How To Make Money From Blogging

How To Make Money From Blogging
There is money from blogging and it only requires hard work and patience. Over the past several years, people have discovered the potential of blogging in making money. Some people have even become a full-time blogger from being a full-time office worker. You can see this evident in many popular blogs such as ProBlogger and Chris Brogan’s blog

But how is it possible to earn profit from blogs? How do you turn this tiny corner in the World Wide Web into a money-making asset?  There are certainly dozens of ways on how to earn money from blogging and these are all over the internet. Here are three examples that you can apply to your blog. 

Sell Your Ads Space 
How To Make Money From Blogging Letting others put their advertisements in your blog is considered as the most basic of the money-making ways in the internet. All you need to do is to contact people who might want to put some ads in your blog and let them have it. You can try Google’s AdSense to get the feel of this process. On the other hand, in order to get this process to be successful, you need to have enough number of traffic because you earn your commissions through ad clicks and views.  

Do Content Marketing 
How To Make Money From Blogging Let us say, you are a chef and you are obsessed in making recipe videos and culinary tutorials. One tactic which you can use to make money from blogging is through content marketing. The rule is simple; you make content and you sell it. For example, you create this compilation of summer recipes. What you can do is to use a sample or “trial” video and somewhat mention your summer recipe compilation in the video. Let’s say your readers can get it for only $1.99 or they just subscribe and they get it for free. You win, either way. It is either they avail it and you get profit or they subscribe and you get loyal visitors which are considered as traffic.
 
 
Engage in Affiliate Marketing
How To Make Money From Blogging
 If you do not have a product to sell, then sell other people’s products. This way you will earn commissions on products you didn’t spend even a cent on. You only need to find a blog or website that offers their products and is under an affiliate program which lets people get commissions through selling their products or services. Usually, you only need to register in those specific blogs or websites to be an affiliate and your goal is to sell the product and you get commissions. Basically, you put the product link on your blog to get your visitors to that product’s page. This is more like giving referrals to that certain product which makes money from blogging quite faster, easier and care-free. Some affiliate programs even provide 50 percent commissions, so you might want to check this out. 

There are many other ways on monetizing your blog. The others are for those who are in the “expert” level. But for newbies, these are, most probably, the easiest and the most basic ways on making money from blogging.

New Bloggers: Here Are 10 Tips Before You Start Blogging

10 Tips Before You Start Blogging
When you’re starting out, you can’t be expected to know everything. There are loads of tips you could read up on, but how do you know which ones to read first? Here are 10 tips you probably don’t know yet, but that you should learn now.

1. Blogging is Writing

The title says it all. Blogs require content. You have to write that content – it won’t write itself.

Running a blog might be a bit of fun, it might not be something you take too seriously – you just do it when you feel like it. That’s not necessarily a problem – it’s best if you enjoy blogging.

But don’t lose sight of the basic premise: it’s all about writing. If writing a lot of content doesn’t appeal to you, perhaps blogging isn’t right for you.

If you’re not sure, then that’s OK – you could always have a go. Don’t knock it ’til you’ve tried it. Just remember: blogging is writing.

2. You Need to Have a Topic

If you want people to read your blog, it’s important to have something to tie your posts together. Personal blogs tend not to fall into this category – there’s a wide range of topics on the one blog, tied together only by the author. This is fine if you’re not bothered whether anyone reads what you have to say.
10 Tips Before You Start BloggingThe best way to tie your posts together is to choose a topic for your blog. This allows casual readers to quickly determine if your blog will be of interest to them; it also allows people to find your blog much more easily if they’re interested in the subject matter. Another benefit is that you’ll find it easier to come up with new posts, as you’ll have set the boundaries for what is and isn’t going to be covered on your blog. (With a very narrow niche though, you may find it difficult to come up with any content at all.)

If you don’t choose a topic, your blog might be fun, but it’ll be a lot harder to build up your readership.

3. You Need to Have an Opinion

Most topics will include a number of areas where there are people on both sides of the proverbial fence. Perhaps your topic involves several groups of people, each with their own distinct views and beliefs.

For your posts to have personality, you need to be able to go beyond reporting the basics of your topic, and start sharing what you think about it.

Being wishy-washy and always seeing everything from both sides might help to keep the peace, but ultimately it makes your blog a bit boring. Don’t be afraid of having an opinion.

