Tag Archive for 'Article'

PingPress.fm – Wordpress Plugin

I think I’ve got Ping.fm, and the PingPressFM WordPress Plugin figured out now. Not perfectly, but enough that we can start using it to some good effect. Ping.fm is a website service that allows you to post once and have it published to a whole list of your Social Networking accounts. So if you have a number of communities that you want to get your information out to, it saves you the effort of going to each one and re-posting your content. The PingPressFM plugin for WordPress lets you connect your WordPress blog to the Ping.fm account, so when you are posting content to your blog, your posts will be distributed to your Networks without ever leaving your site.

The trick is to work out the settings and selectors in BOTH the PingPressFM plugin on your site, and then in your Ping.fm account for each of the services you want to broadcast to. You don’t want to have absolutely everything you put on your blog to go to all your services all the time. You want to be able to choose what content goes to each audience. With a little work, you can set it up so you can determine which posts go to which services, or if it goes out to any service at all.

Configure the Plugin

In the PingPress.fm plugin settings, you  choose from a preset list of Triggers that are designed to work with each of three kinds of Social Networking services you may want be publishing to:

  • Microblog (140 characters or less, like Twitter)
  • Status Update (200 characters, like Facebook and LinkedIn)
  • Blog (any length, and HTML formatting is preserved. For services like Livejournal, or WordPress.com blogs… yes, you can blog to another blog)

you can also create your own custom Triggers, if those categories are sufficient to your needs)

The trick to controlling each trigger is an option to designate selectors based on combinations of categories and tags. So for example for Micro-Blog posts, you might determine that the post must be in at least one of Category1, Category2, or Category5 (but NOT Category3 or Category4). The key then is that the post would also need to have at least one selected tag—like microblog, or Twitter—in order to meet the criteria to be sent to your Ping.fm account as a MicroBlog post.

The process is the same for the other triggers. If you want to be able to choose which service your posts are sent to—on a post-by-post basis—you just need to make sure that there’s a different Category/Tag combination for each one. A good strategy to consider for this might be to allow for ANY/ALL of your Categories to work as selector #1 (unless there are particular categories that you would NEVER want posted to your networks). And then set up one or two specific Tags for each of the different service types.

Using this strategy, a post with the category “Category2″ and the tag “microblog” might be sent to Twitter, and a post with the same category “Category2″ but the tag “status” would be sent to Facebook. And if both tags “microblog” and “status” were used, then the post would be sent to both Twitter and Facebook.

Configuring Ping.fm

So with my triggers assigned in the PingPress.fm plugin, I thought I was all set. But when I checked the different services to see how my broadcasts were working, I found that my content was duplicated in most places. I checked my settings and tried again—with the same results. The posts were showing up twice in Facebook and Twitter, albeit the duplicates were formatted a little differently.

So where had I gone wrong?

Investigating the settings in my Ping.fm account, I found that each one of the different services I was using had it’s own individual settings panel. And each one had multiple triggers that could activate it… So Twitter was being triggered by BOTH “microblog” and by “status”, as was Facebook. And in the case of WordPress.com and Livejournal, they were being triggered by “microblog,”  “status,”and by “article” (my trigger for long blog-type entries). So on those services I was getting triplicate content. Oops!

I’m sure there are lots of strategies for how these settings are employed—I’m new to this broadcast style of posting. But for now, for my purposes, I wanted to be able to specify exactly which service each of my posts was going to. So I reset the settings for each service so that they each would accept only one type of trigger. Next time I tested, everything worked as I’d expected it to. The “microblog” post went to Twitter, “status” went to Facebook, and  “article” to LiveJournal and WordPress.com.

I’m going to keep experimenting with this and adjusting settings to see what else I can get it to do. But if you have any suggestions or comment you’d like to make—another plugin or another strategy you want to share—please chime in.

In the meantime, I’m setting the trigger combination on THIS post to category “Blogging” and all three tags: “microblog,”  “status,”and by “article.” So this post will be (intentionaly) shared on Twitter, Facebook, Livejournal, and WordPress.com… But hopefully not in duplicate.

