Friday, 5 December 2014

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen

Fun and Random

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

Early last year, artist Sonja Hinrichsen (previously) and some 60 volunteers wearing snowshoes trekked out onto the frozen Catamount Lake in Colorado to trample miles of swirling and twisting patterns into the deep snow. Titled Snow Drawings at Catamount Lake, the work was a continuation of her community-based snow drawing projects that bring together local volunteers to transform snowy landscapes into temporary artworks based on parameters provided by Hinrichsen. From her statement about the project:

It is important to me that participants experience the elements of nature while they help me transform their own familiar snow landscape into a piece of art. I hope that the aerial photographs that I take right after completion of each piece can demonstrate also to a larger audience how the landscape is transformed into a piece of art through a system of designs. This changes our perception of the landscape and accentuates the beauty and magic of the natural environment, and thus inspires awe and appreciation for art as well as for nature. I deem this important – especially as modern society becomes increasingly disconnected from the natural world.

Hinrichsen most recently completed a snow drawing project that traced the original flow of the Yampa River in Routt County, Colorado and has upcoming projects scheduled in Illinois and the French Alps.

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

An Expansive Swirling Snow Drawing Atop a Frozen Lake by Sonja Hinrichsen snow land art lakes Colorado

 
#funandrandom 
 » see original post http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/colossal/~3/tj5czbVVlA8/

How to Promote Your Blog Without Letting The Rest of Your Blogging Slide

Blogging with purpose

original post »

Recently I shared the stories of how my two blogs grew. One (ProBlogger) had a ‘tipping point’ early on which grew traffic almost overnight and the other (Digital Photography School) had slow but steady growth over several years with no real tipping point.

There were some great comments on that post including this one from Steve:

I have seen a recent increase in traffic, but it didn’t happen by accident. I spent a good deal of time promoting my blog in various ways. I suspect your increases resulted from similar efforts.

I ran an experiment to see what would happen if I made a concerted effort to promote my blog. My readership increased, which is extremely gratifying. But it came at a cost. My marketing diverted time away from producing high quality content.

I want a lot of readers, and I want them to see my best work. I have yet to figure out how to do the marketing and still have enough time to produce my best content. Do you have any thoughts on this?

I wanted to publish Steve’s comment for a few reasons.

Firstly – I think a lot of us could learn from Steve’s observation that growing traffic to a site almost always is the result of time and effort spent intentionally trying to grow your blog.

I don’t know how Steve went about growing his traffic but there are a couple of ways I’ve seen bloggers work hard at doing it:

1. prolific networking – we’ve all seen bloggers do this. They are on every Twitter chat, commenting on many blogs, attending meetups and events, participating in forums and Facebook groups, emailing other bloggers and generally putting themselves out there many times every single day. The result is that they seem to be everywhere and are on the radar of everyone.

This approach takes MASSIVE effort!

2. guest posting – I can think of numerous bloggers (I’ll share one example later in this post) who have used strategic guest posting to grow their profile and traffic. Those who do it best write amazingly helpful content and usually appear on multiple blogs. They usually also pay a heap of attention to the comments sections on those guest posts (answering every single comment left) and social media.

Another approach that probably fits into this guest posting approach are those who put themselves out there constantly to be interviewed or to interview others. Also in this category are those who put themselves out there in speaking at events.

This approach takes a MASSIVE effort!

But it Doesn’t Stop There

The above two strategies are not the only two that can be used to grow traffic to a blog (and they are not mutually exclusive – many do both) but I think you’ll agree that they illustrate this idea that growing traffic is not a passive thing – it takes significant work.

But it doesn’t stop there… and this is the second reason I love Steve’s comment.

To grow a successful and well read blog takes a lot more than just putting yourself out there to promote your blog prolifically.

As Steve observes – it also takes time to create high quality content for your own blog.

wk1-js3_7866-border

This is where the juggle begins because as we all know, creating great content for your blog on a regular basis takes a MASSIVE effort!

Of course the work doesn’t stop at the creation of content, there’s also serving those readers who come as a result of your promotion who are reading that content.

