1. 10 Secrets Learned in 24 Years of Writing

    Day 2 of BlogIndiana kicked off with a lively keynote from Erik Deckers, from Pro Blog Service. Erik has been making a living from writing for the last 24 years. He shared the secrets he’s gleaned throughout his career. This is a live blog, which means it is largely unedited. You’re looking at notes taken throughout the presentation. It is not meant as an exact transcript. I just try to capture the highlights along the way.

    Of course, I had a difficult time capturing the details with this one. Erik’s talk sparked a lot of conversation on Twitter. Namely, the debate on whether bloggers are writers. Personally, I think my blogging style is so different that it can’t be considered writing, but maybe I’m thinking of writing more formally than Erik means. I guess I’ll concede that bloggers can be writers, but only if they know how to write first—which goes straight into his 3rd point, so I’ll let him get to it!


    Bloggers are writers – if you’re putting words together to share ideas or provide information, you’re a writer.

    1. A word is worth 1000 pictures.
    2. Paint pictures with your words.
    3. descriptive words vs describing a word. (i.e. ran quickly/sprinted)
      metaphor vs simile (metaphors create a picture in the readers’ minds and are more powerful)

    4. Know the rules, then break them.
    5. Don’t let what you learned in English class disrupt the sound & rhythm of the narrative.

    6. Half the grammar rules are wrong.
    7. Words have power – use them wisely.
    8. Write the hell out of everything.
    9. Whatever you do, focus on it with everything you’ve got.

    10. Write intentionally.
    11. Pick a technique you want to improve, and use it in every writing you do – emails, blogs, etc.

    12. “Write drunk, edit sober.”
    13. Write when you are loose, comfortable and the ideas are free flowing. Edit later.

    14. A good writer can write almost anything.
    15. Your words are NOT your babies.
    16. You don’t have to coddle & save them from the editor. Never let someone who thinks you’re awesome (aka Mom) edit your work -  you need an editor who will be critical and  ruthless.


    Heather Sokol is a frugal, gluten free, chocoholic, bubble bath connoisseur. She’s a little bit crunchy, always opinionated and sometimes speaks geek, but not fluently. Heather is the founder of Inexpensively.com and tweets as @JustHeather.


  2. 6 Steps to Measuring Social Media

    BlogIndiana kicked off with a keynote from Jay Baer. We stole him from Arizona just last year, so it’s awesome to see him catapulting straight to the forefront in Indiana. As Jay joked, it was probably a smart decision to start the morning with numbers, right after everyone had their injection of caffeine. The topic was a tricky one—how many times have you thought or said that social can’t be measured?

    Jay Baer, from Convince & Convert, has a way, and he breaks it down into 6 simple steps. This is a live blog, which means it is largely unedited. You’re looking at notes taken throughout the presentation. It is not meant as an exact transcript but I try to capture the highlights along the way.

    Don’t be afraid to admit social media doesn’t act alone.

    The goal is not to be good at social media; the goal is to be good at business through social media. What are you trying to achieve – awareness, sales, loyalty? Pick one!

    Don’t be afraid to measure differently.

    There is no magic number for measuring social media.

    Home Base & Outposts: concentrate on one social network that’s most important to your company while tracking & paying attention to the others

    Holy Trinity: search, content, social

    So, what should you measure? Behavior, not aggregation.

    Awareness: positive social mentions, share of voice (positive mentions vs competitors), new visitors from outposts, inbound links, search volume trends

    Sales: social-only offers, sales funnel behavior (which pages on your site will people only visit if they are considering a purchase i.e. testimonials), brand community participation, offline fan advocacy, online advocacy/sharing, content subscription, propensity to promote (scale of 1-10; subtract 0-6s from 9-10s)

    Don’t be afraid to commit to your numbers.

    Pick your metrics in advance – don’t try to track after you’ve already jumped in.

    Just because everything is trackable, doesn’t mean you should track everything: pick 3 metrics, then see.

    Don’t be afraid of ROI.

    ROI always = (revenue minus investment)/investment

    Multi-Step ROI (Ar.gy/blogROI), Market Research ROI, Customer Service ROI, Correlation,

    Don’t be afraid to share the data.

    Everyone working for the company should have the information to be able to support social media efforts.

    Don’t be afraid of anecdotes.

    Sometimes it’s about the stories, not the numbers.


