New to DearBlogger? Welcome! You can find pretty much all the blogging advice here in video format on our YouTube Channel. Also FYI on DearBlogger.com we can now fix or create your blog for you. Thanks for stopping by!

Guitar Zero: Why 2000 Subscribers Are Waiting for You

My blog is growing slowly and I get inconsistent traffic.

It’s an issue me and Mr. Coffee hear most mornings.

If you started a blog and have been at it for 3-6 months the problem isn’t what to write about, it’s who you’re writing to. Lack of readers is the age-old problem but I’m going to bet you have original insight (I’ve been reading a lot of the club’s blogs lately) and you just shouldn’t have to wait for growth.

In this post, I’d like to show you a set of principles that helps me find more subscribers online. None of this is new or ingenious; however, lately, I’ve been using it to create a decent stream of new subscribers straight from social media.

Of course if you’re not doing this yet, you may find yourself in a palm-to-forehead moment or two.

Where are subscribers?

The goal of this post is to give you some confidence so you can tailor your social media efforts to build your audience. Of course, social media is a huge playing field, so let’s narrow down where exactly we will be looking these days:

  • Blogs
    I’m assuming the audience you want is already familiar with blogs and has their own favorite niche blogs already, of which you’d probably like to become one.
  • Facebook
    People naturally spend 30-45 minutes per morning trolling Facebook, so let’s look there for subscribers.
  • Google Plus
    Because Google Plus is new, it is viewed as unnecessary to the tons of people that just use Facebook to stay connected, but the thing we have to understand is this network is filled with more experts. These subscribers are particularly valuable if you can win them over ๐Ÿ™‚
  • Twitter
    Twitter is the hardest place to get noticed because of the noise. The Washington Post reported a while back that Twitter enjoyed 400 million chips per day which is 16.6 million per hour and over 200,000 per minute! I bet this number is way more today…

Given you’re already on these places and hopefully sharing content, I really hope you can use the strategies in this article because they should help increase conversions (take someone from a total rando to an eventual member of your club or team or army or whatever you call it). If you find them useful or have something to add (I often miss things), it would be great to hear from you with a quick comment.

Why subscribers are waiting for you

Social media is about connecting with people you’re into and consuming their content. The number of new users who’d like to learn from a blogger like you is always growing, so if you’re armed with the right strategy the issue really becomes not one of where and how, but how many. ๐Ÿ™‚

The slight problem is what works for you could be totally different than what works for me.

For that reason I’ve tried to tailor the advice below to be both powerful and generic; useful across industries.

Guitar Zero
My roommate back in college used to want to become a rock and roll star. He knew every 311 song and would bring drum sticks to the dining hall to impress people by drumming on empty trays.

But as an introvert (like me), the whole celebrity thing didn’t look like it was in his cards.

When I asked him why he never tried for gigs, he said he just didn’t want to compete with ridiculous guys running around on stage and break things.

Then he started making electronic beats.

Guess what? He had found his niche. He worked at it all through college and is now a well-known New York City DJ named One Love.

The key to finding fans is to play to your own strengths.

If you’re going to begin a web business or blog for an audience in today’s climate, you have zero chance copying. You would have had a chance as the second or third copycat but, now, for every big blogger there are 14 copycats and 100 more wannabes. You may have small gains but in the long-haul it really just won’t work.

On the other hand, by going niche-narrow about what you love and leveraging free tools to your advantage, anything is possible. Since taking this approach to Twitter, for example, I’ve been able to break the 2,000 threshold and find a consistent stream of new subscribers.

Here are a few more principles to guide you:

  • Pick one place to do your damage
    Swiss blogger Ashley Faulkes explained how to get 4,000 followers not too long ago. By choosing one platform to grow your following ensures you don’t stretch yourself too thin.
  • Share the right way
    Everything from when you post to the length of your post to little style things like using smilies, the right way can have an impact. If you’re just focusing on Facebook, for example, you can use the little “feeling excited” features or make sure you’re sharing images and not links with images to give yourself more control of how things appear, for example.
  • Let people know you’re there
    One thing you might forget is to just announce yourself. Whether it’s a link in your emails or a post to Facebook or the last little request in your YouTube creations, this can all add up.
  • Make it really personal
    Don’t listen to “branding experts” when they tell you to follow a certain blueprint. You have to make your profiles you-specific with lots of personality and a clear mission statement. Folks who really know you will appreciate the extra effort, and those who don’t will be able to get to know you.
  • Leverage that profile into more success
    Once you’ve broken through and established your presence, start to focus on 1-2 other platforms.

It’s especially important to make your mission statements known and repeat them often. Sure, you risk people hating you, but the folks who dig it will really connect.