Many of the most successful bloggers that I’ve seen rise to prominence over the past few years also have an incredible focus upon building community with and serving the readers that they currently have.

They respond to comments on blog posts, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, email etc.

This takes a MASSIVE effort!

Throw into the mix the challenge of monetising your blog, the technical challenges keeping a blog up and running can throw at you, paying attention to your blog design and the challenges of having a family, ‘real’ job, social life and staying healthy and you can see why many bloggers feel quite overwhelmed and disillusioned with blogging!

“Do you have any thoughts on this?”

Steve finished his comment with a question… one that many of us ask. What’s the answer to this massive tension that we all face?

To grow our blog’s traffic takes us away from creating content. To focus upon one thing means a ‘cost’ in another area.

I don’t have THE answer to this question but as I responded to Steve’s comment a couple of thoughts came to mind.

Firstly – Pay Attention to the Tension

It is very easy to get out of balance. Over the years I see bloggers often falling into one of two camps.

1. Focus Upon Content at the Expense of Promotion

This sometimes comes as a result of feeling too shy to put yourself out there but can also be the result of a ‘build it and they will come’ mindset and a belief that great content will attract readers.

This is a half truth.

Great content does help to attract and retain readers – but it’s a lot easier to do that if you’re ‘out there’ promoting that content in some way. This is especially true when you’re just starting out.

As your blog gets older and you do have an established readership you’ll find that they do share great content for you – but in the early days it’s you that needs to do that work!

2. Focus Upon Promotion at the Expense of Content

I’ve seen a number of bloggers lately who are ‘everywhere’ and doing an amazing job of networking, growing their profile and just generally being a fantastic contribution to their niche on social media.

The problem for them is that they do this at the expense of building their own blog. There comes a time where if you want to build a business around your blog that you need to get people engaged in what you do on your blog.

If you’re not paying attention to creating great content there and engaging the readers who come – much of your promotional effort will be wasted.

Pay attention to the tension – spot when you’re getting out of balance and adjust your approach as you do. It’s really important!

Secondly – Try a Promotional Burst Approach

It strikes me that some of the bloggers that come to mind who used guest posting to grow their blogs a few years back didn’t use the strategy indefinitely.

One of the bloggers who I marvelled at with regards to how he built his audience was Leo Babauta from Zen Habits.

Leo seemed to burst onto the blogging scene – seemingly from nowhere – back in 2006-2007. I don’t remember the first time that I came across him but I’m pretty sure it would have been in a guest post on someone else’s blog because Leo was prolific as a guest poster.

Leo would have these bursts of guest posting over a few weeks. It was almost as if every day over these weeks he’d be on a different blog (including here on ProBlogger). The result of the accumulation of all these posts must have been great traffic back to his blog.

The thing was that these bursts seemed to have quite inentional starts and ends to them. He’d be published everywhere (including publishing posts on his own blog) for a few weeks and then he’d pull right back and just focus upon his own blog.

I remember emailing him at one stage when I was going on holiday to see if he’d be interested in writing something for ProBlogger and he said no because he was just focusing upon writing for his own blog at that time. A few months later he was open to writing a guest post again.

I’ve never talked to Leo about this strategy but it strikes me that he must have worked really hard for a month or two before his burst of guest posting to either produce all those guest posts or have a backlog of posts to publish on his own blog and then he must have switched into ‘promotion mode’ and let it all loose.

The key though was that it was for a defined period before he got back to serving the readers he’d attracted.

I saw him do these bursts of promotion several times over a couple of years in which he built himself an amazing audience and real momentum. At this point he didn’t need to guest post so much (if at all) but his established audience began to promote him through word of mouth.

My Final Advice for Steve

There are a couple of things that I think we as bloggers always need to pay attention to – these being publishing regular high quality content on our blogs and looking after the readers we already have (community).

These activities are like a baseline. Take the focus off these at any point and your blog is likely to suffer fairly quickly.

Promoting a blog is something you should also have some baseline activities and rhythm around. For example sharing new content to social media (whether through automation or manually doing it) is good practice.

However I do think there are times where it’s probably well worth having a burst of concerted promotional effort to grow your blog.