4. It’s Better To Plan Ahead Than Jump Right In

Having a topic is important. Once you have a topic, it’s time to kick off with some planning. Start thinking about which areas of your topic you might like to cover on your blog. Write just the ideas for now.

For instance, a blog about music might cover a range of genres (you can list the genres now); it might focus on reviews (will you be reviewing CDs? music videos? unsigned artists? live shows?); it might include posts on music composition (how do you write music? what software is worth using? what techniques can you try?). With a little time and effort, you should find that most topics will branch out in a number of directions.

With the topic areas written down, you can move onto listing out some potential topic ideas. Again, keep it simple – just write some potential post titles for now. Don’t write the content of the posts yet.

This is something you’ll do as you develop your blog and start publishing content, so the first planning session will not be a one-off. Keep planning new posts and you’ll always have a stock of ideas ready to transform into completed posts.

The goal is to determine how much you’ll have to write about in the short-term and also in the mid to long-term. Plus, it’s worth deciding at this stage if the topic still sounds appealing now that you’ve broken it down. You might like the idea of a music reviews blog, for instance, but will you actually get down and write the posts?

There’s also a big plus in planning the order you might start publishing your first posts. Jumping into the middle of your topic might not be the best way to start a blog. Do you always have to start from the beginning? Perhaps not, but you need to give readers a starting point, and a sense of continuity from one post to the next. Publishing any old stuff as you think of it might generate some good ideas, but it’ll be disjointed and harder to follow.

5. You Can Have a Trial Run Before You Tell Anyone

This could be done as part of your planning exercise. Basically, you should give your blog a trial run, in private, to allow you to figure out if it’ll work in practice. This is especially important if it’s your first blog, but is equally worthwhile if you’re starting a blog on a topic you’ve not done before.

The benefit of having a trial run is that if it doesn’t work out, nobody’s any the wiser. And if it does work out, you’ll have a few posts on the blog before you go and spread the word.

It doesn’t look good if you constantly start new blogs and ditch them after the first couple of posts – especially if you’ve spent time (and money) on a domain name, hosting, a custom design, and a big launch promotion.

You’re getting first-hand experience with this point. I’ve announced a few blogs well before they were ready to be shared, and most of them have since closed. I love announcing new blogs, and finding great new domain names. But I don’t want to announce blogs that are going to close within a month. I mean, what’s the point?

6. People Don’t Just Show Up

So you’ve found a great topic for your blog, and you’ve started publishing posts. So where are all the readers? Well, you’ve got to tell people about your blog before they’ll start reading it.

You can use social media, you can reach out to people you know outside the web, you can pay for advertising, you can comment on other blogs, you can write guest posts for other blogs… there are lots of ways to promote your blog. But it takes time to see results.

It’s worth doing some promotion every day if you can – you don’t have to do a lot every day, but a little promotion adds up over time.

Above all, be patient. Don’t give up in the first six months of a blog’s existence. Hopefully within that timeframe you’ll have started to grab a few readers who stop by and leave a comment on the posts they enjoy. The tricky part is keeping lots of people interested for a long time…

7. People Will Tell You What They Think

If you’ve got an opinion, expect that not everyone will agree with you. That’s fine – a bit of discussion is great! However, be prepared for readers to tell you what they think. Depending on the nature of your audience and the popularity of your blog, sometimes the comments section can get quite heated.

This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but it’s worth remembering that if you put something online, you’re not talking to yourself. Even if nobody reads your blog today, what’s to say they won’t see it in a few months from now?

8. Don’t Buy Products Too Quickly

Some people sell stuff. Some products might help you, some might not. Whether a product is fresh on the market or if it’s being used by thousands of happy customers, it may or may not work for you. The only way to find out is to try it.

The point here is that until you get into the swing of blogging (and until you know you’re going to stick at it!), don’t go crazy buying products that might help you in some way. There will be products that you could buy that will help you, but I wouldn’t recommend it when you’re starting out as a blogger. Find your own way first.

I find that if I buy something, it’s better to work with it for a week or two before buying anything else. If you buy too many things too close together, you might not actually use them all as well as you could.

9. Don’t Join Every Community

With numerous social media sites and forums, not to mention other blogs to read and comment on, it’s unrealistic to expect anyone to try and keep up with them all. So while a lot of bloggers will tell you to get out there and network with other bloggers, you should be careful not to go networking-crazy and risk over-extending yourself.

