Showing posts with label Authorblog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Authorblog. Show all posts

Saturday, June 06, 2009

Noah's Arch

Hungry For Success

Photograph copyright: DAVID McMAHON


Sometimes a single image, symbol or word can transcend all cultures and all languages. The golden arches of McDonald’s, the global corporation envisioned and tirelessly promoted by the late Ray Kroc, would have to full into that category of instant global recognition.

This was shot as we walked down Petaling Street, in the Chinatown area of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on a hot July night last year. There’s no language barrier. There’s no need for a translator. More crucially, there’s no ambiguity about the product.

Now that’s what you call great advertising.

And I couldn't resist the chance to post this image below. As we entered Petaling Street, one of the hawk-eyed Authorbloglets pointed out this delivery motorcycle. Now I have to ask the question - do you know of a McDonald's outlet that does home delivery? Seriously?


Visit TNChick's Photo Hunt. Today's theme: "Advertising''.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

N Is For Numbers

Digits Define Our Lives In So Many Ways

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON


In just about every way conceivable, our lives are governed by numbers. Birth dates, years, chronological references to every important point in our existence. We must remember several numerical sequences – phone numbers, ATM access codes, passwords to computers and everyday online applications.

So it’s no surprise that when I started this blog, I initially declared I had no interest in knowing how many people were visiting my site. A couple of my friends thought I was mad, but it really wasn’t important to me.

Then, nine months after I began blogging, I finally succumbed and installed a hit counter.

Yes, it is irresistible. Yes, I was daft not to load one onto my blog at the outset. Yes, it’s great to keep track of daily visits and weekly patterns. Yes, it’s interesting (not just because I am statistically minded) to notice that visits increase in winter, when people are indoors and start to plateau in summer, when everyone is out soaking up the sun.

There have been major landmarks along my blogging path. The first time I got 100 visits in a day was really memorable. Getting to 200 visits a day was a great feeling, but the real watershed for me was reaching (and maintaining) 240 visits a day. Why? Because 240 visits in a 24-hour day equates to an average of 10 an hour, or one every six minutes. That significant moment came a year ago.

My hit counter, when I installed it, was calibrated to register hits, not page views. I have never changed it. So while the figure in the top right-hand corner of this site shows that I have had more than 200,000 visits, I have had about 315,000 page views .


I often get asked what is the most difficult part of increasing readership – and my answer always is the same. The most difficult part is your first 2000-2500 visits.

If you can sustain a blog that long and weather some disappointments, you are well on your way to establishing a loyal readership. No newspaper, for example, ever achieved a circulation of 10,000 or more without doing the hard yards first. Be patient. Sometimes it is harder to be patient than to be creative.

On the night of February 12, I switched off my computer in the knowledge that when I logged on the next morning, my blog would have (in the middle of the Australian night) notched up a landmark. While I slept, someone would have become the quarter-millionth visitor to my site. But nothing could have prepared me for what was to happen the next morning.

While I sipped a cup of tea, my eyes popped. My site stats had blown out beyond my wildest dreams. It took me a couple of minutes to work out where the traffic was coming from, then I realised that I had been included in Google’s Blogs Of Note. That day I had almost 9000 page views.

If you build it, they will come.

But you have to build it first. And build it well.


For the home of ABC Wednesday, go to Mrs Nesbitt's Place.


Sunday, August 17, 2008

The Sunday Roast

Painter, Poet And Writer - Chewy Does It All


This week's interview is with Chewy,
who writes the blog The Back Of My Headboard.


The first of the standard questions. Why do you blog?

One day I went fishing... and darn it... I got myself caught in the net. Now I surf the wave, riding high, tumbling low, all the while discovering new beaches. Eventually other surfers slip into my wake and follow back to my towel. They rest, take in the scenery and converse. We share sunny ideas and warm comments. It’s a delightful place to be.

What’s the story behind your blog name?

I started a blog on the spur of the moment. - Screen name? um... c-h-e-w-y. "Chewy" as in that bubblegum song "Chewy Chewy". A joke between a friend and I. The lyrics "Always has a mouthful of such sweet things to say," expanded my full screen name to Chewy Sweetwater. The back of my headboard is where, as a kid, I stuck my chewed gum. The Back Of My Headboard is where I hang my art.

What is the best thing about being a blogger?

Hanging my abstract paintings on the virtual gallery wall. Welcoming in old friends, lurking relatives and new visitors, listening to their observations and learning from their comments. And the best part of all is - it’s free!

What key advice would you give a newbie blogger?

First the obvious, visit David McMahon’s Authorblog. Pop in, flip through his journal, look through his viewfinder, leave a comment and check out the Post of the Day. Secondly, I’d advise signing up at Blog Cataolog. The site is a social blog directory, a great place to promote your blog and/or find blogs on various topics of interest.

What is the most significant blog post you’ve ever read?

I don’t recall any one particular post I’ve read. If my attention is not grabbed in the first few sentences of text... I’m on to the next blog. (sorry) So many blogs, so little time. One long time favorite blog to read is Shrink Wrapped Scream. Shrinky paints pictures with her words and tends to pull my emotions all around. Quite often she leaves the reader hanging, begging for more. A wonderful unexpected result is that her writings have inspired some of my paintings. Cool, huh?

Being an artist, I’m more attracted to art based blogs, painters in particular. The past few months have been especially exciting in that I have found a supportive circle of artists to share ideas, materials and techniques with. If you’re interested in art topics, click on over to Kim’s blog Creating Space; One Contemporary Artist's Ramblings, Discussions and Ideas. Kim always presents an engaging question at the end of her posts. Her comment section is like plopping down on a couch in an artist’s studio and joining in on the conversation.

What is the most significant blog post you’ve ever written?

I express myself visually through my artwork. I’m not a verbose writer, so I’ve not really written anything very significant. I’ve been trying my hand at writing haikus. My approach is usually as picture puzzles; describing an image using few words. I post them on Tuesdays.

Today's Sunday Roast with Chewy is the 30th in a weekly series of interviews with bloggers from around the world.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Oxford Decree

Brian Thought It Was Casino Royale

What’s not to love about the humour of fellow blogger Brian In Oxford? I love the way he’s blogrolled me. Most people just link to Authorblog or David McMahon (Bart has me linked as ``Irreverence Down Under) but Brian’s got me pegged as ``Down Under David (DUD?)’’ and I love it, I think it’s very funny. Brian also made an interesting remark about the picture I posted a few hours ago of glass bangles at No Tangles, Just Bangles. One viewer and I agreed that the reds looked like salami in a delicatessen, but Brian’s comment was ``I thought perhaps you'd taken a photograph of chips from a casino. Perhaps the pinks are worth $5, the greens $25, etc. Very nice shot, though.’’