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NBA bloggers - bring it (to BlogBurst)

I know that you’re out there. You have every cable channel dedicated to sports. You follow every nuance of the players on and off the court. The sound of a ball popping through a net is deeply satisfying. And you probably wear retro jerseys to better restaurants. Best of all - you write about it constantly.

You’re an NBA blogger, aren’t you?

Now is the prime time for NBA bloggers to show us their stuff. Believe me when I say that we have some seriously interesting publishing partners who genuinely want basketball content - now is your chance! If you have an NBA blog, or know someone who does, please consider submitting it to Blogburst. I assure you, we’ll work to get you the widest exposure possible!

Killed By … Blogging?

An article in the Sunday New York Times is getting a lot of play in bloggyland this week – In Web World of 24/7 Stress, Writers Blog Till They Drop. The gist is that a few prominent bloggers recently suffered heart attacks, and the culprit could be the never-ending stress cycle created by blogging, which just might kill you.

My first reaction was: come on, New York Times, is there really a story here?

Any job that requires you to sit in front of the computer for long hours obsessively watching any kind of information leads to high stress and little physical movement. Is blogging different from day trading, online gambling, or even traditional journalism? I bet stress has taken its toll in those professions too. Or is it just that blogging is a hot topic, so you combine blogging with regular work stress, hit “enter” and you’ve got a story with legs? (Not to mention that some blogs aren’t exactly on the stress program, like the once-a-week-if-that-often Becker-Posner Blog, one of my faves.)

Yet the more I mull it over, the more I think the Times is onto something: the blogosphere does seem to pull successful bloggers toward obsessiveness and high-stress behavior.

In our network (and in the blogosphere in general), the most successful blogs are ones that post frequently and also cover the new developments in their fields. And if you want to keep up with the latest developments, you’re signing up for a never-ending barrage of information — Google Alerts, RSS blog updates, instant messages, emails, comments on your posts. And you might as well get a BlackBerry or an iPhone to ensure you can never escape. As your traffic grows so do the inputs, and the information vortex builds upon itself. The more your attention is dominated by the screen, the more you are apt to sit in one place, maybe eat some potato chips (I think I’m going to go get some right now).

I’m certainly not in a position to give health advice, but what the heck — it’s spring, take a minute to get up and walk around. Go outside and smell the air.

Try to maximize your efficiency. Some bloggers collaborate with others to cut down the work, others make sure to include good search engine optimization as a way of getting more for less.

You’ll also find lots of good tips for work-life balance out there on the Web, and the “getting things done” mavens are full of tips for making your workday (and night) more efficient (like checking your email once an hour instead of every 10 seconds).

Of course, you also can just live fast, die young, and leave a beautiful blog.

Madness Is Good for BlogBurst Bloggers

We are just approaching the second round of March Madness and publishers have created a big dance of their own with posts from the BlogBurst network. Both IBS and Cox Ohio have picked up posts for placement in the sports sections of multiple television websites.

I’m Writing Sports’ post, “Bracketology 101: Back to the Basics,” has been featured in the March Mania sections of television sites such as Whio.tv, Kansas City TV 5, The Pittsburgh Channel, Click on Detroit, and NBC 5 Chicago, as well as on Cox Ohio’s Dayton Daily News. Other blogs posting on the hoopla include Hoopraker, Conquest Chronicles, Bruins Nation, A Sea of Blue, and The Big Dance Blog.

Have you got some spring love from publishers that are placing your March Madness posts? Let us know in the comment section below.

Aside from March Madness posts, other bloggers are experience some Spring love from publisher placement opportunities.From Newslite.tv:

My blog has been on BlogBurst for just over one week now and in the past seven days I have had over 73,000 headline impressions and my posts have been used on Reuters, USAToday.com and Chicago Sun Times - wow…

I only have good things to say about BlogBurst and the visibility it have a given my blog. In terms of headline impressions, post placement and click through rate it has exceeded all of my expectations.

 

Guide to Blogging From BlogBurst Bloggers

Editors at BlogBurst always try to offer as much advice as possible surrounding the art of blogging. But who better to offer blogging advice than your fellow BlogBurst members? Check out these informative posts from BlogBurst network bloggers for some great tips and tricks for starting, maintaining, and attracting visitors to your blog.