By all means find a few sites that you enjoy using and that give good results – or that provide one of the two. As with buying products, don’t join too many sites all at once. Try a few, and don’t keep using the sites that aren’t really working out for you. We can’t be on every site. It’s vital that you use your time carefully.

10. Not All Blogging Tips Apply to You

I feel I should include this here as a little anecdote, as a little criticism towards “blogs about blogging” – including this one! You may see a lot of tips and tricks for bloggers, and at first it can seem like a lot of information to take in. There’s also a neverending stream of tips that claim to improve your blog in a variety of ways.

I’m here to tell you now that not every tip will apply to you. Some of them, like “write great content”, aren’t the type of suggestions you should ignore. But if you don’t follow every tip, you won’t fail as a blogger.

I think it’s great to read tips and tricks and see what works for others – maybe you could try some of those for yourself. They might work for you. However, they might not work at all. It’s like a friend saying you should listen to 10 new albums. By all means listen to them all, but if you don’t like them, don’t buy them! And if you find that certain blogging tips aren’t working out for you, don’t just do them anyway because someone said you should.

Knowing which tips work for you is half the fun. Don’t be afraid to try new things – but don’t be afraid to reject them!

Discussion

Are you a new blogger? Has any of this helped you? If you’re a long-term blogger, how many of these do you wish you’d known from day 1? 

How Remove Blogger Navigation Bar From Blogger

Whenever you use any  blogger template they have a blogger navigation bar which look’s  very unprofessional  as it hangs on top of every page.Using this trick you can remove the navigation bar from any blogger template.For removing the navigation bar we will tweak the HTML of your template (don’t worry its easy)

Here is the step by step Tutorial for Trick To Remove Blogger Navigation Bar From Blogger
  1. Sign in into blogger and click on Design
  2. Now click on Edit Html (Here you will see the html code of your template)
  3. Tick the checkbox Expand Widget Templates (On top-right side of your template)
  4. Now search of this code ]]></b:skin> in your template
  5. Just before ]]></b:skin> add this code
#navbar-iframe {
height:0px;
visibility:hidden;
display:none
}
    6. Now save your template by clicking on Save Template button
    7. Open your blog and see how good your template looks without navigation bar

Tables – HTML Basics and Tutorial

In this article, we shall learn how to create tables in our Blog posts or as a part of our web design layout. This guide covers the usual HTML attributes and styles that can be applied to tables. Tables add a different dimension to displaying your contents and whether you have a football match fixture, menu, marks Sheet,  song, price or grocery lists, putting them in a table format is certainly neater.

Most of us would have either used or come across tables that display data or information. If you have used word processor or spreadsheet softwares, you should be familiar with these terms, which apply as well to our discussion here:-

“row” - a horizontal line of units
“column” - a vertical line of units
“cell” - each unit or data compartment enclosed by the borders

Let us look at some examples to illustrate how the HTML table codes work and where you can place them.

Placement of the Table Code
To create a table in a Blog post, simply type in the HTML codes (mentioned below) when you are writing your post. See that you are in “Edit HTML” mode rather than “Compose” mode when the code is inserted.


If you want the table to be displayed in your sidebar or elsewhere in your template, go to Design> Page Elements -> Add a Gadget and select “HTML/JavaScript” to paste the code.

Basic Table

Name : Thomas
Marks: 80

<table width="200" border="1" cellspacing="2" cellpadding="2"><tbody>
<tr>
<td>Name :</td>
<td>Thomas</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MArks:</td>
<td>80</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

Note:

1. It should begin with a <table> tag and end with a closing </table> tag.

2. We have specified the border as 1px. You can set it to “0” to have no visible border or set it to any other value.

3. Try to specify a width at all times. This improves the speed of page loads since the browser would be able to set aside the space required for the table. When you view your template source code, the width allocated for your Blog posts should be found under #main or #main-wrapper and your table width will have to be less than that. If you do not set a width, the table will by default take up the full width.

4. The cellpadding is the amount of white space between the content and the borders. If there is no cellpadding, you will find the text very close to the border.

5. Cellspacing is used to define the distance between each cell.

6. Every row starts with a <tr> tag and ends with a </tr> tag. In this example, we have 2 rows, the portion colored blue being the first row, and the portion colored red being the second row.

7. Within every row, we have the contents governed by the <td> (table data) tags. You would notice that in the first row, the first data cell “Height:” begins with <td> and ends with </td>. Every data cell will have to be enclosed within such tags.

