It's "ASK ARLEE" day at TOSSING IT OUT, but I was given one question that seemed better addressed at the A to Z Blog. Since the question primarily concerns the WordPress blogging platform which I am not too familiar with, I turned to one of my A to Z Ambassadors who blogs at WordPress. In this post Judy from Raising the Curtain will address the topic of following blogs.
Let's Be Friends
The start of the Challenge is just around
the corner and you’re ready. Your posts are prepared or well under control and
you can’t wait to start the interaction.
You start scoping out a few of the blogs in the Challenge sign up list,
get excited when you find a few quality ones and decide to follow them so you
can keep up with their Challenge posts.
But hang on, these blogs are on a different blogging platform to your
own and despite searching high and low on the site you can’t locate an easy
follow mechanism. So you leave feeling slightly dejected, promising faithfully
to come back manually to the blog… and you never do.
Sounds familiar?
One of the cornerstones of the Challenge is
interaction and you want to make it easy for your readers to follow you, no
matter on what platform they blog. Don’t let that follow slip through your
fingers, especially after you have done the hard part with quality content.
Following Blogger to Blogger is easy
through Google Friends Connect and the internal blogger follow mechanism.
Following WordPress to WordPress is also easy through the internal WordPress
follow button.
But what about following WordPress to
Blogger or Blogger to WordPress?
Here’s a few suggestionsthat might help you
capture that inter-platform follow.
For Blogger Users:
1.
Make sure you have a prominent
RSS feed subscription feed button. WordPress users can import your blog’s URL
into their WordPress reader.
2.
Even through you may not like
to receive blog posts by email, others might. It’s my preferred blog capturing
mechanism and a lot of the time blogs don’t have an email subscription
capability. You might want to consider adding that capability.
3. As Google Friends Connect can no longer be accessed by WordPress.com
users consider linking your blog to one or more alternative follow platforms,
such as Networked Blogs (http://www.networkedblogs.com)
or Linky Followers (http://www.linkyfollowers.com/login/default.aspx).
Each of these sites acts as an intermediary between blogs and their followers,
a sort of blog clearing house. Networked blogs has a Facebook interface and can
also be linked to your blog’s Facebook page if you have one. If you decide to
use one of these, make sure the platform’s follow badge is placed in a
prominent position on your blog.
4. An alternative to Google Friends Connect is Google +. If you have a
Google + blog page or a personal page, make sure your Google + follow badges
are placed on a prominent position on your blog and that your blog posts are
posted to your Google + page.
For WordPress Users:
1.
All of the above applies to you
too, except for Google Friends Connect which has now been discontinued and in
any event the script was not permitted on WordPress.com.
2.
Make sure that you have the
grey WordPress Follow Me button option turned on. It will allow readers to follow
you through an email subscription no matter what page of your blog they are on.
Mine appears at the bottom right of the screen and jumps around with each page.
The Challenge is a great opportunity to
break out of the confines of your blogging platform and invite other bloggers
into your world. You never know, they might even stay for dinner the
follow.
Good luck to all the Challenge participants
and may you all have a fulfilling and followsome April!
Judy
Thank you, Judy! Please be sure to stop by Judy's blog to visit, comment, and by all means follow.
Are there any other follow methods that you might suggest?
This post entered by Arlee Bird