Add Bling to Your Posts; Use Royalty-Free Photos

View My PortfolioI have noticed and read a lot about how a simple image brings a lot to a post, especially an intriguing article. It relates to the reader, and they say a picture is worth a thousand words. Who wouldn’t want to add 1,000 words to each post in such a small space?

I recently started using iStockphoto.com to get small images that I can use in my posts and use for series identification and better story-telling. My own photos don’t always bring as much emotion to what I write as I’d like, so I used to just leave it as stand-alone text. That was a mistake.

More things to remember; very important things that will save you a lot of grief:

  • Don’t copy random images from Google image search. They could legally belong to someone.
  • Don’t ruin a good picture with a stupid title or alteration. Use good design sense.
  • Try to complement or contrast your blog’s color scheme when you can.
  • Do your best to choose a picture that contributes (adds more) to your post.

Purchasing a royalty-free photo or graphic will put you at ease from being issued an order to remove a picture and improve your blog’s curb appeal.

What other ways do you see images helping your posts or documents?

UPDATE:

I was remiss in adding something that I wrote for my primary blog a long time ago:

Easy Bling for Your Blog Without Photoshop

Adobe Photoshop is crazy expensive, so not everyone has good tools to edit their shots. What if you could use an online editor and then save it back to your computer or upload it directly to your Flickr account? Pix-en-ate lets you do just that. FOR FREE!

The Enneagram Personality Profile

EnneagramI’m a 5. You are probably wondering what a 5 is, so I’ll just come out and say it: I’m going to change the world… someday. What I see in the descriptions for being a 5 is that I am progressing up the ladder of “personality health” and will eventually be able to manage my strengths and subdue my weaknesses to become who I know I can be.

Liz Strauss pointed the way to this test with guest blogger Mark McGuinness this week. Mark stopped by to read the comments and saw my comment. He was another amazing person who was inspired by my guest post last December, titled “I Want to Make a Difference, Too.” I’m both shocked and humbled by such positive feedback on my writing.

He is something like the tenth person since that post that has commented about my writing style and the thoughts behind it. YOU people are the reason I am finding my way with what I desire to do to make a difference. I will get my BS in English and hone those skills like a finely crafted sword.

One of these days, my idea or knowledge will come to me, and I will be able to communicate it to the world.

How to Get Things Done With No Deadline

I have an editing project that someone in my network has generously tagged me to work on for them. It’s in quite a raw form (not even an electronic copy) and will take more effort than simply marking it up. That isn’t the problem. My problem is a lack of a deadline. It is totally foreign to me to not have a deadline. Everything at work has a timetable attached, even if we are late already. The customer expects delivery and they expect it on time.

Without a goal, I historically, almost genetically, waffle my free time doing whatever I want to do most at the time. That generally consists of watching TV with my wife or playing computer games. Today I have come up with a plan for getting this done before my summer session college course begins.

  • I set a deadline for editing the text and getting it all in the correct order for the book to be the day before class starts. That is two weeks away, so it is not like I’m dropping everything, but can’t be considered to be a laid back goal.
  • I am substituting my alone free time’s activities to editing until I’m done. That should give me between  one and four hours per day to get started.
  • I will be giving myself motivating reminders such as not disappointing my clients and that there is a paycheck attached to delivery. Anything that motivates you is a good thing as long as you don’t lose any quality.
  • I am going to ask my wife to keep my accountable for my alone time to make sure I don’t revert back to my routine, as I am very much a creature of habit with a poor short-term memory. [now why did I come into this room?]

With these four decisions, I expect to meet and exceed expectations. How do you work without a deadline? Do you have a multi-year “Honey do” list that you just don’t get done? Try this and let me know how it works for you. [tags]motivation, project management[/tags]

Liz Strauss: The Voice Behind the Blog

Liz Strauss in the fleshI am one of the privileged crowd who has had the pleasure and honor to sit down with Liz Strauss and hear what is on her mind. Most of you reading this already know of Liz or are also one of her SOBs. If you just found that sentence shocking, then you need to catch up to the rest of us to know what Liz is all about.

Once you start reading her blog as a routine, much as you listen to a talk radio program, you get used to her unique writing style that includes one sentence paragraphs, bulleted lists, and badge-like graphics to add spice to her articles. The success of Successful Blog has taken her writing from being an online publisher to blogging in the best sense of the term. When you tell people you are a blogger, that often elicits strange responses from people. Those people have not met or read Liz.

Something interesting happens when you meet her in the flesh: her typed words take on color, cadence, and almost a taste. Her writing style is not actually how she writes, per se, but how she thinks. From that moment on, Successful Blog reads differently. It is a personal conversation with you, not a form letter to the Internet. Even her hand motions from her early dance experience take form in her written word.

Liz is just as elegant in writing as she is with her hands.

Liz Strauss and Jesse PetersenAt SOBCon07, Liz chose me (for some reason that is beyond my understanding) to run her slide show for her presentation. That opportunity gave me some one-on-one “get to know Liz Strauss” time as she ran through what was going to transpire in her talk. I saw her hands move as she spoke out of the corner of my eye as I was trying to soak in everything she was saying while figuring out when to flip to the next page in her printed outline. She dances through her words, in sort of a contemporary style. Sometimes she has the fluidity of a ballet, but then another thought needs to come through, so her step adjusts with the new flow.

Her time up front was really a talk more than it was a presentation. From my vantage point behind Liz, while hiding behind a 15″ laptop screen as best I could, I saw people’s reactions to her spoken word. The room was captivated. She could have talked for 3 hours that day and not a soul would have said a thing against that.

That is what I picture every time she posts a new article.

I see hundreds, thousands, and millions (she is very secretive about her traffic, thus I am free to picture her readership in my mind’s eye) of people dropping everything they are doing and reading every word she writes until they feel compelled to participate in the conversation. It is no different from listening to her in person, yet it is an entirely different experience having done just that.

What do you see when Liz writes?