Posts Tagged ‘bloggers’

Featured Partner: Inn Cuisine

by Jeff J  on Jan 14 2010

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Chock full of tantalizing recipes and mouthwatering photos, Sandie’s Inn Cuisine food blog is dedicated to the recipes of bed & breakfasts, country and urban inns. Focused on recreating a taste of B&B’s for family and friends at home, Inn Cuisine’s approach to recipes and cooking is all about preparing great tasting food for the moderate to advanced home cook. From breakfast and brunch entrees to delectable desserts, sides and baked goods, Inn Cuisine’s appealing site design makes it a food blog you’ll return to again and again for a taste of the bed and breakfast experience.

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Featured Partner: Food Tastes Yummy

by Jeff J  on Nov 16 2009

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Nancy, who writes the Food Tastes Yummy blog based out of Canada, is passionate about food and cooking which is one reason why she wanted to share her recipes. She also feels that too many people are deterred from home cooking because they’re in a jam by the end of a hard work day and think that cooking will take too much time. She wants everyone to know that preparing a tasty meal doesn’t have to take hours!

easy salmon cakes

Why Springpad? In her words:

Anything I can do to help my readers experience the pleasure that I get from preparing healthy and tasty meals is why I’ve partnered with Springpad, as they make it easy for you to make my recipe your own by customizing ingredients to suit your taste and adding cook notes.

And, with one simple “Save” button on her site, Nancy gives her readers and the Springpad community the opportunity to collect, organize, personalize, share and use her recipes and recommendations as they see fit.  And, she’s also helping her readers save time by accessing their recipes, shopping lists and meal plans on the go with the Springpad mobile web application.

Picture 1

Get started with Food Tastes Yummy and Springpad:

Social Media Marketing Tool: springpad for Business

by katin  on Sep 11 2009

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As springpad becomes more popular, we are excited to see the many creative ways that people are using it – both in their everyday lives & as a way to promote themselves online.

One of our users & advocates, Christie “The Chatterbox” Crowder, has added springpad to her arsenal of social media marketing tools. As someone who is an active bloggers, twitterer, and podcaster – Christie has found a unique & useful place for springpad in her marketing approach.

Check out this guest post from Christie. She can be found on springpad: christiecgc / theblogrollers


Now that I am in the business of creating social media marketing campaigns for companies and brands, I am always on the hunt for new ways for my clients to spread the word. I have been an avid springpad user since late last year and I am getting in the habit of “springing” businesses that I personally frequent and adding my own comments and ratings. Recently, I “sprung” a couple of businesses that I not only frequent (and love) but have written reviews for, written feature articles about, and/or their owners have been on my radio show. Links, links and more links… which I happily added to my springpad. Then a light bulb went off! Eureka! springpad is the new hot little social media marketing tool!

For example, let’s take my good friends over at Vintage Body Spa. I created a “Business” for them in my springpad (well actually The BlogRollers’ springpad but you know that’s me too, right?). I use and love their products so there is a “I’ve Been There” click and a 5 star rating. I wrote about them on ChicGalleria.com, I wrote about them on my personal blog, other bloggers wrote about them on their blogs, they appeared on my radio show… and all of those links have been added to the springpad business along with a coupon code for a promotion they were running last month. A one-stop testimonial shop that can spring from pad to pad to pad gaining more links, more ratings, and more testimonials everywhere she goes! Not only can they be “sprung”, they can be tweeted, facebooked, and they can add their own “spring me” link to their website! Not only does that give them another vehicle for publicity, it sparks interest and curiosity for the springpad phenomenon! Is it hard to tell I am a fan? I did the same for The Kiwi Tree!

To think of all the businesses that are currently on springpad that either do not know they have been “sprung” or that there was so much potential in an itty-bitty listing! If you are reading this right now and YOU have YOUR OWN BUSINESS…did the light bulb just go off? A new (and hopefully profitable) reason to use and love your springpad!