    Heather Sokol is a frugal, gluten free, chocoholic, bubble bath connoisseur. She’s a little bit crunchy, always opinionated and sometimes speaks geek, but not fluently. Heather is the founder of Inexpensively.com and tweets as @JustHeather.


  3. Join us at Houlihan’s and Avoid the Registration Line

    Coming to BIN2011? Why not join us at Houlihan’s in Castleton the night before and rub elbows with other conference speakers & attendees?

    Houlihan’s has been very foolish gracious in inviting us to hang out Wednesday August 10th from 6PM to 8PM for a laid-back evening of dinner and drinks with fellow BIN attendees. You can pre-register for the conference, enjoy some free appetizers, and maybe win a few door prizes in the process.

    You can sign up to attend this event by filling our our pre-conference interest form. If you’ve registered for BIN2011, an email with a link should be waiting in your inbox. If you haven’t signed up for BIN2011 yet, what are you waiting for? Get going, buster!


  4. What Am I Looking Forward to at BIN2011? The Awesome!

    Blog Indiana is my absolute, must attend event every summer—and, that says a lot coming from me. I attend a lot of blog conferences throughout the year, most of which are a bit more catered to my, uh, demographic. You know, a (cringe) mom blogger.

    There’s something about spending several days with women who get you, for sure, but Blog Indiana is full of my people. And my people? They are awesome. We’re talking about a room full of Hoosier hospitality, Indy geeks and such amazing talent, I can never believe we all fit in one, small midwestern state.

    Just take a look at this year’s schedule! We have rock stars closing million dollar deals over Twitter. We have multiple published authors speaking. We have a local mom blogger who’s more influential than Dooce! (Klout says so.)

    These amazing Hoosiers are not only willing to share their knowledge through sessions & panels all day, but they’ll gladly chat in the hallway, sit down to lunch and grab a drink after the event for more. That’s what makes Blog Indiana an awesome conference—it’s just soIndiana!

    In a couple weeks, I’ll spend several days in California, at a very large conference specifically designed for women bloggers like me. It will be chaotic, overwhelming and often times completely confusing. But, one week later is Blog Indiana, where it all makes sense.

    What I’m most looking forward to is a refreshing few days among people who get me. People who embrace me. People who live where I live and see what I see. If I had to choose just one session to be most excited about, it would have to be the Battle of the Brands panel.

    Because I need some serious help managing my multiple personalities. Maybe then I’ll be a little less confused…


    Heather Sokol is a frugal, gluten free, chocoholic, bubble bath connoisseur. She’s a little bit crunchy, always opinionated and sometimes speaks geek, but not fluently. Heather is the founder of Inexpensively.com and tweets as @JustHeather.


  5. The Twitter Battle of the Brands–How do you stack up?

    What 2 things do @ButlerBlue2 @mrkinetik @basschaos @saraelysecroft @chuckgose @roundpeg @nathan_hand & myself (@cjtheisen) all have in common?

    #1–We are all on Twitter (are there people still not on Twitter?)

    #2– We will all be on The Twitter Battle of the Brands panel at             Blog Indiana moderated by @jessica_journey

    Everyone would’ve had 3 things in common but Blue II doesn’t have opposable thumbs (which makes it hard to tweet)

    If that list of panelists hasn’t made you sign up for the conference already I don’t know what more I can say or do but here goes.

    Have you recently joined Twitter but aren’t sure how to go about picking a handle? Starting up a business Twitter account but don’t know how much of your own personality to add into the tweets? Do you tweet under personal and business accounts? Should you tweet under both or just one or the other? How do you attach yourself to a brand as the face of their marketing online but stay disconnected enough that you can move your persona and presence to a new industry?

    The panel will give you their insights into many of the above questions and take a few questions as well. Should you be interested in posing some Twitter branding related questions to the panel you can ask them in the comments below, via the hashtag #bintbb or reach out to @jessica_journey @saraelyscroft or myself (@cjtheisen) directly on Twitter.

    If you aren’t attending already click the reserve your seat button at the top of this page now. Seriously stop reading this and register. If you are going I hope to see you Thursday after lunch for The Battle of the Brands.

    –Chris Theisen, Digital Communication & Marketing Manager at Flex-Pac

     


  6. What Do You Need to Be a Writer? Not Much

    Anyone can be a writer. If you work at it, you can even be a good writer.

    You need a basic grasp of the English language. You need to know punctuation, grammar, and sentence structure. You need to know how to string several sentences together in a cohesive string.