Finding meaning in a noisy place

new-subscribers-twitter

As I said above I’ve had a lot of successful growth on Twitter lately. I’ve had the (quite modest) breakthrough of passing 2,000 follows. The coolest thing is more and more new followers are signing up to the email club right away and I think it has a big deal to do with my niche-narrow approach and consistent blogging content.

If your focus now is Twitter, here are some things that will help:

  1. Using images from the blog
    Given we’re looking at Twitter as the marketing arm of our blog, we want our followers to get used to our blog. The best way to do this is by incorporating the same images as those we use in the most-viewed pages of our blogs. In my case, I have an image from the homepage, and one from the About page. While it’s fun posting pics of you at some concert raging around, it’s more productive to let a new follower get to know your business.
  2. Displaying the right kinds of links
    A homepage link can get someone to your blog, but then what? You’re leaving the decisions up to them. It’s better to save them some time and link to your subscription page, or a page that shows them where they can sign up; somewhere with an opt-in box. You’d be smart to also put a Twitter link to some rich media you’ve created to show off a bit.
  3. Redistributing content for more exposure
    Finally, once these two really easy items are in place, you should start sharing ideas from your blog to Twitter. But here’s the catch: don’t just tweet. Instead, reference entire situations or events that people can sink their teeth into. From my blog to your Twitter (and more soon):

twitter-conversation

This blog has developed an allure on a couple things (see guest-posting) but as far as social media is concerned (and the ever-important email list), we’re a small, tight-knit bunch.

Things are changing, though, and who knows, maybe next time you check in we’ll have 5,000 followers?

Share your breakthrough social media moment with the community

I’m aware this information might not have been particularly new or riveting. I want to say that so you know I didn’t shrink and get stuck underneath a coffee mug for a few years or something.

If that’s the case, I’d like to challenge you to make this post exciting by sharing your biggest breakthrough social media moment in the comments. Lately, the comments have been pretty rowdy, so I’d bet a handful of folks will candidly let you know what they think of your moment or story.

I dare you; then I’ll do the same.

Share This Post

36 Responses to "Guitar Zero: Why 2000 Subscribers Are Waiting for You"

  1. Appreciate your advice Gregg – I am applying, and re-visiting your site. Tweets & instagram allows me to connect with others. Honoring one own rhythm is primary. So much advice, information & other valuable stuff out there – it takes time to incorporate it within a flow that simply makes productive sense.

    Reply
      1. While numbers are low at twitter (153), it seems to be the best flow. Instagram allows me to use video/voice & pics (my preference) – I also make rounds commenting on other blogs, Goodreads, etc. Not only to get my name/work out there, but also to support others in the same field of spiritual development.

        Reply
  2. Greg — I’ve loved every post you’ve written so far in the short time I’ve been following (though admittedly, I haven’t had time to catch up lately). This is the first one I read in my very small window of free time, and it really hit home. It’s extremely helpful knowing the do’s and don’t’s right when I’m switching to a new blog that is ALL ME on ONE platform. Thanks for the inspiration! I needed it.

    Reply
    1. Rach! Thx. Glad you could drop in for this one.

      Smallest of tips: try to make it ALL THEM. Could feel like less pressure on your. But I’m sure you got it.

      Reply
  3. Greg, as you said, it may not be ground breaking stuff, but it’s so easy to forget the basics. Be yourself, and engage with people. The amazing thing is that’s what makes it fun! I used to feel that blogging was a kind of lonely job, until I started connecting more with people on social media. Not just getting more people to connect, but actually having conversations and interactions. Now I’m finding my peeps! Not just “followers”. ๐Ÿ™‚

    Reply
    1. Word up! ๐Ÿ™‚ I’m glad you say peeps like me. You should check out Lisa’s comment below. Sounds like you’re both onto something great.

      Question – what do we do when our group of peeps becomes a party too big to manage?

      Reply
  4. I’ve found the best way to get followers on all social platforms is to just be human. People can spot a ‘link spammer’ a mile away, hell, most of my feeds are still just people ramming a useless, dry, pointless link down my neck so I delete them.

    A sense of humour, an interest, a spark, anything that makes you genuine and not there just for the followers works. It’s no different to a bar, walk in there and shout out something random and you get the same reaction of shaking heads and mutterings under the breath… Tell a story, show a personality and get to know someone and they might just ask what you do…. Dont tell them, let them find out – and then help them. For nothing.

    And if anyone calls themself a ‘guru’ run a mile.

    Reply
    1. Yup, spammers are what’s going to bring the downfall to so many things on the Internet.

      Spammers on social media is something I can’t stand so far and a hatred for them in me is growing.

      – Sam

      Reply
      1. Jim – Amazing addition. I’m betting you just made this chat rank better in Search (via my comment SEO theory). Thx for that ๐Ÿ™‚ Folks should read this http://thesaurus.com/browse/guru so you don’t have to run a marathon.

