Posts Tagged ‘tags’

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Help Your Readers Find Your Old Blog Posts

December 21, 2009

searchBy Jeffrey Kishner

Blogs are designed to publish an author’s most recent entry at the top of the page, pushing older posts further down the page, and eventually into the archives. This format is great if you’re writing a diary or a news blog, because your readers want to know about the latest happenings in your life or niche.

However, this format does not always work for astrology blogs. Astrology, of course, is dependent upon time, so if you’re only writing about the most recent astrological events (lunations, ingresses, mundane aspects) then your readers will want to go to the home page of your blog to view whatever has been most recently posted. But if you write about the art of astrological interpretation, you risk having some of your best material buried in the archives, where your readers will not be able to find it.

How do you help your readers find your old content? There are several options:

Tag Your Posts

This is the easiest solution. If you’re writing about the current Saturn square Pluto aspect, you can tag your post “Saturn,” “Pluto” and “mundane astrology.” If you’re writing about the love styles of Capricorn men, tag it “Capricorn” and “relationships.” The point is to help your readers easily find your old posts by topic, so don’t go overboard. If you have a tag cloud in your blog’s sidebar that has 200 words, you’re likely to overwhelm your reader, so don’t include a tag for every single celebrity you write about. Keep it simple!

Include Related Posts at the End of Each Blog Entry

An easy way to let your readers explore old content is to include a short list of posts that are thematically related to the one they’re reading. If you’ve written some great articles about the nodes, be sure to include them in your most recent post about them. Some blog platforms have plugins that automatically generate these for you, but the plugin will not do as good a job as you will, so just search through your archives and include your three best posts in a bullet-pointed list.

Link to Old Posts From Within Your Article

Why wait for the reader to finish reading your post to find more relevant articles? You can find terms or phrases in your copy and hyperlink them to stuff in your archives. Be mindful of best practices: Don’t write something like, “You can read my other article about this here.” Rather, you can write, “In my previous post about the South Node in Leo…”

Create Special Pages That Link to Your Best Posts

Although a reader can click through your archives, the experience looking for a specific post can be like looking for a needle in a haystack. If you’ve written a whole bunch of articles about a specific topic, create a page on your blog (if your blog platform allows) and include a short introduction with a list of links. I do this for Sasstrology; each zodiac sign has its own dedicated page with links to nearly all the blog posts about that sign. (For example, see Scorpio.)

Include a Search Box

Your blogging software may natively come with a search box, but it may not do a terribly good job. You can use services like Lijit or Google Custom Search to help your readers get a Google search listing of whatever your reader is looking for.

Widgets Galore

Depending on your blog platform, you may be able to add a widget that features your most popular posts (and other variations, like “most commented,” “most visited,” etc.). Your most popular posts may not be your best posts – the ones you really want to feature – so use these widgets with caution.
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kishnerpixAbout the Author

Jeffrey Kishner is editor/publisher of Sasstrology. He is also a regular contributor at AOL Horoscopes. Jeffrey is available for professional consultations regarding WordPress blogs and social media optimization. You can contact him at jeffreykishner@gmail.com.
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Reader’s Question: Promoting Traffic For Your Astrology Blog

September 12, 2009

Hi Beth!

How have you been? I see you moved to Astrology Media Press. I just read your article there on the astrology bloggers who lose interest and abandon their blogs, and I feel like I’m starting to fit that profile. =( I’m still enjoying blogging, but my numbers are really down. You were nice enough to send me some info. awhile back on adding tags and keywords, but I never got around to doing it. I was just wondering if you could tell me exactly how to do that . . .

I can’t move to AMP as we discussed, because my material is not original, and I’m not looking to charge, so having a PayPal button is not important to me. Thanks for any tips.

Starperson

Dear Starperson,

I’ve been extremely busy setting up the AMP site and pages and getting things off the ground. Well, its here and ran right into Mercury Rx so little things keep cropping up that demand my attention. But I still find time to blog.

Keeping your interest up, and avoiding blogger’s block, especially when your numbers are down, is the main challenge for any blogger. While it is always nice to see that you’ve engaged other people, its good to remember that the original intent of a weblog was to act as a sort of electronic diary. It is really a place to stretch and grow, to generate insights about your thinking processes. As long as you do that, you have reasons (and things) to blog.

Driving traffic is always a hot topic for bloggers. Astrology blogging is such a small niche in the blogosphere, using tags and keys is essential to bringing people to your site. You can read about tags and keywords here. But also, you need to spend more time than the average blogger promoting your site. I know you have a Twitter page and you use it, so keep tweeting. Also, use the search feature in Twitter to find other astrologers and follow them. Most will give you a follow back.

Networked Blogs app and Pages in Facebook has been a Godsend to me while 451 Press was burping itself out of existence. Both of those helped me to maintain contact some of my readers while the 451 site went up and down. I recommend both these Facebook features to help build traffic to your site.

AMP is set up as a opportunity for astrologers to blog without the restrictions that other networks put on you in terms of how you can promote yourself. That doesn’t mean you have to! But even if a person didn’t want an AMP blog, the AMP Community is set up so people can meet up with like minded souls so check it out. Yes, AMP is young, there is a lot of growing to do, but it has a lot to offer besides a web page.

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