Whether it be through guest posting, reaching out to mainstream media, attending/speaking at events or even paying for advertising – a burst of intentional promotional activity for a defined period can have some real benefits.

Giving it a ‘burst’ means that you’re able to plan for it and hopefully the baseline activities don’t suffer too much. Also by giving it a burst you can potentially get that ‘she’s everywhere’ effect that gets on people’s radar.

What’s Your Advice to Steve?

I’d LOVE to hear your advice for Steve on how to keep this balance between promotional activity and paying attention to the rest of your blogging right.

Over to you!

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

How to Promote Your Blog Without Letting The Rest of Your Blogging Slide

Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

How to Promote Your Blog Without Letting The Rest of Your Blogging Slide
 #bloggingtips 

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia

Fun and Random

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

Thread Paintings: Densely Embroidered Portraits by Cayce Zavaglia portraits photorealism embroidery

When scouring through the minute details of artist Cayce Zavaglia’s embroidered portraits (previously), it’s difficult imagine each work is scarecely larger than 8″ x 10″. Her process, which she refers to as both “thread painting” and “renegade embroidery,” begins with a photoshoot of each subject, namely friends, family, and fellow artists. Roughly 100-150 photos are winnowed down to a single selection which she then begins to embroider with one-ply embroidery thread on Belgian linen. She shares via her artist statement:

Over the years, I have developed a sewing technique that allows me to blend colors and establish tonalities that resemble the techniques used in classical oil painting. The direction in which the threads are sewn mimic the way brush marks are layered within a painting which, in turn, allows for the allusion of depth, volume, and form. My stitching methodology borders on the obsessive, but ultimately allows me to visually evoke painterly renditions of flesh, hair, and cloth.

Zavaglia is also interested with the backs of her portraits, a tangled mesh of thread and knots resembling a more abstract version of the exacting portrait on the reverse. In a return to her roots as a painter, she creates gouache and large format acrylic paintings of the backsides, effectively creating a painting of an emboirdery of a photograph. Included here are several works from the last two years including works that will be on view at Art Miami this December through Lyons Wier Gallery. (via Booooooom)

 
#funandrandom 
 » see original post http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/colossal/~3/K76jIiUQNPc/

Thursday, 4 December 2014

Monogram Cats Paw Nebula in Scorpius space picture Table Lamp

Featured Product!

A gorgeous design. Click to customize and personalize. Maybe you'd like to see your name or initials on it?


tagged with: monogram initials, star galaxies, deep space astronomy, inspirational, ctspwneb, star forming regions, scorpius constellation, cats paw nebula, outer space pictures, hrfptraz, star clusters, gas clouds, european southern observatory, eso, vista

Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series A breathtaking outer space picture showing an infrared view of the Cat’s Paw Nebula (NGC 6334) taken by VISTA. NGC 6334 is a vast region of star formation about 5500 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Scorpius.

The whole gas cloud is about 50 light-years across. NGC 6334 is one of the most active nurseries of young massive stars in our galaxy, some nearly ten times the mass of our Sun and most born in the last few million years.
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more items in the Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series

image code: ctspwneb

ESO/J. Emerson/VISTA www.eso.org
Reproduced under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

»visit the HightonRidley store for more designs and products like this
The Zazzle Promise: We promise 100% satisfaction. If you don't absolutely love it, we'll take it back!

Spiral Galaxy NGC 1232, astronomy space picture Wristwatch

A gorgeous best-selling design. Click to customize or personalize. How would it look with your name or monogram on it - why not have a look-see right now?


tagged with: star clusters, breathtaking astronomy images, european southern observatory, inspirational, star forming regions, young blue stars, galactic arms, heavens, spiral galaxies, hrbstslr spgxy1232, eso, vista

Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series A fantastic astronomy image featuring a little of the wonder that is our universe.
This spectacular image of the large spiral galaxy NGC 1232 was obtained on September 21, 1998, during a period of good observing conditions. It is based on three exposures in ultra-violet, blue and red light, respectively. The colours of the different regions are well visible : the central areas contain older stars of reddish colour, while the spiral arms are populated by young, blue stars and many star-forming regions. Note the distorted companion galaxy on the left side, shaped like the greek letter "theta".

