How to Grow a Blog into a Profitable Company

Well growing a successful blog that will rank among the worlds best blogs can be a challenge more especially when you choose a very much competitive niche. I have come across a lot of challenges in my blogging in such that I was more even ready to quit but I really believed that Ajaxsurf will one day grow into being a giant.


There are many bloggers that get into blogging in the name of online revenue and most blogs that are started with that purpose are very less likely to survive competition as they lack a true motive. Blogging should be done as a hobby and as a business in order to be done successfully.

The question I have received from most of the Ajaxsurf fans is how did I get the confident to start a blog and what made me believe that my blog was going to stand out from the huge blogging crowd that contains millions of blogs around the world and my answer is simply hardwork and dedication because when I started things were not as easy as many have thought because my blog lacked content

Content
Content is the best thing that makes a site to be get famous, the content of the site matters the most of the readers will land to your site because of the content that they are looking for.
I know most of you are asking how will one get enough content for publishing, and believe me when I say it is very simple because as new blogger, I spent most of my free time writing articles instead of watching TV and by doing that the readership of Ajaxsurf has grown significantly to an amazing 30,000 daily visits and more 100,000 which is a big improvement that I can achieve as a professional blogger.So keep those articles coming and see the magic and the growth your site will get.


Must Read: Benefits of having a professional blog design

SEO(Search Engine Optimisation)
I believe most bloggers are familiar with Search Engine Optimisation(SEO) as it has been the best when it comes to the terms of improving a new site. Even though content might be the best part of a blog but SEO still remains as one of the most important parts of blogging because its creates a very much visible presence.

Without a proper optimisation, it is very less likely that your blog can be noticed in the internet because the internet very much depends on search engines and without any proper optimisation, your site will hardly make it through despite the content it has.

Dedication
Looking at well known bloggers like Pete Cashmore, you will notice the hard contribution they had put to bring the best quality blogs. Working hard to produce quality materials and posts has been a challenge for me recently until I started to set myself a publishing schedule to improve the quality of my posting. you cannot overcome your blog competition unless you dedicate yourself into blogging because there are so many blogs out there and competition is getting tougher everyday.

I will recommend bloggers to work smart in order to outrun the blog competition

Its Not Only About The Money
Thats is the biggest mistake that many bloggers make out there, they start blogging with the purpose of making some easy cash which will result in their blogs failing to survive as they may lack traffic or interest. I make a lot of money from blogging and trading the currency market but that has not stopped me from wanting to increase my networth or revenue and to speak the truth I am not driven by money but I just want to achieve a lot more in life. I have been blogging for money and instead I have lost a lot until I started blogging professionally without being driven by greed or anything related.

Blogging should be done with the purpose of increasing the readership and the value of the blog and trust me your blog will grow into being a giant. Its that easy, Just forget the crap you see all over the internet about blogging and start blogging the smart way and you will notice some great growth in your blog.

Taking action when someone has copied your blog without permission

This article is about the steps you can take when someone has made an unauthorized copy of something that is published on your blog.


Finding out that your blog has been copied

Previously, I've described how copyright applies to blogs in very general terms, and the steps you can take to apply copyright protection to your blog.

Even if you follow these these steps, if you put material onto the internet it is quite likely that someone will copy it.

This maybe done out of naivety, or as a deliberate attempt to rip you off, or as part of an organised spam-blogging ("splogging") operation.


There are several way you might find out that someone has copied your work:
  • You, or your friends, notice it
    Maybe you or one of you readers searched for a certain phrase and you found your content elsewhere.  Or maybe you found a link to an identical post on a help-forum or discussion board.  If you use a lot of in-post linking (ie you link to another article in your content), and notice you are getting a lot of visits from somewhere unusual, then you might visit that site and find your post copied word-for-word, including the unchanged links.
  • Google's spam bots notice it:  
    If you get an email or a notice saying that your blog has been identified as potential spam, then one of the possibilities is that a real spammer has chosen your content.

If you found out that someone has copied you work because Google's spam-bots detected the problem, then you simply need to follow the instructions in the email that Google sent you, or consult the Blogger Help Forums.  In short, you will be advised about a four step process that you need to follow.   This is tedious, but the nice part is that Google is dealing with the copy-cat for you, and (if you're not a spammer) you'll get your blog back.

