#AskPeshev 21: Inbound Marketing and Monetizing Blogs

#AskPeshev 21: Inbound Marketing and Monetizing Blogs

“The business executives of a company should be the frontliners in marketing the company’s products and services. There’s hardly any way around it.”

— Mario Peshev

Happy New Year!A wonderful and marvelous start of another exciting and prosperous year would not have been possible without your support and help so far.I’m just finalizing the content drafts for the month of January and working on contributed pieces and new headline ideas for the rest of Q1. One of the new concepts introduced during the holidays were my Guides - a collection of four training compilations in my main menu focusing on marketing, management, recruitment, and sales.Still “work in progress” (which is why I’m not linking directly to them) but we’re shaping the long-form content and organizing larger pieces into the new content hubs I’ve been working on. Maybe I’ll manage to release them as MBA books at some point?Here’s to an exciting 2020 and thanks a lot for supporting my endeavors for another year to come!

It's All About Reading...

The business executives of a company should be the frontliners in marketing the company’s products and services. There’s hardly any way around it. If you are a part of the senior leadership or management of a company, it’s crucial to learn how to navigate marketing alongside other business operations.

WordPress blogs could be monetized in so many ways. Advertisement Sponsored posts Paid guest writing opportunities Personal branding (and consulting options) Affiliate marketing Email marketing Are you asking about eCommerce since you want to charge straight through the website?read more…

For an ecosystem where users complain about $5/mo hosting accounts being TOO EXPENSIVE for an entire ecosystem (servers, networking, email support, cPanel, site builders), Akismet being pre-installed with WordPress forcing paid plans for $6/mo is kind of ridiculous.read more…

A business foundation is hard to shape. You definitely don't want different "camps" in your company fighting against each other.

If you’re managing a growing organization then the chances are that your company has been around for a few years now. A growing organization plans its strategy based on its previous experiment and what have worked until now.