Blog Content

How to fill your blog with content and products.

There are a number of ways to add content to your blog. As the blog is your product in this case we want to add content that people are not only interested in but that will help you with your business. The easiest way is to give some examples.

Accommodation

Lots of affiliate programs like accommodation, Amazon and if fact anything that has content is a great place to start if your short on content. Here is one I did for amazon in a few seconds. Obviously you also want to surround it with some other good information. I would simply post this in my best reading blog which could also link to my Internet Marketing blog.

Beginning of content. Took me all of about 4 minutes.

The Third Wave by Alvin Toffler

3rd wave

Change is the process by which the future invades our lives”.

“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn”.

In the world of futurist, Alvin Toffler, along with his wife Heidi, represent the proverbial 800 pound gorilla. Above are a couple of his statements to which you should take to heart.

Before there were personal computers on every desk, table and lap, and before there was wide knowledge of the Internet, Toffler predicted the digital revolution, the communications revolution, the corporate revolution and technological singularity. This later term represents an “event horizon” in which the predictability of human technological development extends past that which present models of the future cease to give us predicability or accurate answers. This is followed by strong increases in artificial intelligence and an amplification of human intelligence.

Toffler’s book described three different types of societies, which he referred to as “waves”. Each of these waves pushes the older societies and cultures aside. The First Wave, which has long been pushed aside for most of us, is the society established after the agrarian revolution, which replaced the first hunter-gatherer cultures.

The Second Wave, in which many of America’s people are still floundering, is represented by what has been called the “industrial revolution”. The main components of the Second Wave are the nuclear family, factory-type eduction, and the corporation, all of which are based upon standardization, centralization, concentration and synchonization, and bureaucracy.

The Third Wave is upon us and is also refered to as the “post-industrial” society and the “information age”. This society is represented by “subcults” or diverse lifestyles, “adhocracies” or fluid organizations that adapt quickly to change, and where information begins to substitute for most material resources. As to the later point, information becomes the main material for workers, each of which are only loosely affiliated. Mass production is replaced by mass customization; offering personalized and cheaper goods, services. Most importantly the gap between what has been producers and consumers begins to be bridged by technology creating a class of “prosumers” that can fill the own needs. We see this today in the way of open source software, assembly kit furniture, and freelance work, such as legal services.

Before there were personal computers on every desk, table and lap, and before there was wide knowledge of the Internet, Toffler predicted the digital revolution, the communications revolution, the corporate revolution and technological singularity. This later term represents an “event horizon” in which the predictability of human technological development extends past that which present models of the future cease to give us predicability or accurate answers. This is followed by strong increases in artificial intelligence and an amplification of human intelligence.

Toffler’s book described three different types of societies, which he referred to as “waves”. Each of these waves pushes the older societies and cultures aside. The First Wave, which has long been pushed aside for most of us, is the society established after the agrarian revolution, which replaced the first hunter-gatherer cultures.

The Second Wave, in which many of America’s people are still floundering, is represented by what has been called the “industrial revolution”. The main components of the Second Wave are the nuclear family, factory-type eduction, and the corporation, all of which are based upon standardization, centralization, concentration and synchonization, and bureaucracy.

The Third Wave is upon us and is also refered to as the “post-industrial” society and the “information age”. This society is represented by “subcults” or diverse lifestyles, “adhocracies” or fluid organizations that adapt quickly to change, and where information begins to substitute for most material resources. As to the later point, information becomes the main material for workers, each of which are only loosely affiliated. Mass production is replaced by mass customization; offering personalized and cheaper goods, services. Most importantly the gap between what has been producers and consumers begins to be bridged by technology creating a class of “prosumers” that can fill the own needs. We see this today in the way of open source software, assembly kit furniture, and freelance work, such as legal services.

To pick up your copy click here.

End Content example.

So that was easy. There a lots of affiliate products around that will let you do this.

Another way is to quote something.

Darren at Problogger makes a great living doing this. Just reference the post with Quentin from Blogging Empires (embedded affiliate link) told me of a new program he is relaesing for the blogging community. Then snaffle some content off the site. Most people don’t mind this if it adds to the sale.

PLR Articles

A great way to get content for you site is with Private Label Rights articles. Over the coming months we will provide you with a lot of these for different topics. Never just post them direct but take a portion of the information and use that as your post. You can do the same with resale products. In fact some of this site was built this way. Can you tell which parts.

Here are some to get your started.

Index of /articles