NGC 1232 is located 20º south of the celestial equator, in the constellation Eridanus (The River). The distance is about 100 million light-years, but the excellent optical quality of the VLT and FORS allows us to see an incredible wealth of details.
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more items in the Galaxies, Stars and Nebulae series

image code: spgxy253

ESO/J. Emerson/VISTA www.eso.org
Reproduced under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

»visit the HightonRidley store for more designs and products like this

2 Cute Bull Terrier Puppies Postage

Cute Alert!

How can you resist this cute puppy design? Maybe you'd like to see your name or initials on it? Click to customize and personalize...


tagged with: dog, bull terrier, puppies, animal, pet, cute, kawaii, yellow, white, graphic

One of terrier is in dark chocolate brown and white and the other is in maily white with a dark chocolate brown patch. Each water bowl is in blue and red. The background is bright orange yellow with white bones. This is a digital illustration.

»visit the kazashiya store for more designs and products like this
The Zazzle Promise: We promise 100% satisfaction. If you don't absolutely love it, we'll take it back!

Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Comparison of Zazzle tools: PinAProd and SeeMyBest

I've been asked both directly and in a roundabout way to explain the different purposes of SeeMyBest and PinAProd tools for Zazzlers. So here's a comparison - what they're for, what they produce and their features / options.

If you're pressed for time, skip to the handy features / options comparison table at the end. And if you haven't got time for that, SeeMyBest Pro is the most fully featured and the one I recommend (it's the one I use all the time).

SeeMyBest

Dec 5th Update: SeeMyBest Pro adds html and BBCode generation both for individual products and all products together. And, hot off the press - if you have a Zazzle promo code, it can be included in all product links by putting it into the config screen.
Dec 24th update: SeeMyBest Pro gets a great new personalisation panel feature. Your generated code for websites / blogs now comes with a form for your visitor to type in their details. When they hit the update button, all products change to show what they typed. Live example here: http://razamazazzle.blogspot.co.uk/2014/12/first-test-of-new-personalization.html

In principle, SeeMyBest is for generating web sites when you don't have one. Everything is focussed towards getting visitors to it. The sharing card / generated link (shortened) give you something to put in front of people's faces to get them to visit it. When they do, they see your page of products each with those sharing / pin buttons. This is so the visitors can easily share or so they can visit your products and buy.
Here's an example of a page generated by SeeMyBest (free) showing my top 12 most popular outer space watches.
Here's a screenshot of the page that it produces:
Example page generated by SeeMyBest (free)

PinAProd2

PinAProd2 is aimed at folk who do have their own website / blog and aren't afraid to copy and paste (and maybe mess a little with) html. Here's a recent blog post I created


Blog post created with PinAProd2 (free)
Note the text under the  piccies - that comes straight
from the product page description on Zazzle




The html it generates shows your visitors one or more products on your own website / blog (no sharing / pin buttons). The images and links take your visitors to the respective product page on Zazzle.
Both allow you, while you're on the config screen, to pin / share the products that are pulled and shown on the preview screens of each.

PinAProd3 (paid for by donation) adds sharing / pin buttons to the generated html and also generates BBCode (y'know, for forums).

It also passes product name and description (which can include your tags converted to hashtags and can be trimmed to a set number of characters) to Pinterest (not possible with either Polyvore or G+) -

PinAProd2 only passes product name. SeeMyBestPro adds all sorts of options for the generated pages including a contact / profile panel and a panel of up to 3 further links to more SeeMyBestPages (that you have already created). It also lets you give a page background colour and image, and a banner image.

