Posts Tagged ‘web’

Want Free Web Site Building Videos for Creatives?

Ok, so, if you’ve been following the twitter stream or the facebook page or this blog for any length of time you’ve seen a lot of bits & pieces on how creative people might begin to use the web to get attention for or market their work.

…but maybe that’s all it looks like to you, a lot of bits & pieces.

I’ve had several one on one conversations with individuals who’ve asked for advice directly on sites they have in place, or setting up a new site for their work.

Doing that one at a time hasn’t been terribly efficient though I’m hopeful it’s been some help to those folks.

This causes me to wonder, how many people would really like some free training on:

  • getting themselves online in ways they can maintain fairly easily?
  • ways that don’t cost a fortune?
  • ways that actually work in terms of attracting attention from people interested in your work?

Interested in free training on web site building & web strategy videos?

Leave a comment on the blog or this facebook page update, or retweet a mention of this post on twitter via the ‘retweet’ button to the top right of this post .

I’m really interested in how many folks would really like some of this info.

thanks for the feedback!

Talk soon…

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Artists…PageRank doesn’t always equal Traffic!

Artists, performers, writers and other creatives using a blog or web site to showcase their work need to be aware of PageRank. It’s a number calculated based on link analysis that’s supposed to indicate how relevant your site is to other sites discussing similar content. The problem with that is, for artists, often our content is very, very specific! The more specific and individual we make ourselves and our work, the harder it is to be seen by search engines as “similar” or relevant to a keyword phrase or sites that may be tangentially related to the subject of our work. For many visual artists or performers who’ve documented their work with photos or videos the problem is compounded by a lack of text on pages for the search engines to index. For these it is very important to annotate images and videos with tags, captions or some descriptive text.

Having said all that, PageRank is only an indication of how likely your site will turn up in a search for specific keywords found in your site based on links from other sites seen as also relevant to those keywords. PageRank is not necessarily a direct indication of how much site traffic you can expect to see on your site! Often we see advertising for SEO services or instruction on how to improve search engine optimization for our sites. I’ve even seen this being offered specifically for Artists and creativity related sites. I’m all for optimizing your site for search engines, but the assumption that doing so will have a direct and immediate impact on site traffic for artist’s sites is typically not accurate.

When you are making work that is highly individual it’s important to realize that search engines are really not smart enough to grasp the subtle differences that might make your work or performance great versus something manufactured using similar descriptions. If your goal is to increase awareness of your work and a broader base of collectors or fans the thing to concentrate on is traffic. How do you increase traffic if you’re not focused on PageRank? For specific, individual work we all need to focus on virtual locations where targeted influence can result.

Some suggestions include:

— an obvious one is to use social networks like twitter where followers may have similar interests and may retweet mention of your posts

— bookmark links to posts on StumbleUpon where others may find value and give your bookmark a “thumbs up”

— On LinkedIn join Art related Groups or Alumni Groups if you attended an Art institution or program. Submitting a post with useful links to posts on your blog or site that include Art related references, articles or videos will likely result in traffic from individuals with similar interests who may pass along your link or mention it on facebook, twitter or other social networks.

These methods have a higher likelihood of resulting in site visits from individuals who have already self filtered themselves, who are interested in the content they find in these channels.

Please mention your own experiences and add methods you’ve found to be effective in the comments below.

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  • Twitter
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  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace
  • email
  • Print