Archive for category Blogging
SCBWI – Blog Spotlight
Posted by cherished in Blogging, Illustrators on October 20th, 2009
This is an article on blogging for illustrators that you may enjoy if you need help on what to post on your blog.
Outline a social media mission
Posted by cherished in Blogging, Social Media on October 20th, 2009
Alyson Stanfield’s article, Outline a social media mission is a great place to start thinking about integrating different social media sites to promote yourself as an artist.
Will the real social media expert please stand up?
Posted by cherished in Blogging, Social Media on October 1st, 2009
Just found this article on Social Media. It kinda puts our cultures recent obsession with social media in perspective.
Enjoy the article here:
Social Media is Rife with Experts but Starved of Authorities.

Feedbooks
Posted by cherished in Blogging, Design Blogs, Marketing, Software/Tools on September 12th, 2009
A place to discover and publish e-books

Discover
On Feedbooks you’ll discover thousands of public domain books and original books from new authors that you can read on any mobile device.
Publish
Turn your book into a high quality e-book with our publishing service or contribute to our collection of public domain titles.
Feedbooks can distribute e-books to a whole ecosystem of reading platforms and reach a global audience of millions of users.
Converts RSS feed to PDF, .mobi, Kindle and other files. Can combine multiple RSS feed to create a newspaper.
Doesn’t yet support photos.
8 Ways to Get Creative During a Credit Crunch”
by Ali Brown
Although the credit crunch is still weighing on millions of people, it doesn’t mean the end for every small or medium-sized business. In fact, this is a great time for savvy entrepreneurs to grow a business and prosper by thinking creatively and strategically. To make sure your business thrives during the downturn, you need to take a good hard look at your business.
Here’s how you can flourish during difficult times. It just takes a bit of creativity…
1. Trim the fat. Now’s the time to review your company finances in a calm and collected manner. Be sure to look at what is being paid on time. Then look for waste and how you can save – there are sure to be a few places where this is possible. Eliminate expenses that aren’t essential to your core business.
2. Know your customers. Spend time with your customers and find out more about their needs so you can deliver what they want when they want it. Also consider sending out a customer satisfaction survey to gain additional insights. Continue offering great service and going above and beyond so that every customer feels as if they are getting the VIP treatment.
3. Stay ahead of the competition. Researching your competition is invaluable so you can make sure you’re competitive with their quality and service. Also remember that during a downtown, some of the people who are laid off may start their own businesses. Monitor the market for newcomers, but remember that you have a head start.
4. Enhance your offering. Cutting prices is one way to make your product or service more attractive, but it’s not the only way. Once you lower your prices, it can be hard to raise them again. Think about adding other incentives like reduced delivery times or added bonuses instead.
5. Adapt to the market. If you notice that sales are declining in one area, focus your efforts on areas that are seeing more sales. Don’t waste your time on sectors that are in freefall. If your business is focused on a single product, consider repositioning it and be ready to cater to people’s changing needs.
6. Invest in you. Now is the perfect time to build on your knowledge, skills, and talents by attending conferences, taking a professional development course, or investing in a business coach. It will help position you as an expert in your field and give you a competitive edge!
7. Make more noise. Continue advertising if you can afford it, but look for other inexpensive ways to get the word out. Perhaps start a blog, join web forums in your field, or write a column for a trade publication or local newspaper.
8. Prepare for the good times. Remember that a recession is a periodic event, but it doesn’t last forever. Resist the urge to run for cover. Instead, keep doing business.
Come out fighting and energize your business to ensure that you don’t go the way of the dinosaurs. The good times will come again – this is your chance to make sure you’re a part of them.
© 2009 Ali International, LLC
Online entrepreneur Ali Brown publishes the award-winning ‘Highlights on Marketing & Success’ weekly ezine with 36,000+ subscribers. If you’re ready to jump-start your marketing, make more money, and have more fun in your small business, get your FREE tips now at www.AliBrown.com
Shorten your URLs
If you Twitter a lot and like to share links like I do, you may want to check out these sites that will shorten a long website address into something more manageable.
Making long URLs usable! More than 160 million of them. Over 1.5 billion hits/month.
… feed your blog to twitter
Posted by cherished in Blogging, Social Media on December 17th, 2008
This free service allows you to automatically convert your recent blog posts into Twitter posts.
Twitters to Cherish
Posted by cherished in Blogging, Social Media on October 2nd, 2008
I have been reading article after article lately on how Twitter can help promote and manage a business. At first I thought to myself, “how can anyone REALLY be doing anything when they have to type everything they do on Twitter?” The point of this micro-blogging site is to keep each other updated on a play-by-play level, am I right? Who has time for that?
But, after a few more articles, webinars and seeing Twitter links on many of my artist’s friends sites, I threw caution to the wind and I decided to give it a try.
It didn’t take me long to realize that if I said I was “working on a painting of xyz,” someone might ask about it later. So, in my warped, task achieving, type ‘A’ personality mind, Twitter transformed itself into this this really cool accountability for the tasks I need to get done And at the SAME TIME it keep me updated, on task while sharing with my “followers” stuff from my life. I don’t write most things on there, that WOULD be overkill, and I really wouldn’t accomplish anything, but I do try to include some highlight of the day and interact with other Twittters, too!
I am finding that everyone has their own approach to the types of entries that they share. The best thing for me, is that I can see what other artists around the world, friends, family member, and successful professionals are doing. My art licensing friend, Tara Reed, who wrote an excellent free e-book on Twitter, refers to Twitter as her “virtual office.” What a great way to stay in touch! I am realizing that we all lead the most interesting lives which further fuels the fire for what we do.
I don’t know if it has helped business yet, but I realize that building a brand takes a long time, so until I find out I guess I will be posting about it one tweet at a time.
You can follow me @cherishart on Twitter.
Twitter Search
Posted by cherished in Blogging, Software/Tools on September 10th, 2008




