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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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Latest posts from Danny Brown

Enjoy the latest posts from Danny Brown, and feel free to add your own thoughts in the comments after the post.

Ten for 10 – The Run-In to 2010

SoapStarting tomorrow, I’m going to be sharing a list of things called Ten for 10, which is just a buzzy blog name for people and things that I think will be worth your time checking out next year.

They’ll be a mix of bloggers, blogs, platforms, technologies and just plain old good things. Some of it might help you plan your next 12 months from various angles – social media, marketing, blogging, personal goals and more.

Or, it may just be a load of codswallop that you’ll have no interest in – the choice is yours!

Along with these lists will be some guest posts from bloggers I admire immensely, and they’ll be sharing their views on what made 2009 for them, and what they hope to see in 2010.

I hope you’ll stop by and check out each day’s offering (and feel free to subscribe to make sure you don’t miss anything), and let me know your thoughts. Since, at the end of the day, it’s your opinions that help shape this blog anyway.

Cheers!

Creative Commons License photo credit: Thomas Hawk

Marketing in 2010 eBook from Valeria Maltoni

Perhaps better known as the Conversation Agent,?Valeria Maltoni is one of the most respected marketers around. Her views are much sought after by the likes of?Fast Company,?Marketing Profs and the?Blog Herald to name just a few.

She’s also a hugely popular speaker on marketing, new media and conversations between brands and customers, and has one of the most respected blogs over at Conversation Agent by Valeria Maltoni.

She’s just published a free eBook entitled Marketing in 2010 – social media becomes operational, which looks at how you can move your marketing and social media efforts from theory to full-on operational and tactical. To do this, Valeria gathered some of the brightest minds in marketing and social media today:

Jason Baer, Olivier Blanchard, Mark Earls, Rachel Happe, Gavin Heaton, Jackie Huba, Jonathan MacDonald, Amber Naslund and Shannon Paul.

Valeria was also kind enough (or simply temporarily mad!) to invite me to share my thoughts. So you can find me talking about Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner. Yes… all these smart brains and I’m talking Looney Tunes. Plus ca change…

Anyway, the eBook is a great collection of varying views on how you can turn social media operational next year, and a great resource to turn to to help you meet some of your goals. So stop reading me and head on over to Valeria’s blog to check it out and download it.

Enjoy!

The Best Day for Blogging is Thursday

What no one ever tells you about bloggingActually, as you can see from the time stamp, it’s not quite Thursday when this blog was posted. Yet according to quite a few blog posts themselves, this is the prime time to post your blog when it comes to catching the attention of visitors. Is this really the case, though? I’m not too sure.

Although I can see the logic behind this reasoning (and the charts highlighting traffic spikes for the time of day and actual weekday make a good argument), there are a few reasons why posting a blog at pretty much any time is just as beneficial.

One Can Make a Community

Unless your solitary goal for blogging is to see how much traffic you get, or how many subscribers you have, then there’s no real reason for favoring a particular day to post.

Agreed, if your blog is a business-oriented one, then perhaps it is more useful to post from the beginning to the middle of the week.

However, if you’re simply writing a blog to share your views and hopefully connect with others that share similar and open up a thread of discussion, then any day of the week is good enough. Even if you only receive one visitor/commenter, that’s someone you’ve touched with your post and surely that’s reward enough for blogging?

Besides, there are also wonderful social media tools like Stumbleupon, Reddit, Sphinn and others that can bring you passive traffic for the virtual lifetime of your post. Add in the sharing aspects of Twitter and Facebook, and services like them, and you can see a blog post can live long after the initial publish date.

Roads? Where We’re Going We Don’t Need No Roads!

A quote from one of my favorite movie trilogies – Back to the Future – it also sums up why posting any day you wish is fine (in a roundabout kind of way – bear with me). When you write and post a blog, it’s present only for you and everyone else in your particular timezone. Anyone else is either a future or past reader.