    And that’s it.

    You don’t need to go to writing school. You don’t need to take special writing classes. You don’t need permission. No one is going to tap a sword on your shoulders and say, “I dub thee. . . a WRITER!”

    You just need to start stringing words together in a way that is pleasing to you. And, if you like, pleasing to other people. You just need to start writing something you enjoy, and when you’re done, you need to write something else.

    I have based my entire writing career on trying something new and seeing if I liked it. Not waiting for someone to tell me I can do it, or taking a class on it. If I like it, I’ll do it again. If I really like it, I’ll keep doing it. That’s how I’ve managed to make a living — and a long-term hobby — out of being a professional blogger, a newspaper humor columnist, and now, a book author.

    I didn’t need any special training or permission to be a writer. I didn’t take any writing classes. No one granted me a writer-ship with a sword. But, on a good day, I can sometimes do it better than the people who did get all of that.

    Back in 2005, I entered a script for a play into the 2005 Indiana Theatre Works script competition. I took a play that I had originally written for radio, and adapted it for the stage. But I had never even written a stage play before, so I wasn’t sure how it was done, so I did some reading and wrote what I thought was a “proper” script. I even had to ask my wife for stage blocking directions.

    So you can imagine my surprise when I was named a finalist for the Indiana Theatre Works conference itself, where I would get to meet other writers, directors, and even actors. I was in awe of the people who were there, and I questioned whether I belonged.

    This was a room full of playwrights and Masters of Fine Arts holders whose specialty was in playwriting. I was just some schlub who made booger jokes once a week for some newspapers.

    Everyone else had spent years, and sometimes decades, in “the thea-tah.” My only experience in live theatre was as a G-Man in “You Can’t Take It With You” when I was 16. My total stage experience was two lines. Otherwise I hadn’t done anything with or for live theatre.

    But I could write. I had already been writing for 18 years, so I at least knew my way around a pen and paper, so I tried to get by on my (false) confidence. Everyone else figured it out though, as the weekend went on, and I asked some pretty basic questions. Plus, I think I blurted out “but this is my first play!” more than once.

    So a few people were rather annoyed when I received the Best Comedy Script for the entire competition, beating out a couple MFAs who had spent years honing their craft, sweating every word, only to be beaten by some newbie who entered the contest on a whim, because he had never written a play before.

    What’s my point?

    My point is that, it doesn’t take anything or anyone special to be a writer. Anyone can do it, and anyone can succeed.

    It doesn’t matter whether you can spell. Or that you don’t know the difference between the subject and object of a sentence (after 24 years of writing, I’m still not clear). Or that no one has said “you’re a WRITER!” and whacked you with a sword.Erik Deckers is the co-owner of Professional Blog Service, a public speaker, and the co-author of three social media books.

    All you need is a laptop, or a typewriter, or even a stubby pencil and the back of an envelope. It’s up to you to call yourself a writer, because no one else is going to. Or needs to.

    Besides, my sword is tarnished.

    Erik Deckers is the co-owner of Professional Blog Service, and the co-author of “Branding Yourself” and a new social media book coming out in October. He also helped write “Twitter Marketing for Dummies.” Erik will be the keynote speaker on Day 2 of Blog Indiana 2011.


  7. BIN2011 is ready to roll!

    Blog Indiana’s fourth annual Blogging & Social Media conference, BIN2011, is ready to go! Our schedule is packed with 100% Hoosier speakers this year, and we’re happy to have Bloomington’s Jay Baer of Convince & Convert as our day one Keynote!

    Jay’s presentation, How to Hug Your Calculator: The 6 Step Process to Measuring Social Media, will prepare the BIN2011 crowd to take what they’ll learn over the next two days and apply it to their personal and business  social media habits.

    Day two kicks off with Blog Indiana vet Erik Deckers’ session, Writing Secrets the Pros Use – a primer of Erik’s best advice based on his decades of professional writing experience.

    In between are more than two dozen presenters and panelists ready to share the latest information and advice about blogging, marketing, video, writing, and several other topics. A complete rundown of sessions can be found on our conference schedule page (you should definitely check it out).

    What are you waiting for? Sign up now and save!

    We’re rewarding our early registrants with the lowest registration price we can offer to the public: $169 for a two day ticket plus access to our Wednesday August 10th pre-registration party! This super early bird rate will only be good until Tuesday June 14th, so act fast!


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