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Did you know, that as of this month, there are over 156 million public blogs in existence? And with that type of competition growing everyday, is the effort worth the prize? What makes a blog a rewarding a home run? and are you still wondering how to attract more visitors to your blog?

We are too.

I did some research regarding this matter and there’s a lot of opinion on the subject. Some say sell advertising, some say to blog every day, some say to not write more than 200 words so the audience doesn’t get bored, others suggest tightly niche your content and others say wake up the dead with extreme controversy.

I do agree with them all, most importantly I believe that businesses need to write stuff that people actually want to read!

Before you start writing, ask yourself who the target audience is and what the do they really care about. Also ask your self these questions:

  1. Why do you write your blog? To make money, to serve as marketing tool?
  2. Have you clearly identified 3 other highly read blogs in your topic?
  3. Can you see their magic formula? Is meaningful content – are they a rock star, have a book and/or a national expert?
  4. How is traffic being driven to their site? This takes some digging, but it’s important.
  5. Does your niche topic have a big enough audience to tap?
  6. Have you looked at Google analytics to see what you have written in the past that really drew readers?
  7. Does your content provide pragmatic advice? Is the writing original and thought provoking, Is it entertaining, or is it just sucking up your time and you should be doing something else?

If you answered NO to any of these questions, stop writing, talk a walk, read a book and start again.

Be useful. Be unique. Be engaging.

How do these blogs do it?
HuffingtonPost 35,000,000 estimated unique monthly visitors.
TMZ17,000,000 estimated unique monthly visitors.
engadget – 11,500,000 estimated unique monthly visitors.

For more blogging tips, view: 10-steps to making writing your blog easier.

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I’m a late night gal. Although, I do spark after my java and eggs in the mid AM and then again at 3 and again after tennis around 8 or nine. I suppose the point is we all have peak performance and high think zones. For a week, monitor your best creative juice output. What time is it? Then, if you can, plan your day accordingly.  We should not fight these waves of brilliance, we should leverage them.

If nothing else, have a pad ready at your peak times and make list of ideas for marketing, blog posts, new biz prospects. Do this every day for a week. By Friday, you’ll have a bunch of powerful stuff.

And hopefully you are an entrepreneur and can decide your schedule. And if you are not, you should highly consider the jump. It’s really the most awesome place to be.

Regimes and rituals do help me stay on course. But there are others days, I am a reckless, wild, free bird and fly all over the place and still produce.

Do what works for you. If it’s not working, try something new.

If you have not read Finding Flow, you should. It’s an awesome book. All of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi books are amazing.

For more on marketing, visit our Market your biz blog.

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Brain Freeze

This weekend was full, but not with all my favorite things. Friday night I celebrated a girlfriend’s birthday and went to a swanky steak place, consumed caviar, nice wine and had a good time. Saturday AM, I had a league tennis match and before I even got there, I was convinced I was going to get beat. My opponent had the reputation of being over skilled in our group and had beaten everyone. To my total surprise, I played my best tennis and beat her. Pretty cool.

That afternoon I had marked out time to work on my book proposal. My proposal has been finished for months and my agent has been working the field, pitching away. I’ve gotten two bites back and a request based on a the publisher’s feedback. Simple enough, right? Starting point, feedback, tweak up and send back. A nice orderly way to manage my Saturday. Well it didn’t quite look like that. By 6PM I had transformed into a non thinking, sleepy, procrastinating zombie. Then stress was entering my head because I knew I also had other things to do before Monday. I was making no progress on anything. My conclusion: I needed some new black shoes. So I hit the stores. Nothing called out and said “Buy me, Buy me”.  Another thought entered my mind, Sushi and Saki – now there’s a nice combination! And I have my notebook and file with me. I’ll eat, drink and work. Well I did the first two, drove home and passed out. Missed Saturday night live, damn it!

Sunday morning arrives along with a mammoth, too much, Saki headache from the night before. For the next few hours I scribbled nonsense, napped, had a nightmare, watched football and procrastinated even more. This was so unlike me. The weekends are my best creative output time. I’m usually a machine.

My logical alias checked in. He whispered, “You are scared, Karen. Scared you may come up with a brilliant new twist for the book proposal, the publisher will hire you and then you will have a giant deadline. Or you won’t come up with JACK and you’ll get rejected.” It’s all bad. So is drinking poison, which was not even on the list and just as unlikely.