If you find out some other way, then you need to decide what do to about the problem (if indeed you believe is is a problem).   This is closely linked to what you want to achieve - this could be any of:
  • Do nothing - if you don't mind being copied, and you're willing to risk being incorrectly identified as a spammer
  • Getting the copied work taken down
  • Leaving the copy in place, with your name or URL  added beside it
  • Being paid compensation
  • Receiving a public apology
and I'm sure there are other possible remedies, too.

Once you know what you want to achieve, you can plan what steps you need to take, based on the notes in the next section.

Reality check:  There is nothing wrong with being ambitious and wanting to receive $10M compensation.  But  unless you can afford really good lawyers, it might be a good idea to have a backup plan which involves a realistic goal too, eg having your name added to the copyright materials, or having them taken down.


Steps for resolving copyright problems

Start the easy way

Unless you're certain that the copying was deliberate and malicious, the first step is most cases is to send a nice email to the person who made the copy, telling them that it's yours and what you want done about it.  (You might need to just leave a comment on their blog, if no email address is provided.)

    Report them to their internet service provider

    The obvious first step if politeness doesn't work is to complain to their web-host:
    • If they use Blogger (ie their URL is WHATEVER.blogspot.com, or they have a custom domain but the source-code on their site looks like Blogger code),
      then you should contact Google through this page:   http://www.google.com/blogger_dmca.html 
      Google have a very thorough process for dealing with claims of content stealing - and if the other site that you say has stolen your work is also published in Blogger, they can look at the dates in their database to see who actually published it first.
      Make sure that you read all the details of Blogger's policies before you submit a complaint:  they don't like malicious complaints, and you could be fined quite heavily if you claim that you own something which you don't really own.
    • If the person who has copied your work isn't using Blogger, you may need to do some detective work with whois (use Google-search it to find a whois service for the domain you're looking for) to see   who the host is, and what process this host uses to resolve copy-right complaints. 
      This could be particularly difficult to do if they're not located in the same country that you are (so their laws will be different), or if they use a different language.
    • If the person who has copied your work has put it into YouTube, you can use information and tools on  YouTube's opyright page.


    Complain to other services

    If the other party's web-service-provider can't or won't help, then you could try reporting them to other services that the use.

    For instance many websites are also on Facebook:  if the contents includes your material, or links to a website that's distributing your copyright material, you may be able to use Facebook's intellectual property violation reporting process.  (I haven't tried it myself, but have been told that this can be particularly effective.)

    If they show advertising on their site, then complaining to either the advertisers, or to the company that organises the advertising programme, may be effective.  AdSense is quite sensitive to not having it's ads shown along with copyright violations, and provides a policy violation reporting form that you can let them know about the problem.

    Charge them

    Logodollar2Some people have had success from sending the offender a bill for use of your work.  This takes a bit of thought:  if they pay the invoice, then legally you may have licensed them to use your work for far less than it is worth.   On the other hand, if the amount that you ask them for is ridiculously high, they will probably just laugh and ignore you.

    Threaten legal action

    This can be fun:  write a very formal-sounding letter demanding that they cease-and-desist from using your work (name it very specifically) by a certain date, and advising that failure to do so may incur penalties including but not limited to commencement of legal proceedings for in which you will be looking for legal expenses as well as damaged incurred.  

    If you would actually be willing to sue the person (see the section below), then consult a lawyer, and get them to send the letter.   But if there's no chance that you actually will sue  (and most bloggers simply don't have the time, resources or levels of proof to do so), just make the letter sound good.   If necessary, get a friend who can write pompous-sounding letters to draft it for you.    Send it by regular mail - emails are too easily ignored - and make it look official.

    Finding the address to send a letter to can be a challenge - one option is to scour your copy-cat's work, and see if you can find their company or personal details on LinkedIn (most are smart enough to hide themselves on Facebook).    And if you can, then complaining to their boss may be an option, too, depending on your niche and whether their action might be harming their company's reputation.

    Legal action

    If all else fails, another option is to sue the person or organisation that copied your work.  If you or the copy-cat are in the USA, then the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) provides an approach for this.   But if you and they are in different countries, then different laws and processes may apply.  But no matter where you are, two things are likely:
    • You will need to hire a lawyer - so it may be expensive and take a lot of time, and
    • You may need to prove that you really did create the work, and when it was made.   
    The second point is where copyright registration services come in to play:  they provide evidence that you really had created the work as at a certain date.  Unfortunately this is one of the ironies of copyright:  listing your material with a copyright service does nothing to stop anyone using it.  But if you don't list it shortly after it's created, you probably won't have any evidence if you ever get to the point of wanting to sue (or even formally complain about) someone who has copied your work.