Ecommerce Sites are Boring! Add Personality and Passion with a Blog!
From Better Blogging with Michael Martine

Blogging is Easy? Um, No. Here’s the Cold Hard Truth…
From Better Blogging with Michael Martine

Journalists who learn to blog help their online sites grow beyond shovelware
From howardowens.com

How to install WordPress on your computer?
From Createlf

Plugins By The Bucketload
From My Radical Blogs

5 Easy Wordpress Tweaks For SEO and VEO
From Social marketing, Web 2.0 News, & Blog Promotion

Top Bloggers Essential Research Tools - How Amy Gahran Maintains Info-Provocateur Status
From B.L. Oschman’s weblog

The A-List, Part 2: Be The Source
From Everybody Go To

Is embedding better than quoting?
From Matthew Ingram

7 Tools For Blogging On Your Phone
From Mashable!

How to fight trackback spam in your WordPress blog?
From Jammed: Full into Capacity

How to Unlame Your Business Blog: 10 New Tricks for Old Dogs
From Business BlogWire

Ten Tactics That Could Save Your Online Reputation
From Mashable!

Blogging Ethics 101b - Commenting
From Better Blogging with Michael Martine

Blogging and the Box Office

Nielsen is introducing  some new reports aimed at online community interaction.  Nielsen PreView will incorporate the company’s many research divisions and tie the data to the entrainment  industry.

The initial report  analyzed the box office performance of 400 recent films, finding that titles grossing at least $100 million in sales are likely to have received elevated levels of attention on blogs.  More details, here.

Some of my favorite film bloggers are:

/Film - Blogging the Reel World

The IFC Blog

Film School Rejects

All the news that’s fit to post, NOT print

Reuters-BlogBurst/SpitzerOne of our newest blogs, Blogflict, has an interesting angle on “Eliot Mess,” praising the New York Times online.

It was major news across all mediums, with BlogBurst publishing partners USA Today and Reuters both incorporating bloggers’ perspectives into the story.

Here’s but a few of the BlogBurst bloggers who weighed-in:

Hypocrisy- They name is Spitzer (jobsanger)

Political Perceptions: The Spitzer Effect (WSJ.com: Washington Wire)

Eliot’s Mess: Spitzer scandal details emerge (The Carpetbagger Report)

Wall Street Journal Taps BlogBurst to Fuel the Retirement Debate

WSJ Retirement Debate Screenshot

The BlogBurst editorial team is excited to announce that BlogBurst blogs have been selected by The Wall Street Journal to fuel a new site featuring content surrounding the retirement debate.

Retirementdebate.com, which launched on Monday, March 3rd, features news, business, finance, and political posts with a narrowed focus on retirement, social security, Medicare, baby boomer, and senior living issues.

Here are just a few examples of posts by BlogBurst network members that were placed on new WSJ Retirement Debate site:

Still Clickin: You Bet Your Life…Insurance

The New Business World: Declining Dollar, Pension Funds and Downward Business

Senior Housing Daily: Housing Market Decline Affecting Senior Housing?

Net News Publisher: Social Security Union Endorses Obama

 

 

Fascinated with Finance - for good reason

Finance blogging is not boring.

You might not be interested in the economy, but I can assure you that the economy is interested in you. Finance and economy-relatied topics are, often as not, the story behind the story. Interested in Apple and all of its products? I can assure you that you’ll find something interesting about their story in the broader markets. Love your Google searches and applications? How about the high-quality food at Whole Foods? The blood-red excitement of Ducati motorcycles? These are all very interesting market stories, and the stories of the stocks behind these names (AAPL, GOOG, WFMI, DMH respectively) are equally interesting - in some cases more so. Do a quick news search for any of these names and you’ll see what I mean.

