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What's the Difference
Between a Website and a Blog?
by Yuwanda Black
[Want to start a successful career as a freelance writer?
Click here.]
Are You
Serious About Making Money Online as a Freelance Writer?
The following is sage advice for freelance writers -- or anyone -- who's
thinking about getting a blog or website and/or those who are thinking about
changing their web presence. If you are serious about making money online as a
freelance writer, read carefully.
After my
recent blog troubles, I
decided to have a new blog designed and hosted on its
own domain. I finally got fed up with free blog
platforms. This entailed registering a new
domain. Once I got to this point, however, I stopped.
Why?
Do You Really Need a New Blog, or
a Website?
Mainly
traffic generation. As I wrote on the post,
7 Things You Must Know Before Moving Your Blog.
"... after your new blog is up and running,
constantly update your old blog. You probably have some
search engine recognition behind it ..."
I started thinking that I would essentially have to
start from scratch promoting a new URL (website/blog).
And, not for nothing, I already have two web presences
that are working pretty well for me (this site,
InkwellEditorial.com and my blog,
InkwellEditorial.blogspot.com).
This is what brought me to the question, "What's the
difference between a website and a blog?"
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The Answer to What's the
Difference Between a Website and a Blog
So I started to do some research because, quite frankly, I
couldn't think of what it was. I should probably be embarrassed to admit that,
but it's the truth. According to the post
Blogs
vs. Web Sites: Is There a Difference?, it basically boils
down to interactivity. A blog and a website are both simply websites.
But, blogs have an interactivity
about them that most websites don't. Plugins like "Most
Recent Posts;" "Most Popular Posts;" "Related
Posts/Entries;" and "Last Post by This Blogger" all
encourage interaction.
Websites, on the other hand, tend
to be more of a portfolio, an introduction to your work
(ie, samples) and business (an online company brochure,
if you will). Which Do
You Need: A Blog, a Website or Both? As each
person's needs are different, I'll tell you how I went about deciding, then you
decide for yourself. I'm getting a new website, with
a blog as a sub component. This is how this happened . . .
I changed things midstream with
my blog designer. I told them that I wanted my new blog on InkwellEditorial.com,
the current home of my website.
After asking a few technical
questions like how it would affect transferring existing
files into the new "blog design," he wrote the
following:
"That [referring to the cost and the blog design I chose] actually
depends if you want your site to be more of a portfolio site or a blog site.
Which will you use it for most? To blog and attract people that way? Or as a
business site with a blog?"As I'm getting a new website that
will have a blog as a subdomain, the URL will probably look something like
this: http://InkwellEditorial.com/InkwellBlog
The Drawback of an All-in-One Website/Blog The drawback to this is
that it means I'll be blogging at blogger for probably another year or so
until my traffic at my new blog home is where it is now (about 3,600
visitors/day).
I simply can't afford to abandon this site which has a PR Rank of 4 and an
Alexa Rank at this writing of under 500,000 (not in the top 100,000, but for a
freelance writing blog -- darn good numbers). The
Benefits of an All-in-One Website/Blog
Marketing:
In spite of this drawback, the benefit of an all-in-one blog/website is that
you have one home, one domain to drive traffic to. I run several websites and
let me tell you, getting sufficient traffic to one is a full-time job. I
couldn't even fathom having yet another site to market and promote from
scratch. Passive Income Generation: My other sites bring me projects, so driving traffic to them isn't
important as far as residual income. But, InkwellEditorial.com and its
accompanying blog bring me residual income in the form of ebook sales and
AdSense income mostly. Advertising: Furthermore, over the last
year and a half, I've been approached probably 20-30 times about private
advertising. I've never taken anyone up on it because, quite frankly, my site
wasn't set up for it. And, I always said, "When I get it redesigned, I'll
accept advertising."
Other Opportunities: I also have several other ideas that
have been waiting in the wings "until I get my site redesigned." Now, I can
move ahead with those too. Although a website redesign wasn't on the agenda for another year or so, the time to do
it is just right -- now. The #1 Thing to Consider When Trying to Decide Whether
to Get a Website or a Blog Purpose. As I wrote in the post,
Will You Ever Make Money Blogging? Answer 1 Question to Find Out, " ...
the most critical component to pay attention to when you're getting a blog
designed from the ground up, so to speak, is purpose. . . . As in, what purpose
does your blog serve -- or would you like for it to serve. Every design
decision you make should support this decision."
Once you know what you want your web presence to do for you, it will be easy
to make decisions regarding whether it should be a blog or a website.
Thinking About Moving Your Blog/Website? Learn What I Learned the Hard Way
Final Note: If you're thinking about moving your blog or website from one
platform to another, read
7 Things You Must Know Before Moving Your Blog first. Learn from my
mistakes.
Originally Posted on 6/5/08.
Sincerely,
Yuwanda Black, Publisher
http://www.inkwelleditorial.com/
http://www.inkwelleditorial.blogspot.com/
http://www.SEO-Article-Writer.com
http://www.SEO-Articles-For-Sale.com
How to Start a Successful Freelance Career
Newsletter
P.S.:
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P.P.S.: Remember, at InkwellEditorial.com and
InkwellEditorial.blogspot.com, you'll find everything you need to know about
how to start, grow and/or maintain a freelance writing career (eg, writing
for the web, blogging, forum posting, seo writing, freelance writing jobs,
newsletter writing, article writing, ebooks on freelance writing and more).
Freelance Success Stories:
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Editorial's newsletter features these successful professionals who put to rest
the phrase, "starving freelancer."
Read the first issue
here and
subscribe to read all previous issues.
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