Christie Crowder is a Mom, Author/Blogger, Radio Show Host, and an all around multi-tasking maniac. She is the creative force behind her personal blog, My Life – A Work In Progress, which chronicles how she strives to live an imperfectly inspired life amidst everyday chaos, her internet talk show, The ChatterBox, which allows her to put her gift of gab to good use, and she is one half of the social media marketing dynamic blogging duo, The BlogRollers.

Why Bloggers and Publishers should help their readers Spring It!

by mfusco  on Nov 24 2008

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Enrich your advice. Extend your brand. Help turn the consumable web into the usable web.”

The amount of consumable content available on the web is almost infinite.  But only a portion of that content is actually usable.  As bloggers and publishers, you work hard to create useful information and advice.  However, in order to make it usable, your readers often need to transform your information into something usable.  To do this, they create personal task lists & shopping lists, print out recipes, add things to their calendars or address books, and write notes to themselves.  In most cases, your readers do these things on paper or in another application that’s not related to your website -  the result is that your brand is nowhere to be found.

What is usable content?

We like to think of “usable content” as any piece of content that allows a reader to a take action on it.   For example, if a reader finds an article about vacationing, the usable portion would be a suggested packing list or a restaurant’s phone number or website to make a reservation. Or if a reader finds a blog post about how to roast a chicken, the usable portion would be the shopping list for ingredients & supplies.

How does springpad help bloggers and publishers share their usable content?

Springpad allows bloggers and publishers to easily structure and embed usable content into their articles or blog posts.  The method of doing it is simple; create related springIt! links.  SpringIt! links allow your users to “spring” branded, structured, and usable content into their springpads.  The usable content can take the form of simple things like shopping lists, alarms, or recipes as well as more robust offerings like branded springpads (e.g. Meal Planner, Trip Planner, etc). 

Example SpringIt! Implementation




Let’s take a look at one of the posts from the Spring Partners employee blog, thesimpleme.  After the user reads the post and decides that they’d like to save the recipe for later, they can click on the “Spring the recipe!” link.










The reader then gets a copy of the recipe, with the author’s brand attached to it, links back to the original article & even links to a few related articles.



The author of this recipe has now given their reader the benefit of using this recipe in springpad, provinding many features that would otherwise not be available to the reader:
– Sharing with family & friends (the author’s brand & links stay intact)
– Saving the branded recipe to use again & again
– Automatically creating shopping lists, which can be organized & reused
– Including the recipe in weekly meal plans & other food-related springpads

Implementing SpringIt! Links

Currently, bloggers & publishers need to contact us to put branded SpringIt! links in their websites. Please get in touch with me to get started.  (mfusco AT springpartners DOT com)

To learn more: Check out this video featuring Rookie Moms
Or see try SpringIt! it out for yourself on these websites:
Sex and the Knitty: (Pumpkin) Patch It Together (a shopping list)
Midlife’s a Trip: Spring Karen’s Kick-Ass Cranberry Sauce Recipe (a recipe)
Good Girl Gone Blog: Every day should be bagel day! (a restaurant)
thesimpleme: Make smaller mortgage payments (a budget, a task list & an alarm)

Growth of Blogger Influence on Consumer Behavior

by Jeff J  on Oct 28 2008

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A Jupiter Research survey sponsored by BuzzLogic released today highlights the growth of readership and the blogging community’s increasing influence on purchase decisions:

The results suggest frequent blog readers (defined as consumers who read blogs more than once per month) use blogs as the top online navigation tool to discover other blog content, ranking higher than general Web search or blog search. Demonstrating a 300 percent growth in monthly blog readership over the past four years, the study also confirmed blog readers are strongly influenced by blog content when it comes to purchase decisions across a number of categories, and that blogs play a key role in ushering readers to the point of an actual purchase.

Rob Crumpler, CEO, BuzzLogic goes on to say: “blogs are becoming trusted guides, steering users who are seeking very specific information to places of interest online.” As avid members of the blogging community ourselves, we’re in violent agreement with the survey results.

And our new product – springpad (springpadit.com) – is designed to help bloggers extend their expertise and attract new readers by making it easy for their readers to interact, share and apply their insights and advice. Interested in learning more?  Contact me (jjaner at springpartners dot com)

BlogHer ReachOut Tour: Boston & DC

by katin  on Oct 10 2008

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I attended BlogHer ‘08 in San Francisco over the summer.  This weekend, BlogHer is taking both Boston & DC by storm with one-day conferences.

