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Thanks for your kind words. Means a lot to me coming from a distinguished, experienced blogger It's been quite a journey gaining the courage to publish that "first post". I learned a lot from people like David and others.
Looking forward to visiting your blog and joining the conversation.
Thank you. One early mistake I made was not to ask questions of more experienced bloggers when I hit a roadblock. I learned it's o.k. to ask for help. I'm 60 years old, and was a little rusty in the ask for help department. Professional bloggers have such a generous spirit, and are very willing to share their time and knowledge.
I visited your blog. Very interesting. I've learned some things about land value in Arizona, which makes me want to read more.
Matt
Thanks for your valuable comment. Passion, living and breathing your topic is definitely what it takes to blog. Once your writing inspires a conversation, there's no feeling like it.
I visited your website. Love the design. A lot of useful information for small business people, like myself. I'll be back
I took the plunge - and my first blogging efforts sucked big time. Experience in the face of need is a great teacher, and although I'm still nowhere near the top 100,000 , I'm getting there - With a little help from David Risley and others I must add. :-)
Thanks so much for sharing your experience. I hear what you're saying about procrastination, which is a horrible affliction. What really resonates with me,though, is that you had the courage to jump in and learn to swim. Blogging makes us strong.
Another point you make that hits home is balancing dry and serious with mirth and merriment. It's not easy. I love making people laugh and feel good about themselves. But, I've learned when you communicate in writing, you don't have the benefit of facial expressions and tone of voice. I read some of my deposition transcripts and want to cry. Law makes you strong, too.
I have a sense from reading you comment, that you are well on your way to creating a special blog. I will be a fly on your blog wall. I look forward to learning about your passion.
Thanks for joining the conversation with your thoughtful comment. I'm 60 and happy to find I still love to learn about new things.
I visited your website and found the images compelling. I loved the photograph taken from David Wojnarowicz's 1977-79 series "Rimbaud in New York. Fascinating stuff.
I look forward to reading your blog too!
The one thing I have difficulty w/ is blogging everyday. Even with the subjects I'm passionate about I find it hard to fill the space. Plus I'm concerned about quality over quantity. Any advice?
I visited your blog. I am an avid fan of Steve Martin, and I absolutely agree on your take about his role in the Pink Panther movies. Peter Sellers is the only guy that makes me roar when he says, "Does you dog bite?"
The quality in your blog shines through. I think all of us fear publishing a stale post, or running out of ideas. Here's some thoughts in response to your question:
1. I agree with you about quality over quantify, but every post isn't going to launch 1000 ships.
2. I generally come up with ideas for my posts when I'm away from my desk. I let the old(really old) right brain run around, and think about the world, my day, things I care about. When an idea starts taking shape, I try to put a different slant on it. Add some type of personal touch to the subject. My best ideas seem to come right before I fall asleep (4-5 times during the day)
3. Engage your reader by building the post around a question. Much the same way you engaged me. Sometimes the comments and responding to the comments are more fun than the post
4. Stay true to your message, but mix up the format. Sometimes surprising your readers keeps everyone on their toes.
I hope this has been helpful. Enjoyed the question.
Thanks again!
It's easy to make mistakes but the trick is to learn from them and move on as you have clearly done.
Thanks for sharing your insight. I absolutely agree that learning by your(my) mistakes is essential for your growth. I have the bruises to prove it.
Loved your website. Your tag line is great, "the web through my eyes". You are true to your message. A lot of valuable content and resources about the Internet.
I recently traveled to Chicago to visit my daughter and son-in-law. Had a ball.
Have you had any experience with on line article directories you can share with us?
Thanks for some valuable advice. Your message rings true about content being well written, helpful and informative, regardless of where you publish it. Any favorite article directories? Any advice about what kind of article directories to stay away from?
Rookie bloggers can always benefit from someone with your experience. I've learned to ask...Thanks!
I think I've had the best results from Ezine. They seem to take care of the material the best, it's a great front end for people looking for information, and the backend for writers is very intuitive. I'd be curious to hear others weigh in on the question, though.
Thanks, Matty. Hopefully, we'll hear about some more experiences about article directories.
As a new blogger I just found out THE best way to get someone like me to comment. Visit the sites of the people who comment and let them know you did by informative and insightful comments. IMO you personify a great blogger because you're a wonderful caring person.
Now, if I can get someone to comment on my blog so I can emulate you... No, that's not a hint. I'm working on making my blog good enough so that I don't have to resort to underhand methods to get interaction. True interaction from musicians/bands who use the knowledge I share on my blog to forward their careers is my goal.
