Post by account_disabled on Jan 3, 2024 6:26:43 GMT
I've said several times how useful it is to write articles for other blogs . Thanks to guest blogging you can find new readers . And it really happens. I see it in the blogs I follow, in the comments on their articles: phrases like "I met you thanks to the guest post you wrote for..." make us understand that that practice worked. Of course, we cannot always accept articles from others, because the first point to consider is the quality of the texts , but also the message of the article proposed to us: I would never publish something that is not in line with my ideas. It's clear that in a blog like this a problem like this can rarely arise, but you never know. Maybe tomorrow someone will offer me “10 valid reasons to publish with a paid publisher”.
I wouldn't want to be in his shoes... The question someone asked me some time ago is: where to publish guest posts? How to select blogs for guest blogging There are lots of posts out there that explain how to find blogs to submit articles to. They all look a little alike and say they find influential bloggers in their niche, bloggers who have a large following, even on social media, blogs that are ranked high on search engines for their main keywords. The reason is simple: with guest blogging we need to get targeted Special Data traffic to our blog . If we write an article for a blog that gets 30 hits a day, we'll probably get a couple of hits and then no more. Other bloggers recommend looking at some technical aspects: the usual question of good links . There are those who insert the "nofollow" attribute in the links in the signature of posts written by guests, so those links will not be considered by Google as backlinks. I don't use "nofollow" and I think that guest blogging should be a practice aimed at making the blogger known and not designed for SEO purposes. From blog to blogger: ethical guest blogging We can't reduce people to a shopping list.
This is the impression I had when I reread the methods for finding blogs to propose articles to. Making a list of influential, great blogs has a completely selfish flavor : I propose a guest post because you are great and I will have a good return on visits (but, honestly, I don't give a damn about you). Is this really the best way to write and publish guest posts? Over time my approach to guest blogging has changed. I'm not interested in submitting articles to a blog just because it's supposed to have lots of visits a day. I propose it if I like what he publishes, if I felt comfortable commenting, if I am in line with his ideas. I prefer to publish a guest post for a blog that "bills" 20 visits a day, but which I respect, know, or in any case appreciate its work, rather than for a blog that totals a million visits a day, but for me publishes rubbish or content that I don't agree with. Where to propose guest posts, then? I would change the question at this point, because perhaps the message I want to give has been intuited. Who should you propose guest posts to? To the people I follow. No longer blogs, but bloggers, people . Not more traffic and SEO, but pleasant communities and similar intent. Ethical guest blogging , in my opinion, will yield better results than a frantic race for the link.
I wouldn't want to be in his shoes... The question someone asked me some time ago is: where to publish guest posts? How to select blogs for guest blogging There are lots of posts out there that explain how to find blogs to submit articles to. They all look a little alike and say they find influential bloggers in their niche, bloggers who have a large following, even on social media, blogs that are ranked high on search engines for their main keywords. The reason is simple: with guest blogging we need to get targeted Special Data traffic to our blog . If we write an article for a blog that gets 30 hits a day, we'll probably get a couple of hits and then no more. Other bloggers recommend looking at some technical aspects: the usual question of good links . There are those who insert the "nofollow" attribute in the links in the signature of posts written by guests, so those links will not be considered by Google as backlinks. I don't use "nofollow" and I think that guest blogging should be a practice aimed at making the blogger known and not designed for SEO purposes. From blog to blogger: ethical guest blogging We can't reduce people to a shopping list.
This is the impression I had when I reread the methods for finding blogs to propose articles to. Making a list of influential, great blogs has a completely selfish flavor : I propose a guest post because you are great and I will have a good return on visits (but, honestly, I don't give a damn about you). Is this really the best way to write and publish guest posts? Over time my approach to guest blogging has changed. I'm not interested in submitting articles to a blog just because it's supposed to have lots of visits a day. I propose it if I like what he publishes, if I felt comfortable commenting, if I am in line with his ideas. I prefer to publish a guest post for a blog that "bills" 20 visits a day, but which I respect, know, or in any case appreciate its work, rather than for a blog that totals a million visits a day, but for me publishes rubbish or content that I don't agree with. Where to propose guest posts, then? I would change the question at this point, because perhaps the message I want to give has been intuited. Who should you propose guest posts to? To the people I follow. No longer blogs, but bloggers, people . Not more traffic and SEO, but pleasant communities and similar intent. Ethical guest blogging , in my opinion, will yield better results than a frantic race for the link.