Spring Partners will be there, talking about springpad. If you can’t make it to BlogHer this weekend, I sure hope you check out the video demo.  We are still in Invite-Only Private Beta, so sign up to participate.

Read about the current beta features.

Do you have your own blog?  springpad’s got something special for you.

10/10 springpad update – BlogHer Launch

by katin  on Oct 10 2008

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We are really excited with the current state of our new product, springpad.  In fact, we are inviting hundreds of bloggers into the system this weekend to start testing it out.  If you haven’t already, sign up for springpad.

This is the first of many product updates.  Check back here for new features, system notes, known issues & plans for upcoming releases.  Your feedback is very important, so please don’t hold back!

springpad is in Invite-Only Private Beta. (watch the feature video)
As we invite users into the system, we are looking for feedback:
1. Notebooks: What types of templates do you want to see?
2. Features: Tell us what you think so far & what you’d love to see added
3. Bloggers! Check out the demo for bloggers & Give us your feedback [feedback AT springpartners DOT com]

Supported Browsers:
springpad current works on Safari 3, Firefox 2 & Firefox 3. We’re not quite ready for Internet Explorer – stay tuned.

New features: (watch the feature video)
1. Create Notebooks & Pages for organizing all of life’s projects, big & small
2. Add notes, shopping lists, packing lists, events, alarms & task lists
3. Add Contacts to your notebooks & send Events to your google calendar – Integrate with GMail
4. Search for Restaurants by name or cuisine

Features scheduled for the next release:
1. Create alerts or reminders for you & your family – receive them via email or text message
2. Recipes:  They’re in there now – but a simpler, better version is on the way
3. Our first Notebook template:  The Meal Planner!  Use it for your weekly meal planning, shopping lists & recipes
4. Create Budgets – for shopping, family expenses, party planning & meal planning

On the very near horizon:
1. More great Notebook templates: We’re starting with meal planning, trip planning and gift planning (for the holidays)
2. Collaboration with a spouse or friend
3. Access your springpad on the go with mobile phone support
4. Usability: We’re adding a shiny new look & feel to springpad
5. You tell us…  invite lists?  fitness trackers?

How mass media is using bloggers to reach readers

by katin  on Oct 09 2008

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Chris Anderson recently talked about how a passionate amateur almost always beats a bored professional:

They choose to spend their time on what they do, and they go exactly where their passions, interests, knowledge and personality takes them–no further. If they lose interest they move on and are replaced by someone bursting with fresh energy. Self-selection ensures engagement.

When I attended BlogHer over the summer, I discovered some pretty awesome amateur writers in the form of bloggers. They write on topics ranging from health to food to politics to parenting, and sometimes go on an entertaining rant or two. And, I am embarrassed to admit that prior to discovering the large world of bloggers, my main online sources were limited mostly to CNN for news, AOL for celeb gossip & Epicurious for recipes. But, I am proud to say that I am not likely to ever go back.

So, yes, I agree with Chris. Passion is the secret ingredient that makes online content great, it’s the je ne sais quoi that ropes in the reader & commits him or her for life.  A few examples:  Vegan Yum Yum’ recent post on food photography for bloggers, The Simple Dollar’s post about what he learned as a first time home buyer and ten simple ways to live a less stressful life from zenhabits.

But, don’t just take it from me. Every media company under the sun is working to harness the passion of bloggers. Real Simple has put their Simply Stated blogs front and center, CNN is looking to the public to write the news through iReport, Martha Stewart has her own set of blogs in addition to a circle of featured bloggers who are part of her ad network, and even USA Today has members of its staff writing content in the form of blogs.

So, does the increasingly blurry line between media conglomerates & independent bloggers really benefit the reader? The answer is yes, in the sense that media companies are trying new ways to engage with their readers. And a double yes, in the sense that amateurs are now being legitimized by media companies and sponsors alike, and in turn discovered by more and more committed readers like me.

