Every profession or hobby requires a set of tools. Painters need a brush, paint, and canvas. DIY passionate need tools like a saw or a hammer. Enthusiasts of jogging need decent running shoes and similar equipment. Blogging is no different – you need a toolset that will help you make the most out of your blog and minimize your effort.
In this article, I’ll present to you the 10 best free blogging tools. I’m not going to write about popular tools such as Trello, MailChimp, or Google Analytics. They are excellent but I bet you know them very well already. In this article, I’ll give you a list of the top 10 free blogging tools you probably don’t know yet.
- Screaming Frog – make your blog SEO-friendly
Screaming Frog will help you make sure that your website looks good for site crawlers. This tool shows what you should fix to improve search rankings, like filling out missing alt descriptions of images, using the right kind of redirects, or complete missing meta descriptions.
Pro tip: page load time is considered to be one of the most important factors affecting SEO (more on this topic here). Use Page Speed Tools and Pingdom to discover how you can make your website load faster.
- Infolinks – make money from your blog
That’s what monetization platforms are for. Put banners or promoted links on your blog and get paid when people click them. Infolinks is one of such platforms, used by over 200k websites worldwide.
Pro tip: people are getting immune to traditional banners so choose a monetization platform that offers more types of promoted content, like Infolinks’ innovative ads.
- Survicate – collect feedback & email signups
Use a tool like Survicate. You’ll be able to launch targeted survey widgets and collect feedback from visitors. Ask them not only how they like what they are reading, but also what they want you to write about next, what are their interests, or what forms of content they like the most. Collected answers will help you create better content than ever.
Pro tip: you can also use Survicate or any similar tool to collect signups for your mailing lists. Exit surveys will be the most useful here.
- Notify – promote your content directly on social media
Finding such conversations is a great opportunity for you to promote your content. Use Notify to be notified on Slack or HipChat about tweets that contain keywords you choose. Jump into conversations and suggest your relevant content.
Pro tip: add names of your competitors to monitored keywords to find out what people are saying about their content.
- ManageFlitter – grow your Twitter follower base
There’s one simple trick – follow people that can be interested in your profile and the content that you share. Use a tool like ManageFlitter or Crowdfire to do it. This technique helped us grow the number of followers from 0 to 17000 with little effort.
Pro tip: remember about unfollowing people who don’t follow you back; otherwise you will quickly ruin stats of your account and even can be marked as “spammy”.
- Appear.in – engage your audience with webinars
You need to prepare well. There is nothing worse than a webinar full of silence or mumbling. And choose software wisely. For some reason, the right webinar software is still not easy to find. But appear.in works smoothly and allows you to have up to 8 participants at no cost. You can check how this form of interaction resonates with a small selected part of your audience before you go full-scale, which will require a premium plan.
Pro tip: invite the most active members of your audience to the first webinar and collect their feedback to polish the script and gain confidence.
- Buzzsumo – find hot topics
You must follow trends. Google Trends will help you with that. You’ll see what’s trending right now.
Pro tip: after spotting hot topics, use Buzzsumo to find what has already been published. Next, use skyscraper technique to create better and more in-depth content than already existing.
- Hemingway App – polish your writing
Unfortunately, Hemingway can’t check your writing – he is dead. But an app called Hemingway can. It will show you where you are elaborating too much, what you can cut and which words are worth replacing for simpler synonyms. For me, it’s a must-have (this text was edited with Hemingway as I tend to elaborate too much).
Pro tip: if you’re not a native English speaker, use Grammarly to check and improve your writing before you upload an article to Hemingway.
- Startup Stock Photos and Pexels – get images
Pro tip: if you need to edit photos of any other graphics, take a look at Canva – a simple but powerful browser-based graphic edition tool.
- Keywordtool.io and Keyword Planner – research interesting keywords
First, use keywordtool.io or a similar tool. Enter the topic you want to write about. You’ll get a list of related keywords. Copy it and upload it to AdWords Keyword Planner. You will see how many people search for those terms and how competitive they are (the higher competition, the harder it’s to rank high in Google for a term). Choose keywords that your audience will find interesting with as low competition as possible, write, and see how articles rank.
Pro tip: while keywords are important, keyword stuffing doesn’t work anymore. Focus on quality instead.
As you can see, you don’t have to drain your budget to get equipped with the tools to gather feedback on your articles, polish writing, choose interesting topics, and even earn on your writing. So choose tools that you think will be the most useful and put them to the test.
No comments:
Post a Comment