Side By Side Config Screen Comparison

(click to see larger images)
SeeMyBest (free)PinAProd2 (free)


Here's a complete side-by-side feature / options comparison

Updated Jan 26th 2015

SeeMyBest and PinAProd comparison
SeeMyBest
(free)
SeeMyBestPro
(donation)
PinAprod2
(free)
PinAProd3
(donation)
All product links include your referral
id, tracking code and Z promotion
code, if you set one
not promotion
code
y not promotion
code
not promotion
code
Has different tracking codes
for the different places your
links will appear
y y y y
Set the size of image used
when sharing
y y y y
Set the background colour to
product images - also supports
transparent backgrounds
y y y y
When pinning to Pinterest, includes:
product
description
product
description
product name
product name,
description
and hash tags
if option set
Generates a website without you having one y y n n
Sharing buttons included:
Pinterest Pin
Google Plus share
Polyvore share
y y
n/a n/a
Page by-line and description
y y n/a n/a
Short page description
y y n/a n/a
Generated page's link can be
shortened using Google's link
shortener at the click of a button
y y n/a n/a
Set a page background
image that repeats
n y n/a
n/a
Set page background color
n y n/a n/a
Include your banner image at
the top of the page
n y n/a n/a
Sort results by newest / most popular n y n/a n/a
Contact / profile panel - options for
email address and
Pinterest, Twitter and Facebok profiles
and your blog
n y n/a n/a
A panel to hold up to three more links
so you can link to different sections
of your generated website
n y n/a n/a
Config screen and options setting y y y y
Page / html output preview
y y y y
Generates sharing cards
(html and bbcode for forums)
y y n/a n/a
Generates html for your blog
or your own website and
BBCode for forums like Zazzle's
only for
sharing cards
y y y
Generates a Curated Zazzle Collection
n y n n
Pinterest and Polyvore
pin / share buttons
y y y y
Google Plus share button
y y n y
Wanelo share button
n n y n
Config options for pulling products from Zazzle y y y y
Can save all configurations options set
('saving' is done by bookmarking a link you are given)
y y y y
Pull from specific store
y y y y
Use search term or phrase
y y y y
Pull and sort by most popular / newest first
only Popular
y y y
Set how many to pull
y y y y
Pull from 1st, 2nd 3rd etc results pages
y y y y
Pull from a specific store category
y y y y
Pull from a specific department
(ie type of product)
y y y y
Pull from multiple departments (up to 4)
n n y y
Block items from being pulled if they
contain any of up to 3 terms or phrases
n n y y
Set size of image to use for
product thumbnail
n y y y
Include product tags as hash tags
in generated html and Pinterest pin info
n n
n y
Trim product description to length
you set (0 to remove product
description entirely)
n y n y
Remove price from generated html
n/a y n y
Generated BBCode available for
individual items or all items together
n/a saved list n/a n/a
Generated html available for
individual items or all items together
n/a saved list y y
Gather and save products from
multiple pulls from Zazzle
n/a y n n
Personalize multiple products at once
n/a y n n

I'd love to hear what you think or get your suggestions for improvement after you've used them a few times.
As usual, I'm happy to answer any questions you might have :)

comments, likes, +1s, tweets are always welcome! :)

Tuesday, 2 December 2014

Desiderata, Starry Wingtip, Small Magellanic Cloud Canvas Prints

Featured Product!

A gorgeous design. Click to customize and personalize. Maybe you'd like to see your name or initials on it?


tagged with: full desiderata, desiderata poem, noise and haste, go placidly, inspirational, wismcg, small magellanic cloud, star galaxies, outer space picture, hrfptraz wallart, wisdom, peace, verses, deep space image, galactic, deep space astronomy, starry

Inspirational Guidance series The full Desiderata by Max Ehrmann: Go placidly amidst the noise and haste... featuring a starry wingtip of the Small Magellanic Cloud where stars blaze in multi-colored glory through a veil drawn aside.
The poem has inspired young adults who are coming of age since the 1920's and is as popular today as it ever was. It's been given as a gift by loving parents, grandparents, godparents and aunts and uncles as essential life-wisdom ever since it was written.
They've found it to be one of the few ways for such wisdom to get past those raging hormones, giving support to the upcoming generation through their rebellious years and beyond...
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more Wall Art

image code: wismcg

Image credit: NASA/CXC/JPL-Caltech/STScI

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The Zazzle Promise: We promise 100% satisfaction. If you don't absolutely love it, we'll take it back!

