Posted in Thursday Tip

#ThursdayTip: How To Create An Animated Image For Social Media

Welcome to this week’s social media quick tip.  This week I want to show you how to add variety to your social media posts with an animated image.  

We are going to use Canva to create our animated image. If you aren’t already using this tool, I highly recommend you add it to your social media toolkit. 

Click here for a step by step guide to using Canva.

It’s super quick and easy to do as you can see from the video instructions below.

Note: This is a Pro Canva feature.

You can also access a range of social media templates with built-in animations. They’re fully customizable so you can add even more animation or change any element to make them your own
Posted in Thursday Tip

#ThursdayTip: How To Analyze What’s Working For Your Competitors

Welcome to this week’s social media quick tip.  This week I want to show you how to analyze what’s working for your competitors and industry peers.

Your competitors and industry peers are valuable sources of insight. Look at the type of content your competitors are creating. Identify which content is performing well for them in terms of social shares, comments, likes, etc. Now, brainstorm around how you can take a piece of content they have created and put your own unique twist on it.

How to do this

Facebook provides an excellent feature to help you “spy” on your competitors with its Pages to Watch feature. To access Pages to Watch, go to your Facebook Page Insights and scroll down to the bottom of the Overview tab.

download - 2019-08-29T104536.596

Here’s to your social media success!

 

Posted in Cool Tool

Monday Morning Cool Tool: Portent’s Content Idea Tool

1_eNc_si2txKAEyzq83wicLQ.png

This week’s cool tool recommendation is Portent’s Content Idea Generator tool.

This tool allows you to generate headline ideas with just one keyword. Be prepared that the tool can throw up some quirky suggestions, but don’t let that put you off. Keep playing around with it until you find one you can work with. I also really like how it shows you best practice tips, such as using metaphors in your writing.

For more tools like this read  7 Tools To Find Inspiration For Your Headlines

Posted in Cool Tool

Monday Morning Cool Tool: HubSpot’s Blog Topic Generator 

1_QskWUH45Ro0SZJUKJO8YtA

This week’s cool tool recommendation is HubSpot’s Blog Topic Generator tool.

HubSpot’s Blog Topic Generator tool lets you input up to three different nouns and returns five blog topic ideas.

Here are the suggestions generated for me when I input the terms “social media” and “marketing” into the tool.

1_E-S7L4CmtyaE0zF1fTRqzA.png

For more tools like this read  7 Tools To Find Inspiration For Your Headlines

Posted in Cool Tool

Monday Morning Cool Tool: Inbound’s Title Generator

1_3xoo14DQWoKbIm9m-vy2jw

This week’s cool tool recommendation is Inbound Now’s Blog Title Idea Generator tool. 

Sometimes all you need to get those creative juices flowing again is a title and this is where Inbound Now’s Blog Title Idea Generator comes in. You don’t even need to input a keyword — keep clicking on the generate title button until you find the inspiration you need.

For more tools like this read  7 Tools To Find Inspiration For Your Headlines

Posted in Cool Tool

Monday Morning Cool Tool: Quora

1_SkmXdPaAk-bmdPc0aT4Kag

This week’s cool tool recommendation is Quora.

Quora is a question and answer platform where you can either ask a question about your topic or simply do a search using your topic keyword to find what people are asking about that topic. It’s a super place for market research. Make a list of those questions which you feel you could write about.

You have the option to follow chosen topics in your niche. Once you do so you’ll keep seeing the ‘Top Stories’ (questions) in your Quora newsfeed. You can also check out the ‘New Questions’ option to see the latest questions. When you have written an article or blog post on the topic, go back into Quora and answer a question related to the topic. You can include a link to your post in your answer.

 

Posted in #BCSM, #HCSM

Blogging and the experience of cancer survivorship

Blogs bring about a sense of community.  In the greater online health community, blogs make you feel like you’re not alone, that someone else understands what you are going through ~ Wego Health

I was 34 years of age when I hit was hit with a juggernaut – the metaphorical juggernaut of the words “you’ve got cancer”. I went through nine months of treatment for my disease and I coped remarkably well with this period, but it was when my cancer treatment finally ended that the full impact of what had happened hit me.

There is an expectation that when you walk out of hospital on your final day of treatment, your cancer story has ended; but the reality is that in many ways your story is only just beginning. The apparent randomness of a cancer diagnosis shakes your sense of identity to its very core and afterwards nothing will ever feel certain again. Friends and family may find it hard to comprehend why you are sad or depressed.  Understandably your loved ones want you to put your cancer behind you, to get on with your life and move forward, but it isn’t so easy. Fellow cancer survivors do understand though, and in my search to make sense of the experience of cancer and integrate it into my life, it was to these survivors that I needed to turn.

But where to find them? I searched online and while I found many blogs, chat forums and websites with great advice for those newly diagnosed, or going through treatment, I found it harder to access information on how to deal with the post-treatment limbo I found myself in. So I decided to start my own online resource – Journeying Beyond Breast Cancer. I wanted to provide a safe space for cancer survivors to share their experiences of navigating their way beyond their cancer diagnosis.

“One of the most valuable things we can do to heal one another is listen to each other’s stories.” 
Rebecca Falls

When I was first diagnosed with breast cancer, I knew nothing about blogs or online forums. It was only after I finished my treatment and was struggling with the aftermath that I ventured into the blogosphere. I believe that my experience during treatment would have been a lot different and a lot less isolating for me, if I had been able to write about it in a blog. Cancer can be a frightening and lonely experience. Being able to write about it honestly and unsparingly and connect with others is a powerful release mechanism.

Writing for Journeying Beyond Breast Cancer and linking into a community of liked-minded bloggers has been the single most empowering thing that I have done in my journey with cancer.  It has enriched my experience, brought new friendships into my life and expanded my horizons like nothing else. Blogging has taught me so much about myself as a writer, a cancer survivor and a health activist. It has taught me to be more aware and mindful of my everyday experiences, to be more honest and courageous in my communication. But above all else, blogging has connected me to people and places I would never have ordinarily connected to, and given me a sense of community and blogging I don’t think could ever have been possible otherwise.

Related Post:

Mired in meded – the aha moment about blogging