If They Haven't Heard It, You Haven't Said It
How to get more people to read your blog posts
using Triberr
Over at
Ruby Barnes my blog has been running for two and a half years. In that time
I’ve had around 183,000 page views across 161 posts. After a hesitant start I found my pace with several different posts about life observations,
the writing process and first experiences with social media. But
my carefully crafted posts fell upon deaf internet ears. I was shouting in the
wilderness, like a mad preacher. Big excitement
when five people looked at my blog in one day. It seems like a lifetime ago.
A man named
Harvey Thomas once said “If they haven’t heard it, you haven’t said it.” (He
was the guy who advised a budding politician named Margaret Thatcher to lower her voice by an octave. What
if he hadn’t?) Harvey's truism was shared before the internet was widespread but it
summarises what social media is all about i.e. sharing messages you consider to
be worthwhile is necessary to reach your audience.
At time of
writing 500 page views is an average day on the Ruby Barnes blog. I’m not
talking about selling books here (for example The New Author), rather about the
effective broadcasting of readerly, writerly and I’m an interesting person blog posts. At the beginning I tried a
lot of things to attract people to my blog. Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) was
effective but I’m a non-expert and some posts attracted a lot of people looking for elephants. My real-life writer friends weren’t interested in some old blog by
the class joker. I had a very small facebook circle and less than fifty RubyBarnes twitter followers. Blog visits were hard to come by. But like my
protagonist, John Baptist, I’m evangelical in everything I do (though, unlike
JB, I’m not a serial killer preparing for the Second Coming.) Determined to
drive traffic to my musings, I persevered with facebook posts and tweets. Those
had some impact but it was short-lived. With a day job, young family, active
sports and music hobbies, and several writing projects on the go, I was going
crazy and spreading myself too thin. Then a fellow writer suggested I join
their Triberr tribe. WTF?
It took me
a while to understand what Triberr was about and that’s why I’m going to try
and explain it here for those who are interested in getting a wider blog
audience for free. The idea is simple. You join a group of people who also have
a blog. Ideally you’re all like-minded with similar blogging interests. There
are a few settings to go through which will connect your blog and social media
(usually twitter but facebook and LinkedIn can also be connected - I recommend to just use twitter) to the group.
When you next post something on your blog it will appear on Triberr for the
other group members. When they approve your blog post it will automatically go
out on their twitter (or facebook, LinkedIn if enabled). Okay, nice bunch of
friends. Tribemates, as we say on Triberr. You might get, what? Half a dozen
people sharing your blog post? Big swinging Mickeys, as we say in Ireland. Well,
there’s more.
A Tribe has
up to thirty members. A good Tribe will get you around fifteen shares of your
blog post. Each tribemate has their own twitter followers (there will be some
overlap between members). Your blog posts will be tweeted by your tribemates to
their twitter followers. I’m in 9 tribes with 96 tribemates. Between us we have 856,000 twitter followers. My blog post will be tweeted to some proportion of
those 856,000 twitter followers and some of them will visit my blog. Those
twitter followers are global, different countries, different time zones. This
has to be better than just me tweeting my blog post to the 6,600 Ruby Barnes
twitter followers. And guess what, it is.
The importance of making your blog post title
work well as a tweet
A
masterpiece of a blog post, expounding ground-breaking theories. A brilliant
book review wrapped up in masterly SEO. A tempting snippet from your latest
piece of fiction. All worth visiting the blog and reading, but no one will do
that unless you tease them in with your blog title. This applies in general but
in particular to blogpost sharing on twitter. And when tribemates share your
blog post the title should entice them to do so. Regarding length, a blog post
that fits on one line of your blog is about right. Triberr will add a goo.gl
shortlink to the title and your twitter name e.g. Serial Killer Makeover for The Baptist goo.gl/VlfWGs via @Ruby_Barnes.
You could also include a hashtag in the blog post title if relevant e.g.
#bookreview #Goodreads #free.
The added benefits of Triberr
As well as
getting global shares in different time zones for your blogposts via twitter,
there are a few major additional pluses.
1. If you
reduce your blogpost to a title that works really well as a tweet then it will
get favorited, retweeted and even replied to on twitter.
2. New
people will start to follow you on twitter. These will be people who are
interested in your tweet and your blog content.
3. Of
course you will get more page views for your blog post - that’s the whole point
of Triberr - but you can leverage this for giveaways, mail list sign-ups, book
launches etc.
4. It can
be a major challenge to find good content for your twitter. Folks will soon get
fed up if you send out the same tweets all the time with just one or two new
blog posts every month. Triberr really helps with this and will save you a lot
of time and effort. Your tribemates’ blogposts can make great twitter content
for you. Just check them occasionally and you will soon start to trust their
content. This can give you newsworthy, interesting tweets that add value for
your twitter followers. You’ll also find new info through these tribemate
blogposts if you read them yourself - writing advice, special offers,
advertising opportunities, industry news, all kinds of insights.
So how do we do it?
Just a few
simple steps. Here are some screenshots to open up a new account (caveat -
these things change from time to time), but first log in to your twitter account before you get started on
Triberr.
Step 1
Go to
http://triberr.com and click top right to Register.
Step 2
On the
pop-up screen enter your name, email and blog address, and click Sign Up.
Step 3
Click Login
top right of the screen and then click, under Member Login, on Sign in with Twitter.
Step 4
Your
Twitter avatar will appear top right of the screen. Click on Account > Settings > My Blogs
> Edit and check your RSS Feed URL is in the box. If not then
add it (more about details of your blog feed will be added in another post).
Step 5
You need to
find a Tribe to join. If a tribe has been suggested by a friend then follow any
link they send you. Otherwise you can search through the different categories
of Tribe. Find one you like the look of, follow it and ask to become a member.
Step 6
Go to Account > Settings > My Blogs
> Assign and assign your blog to
the tribe you have joined.
Step 7
Go to your
Triberr Stream every day (or
whenever you can manage it) and you will see recent blog posts from your
tribemates. (If you can’t see a Stream then Triberr has logged you out, so
login again with Twitter.) If you hover over the green Share box then that blog post will automatically be fed out to your
Twitter followers.
There are
various other settings, including frequency of sharing to your twitter,
changing from hover to click to Share, but you have the basics above. It’s well
worth the initial effort. Things will never be the same again for your blog.
I’ll leave
you with this thought.
If someone stands alone in a forest and shouts, are they
(a) not looking for an audience, (b) crazy or (c) angry with a tree?
Comments
Triberr works by sharing your blog all over the world. Sometimes it'll get read, sometimes not--that will depend on your content. And punchy titles? Oh yes! The times I'm asked to share a blog post and the title comes up with 'Interview with Mr Smith' BORING!