First Scroll, Ancient Japanese Fart Battles Mug

A gorgeous best-selling design. Click to customize or personalize. How would it look with your name or monogram on it - why not have a look-see right now?


tagged with: fart battle, farting competition, japanese art, edo period, ancient art forms, just fun, humor, laughs, funny flatulence, hrbstslr hgfrts1, humour

Just Fun series The first section of the He-Gassen Japanese art scroll created during the Edo period by an artist or artists unknown. In this section there are three competitors. Two are directing their flatulence at a poor chap in the process of preparing some steamed rice and he is bowled over by the force. The third competitor has launched a poor cat that is tumbling over and over in the gust.
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more items in the Just Fun series

image code: hgfrts1

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Cute ponies for the bedroom and school

Connemara Pony Stretched Canvas PrintsI Love My Pony! Cute Equestrian Sleeves For iPadsBrown Pony Courier Bags

Cute ponies for the bedroom and school

If you know a boy or girl who loves ponies then here's a collection that should give you some gift ideas.
Any boy or girl will love them - some for bedroom and some for school. Which of these would be best?

Click the image for more details and to buy. You'll also see more designs from the artist there.

Cute and Playful Puppy or Dog Table Lamp

Cute Alert!

How can you resist this cute puppy design? Maybe you'd like to see your name or initials on it? Click to customize and personalize...


tagged with: dog, pup, puppy, playful, colorful, cute, modern, kids, children, child, kid, doghouse, dog house

This adorable design features a dog sitting next to his dog house in a bright and fun outdoor scene! Find this design on multiple products in the Kids and Baby section AND electronic section of our shop. http://www.zazzle.com/cranberrydesign

»visit the cranberrydesign store for more designs and products like this
The Zazzle Promise: We promise 100% satisfaction. If you don't absolutely love it, we'll take it back!

Is it Time to Burn Feedburner? There are Alternatives

Blogging with purpose

original post »

This is a guest contribution from Steve Williams of feedburner-alternatives.com

To build up a readership it’s crucial to offer your visitors to subscribe to your blog, so they get updated every time you publish a new post. The two most important channels are email and RSS. Social media, despite the hype, is only second priority in terms of effectiveness.

Several services exist which help you to offer easy RSS & Email subscription options, ranging from RSS subscription facilitators (turning your RSS feed into a nice-to-look-at subscription screen which anyone can understand), RSS2Email as well as classic Email marketing services.

Feedburner: The top dog in decline

The – by far – most popular choice in the blogging community is (still) Feedburner. Feedburner offers solutions for both RSS and Email. And the best of it: it’s 100% free.

However, since Google bought Feedburner in 2007, it never got further developed. Several features got shut down, such as the monetization tool Adsense for feeds as well as the Feedburner API.

And it’s getting worse: more and more bloggers notice that Feedburner’s email delivery is not working reliably anymore. And as there has been no Google support to solve the issue many bloggers have given up on Feedburner.

However: which alternative services could take Feedburner’s spot?

The Feedburner alternatives

The essence of our research: there’s not one solution for all. It all depends on what your needs are.

Switching from FeedBurner Decision Tree Infographic

Credit to feedburner-alternatives.com

Feedburner is not working anymore, and it’s time to do the switch.
If you used Feedburner to handle your RSS feeds, Feedblitz (inexpensive) and Feedpress (slightly more expensive, but more features) are the way to go.
If you also used Feedburner to update your readers by email, then Feedblitz is the first choice which offers the most advanced solutions for both RSS and email (however, they charge quite a bit).
If you want to spice up your email newsletter a bit more, it may be worth to switch to the services which focus on those, i.e. either Mailchimp or Aweber. For the RSS-part you can then use Feedblitz or Feedpress.
Are you already using one of those alternatives? Let us know in the comments!

Steve Williams initiated www.feedburner-alternatives.com, reacting to the increasing frustration with Feedburner and the time-consuming process to find an alternative. Contact him on his page with suggestions on how to further improve the overview.

Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

Is it Time to Burn Feedburner? There are Alternatives

Build a Better Blog in 31 Days

Is it Time to Burn Feedburner? There are Alternatives
 #bloggingtips