However, there is a much more pertinent reason to start to get your head around the markets. It involves your retirement - or your potential lack thereof. General sentiment among political figures (across both sides of the aisle) suggests that Social Security will likely not be around for the internet generation - at least as we know it. We will instead, in all likelihood, have to provide for our own retirement (or at the very least, supplement it ourselves) as best we can. As a general rule, even if your idea of investing is a generous donation to the Bank of Sealy or the Bank of Serta once in a while, you still have the corrosive efffect of inflation to deal with. That stash of cash will decrease in purchasing power over time - often in a much more serious way than you can conceive of. It wouldn’t hurt to put your money to work for you in some kind of market vehicle that you understand, if only to be able to fight the effects of inflation.

To do that, however, it behooves you to understand what you’re doing and there is no shortage of internet sites and blogs that can help you do just that.

Shifting gears here for a moment - let’s say you’re a finance blogger. I know that the above notes are not news to you, and that you might find them to be so basic as to be almost irrelevant. You’d rather talk about Forex trades or Iron Condors or cup-and-handles. However, I want you to think for just a bit about how you can serve a broader audience - the millions of people who genuinely need your guidance in figuring out market basics. If you could, spend some time talking about the basics of such topics as inflation. Talk about how money origination is really debt origination. Talk about the corrosive effects of inflation on purchasing power. Talk about the different types of price indexes (producer, consumer) and what’s included - and what’s not. Talk about the things that you think every person should know about the markets that surround and affect them.

I think your audiences will grow for it, and I know they’ll benefit from it.

Tips and tweaks for a better blog

Hi everybody-

 

I know that as a blogger, you’re busy searching out the best information you can, in order to bring your readers (and our publishers) the most authoritative information possible. However, I would like to ask that you check on a few things that will make life easier for the Blogburst editors, and perhaps yield benefits for your readers.  

 

Archive!

 

It surprises me how many blogs I see that don’t have visible archives available from the front page. I have a specific need to find archives quickly - but I have no doubt that your blog’s readership would also appreciate the ability to get to all your previous posts in an easy way. Speaking simply as a reader, if there’s a blog I really like, I’ll read the entire blog beginning with its first post, and proceed in chronological order. Visible archives make this possible. 

 

Most blog platforms give you the ability to display archives in the sidebar - usually as a list, graduated monthly. I find those to be the most effective. There’s also the calendar-style ones, which I don’t find to be as handy - but anything beats paging through “previous post” links alone. Please consider activating your archive widget in your sidebar, if you haven’t already. 

 

Full Feeds

 

Much has been written on the philosophies and strategies behind partial feeds versus full feeds (here’s one small sample) but in Blogburst, we do need your full feeds. I have, in the past, seen major blog platforms flip everyone back to partial post output upon making platform-wide software upgrades. So, if you proceed with a software upgrade in your blog’s software (or your blog’s provider does it for you) I’d ask you to please check your settings and see if you still have a full feed output.

 

Be the main attraction

 

Think about your favorite blogs for just a second. Hold them in your mind. I’m willing to bet that these blogs that you’re holding in your mind right now are strong, and memorable, because of the strong voice of the blogger - the color and life that they breathe into the facts that they gathered for your perusal. I’m also willing to bet that they do not simply give you a link to someone else’s story, with a throwaway paragraph attached that simply describes what the story links to. 

 

I realize that it requires much more effort to create your own voice, but I would encourage you to try. I truly believe that the “authority blogging” path is the most rewarding way to go, and your readers will certainly appreciate it. Is it hard? Well, it does take more effort, and you might not be good at it right away. However, most things worth doing take effort - and as my voice teacher used to say, “You don’t get better at singing by not singing!” This goes for “authority blogging” too. 

 

Thanks!   

Wordpress has upgraded - have you?

Looks like Wordpress has upgraded their platform again - 2.3.3 is available. As this is a “point release” (2.3.2 to 2.3.3) then this release is meant to fix bugs, and security issues in particular.

 

Wordpress has this to say about it:

 

WordPress 2.3.3 is an urgent security release. If you have registration enabled a flaw was found in the XML-RPC implementation such that a specially crafted request would allow a user to edit posts of other users on that blog. In addition to fixing this security flaw, 2.3.3 fixes a few minor bugs.

You can find more information about the upgrade at the Wordpress download site for your convenience.

 

If you’re curious as to the benefits of upgrading (or the pitfalls of not upgrading) you can find that at the Blogger Resource Center.