First, I’d like to mention that I had my final guest posting article on DeAnna Troupe’s blog post last week, titled You Can’t do It All When You Work For Yourself,  a small business topic many folks need to learn as soon as they can.  I  hope you check it out, and I thank DeAnna for asking me to write it for  her.
 You know, ever since I wrote my post on guest posting,  it seems I’ve been coming across many other posts about the subject as  well.  One of those posts I commented on, and it’s created an  interesting exchange that has prompted me to write this post.  It’s from  a blog called We Build Your Blog, and the post was titled Guest Blogging – Why don’t you do it?.   Andrew is the guy who writes it, and he had recently commented on my  post above, which is what prompted my return visit.  By the way, that’s  the great thing about CommentLuv; thought I’d plug that while I was at  it.
Anyway, his response here left me wondering what he might be getting  at, because, well, truthfully, my mindset wasn’t geared towards how he  responded.  When I went to read what he had to say, my mind cleared up  and I knew where he was coming from.  And it’s something that,  personally, I won’t do and never have done, and never even thought about  doing, yet something he recommends.  First, I hope you go read his post  and comment; it was nicely written.
It’s this concept of actively seeking out blogs to write guest posts  for to help spread the word, get backlinks, and help PR, which in this  case, I assume, is page rank, though I could be wrong on that.  He talks  about asking some of the big boys if they would accept guest posts, and  how sometimes they accept it and other times they turn it down for  whatever reasons they have.
As I said, the concept of asking someone else if they’d accept a  guest post of mine has never flickered in my mind, but while reading his  post, it reminded me of an old post that Dennis wrote when he alluded  to the thing about if I wanted to write a gust post for his blog to just  ask him, and in my mind “why would I ask someone if I could write for  them, for free, instead of just putting it on my own blog and moving on  with life?”  Not sure if you remember that exchange, Dennis, but it  remains clear in my mind.
Once again, I’m left wondering whether this is a generational thing  or a cultural thing in why, to me, such a thing as asking someone else  to accept a guest post of mine is anathema to my way of thinking.  Maybe  it’s couched in some way in some of my history of others claiming my  work as their own and not getting credit for it.  Maybe it’s tied in  with the fact that I never asked out first any of the women I ended up  having any sort of relationship with.  Or maybe my mind sees it as a  favor to me to ask people here and there to guest post here.  I do see  it as a compliment, I must admit, whenever someone asks if they can  guest post here, but I know that not everyone sees things that way.
It’s probably the same reason I think the way I do about posting to  article directories.  I see that as someone else getting the benefit out  of what I write rather than my getting much benefit out of it.  That  point can easily be argued both ways, but the way I see it, when I get  those monthly stats showing me how many people looked at an article I’ve  written, it’s not much higher than when I post articles to my own  sites.
By the way, on Andrew’s blog, I responded that, because of my own  pride, I have never asked anyone if I can guest post for them, and  probably wouldn’t, that I don’t care about page rank, since this blog  has no page rank anyway (but my Alexa rank is now around 115,000, and  getting better weekly), and that at this point going for more backlinks  probably isn’t going to do much more for this blog, though I welcome  them when they come.
So, I put the question out there; how far will you go to promote your  blog?  I don’t mind guest posting, and I don’t mind people asking me if  they can guest post; I want to make that clear.  I just don’t do it,  and can’t see myself doing it.  What say you?
 
 






 





 