    There are some other issues with copyright services too:
    • It can be difficult to list a blog, which by its nature has different material being loaded very frequently.
    • You won't necessarily know which services(s) to register with - because you don't know where someone who copies your work is located, so you won't know what services a court in your country will accept evidence from.
    So, while I'm not advising you to avoid the registration services altogether, it's important carefully to choose when and how to use them.

    Peer pressure / Name-and-shame

    If the legal approach doesn't work, or would be too expensive, then another option is to use social pressure to convince your copy-cat that they need to stop copying your work etc.  This can take a range of formats - eg, if a local small business has copied your photograph and isn't willing to compensate you, you might get all your friends to contact the business and threaten not to buy there again.   Or you might start a Facebook campaign, or put a video on YouTube telling your side of a story.   Whatever you do, make sure you that you:
    • Really know what you want to achieve:  fame, a pay-off to stop the campaign etc
    • Consider the risks (ie what could go wrong) and whether they're worth it
    • Don't break the law yourself (it's not worth it, especially if you're the small guy), and
    • Think strategically about what you might do, and how this could affect the relationships in your area or niche:  some people are just too much trouble to have an enemies.


    DISCLAIMER

    This article contains general advice about the copyright issues faced by people who use Blogger.   It cannot cover every possible case or specific legal systems. 

    If you need legal advice about a particular situation, consult a lawyer, ideally one who is familiar with copyright law in your country.

    I do not, under any circumstances, suggest using illegal approaches - threats of violence, sabotage, etc.



    Related Articles

    Copyright, Blogs and Bloggers, an Introduction

    Tools for applying copyright protection to your blog

    Putting 3rd party HTML (eg a Creative Commons licence) into your Blog

    Removing the Attribution Gadget from your Blog

    Displaying a gadget only on the home page - or only on a specific page

    This article is about how to set up a gadget / widget in Blogger so that it is only visible on the first place that a reader sees when they visit your blog (often called the "home page").  It is one of a series of articles about controlling what goes on the homepage of your blogspot blog.


    Front Page Bob
    By Paginator (Own work)
     [CC-BY-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons
    There are a number of reasons why you might want to put a gadget only the screen that shows when a visitor first navigates to your blog's home page.

    You may want to show a welcome message, or a topic-index page, or to give a view of your recent tweets or some other RSS feed.    

    No matter what the reason, the process is very similar:

    How to make a gadget only appear on the first page

    Note:  in Blogger, the words "gadget", "widget", and even "page-element" all mean the same thing.  I generally use "gadget", because the Page Elements tab currently says "Add a Gadget".  But they're absolutely the same.

    1   Add the gadget

    Do this in the usual way.


    2  Place the gadget

    Drag-and-drop the gadget to the place where you want it.   It may be over or under your blog-posts gadget, or in a totally different place.

    A popular place for a gadget that is going to look like a "home page" would be in the Body section, just above the Blog Posts gadget, where "Test Gadget" is in this example:



    3   Find the Gadget-ID  in the usual way.


    4  Find the code for your gadget:

    Edit your template.

    Click in the search box inside the template editor, and look for the widget name that you noted in step 3.   Once you've found it, notice what comes after it.   In this example, it's the line for Blog1:
              <b:section class='main' id='main' showaddelement='no'>
    <b:widget id='Text1' locked='false' title='Test gadget' type='Text'/>
    <b:widget id='Blog1' locked='true' title='Blog Posts' type='Blog'/>

    Use the expansion triangle at the left side of the template editor to expand this section of the code.  After you do, it will look like:
     <b:section class='main' id='main' showaddelement='no'>
    <b:widget id='Text1' locked='false' title='Test gadget' type='Text'>
    <b:includable id='main'>
      <!-- only display title if it's non-empty -->
      <b:if cond='data:title != &quot;&quot;'>
        <h2 class='title'><data:title/></h2>
      </b:if>
      <div class='widget-content'>
        <data:content/>
      </div>
      <b:include name='quickedit'/>
    </b:includable>
    </b:widget>
    <b:widget id='Blog1' locked='true' title='Blog Posts' type='Blog'>

    5   Add conditional formatting

    You need to put conditional formatting code around the code for the gadget - makings sure that it doesn't go around the code for anything else!  (which is why you noted what comes afterwards in step 4)

    And to avoid leaving blank space where the gadget would have gone, you need to update a "hide" instruction to apply it to the gadget-id you noted in step 3.