For instance, I’m originally from the UK but I now live in Burlington, Canada. There’s a difference of 5 hours between the two places (the UK is ahead of Canada). So, anything I write could potentially be read on a completely different day, yet still at the immediate point of posting. So, I write a post at 8.00pm on Saturday night, and someone in the UK would read it at 1.00am on Sunday morning.

Take into account the likes of Australia, Asia and other places even further afield, and you can see that what might be a prime time for one country is already in the past (or yet to come) for another. Which kind of negates parts of the “ideal time to post” theory.

Of course, the whole time travel thing in Back to the Future always was a bit confusing to me, so maybe I’m just talking nonsense!

The point is – we blog because we like it. As I mentioned earlier, if it’s a business-minded blog then perhaps there should be certain days that a post is published. For the rest of us? Look at it this way – slow and steady might not win the race, but it certainly won’t lose it.

Write engaging content, communicate with your readers, share with the community and you’ll enjoy visitors and readers no matter what day of the week you write. And of course, always invite your readers to subscribe to your blog!

What say you – do you prefer posting at certain times or do you blog when the inspiration takes?

Creative Commons License photo credit: andyp uk

Thank You

0216Like any of the best innovations in life, social media doesn’t stand still.

Constantly evolving, always re-inventing itself to meet new challenges and overcome new detractors.

If you’re not careful, you can miss a lot of what’s going on. Like making new friends and acknowledging the fact, for example.

I’m guilty of that, I’m sorry to say – although in my defense, it’s not because I’m deliberately being a selfish jerk! Anyone that knows me would say I’m a reasonably nice guy (I hope, anyway!) and that I always try and show appreciation or support. Which makes me realize that I’ve neglected to thank people that deserve it – you.

Whether you follow me on?Twitter , or have me as a friend on Facebook, or subscribe to this blog you’re showing that, for whatever reason, you want to know me. Even if you just stop by here occasionally, you’re offering time from your day to see what I have to say – and I really appreciate that.

So, to anyone and everyone that has ever listened to anything I’ve said, Tweeted, written about or more and still keeps coming back for more –

Thank you.

I may not always reply, or get back to you as soon as I’d like to. But it doesn’t mean I’m not listening or reading. I truly appreciate your time and investment in anything I ever say. Here’s hoping I can keep making it worth your while.

Cheers!

Creative Commons License photo credit: Cia de Foto

Headway WordPress Theme and 12for12k Partnership

Regular readers of this blog know I’m a huge fan of the Headway premium WordPress theme. I use it here on this blog and on 12for12k, and think it’s the best WordPress theme around and perfect for coders and non-coders alike.

The father and son combination of?Grant and?Clay Griffiths, along with Michael Martine, have put an awesome piece of kit together for WordPress users. With its visual editor as well as custom coding, Headway is ideal for blogs, websites, membership sites and a whole lot more.

Now the best WordPress theme just got even better.

Thanks to the kind guys over at Headway, all 12for12k supporters can save 25% when buying the Headway theme. All you have to do to receive the discount is one of the following:

  • Be an active part of the 12for12k community.
  • Wear the special 12for12k avatar on Twitter (if you haven’t got one, email your Twitter username and picture to 12for12k).
  • Provide a copy of Paypal or ChipIn receipt of any donation made to previous 12for12k charities.

Then, when you’re about to buy the Headway theme, contact me using the Headway option on my contact box for the special 12for12k discount code. Simple. And with 50% of all sales going to the current 12for12k charity on whatever month you buy, the 25% saving you make and free updates for life, what better time to get your hands on the awesome Headway WordPress theme?

My sincere thanks to the guys over at Headway for this amazingly kind partnership.

  • Disclaimer. I?ve been impressed with the Headway premium WordPress theme from the start and it?s the only theme I?ve ever set an affiliate account up with. If you?re thinking of buying it and do so via any of my links, 50% of the affiliation revenue will be donated to the current 12for12k charity on your behalf.

Note: This blog no longer runs on the Headway framework. Instead, it’s a custom WordPress design by Lisa Kalandjian of SceneStealer Graphics.

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