It’s 4:15 and my local Tampa Bay Bucs are playing on the radio. TV was blacked out. That makes my cranky too. But, I can burn through another couple hours of fear and fuel my procrastination even more.

It’s past 8pm, the Bucs lost 28, 24 and I have not written one darn word or even had a half of a thought of genius. It’s cat nap time, again. I set my iphone for 20 minutes. I will rest, from all the hard labor I did today, wake up and then write.

I opened my computer and within a couple of hours, drafted a discussion document about an expanded approach to my book proposal, wrote a short blog, sent 10 new business emails out for speaking gigs and went to bed. Phew, got through it! It should not have been so painful. I suppose next time my brain freezes I will go exercise, that usually works well for me, but this weekend my funk wasn’t liking much exercise other than looking for the remote control.

Today I feel like new person, maybe because the document was off my plate for a few days. I was venting to one my colleagues about my brain freeze and procrastination, guilt and stress and she sent me this excellent article on high-level creative thinking. It’s worth the read and I will try the advice next weekend. Thank you Lauren!

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this on going challenge I had this weekend. What’s your story?

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Today I attended a “Get Motivated” event. I experienced 8 hours of elite speakers.

Message takeaways from each speaker:

Colin Powell (who was amazing)

  • Recognize people in your world and your team’s purpose
  • Small acts of kindness make a big difference
  • The organization’s success is mandatory; if someone is not carrying his or her weight, make a change

John Walsh (who shared an important message)

  • People, their passion and causes can make a difference in this world
  • When life hands you your greatest loss, turn the situation into positive change to help others

James Smith (who was very entertaining)

  • If you are not in the game, you’ll never win
  • Self responsibility is not an option

Apolo Anton Ono (who is such an inspiration and so cute)

  • Embrace a zero regret mindset
  • The journey is as rewarding as the win

Zig Ziglar (who is a legend, but getting old)

  • Healthy relationships impact your business success
  • When you get old and can’t speak the way you once did, add video to your presentation

As a speaker, I love to watch other speakers. As a entrepreneur, I’m always looking for gems of wisdom and as a human in the rat race, I’m forever seeking added motivation.

I got all that for 19 bucks. For me, it was a purposeful/productive day and I got to spend time with my staff away from the office which was an added bonus.

Additionally, I witnessed a big feat for the producers of the event, Peter and Tamara Lowe. The place was packed with about 20,000 people. It was a nice sight: hungry business people fueling the local economy, consuming concessions, soaking up healthy energy and optimism. And some were even purchasing products and signing up for future development events. It’s great to see a business making money and enjoying success.

They have a good business model: market, fill a need, deliver value, market more and monetize. There’s nothing wrong with that.

As I was writing this blog, I checked out the web to see what others thought of the Peter Lowe “Get motivated” events. I found some interesting views, alleging A BIG SCAM.

So what’s all the whiny chatter on the Web about crude marketing tactics and event scam?

If an event producer drugs you upon entry and then tries to sell you stuff, that’s a scam. If you attend an event for 19 bucks, filled with top-notch speakers, get to network with 20,000 other business people and they introduce you to their product, then that equals a well done event with a sound business model.

Business conferences, seminars and events are always about what you make of them, what you take away and how you apply any new insight to your business or life.

These web crybaby idiots who scream scam need to take responsibility for their own their actions and decisions. And if they are unable, they should stay home.

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Time Magazine recently released its top 100 influential people. The list has gotten a lot of blog chatter and media coverage. It also made me think about my base of inspirational people and why they are important and influential to me.

Some I don’t see often. Some I’ve not met yet. And some are no longer here.

As an entrepreneur, it’s valuable to have a list of business and life rock stars, people that you admire and who somehow add more good to your destiny and being.

For me, these extraordinary souls have accomplished incredible outcomes and overcome challenges. They possess characteristics that I appreciate and their stories somehow act as surrogate spirits that stay very present in my chosen path.

Some are fictional friends and some are real-life mentors. Some are business leaders who I know will be legends one day, and others are people from my past.