(Check the dates on the posts to see if they match up, in case this post has aged a bit)

Feedburner Feed Stats for WordPress

Hot Plugin, Cool FeaturesEvery WordPress installation that Fresh Start Creative does incorporates an RSS feed. The feed provides users with an easy option to subscribe to your content and be automatically notified when you post updates and new content. We also set up a free Feedburner account for our clients and link their feeds to the service.

FeedBurner’s services allow publishers who already have a feed to improve their understanding of—and relationship with—their audience. Passing your feed through FeedBurner lets you realize a whole new set of benefits. You can learn more about about RSS feeds and he Feedburner services here.

Feed Stats for WordPress is a plugin that allows you to view your FeedBurner feed stats right from the “Feed Stats” page in the “Dashboard” section of WordPress.

Currently, this plugin allows you to view the following types of statistics:

  • Subscribers
  • Hits
  • Reach (see the FAQ section for more information about this)
  • Item Clickthroughs
  • Item Views

Learn more at the Feed Stats for WordPress home page, or on the WordPress.com Plugin page

Google Analytics – WordPress Plugin

Hot Plugin, Cool FeaturesTypically, when Fresh Start Creative installs a new WordPress blogsite, we also set up a new Google Analytics account to track valuable user statistics for the site. Google Analytics shows you how people found your site, how they explored it, and how you can enhance their visitor experience. With this information, you can improve your website return on investment, increase conversions, and make more money on the web. Learn more about it here.

Google Analyticator adds the necessary JavaScript code to enable Google Analytics logging on any WordPress blog. The plugin eliminates the need to edit your template code and provides a comprehensive set of options to customize how it works with your site. It supports all of the tracking mechanisms that Google Analytics supports such as external link tracking, tracking without counting administrative users, and other advanced tracking methods.

Google Analyticator supports the following features:

  • Standard Google Analytics tracking support
  • An admin dashboard widget that displays a graph of the last 30 days of visitors, a summary of site usage, the top pages, the top referrers, and the top searches—right on your WordPress Dashboard
  • External link tracking of all links on the page, including links not managed by WordPress
  • Support for hiding Administrator visits without affecting Google Analytics’ site overlay feature
  • Support for any advanced tracking code Google provides
  • Allows code to be placed in the footer to ensure faster load times
  • Complete control over options; disable any feature if needed

Learn more at the Google Analyticator home page, or on the WordPress.com Plugin page

Status Updates via Ping.fm

This is a sample of a Status Update post that will be sent to Ping.fm, and from there to linked Social Networking services. In this case—Facebook—which limits it’s status updates to 200 characters.

Adding a YouTube Video to your blog

Adding video to your blog is a geat way to engage your audience and create some buzz. The best way to do this is to “host” all of your video on YouTube, where you can also benefit from the traffic you can generate from the huge community there.

The first thing of course is to have a YouTube account, and then some video to post there. Assuming that you already have that base covered, actually adding the video to your blog is simplicity in itself.

Here are the steps:

  1. Open a Page or Post on your blog where you would like to present your video
  2. In a separate browser window or tab, go to the YouTube video page for the video you would like to present
  3. In the right-hand column, next to the video, there is a grey box with the account name and description, and at the bottom of the box are two fields named “URL” and “embed.” Click into the embed field to highlight all the code there. Copy that code into memory and return to your other open window with the blog post open.
  4. Now, at the top of the editing window for the Page/Post, there are two tabs—Visual and HTML. You want to click the HTML tab to enter the code for your video.
  5. Scroll down to the place on the page where you want the video to appear… Somewhere before or after an appropriate paragraph. When you find the right location, simply hit RETURN to create a new line, and then PASTE the code you collected from YouTube into that empty line.
  6. That’s it! Switch back to the Visual tab of your editing window, scroll to the place on the page where you added the code, and you should see a blank yellow box representing the video. You can click next to it and use the Center tool if you want it centered on the page. But otherwise, you’re done.

Here’s an example of a video on a post…