The Art of Networking and the Social Web

by Jeff J  on Oct 02 2008

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Is the social web a silver bullet for networking? With everyone being no more than six degrees of separation from anyone else, can you establish a meaningful connection with someone you want to know just by tapping your social networks? I would say no.

Despite the continued growth of social networks, the blogosphere and the trust placed in crowd sourcing referrals and recommendations, I think networking success still relies heavily on personal introductions and referrals from trusted sources. Social networks create a lot of noise that makes navigating through the networking funnel time consuming; i.e., getting from awareness you exist through consideration and preference to making a meaningful connection.

Although the automation of “friend me” and “follow me” features has enabled me to amass hundreds of “friends”, it hasn’t really gotten me any closer to someone that I want to meet; for example Tim Ferris. Regularly posting comments on his blog might gain his attention and possibly a connection, but a personal introduction from a respected source will get there faster.

Speaking of Tim Ferris, Robert Scoble wrote an article in Fast Company describing how Tim went about meeting the bloggers he wanted to know. The key to his success? Attending Bloghaus at the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show and making dinner plans with his targeted bloggers. To be sure, Ferris did his homework by regularly commenting on their blogs and linking to them from his blog; but in the end, it came down to the face-to-face meet and greet.

And that’s the point. Given the social web’s unparalleled opportunity to connect – at some level – with more people than ever before, there’s still no substitute for personal introductions and trusted referrals. Successful networking in an automated world is not just the social web or the rolodex, it’s both.

So…does anybody know Tim Ferris that would be willing to make an intro?

The Many Ways that Bloggers Retain Readers

by mfusco  on Sep 12 2008

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Similar to other authors of advice and useful content, bloggers employ many tactics to attract first-time readers.  It’s mostly in the form of writing creative & useful advice, commenting/linking throughout the blogosphere, and optimizing their posts for search engines.

After attracting readers for the first time, turning those new eyeballs into devoted, repeat readers takes work.  As I’ve discussed before, it starts with the constant creation of fresh, new content.  Beyond that, there are many creative options – here are the main ones I’ve seen:

  • RSS Feeds are a great way to build a regular following and to monitor readership stats via services like FeedBurner, but this does not always bring readers back to the blog to interact via comments or discovery of old posts.  The Simple Dollar proudly displays their RSS feed.
  • Email Newsletters are not all that different from RSS feeds.  And, with all the emails that people get nowadays, newsletters might get lost in the mix.  Lots of great food blogs, like Chocolate & Zucchini, Foodista and Tasting Table offer beautiful newsletters.
  • Downloadable PDF’s and Excel files allow readers to take the blog’s advice one step further for life tasks, like creating a meal plan.  These downloads are great for deepening the quality of the advice, but may not always drive return readership.
  • Bookmarking and Sharing Services allow readers to store and distribute a blogger’s advice and related brand.  They both re-engage readers & help to reach new readers.  To see how they work, check out the bottom of any of 101 Cookbook’s posts – you’ll notice the integrated del.icio.us, StumbleUpon and Facebook buttons.
  • Blog Carnivals solicit other bloggers to submit links to articles on a particular topic.  The benefit to the “carnival host” is the ability to both create return traffic and aggregate a lot of great content with minimal effort.  The contributing bloggers get the chance to distribute their advice in hopes of driving readers to their site.  Check out Org Junkie on Mondays, Rocks In My Dryer on Wednesdays, and Delicious Baby on Fridays.
  • Contests encourage readers to comment on posts, driving repeat readers and encouraging interaction.  Within the Corners of My Kitchen runs a weekly product giveaway and Rookie Moms is currently offering a prize for feedback on their new site design.

While some of these methods are a one-time setup, many of them require a lot of work and commitment from bloggers.  Based on their widespread willingness to do this work, we believe that reader retention and re-engagement must be of high importance to these talented content creators.

Here at Spring Partners, we are developing a tool that might just help…
We believe that by helping readers to interact with bloggers’ advice we will not only be helping users, but also helping bloggers to further extend their advice, their brand, and their devoted readership.

Signup to be a part of the springpad private beta.  Or, if you are an interested blogger, consider being part of our life expert program.

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