eBid Widgets

eBid Widgets, by Kimbo! Technical and design support for the small online retailer.

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Blogging for eBidders

eBid Widgets, by Kimbo! Templates, Banners & Tech HelpA blog is a virtual journal, a personal route to sharing thoughts, talking to an unknown and changing audience, and getting your stuff “out there”. How can this be useful to eBidders?

Why Blog?

Why should eBidders consider blogging? To promote sales, ultimately of course. There are a number of ways blogging can help you do this.

Share expertise.

By sharing your expertise on any subject you help your fellow fans, and in the process (if you do it right!) get yourself a reputation as knowledgeable on some subject or other. Know a lot about what you sell? Then share some of that experience and when somebody thinks “postcards” or “china” or whatever your chosen area is, there’s a good chance they’ll think of you. You can also, of course, use a blog to directly promote a particular listing or range by giving a link and talking about the product, but if your blog is just a series of adverts there’s little motivation for others to read it. However…

Promote items

There is, of course, the option to post about new items, new ranges, particularly interesting offers, and people already interested in your products will find such information useful and interesting. Corgi fans will want to know if you’ve unearthed a rich seam of vintage vans in a recent auction, so they can watch your listings for items they’re interested in. If you list a piece of rare Murano glass, your glass blog will need an update. 

Add value

Make your blog an interesting read, don’t just repeat your advertisements (listings) straight from eBid, add value - tell a story about how you found the item, a bit of history about the location featured, anything that makes it worth reading and holds the attention of your audience for a few moments. Give your readers a reason to follow your blog.

Where to blogBlogging for eBidders

There are a number of blogging sites, large and small. Some of the better known names are Tumblr, Wordpress, Blogspot, Blogger and LiveJournal. Different sites suit different ways of writing; some blogs have a more visual aspect (Tumblr), some are more geared to the written word (WordPress), each has its strengths and weaknesses and you might find you need to experiment with several sites before finding the one that suits you best. Many blogging sites will allow you to embed your blog in your own site, useful if you wish to keep everything under your own domain address. There are also specialist blog sites where a theme is favoured, such as food, crafts etc. Google is your friend - explore! Find a blog you like and that matches your own aims, and that hosting site is probably as good a place as any to try first.

How to blog

The mechanics are going to vary from site to site, but most will allow a variety of update methods: you can type into a web page (as I’m doing here), email updates, send from mobile phones, whatever suits the way you live and work. I find composing via the blogging site’s own web interface works best for me. You may prefer to work offline and build your thoughts elsewhere, then copy and paste in. The process remains the same: think of something you want to say, write it down, publish it to your blog (more of which, later). 

How it looks will depend to a large extent on the theme you select for your blog. It is possible to tailor your own layout and presentation, but unless you get into serious blogging (well beyond needing my help!) you’re unlikely to want to go that route. Most blogging sites offer a selection of themes/templates (free or at a modest price) in which you can present your blog. This blog, for example, uses a free Tumblr blog theme, the credits for which are at the foot of the page. Even as an experienced web designer, I’ve never yet felt the need to make my own, there are so many excellent free resources available. 

Three steps to a blog post

Think of something you want to say

Sometimes easier said than done! If you feel pressured to blog regularly, it can sometimes be daunting to come up with something fresh to add. If you’re just posting adverts, as I said, that can get a little stale - where’s the interest for your readers? So it’s important to have some sort of message; a story to tell, advice to give, even a question to ask. For this blog, for example, the trigger is often a conversation on the eBid forums that makes a little ping! go off in my head - exactly has happened here, and which I made transparent to all so you could follow the process through. Somebody asks about blogging, I clarified that there was an interest/need, decided to write a blog post; write, post, publish. Bingo. In your own area it could be a question about how a certain craft project can be undertaken, where a particular type of ornament is made, the history of a building featured in a painting… anything can be a trigger to a blog post. A trip to the shops, a flat-tyre, wet weather, anything that sends your brain off down an interesting path can produce a blog post. Or, as has been said, it can simply be a “look what I just offered for sale” notice. Your blog is your oyster, so to speak!

Write it down

Whether you compose on the site, on paper, in your head, whatever you choose, the blog post has got to be written somehow. Depending on how you feel about that, it can be huge fun or hard work. It can also be short, long, funny, sad, informative, angry, gripping or dull. In my experience the last one’s the easiest to achieve, and the only one you really want to try to avoid.  Normal rules of composition apply, so try to have a beginning, a middle and an end (unless it’s a simple one-liner), and aim for the best spelling and grammar you can manage. Perfection isn’t necessary (thank heavens!) but you want to make it as readable as possible, and that means clear writing, well laid out.  Break long text into paragraphs, use headings where appropriate, add pictures if possible; imagine you’re writing a magazine page and you want your readers to stop flicking past and stop to read. 

Publish it

Having sweated over your mini-masterpiece, the time will come to publish it. This means make it public on your blog page (it will be hidden from view during composition). Publication will be a built-in function of your blog host, a button to press more than likely. But there will be certain extra functions you’ll want to employ. Most blogs will have “tag” options. Tags are keywords that identify the subject-matter of your post, and should be added to every entry. You can see my examples on any eBid Widgets blog post here. Blog readers can search by tags for subjects that particularly interest them, so make sure you tailor your tags to suit your audience and there’s no reason you should soon be picking up new readers from around the blogosphere. 

eBid Widgets on FacebookYour blog will probably also have options for integrating with your social networking sites (in any) so make sure you set-up your Facebook and Twitter links on your blog and your new posts will be automatically promoted to your friends and followers out there. 

So there you are. Blogging in a nutshell. Think of something to say, write it down, publish it to a blog. What’s keeping you? 

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