Essential Social Media Connections For Your Blog (Day 6)

circuit board

Photo by WhatKnot

This is day 6th of the 31 Day Challenge To Optimize Your Blog With Social Media. Yesterday we spoke about measuring stats on your Facebook Page. Today we’ll start digging in laying down the social media cable in your blog.

The main goal with your blog is to be a platform for connection. Your readers connecting with you, connecting with each other, and connecting with your social media outposts. In terms of your social media sites, you want to keep two things in mind:

  1. Let folks connect with you on their terms - There’s no way to tell if your visitor is a YouTube fanatic, a Twitter fanatic or a Facebook fanatic. Let them self-identify by giving them all choices.
  2. Take away as many barriers as possible – Give them many choices in multiple places and make those choices actionable with one click. Don’t make them search for your org on Facebook if they were just on your site.

Essential Social Media Connections From Your Blog

The Sidebar

Listing social media sites in the sidebar is a common practice. Most blog themes make it easy to include those links with images. You can also create linked images with HTML.

sidebar widgets from headway

The Navigation Bar

Another option is to create sub pages within your navigation bar (similar to what I’ve created). Simply modify those navigation links so that they forward to your social media sites.

Above The Header

This an option that makes sense because it follows the “F” pattern people use when view web pages. Paddy Donnelly, a brilliant web designer created these icons that hang in the upper right-hand corner of his site:

iampaddy Essential Social Media Connections For Your Blog (Day 6)

The Footer

I’ve found that having social media links located “below the fold” in my footer saves space in the sidebar for other content. Because I have profiles on many social media sites, I put my top three social media sites (based on my strategy and where I get most of my referral traffic from) in my sidebar, and additional sites in my footer.

footer1 Essential Social Media Connections For Your Blog (Day 6)

Within Pages and Posts

Whenever you mention a social media site within a blog post, link to your profile. You should also be doing this in your About Page and other pages where people might expect to connect with you.

Don’t include links to social media on Pages that have a specific call to action, like a subscription page, ecommerce page or donation page. When people visit these pages, you don’t want them bouncing off to YouTube to watch your videos.

Essential Social Media Connections To Your Blog

It goes without saying that you want to link back to your blog from your various social media sites. But with a little creativity, you can increase the likelihood of people sticking around once they click through to your blog.

Custom Landing Pages

Make sure you display relevant content to visitors relevant by creating custom landing pages from your social media sites. In my case, when people click on the link in my Twitter profile, they are taken to a Twitter Recourse Superlist. While I may know nothing about a visitor from Twitter, I do know one thing: They use Twitter. My bounce rate on this page is very low because the first thing they see relates to Twitter.

Non-profits can create Twitter Lists of relevant users, information on a regular hashtag chats or helpful Twitter tips.

Using a Feedburner Widget

If you’ve got a blog, you’ve got a feed. And if you’ve got a feed, you probably use Feedburner. Here’s a simple trick that can increase click-though rates to your blog:

Feedburner gives you the ability to create a Headline Animator that displays your latest post in ticker-tape style. Copy this code into any social media site that will allow custom HTML in the profile (Facebook Pages, Flickr, Stumbleupon and Posterous…). You may not get RSS subscribers directly from Flickr or Stumbleupon, but you will get people visiting your blog, especially if they see a relevant post.

feedburner headline animator

Optimize Link Text

If you’re able to edit the link text for your blog on a social media site, optimize it with SEO keywords. For example, on LinkedIn, the link to my blog says: “Non-profit web marketing”:

linkedin anchor textHomework: Make sure you have an easy way for people on your blog to find your outposts, and for people on your outposts to stay longer once they visit your blog.

If you don’t want to miss out on the 31 Day Challenge To Optimize Your Blog With Social Media, please sign up here.

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  • That's a great idea - landing pages based on where somebody came from!
  • Thanks!
  • Some great stuff here John, however not too sure how to create the Headline Animator!!!
  • That's an app in FeedBurner. Do you use Feedburner?
  • Yes I use Feedburner and I've got the app (I think); where does the script go in the different sites?
  • It depends upon the site...
  • hot, Hot, HOT stuff my friend - I look forward to each post!
  • Thanks, Frank!
  • You're on a roll in 2010. Keep up the good stuff.
  • You're telling me I'm on a roll? Dude - coming from you, that is a huge compliment!
  • Coming from me? What do you mean?
  • Meaning that you're a smart dude who has a refined taste about what's quality and what's not.
  • I liked the landing page idea as well. Must do that. Also the connection icons above the header is a great idea. I will have to figure out how to do that in Thesis.
  • I know you can do that in Thesis - saw something in the forum about that months ago.
  • John,

    Thanks for sharing some great tips in this piece. Hadn't thought about creating a landing page specifically for people coming from Twitter via the bio section. And the headline animator is a pretty smart idea as well to help spread content visibility on sites like StumbleUpon.

    Guess I have some more tinkering to do. :)
  • Tinker away! You're a smart guy, I'm sure you can teach me a few things too.
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