Again, thank you for being you.
David, hurry back, but don't forget to have Mr. Berezin guest again, please? :-)
Molly
You absolutely made my week. I think our blogs are like our homes. Someone is kind enough to pay a visit, I want to learn about my guest, and treat her as a special person. There are so many people out there with so many wonderful insights and passions to share. I love learning and sharing those passions.
I'm on twitter. When someone is kind enough to follow me, I always visit their twitter page and website. I think this is what social media is all about. That's one of the points I tried to make in my post. Be nice. It's a wonderful way to engage the generous, fascinating people we meet in cyberspace.
Molly, I would love to visit your website/blog. The interaction between you and Matty is terrific. Please tell me where to click.
Thanks you!
I'm one of those people who hasn't jumped in....yet. Very much appreciated your post, and subsequent comments. You have that delightful ability to laugh at yourself and put people at ease. The comments you elicit show that this draws the best out of people.
The stand-out comment you made in your post, for me, was "It's what your readers care about hearing from you, not what you feel like blogging on that day." Can't help feeling relationships of all kinds would benefit from remembering that.
I'm not quite old enough to be your mother, 'tho I have a few years on you, but since it's obviously a while since you ran things past her, I thought I'd fill in for her on this occasion. It's "whom I frequently came up against in court", and "you're tired", "you're blogging". Corrections made in the spirit of further improving an excellent product - just like would have been the case with your mother.
Every good wish,
Marlene
Thank you for your kind words and thoughtful comment. I especially appreciate your help with my "construction". My Mom says, thanks. Blogging is great, but the joy is participating in a conversation with nice, passionate people.
I'm not going to let you off the hook...yet. Why haven't you jumped in? What's keeping you out of the pool? Your experience will be helpful to us all.
I remember how nervous I was as a young attorney waiting to be assigned out to trial. Those hours leading up to the trial were killers. Once the trial began, it was exhilarating.
How do we know when the time is right to start blogging? There is no judge to say, "Counselor call your first witness". I hope Marlene will share her experience with us.
Thanks for your interest. You will always have people wanting to converse with you.
Thanks so much for your kind words. Love the young lady to your left. There were many days when my post fell in the forest and no one was there to say it created any buzz. That's the life of a rookie blogger, or any blogger.
I had the most fantastic week with my rookie blogger post. David's group was just wonderful. I thought I died and went to bloggers heaven. Guess who I met in bloggers heaven. You'd be shocked. That's for another post.
I love the way you related Pink Floyd to blogging. Fun and thought provoking. What a great combination.
I'm looking forward to continuing the conversation. My next rookie blogger post will be about some of my mistakes (it would take 3 posts to cover all of them). I hope allows some young blogger to avoid a couple of mis-steps.
Thanks, again.
Lawrence, great post. As my blog is only a part of my business, there's not much to it right now. Currently, I use it to post updates about my doings and to promote other artists (of all types.) Every once in a while, I throw in my own insights on being an artist and a Creative in general. I have not found my "flow," but I definitely have the passion.
@Sharron: Oh, my goodness. Your comment about procrastination hit me right between the eyes. I needed to read it, because I'm a procrastinator. The idea of success is scary, and I'm trying to bust through that barrier. Thank you! ;)
So many of you have posted such great thoughts! I have a ton of blogs to visit now. Thanks for the education and isights!
Jennifer Moore
JenniferLynn Productions, LLC
This applies not just to my blog, but to photos, books, stories, articles, paintings, hand crafted items--anything I will need to "make later" gets written down in my Holy Journal for later reference.
If you don't carry one or keep one by your bed, I recommmend it. It's been very helpful to me.
I couldn't have said it better. Great advice. My only problem is when I wake up at 4 a.m. with a big hairy idea and write it on a piece of paper, it usually makes no sense the next day.
Has the 4 a.m. demon ever changed your words around after you fall back to sleep?
Thanks for sharing!
If I wake up enough to write something down and I do go back to sleep, I generally will have woken up enough for whatever it is to make sense.
My mind is always clicking away. Unfortunately, it tends to move faster than my fingers, so sometimes I don't even get a chance to write anything coherent down. I find the most potent ideas come back, though.
Hope that hellps.
Jennifer Moore
JenniferLynn Productions, LLC
Alex
Are you on Twitter and/or Facebook? If yes, how do you find the interactions?