8. The contents in each data cell need not be plain text. You can insert pictures, images, links, videos, etc. For instance, we could replace “Height:” with a picture code that looks like this “<img src="Image URL" />” to insert a picture that we have uploaded onto a photo server. For more on the links and image codes to insert, you may refer to our guide at Hyperlinks and Image Links.

Text Formatting

You may want to change the text font face, font-size or color and make the text bold or italic. You can even align the text either to the left, center or right of the cell. We'll suggest a method that is easy for all of us to adopt, without having to learn complicated style codes. Create a new draft post. Choose “Edit HTML” mode and paste the above table code. Now, view the post under “Compose” mode. Using the rich-text editor, change the font, color and alignment to whatever you like. All the style codes will be automatically inserted and what-you-see-is-what-you-get.

If you want the table in your sidebar, do the same, create the table in a draft post and use the rich-text editor to insert the style codes for you. When you are done, click back to “Edit HTML” mode and copy the entire table code. Under Template -> Page Elements -> Add a Page Element -> HTML/JavaScript, paste this code (with all the style definitions) and save.

Table with Header

S/No. Name Marks
1. Thomas 95
2. Aladin 80
3. Tin Tin 97

The code for the above table is this:-

<table border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" width="200"><tbody>
<tr>
<th>S/No.</th>
<th>Name</th>
<th>Marks</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>1.</td>
<td>Thomas</td>
<td>95</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>2.</td>
<td>Aladin</td>
<td>80</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>3.</td>
<td>Tin Tin</td>
<td>97</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

Note:

1. The <th> tags are used to mark the content as headers and such text will be bold by default to distinguish them from the other contents. We intentionally included more rows and columns to let you see how you can insert more rows using the <tr> tags and more data cells using the <td> tags.

Row Span and Column Span

Sometimes, you may want to merge certain cells, such that the cell spans multiple rows or columns like this:-
Menu
Starters Salad $1.00
Soup $2.00
Main Fish $3.00
Chicken $4.00
Lamb $5.00

The code for the above table is this:-

<table border="1" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="300"><tbody>
<tr>
<td colspan="3">Menu</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="2">Starters</td>
<td>Salad</td>
<td>$1.00</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Soup</td>
<td>$2.00</td>
</tr>>
<tr>
<td rowspan="3">Main</td>
<td>Fish</td>
<td>$3.00</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Chicken</td>
<td>$4.00</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Lamb</td>
<td>$5.00</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

Note:



1. For the top row, we merged 3 columns and named it “Menu”. In the <td> tag, we have therefore inserted a colspan="3" to indicate that the word spans 3 columns.



2. In the left column, we wanted the word “Starters” to span 2 rows, and have inserted rowspan="2" into the <td> tag.



3. Similarly, to have the word “Main” span 3 rows, we inserted rowspan="3" into the <td> tag.



Border Color, Background Color, Background Images


Let us now insert some colors into our table code.
Music Videos
Games

<table border="1" bordercolor="#ff3366" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="200"> <tbody>
<tr>
<td bgcolor="#33ffcc">Music</td>
<td background="http://www.blogpulp.com/imagehost/images/381245101.jpg">Videos</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td bgcolor="#ff66cc">Games</td>
<td><img src="http://www.blogpulp.com/imagehost/images/236728310.jpg" /></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
Note:

1. We have added a bordercolor to the table. Take a look at our Hexadecimal HTML Color Codes article for more color choices and the codes to use.

2. To add a background color to a cell, insert the bgcolor definitions.

3. Should you like, you can have a background image instead of color as we have done in the above “Videos” cell. Upload the image onto a free server and insert the relevant URL of that image.

4. In the bottom right cell, we have inserted an image rather than text, to show you how an image can be inserted into a table.

Alternative Method

We end this part of our introductory article on HTML table codes with an alternative method to insert tables into Blog posts. If you have a word processor - MS Word, OpenOffice writer, etc. - you can create a number in the processor. Format it, enter your text and when it is done, block copy the entire table. Go to your New Post and under “Compose” mode, paste the table.

When you view the post in “Edit HTML” mode, you can see the table code similar to what we have discussed above. While this method of inserting a table is easy for the layman, the final code may be cluttered with other styles and definitions that are brought over from the word processor. If you'd like, create a simple table using your word processor but use the Blogger text editor to format the fonts, colors and alignment. To insert background colors and images, it is still advisable to follow the above guide.
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