    The code to use is this - except put the gadget-id instead of the XXX.

    <b:if cond='data:blog.canonicalUrl == data:blog.homepageUrl'>

    THE red CODE FOR YOUR GADGET GOES IN HERE 
    <b:else/>

    <style type='text/css'>
    #XXXX {display:none;}/*remove blank space that the gadget leaves*/
    </style>
    </b:if>

    The example above looks like this, when the code has been added:
    <b:section class='main' id='main' showaddelement='no'>
    <b:widget id='Text1' locked='false' title='Test gadget' type='Text'>
    <b:includable id='main'>
      <b:if cond='data:blog.canonicalUrl == data:blog.homepageUrl'>  <!-- only display title if it's non-empty -->
      <b:if cond='data:title != &quot;&quot;'>
        <h2 class='title'><data:title/></h2>
      </b:if>
      <div class='widget-content'>
        <data:content/>
      </div>

      <b:include name='quickedit'/>

    <b:else/>

    <style type='text/css'>
    #Text1 {display:none;}/*remove blank space that the gadget leaves*/
    </style>

    </b:if>
    </b:includable>
    </b:widget>
    <b:widget id='Blog1' locked='true' title='Blog Posts' type='Blog'>


    6  Check that it's worked

    Preview your blog before you save the changes:  check that the the widget is visible.

    Save the template changes, and look at your blog.  Check that
    • The widget is on the first page
    • The widget is not seen when you look at an older page (eg one from your archive)
    • The other elements of your blog (other widgets, blog post titles, dates and contents) are all as you expect them - on the first screen, and on other screens too.

    If anything is wrong with how your blog is working, go back to the template editor (Layout > Edit HTML), and upload from the copy of your template that you made at the beginning of step 1.   This will let you blog work properly, while you figure out what went wrong.


    How to display a gadget only on a specific post or page


    Follow exactly the same approach as above.

    But instead of  
    <b:if cond='data:blog.canonicalUrl == data:blog.homepageUrl'>

    Make the conditional statement based on something else.

    This can be a different condition, or a specific page URL.    For example to display a gadget only on a specific page, use this code, and put the address of the page instead of POST-URL:
    <b:if cond='data:blog.canonicalUrl == "POST-URL"'>>

    Note:   for the address of the page, if your blog does not have a custom domain, then be careful to use the "blogspot.com" version of the address, not one with a country-level name  (eg the blogspot.in or blogspot.co.uk version)


    To display a gadget on every page except a specifc one, replace the double equals signs (==) with the HTML code for not, which is an exclamation mark followed by an equal sign (!=).   For example:
    <b:if cond='data:blog.canonicalUrl != data:blog.homepageUrl'>

    Blogger have now provided an expanded list of conditional statements - you can find information about it:





    Where to get more information

    Controlling what goes on the homepage

    Adding a gadget / widget / page-element to your blog

    Editing your blogger template

    Putting a slideshow from Picasa onto your blog

    Getting the HTML code to put a picture into your blog

    Making a gadget that looks like a posthttp://buzz.blogger.com/2015/06/even-more-expansions-to-blogger.html

    Apple Becomes The Most Valuable Company

    Apple has taken their first position in the world as it had lost many of its rankings after the Steve Jobs death tragedy.

    Since 2012 Apple was able to grow from $36 billion to $76 billion within ten months as shown by the the Interbrand's 2012 global brand rankings. Since the 2012 growth Apple has been holding second position after Coca-Cola. This has been a very great improvement by Apple as they had shown a very good growth that year as they moved from position eight to position two.

    In 2014 Apple was able to take over the first position once again after the negative critics the company had as it had a massive growth from $76 billion in 2012 to a staggering $$124.2 billion in 2014. Since then Apple has been holding the position as the most valuable company until Google stepped in the beginning of 2016 due to the bad financial reports that were reported by Apple and surprisingly Apple was able to reclaim their position. The quick bost in the company value has been boosted by the announcement of the Iphone 5se and the Iphone Air 3 , which had rapidly increased the share demand.

    What are your thoughts, do you think that Apple will continue hold position number one despite the presence of its rivals Google, Microsoft and Facebook? Please leave your opinions on the comment box below.