        Samuel – Are you getting a ridiculous amount of spammers? Any way I/we can help?

        Reply
  5. Like one of the other posters above, I’ve decided to concentrate on my personal FB page rather than my blog page where FB seems to like to punish you for not paying to promote a post. Most fan page “likers” are just not seeing one’s posts regularly. One other issue is that Klout will only allow you to link one FB page to your klout profile. Some people think Klout is useless, but potential advertisers in my niche (travel) seem to want to know one’s Klout score. What’s your position on Klout? Do you pay to promote your blog page on FB?

    Reply
    1. Hey Suzanne. Yeah Jeri and Dara had really similar issues with Facebook pages not getting much traction. Fan pages were awesome when they began in late 2007, but the volume of pages out there combined with people getting more weary of like requests is almost insurmountable. Displaying a Like box with minimal (really anything under 1000) likes is detrimental to a blog. So, the solutions are:

      1- Promote
      2- Run a contest with a product readers find valuable
      3- Boycot pages

      I’ve done #2 and it’s really fun. Check out this post, it’s an older one but has some useful info and was sending a page of mine like 20 likes a day: http://www.honestcollege.com/2011/12/our-holiday-giveaway-begins.html

      On Klout. I’ve never bothered with advertisers. Are they offering deals worth investing time/money in klout score? I checked my score once like 2 years ago and was like umm, cya later. I don’t pay to promote either, though folks like Social Triggers have it figured out to get more subscribers, which equals sales, revenue, and probably covers the costs. So it’s not like promotion is bad. I also had a roommate of mine sink $2,000 via credit card into it to get about 400 likes, many of which faded off in a few months. Total waste. What DOES annoy me about Promote a Page is how it’s directed at all users. It’s really only appropriate for a business to use. Otherwise you’re better guest posting, using a contest, or just boycotting all together ๐Ÿ™‚

      Hope this helps.

      Reply
  6. My FB page is completely dead, but, I use it to make personal contacts, I’ve already made a few AWESOME connections just right in my niche, I would never be able to make them on Twitter for sure. Twitter followers are growing slowly, but consistently without any effort, so it is good and I am happy with it.

    Reply
  7. I get frustrated with my FB page. With the new algorithm changes, the average number of views is way down on any given status. My main goal is not spend too much time chasing the illusive social media beat and just work more on being myself and sharing what I like. It also depends on if the blogger is building a community or just looking for traffic. I personally avoid most blogs that post five days a week. It’s just too much and I want to interact with the blogger as well as their content.

    Reply
  8. I have a Facebook page for my blog (Conversations with a Gender Therapist) and I have it linked with my “professional” Facebook page, Dara Hoffman-Fox, LPC. I’ve noticed that I get WAY more interaction from my Dara page than the business page for CWAGT. My readers enjoy engaging with me more as “me” it seems, which is good feedback to know! My next plan is to create YouTube videos ๐Ÿ™‚

    Reply
    1. Yeah, if you can command the respect of a business and keep the personal flavor, you’re in for lots of engagement.

      Here’s my pre-order for those vids!

      Reply
  9. Hi Greg

    It’s a learning curve isn’t it? I just passed the 2000,mark for twitter followers myself. I think it’s interacting in an honest way as much as possible. I retweet followers content that’s interesting and while I do tweet about my books,I try not to make unending buy my book tweets!

    Reply
  10. I started using Twitter to see if it would help bring traffic to my blog, but (totally unexpectedly) I ended up liking it for it’s own sake. It’s a great place to get tips and ‘meet’ like minded people!

    Reply
  11. I agree with your assessment of Twitter. I am working on it. I am getting better at it. Like anything, it does take time. Part of my problem is I am pretty careful who I add and why. It does slow done the momentum a bit. ๐Ÿ™‚

    Reply
  12. After blogging consistently for about three years I have learned not to rely on social media much. I can safely say that my readership has grown with very little direct help from social media. The best advice I received was post new information as often as possible. It will help!

    Reply
  13. Already have 2,000 followers. It’s not how many followers you have it’s what followers. Frequently happens that famous people start following me. Naturally I follow them back.

    Twitter works very well for me not only for promoting my blog but whatever message I want to get across.

    Reply
  14. Great post Greg!

    The best way to build a twitter following, and one that helps your blog is by interacting with people. I tried the whole just putting links to my blog posts in tweets and it doesn’t really work. But if you go on there and be social with people and discuss things, and try and solve peoples problems it works. Linking to posts on your blog that are relevant and will help solve someones question works. I am just getting started with blogging and twitter, So there isn’t much momentum yet, but there will be =)

    Reply
    1. Thanks Ryley! Sounds like you’re way ahead of your beginner counterparts. Use it to microblog too – good way of appearing big when you’re just getting going.

      Reply

Post Comment