I look up to this group often, (most of them don’t know this). I don’t agree with everything they do or have done. I am in awe over their achievements. And often consider how they would handle certain tough situations.

My group of inspiration is not in my everyday, every moment zone, but they always somehow challenge me to be better. And I am grateful for all of them.

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OK, for all you folks who love statistics, here’s one: 89.7 percent of all statistics are made up. This next one is actually true; 90 percent of all kids are considered creative—yet only 2 percent of all adults are. What happened to all those creative people? Did aliens come down and surgically remove their creativity, while erasing all memory of the procedure?

“As adults we are so conditioned by the four Rs of adult thinking; rules, restrictions, rejection, and reason,” Michael Michalko, explains in his book “Thinkertoys”, Handbook of Business Creativity.

Well the good news here is you can be a born-again creative with a little devotion. All humans have creative capacity. They just get kind of lame or lazy at times. Now there are few gifted folks that don’t give much effort to creative development, they are the lucky, natural ones. Some of you may be in this group and yes, we hate you.

Wherever you land on the creative meter, I’m going to share some ideas that can keep you in the brilliant, creative zone. Some of these creativity ways are from my experiences, some are from other cool thought leaders pals, and some I made up, because I can, I’m creative.

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by Nettie Hartsock

In this week’s “Five Questions for Creatives” we turn to Lloyd Dangle, graphic artist, comic strip artist and blogger. Lloyd is widely known for his Airborne™ brand illustrations and at night he dons his comic cape and draws his highly popular Troubletown comic strip. Lloyd blogs at – www.troublogtown.blogspot.com/. Lloyd’s web site can be found at www.lloyddangle.com.

Lloyd DangleLloyd is a multi-disciplined writer, designer, and artist whose works, over the past 20 years, have appeared in over 100 magazines and newspapers of every type. His weekly comic strip, Troubletown, was first published in the San Francisco Bay Guardian in 1988 and has grown to become a widely-syndicated cartoon feature in alternative newsweeklies and lefty political magazines. Lloyd is also widely sought for his live Dangle-tooning at corporate events and meetings.

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By Karen Post, The Branding Diva®

Several studies were conducted within large organizations to discover the major difference between highly creative teams and non-creative teams. The findings were eye-opening. The major difference in the two groups was not training, education, or even gene pools; it was confidence. The folks that were pumping out the big ideas believed they were creative.

Does your organization aid in this creating a culture of “we are creative, hear us roar!”?
Or does the environment and leadership unconsciously suppress the creative spirit?

Let’s find out.
5 questions to assess your creative culture.

1) Is creativity part of your organization’s core values?

2) Do you easily invite ideas from all departments? Not just the marketing group?

3) Do you recognize and reward creative thinking, even if it does not evolve into a formal practice or product?

4) Does your total environment stimulate creative idea generation?

5) Do you have regularly scheduled creative events that present ideas and tools to empower creative thinking?

If you answered no, to any of these, you’ve got work to do. Here are five simple actions you can take to amp up your creative culture and output.

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This week’s question of the week is based on the thoughts of our current Pole Vaulter, 2thinknow.com’s Christopher Hire. He strongly believes that “too many people equate innovation with change alone.” They are wrong. Rather, “[he and his firm believes], innovation is a change to benefit and advance mankind and civilization.” Furthermore, “If it doesn’t do good, if it doesn’t excite and if it’s not contagious, then it’s not innovative. It’s more fried chicken. And more unneeded change.”

Question: Do we need more types fried chicken? Do little iterative changes matter, or should we push for the big ideas all the time? What qualifies as innovative to you…?

We would love to hear what you have to say.

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Crop circles. We’ve all heard of them and pretty much forgotten about them. We remember the conspiracy theories, TV specials and movies, but the truth is that most of us are past it. We’ve accepted the explanations and moved on.

So, here’s a true Oddpodz congrats to the people who have brought them back into the news. Only this time, in 3D.

That’s right. Last week the world’s first 3D crop circles appeared in England. According to the Daily Mail,

“Experts have been left in awe of the intricacy of the latest sighting, which is 360-feet in diameter, on a wheat field in Oxfordshire.

The formation gives an impression of looking down on skyscrapers from above and was only spotted last week by a microlite pilot.’

Really. Go check it out.

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