“A 5-Day Course to Help You Create Killer Content for Under $30!” plus 1 more | ![]() |
A 5-Day Course to Help You Create Killer Content for Under $30! Posted: 05 Dec 2010 02:14 PM PST Later today the first ever ProBlogger Academy short course, “Creating Killer Content for your Blog,” goes live. Have you joined yet? It’s going to be an exciting week. Chris Garrett and I have put together some great content and are looking forward to interacting with students. This five-module course will walk you through the five key aspects of creating a blog with the type of content that will:
If those things are of interest, this is the course for you. What is it?The course is presented with videos and articles over five modules (in five days) by myself and Chris Garrett (co-author of the ProBlogger book) and covers these topics:
The live calls will be held on Friday at different times of the day to make them accessible to as many people as possible in different time zones—but we’ll also record them for you. You have access to all of the content for 12 months after the course runs, plus you’ll gain access to a Q&A tool to engage with other participants and Chris and myself during the coming week. Join the Fun and Learning TodayBest of all, this five-module course costs just $29.95 (cheaper if you buy the four-course bundle we’re offering). Check out all the details and sign up today here. Five days of learning for under $30? You won’t find courses like this for less! Doors open about seven hours from now, but sign up now to get access when they do. It’s going to be a fun week and I look forward to connecting with you personally during the course! Post from: ProBlogger Blog Tips A 5-Day Course to Help You Create Killer Content for Under $30! |
When’s the Best Time to Publish Blog Posts? Posted: 05 Dec 2010 05:01 AM PST This guest post is by HubSpot's social media scientist, Dan Zarrella. Of all the data analysis that I've done, day-of-week and time-of-day data has been consistently the most popular. So in preparation for my upcoming webinar, titled Science of Blogging, I decided to combine all of my existing data on timing with my new research into one master post on the subject. The first time I looked at blog post timing was when I was analyzing retweets. I found that retweets exhibit a strong diurnal pattern, in that they're more common during the day and less so at night. I noticed that retweet activity tended to peak around 4pm EST, suggesting that this might be the best time to tweet a blog post for maximum potential retweet reach. When I looked at retweet activity over the days of the week, I saw that they peaked later in the work week, specifically on Friday. Since I first published this graph, the most frequently cited piece of this research has been the idea that Friday at 4pm is the most retweetable time of the week. While your niche maybe different, this data was based on analysis of nearly 100 million retweets, so in aggregate, Friday at 4pm is indeed the most retweetable time of the week. Moving on from retweets, I started studying Facebook sharing and discovered some things that surprised me about timing there, too. First, while major news sites and blogs publish articles during the work week, articles that are published on Saturday and Sunday tend to be shared on Facebook more than those published during the week. Perhaps one reason for this is that (as Wired reported), more than 50% of American companies block Facebook at work. Next, I looked at the effect that the time articles were published had on the number of times they were shared on Facebook. I found that while there is a fair amount of variation, articles published in the morning, around 9a.m. EST, tended to be shared more on Facebook than articles published at other times of the day. Looking back at these four data points, it may seem that they're contradictory, but thinking through them a bit more, we can see that they is not necessarily so. Both day-of-week charts tell us that we should experiment with publishing articles later in the week—on Friday and Saturday specifically. And by publishing posts early in the day, but tweeting them later in the afternoon, we can stimulate both Facebook shares and retweets.
I found that among very popular blogs, publishing multiple times per day led to a huge increase in a blog’s success. This tells us that rather than focusing one perfect day or time, we should aim to publish at many times, and on many days. Have you experimented with post timing and tweeting? What has your experience shown about the best times of day or week to reach your readers? Dan Zarrella is HubSpot's social media scientist. This post contains data from his upcoming webinar The Science of Blogging, taking place on December 9th. Post from: ProBlogger Blog Tips When's the Best Time to Publish Blog Posts? |
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