Friday, May 29, 2020

Use A Blogger Chain Letter to Help Your Job Search

Use A Blogger Chain Letter to Help Your Job Search 2 E-mail chain letters annoy me as much as they annoy you because they are usually based on lies. How many times has that girl in the hospital been on her death bed waiting for your friends, right? As if. This blogger chain letter is different because all the participants benefit and no one is being duped. It's more like a game, really, where everything is played wide out in the open. How is this useful for your job search? If you are following the advice of a site like Blog for Jobs then you are interested in promoting your blog, which in essence means you should be striving to promote your community, your network, yourself. Playing this game will help you do that. Here's what you need to do. Gary Lee started the game and I heard about it from John Chow. The premise is very simple. You simply copy the text below and follow the instructions to play along. Oh, and be sure to change the blog link mentioned to your own blog. There is one condition â€" you can only participate if your domain has your name in it (click some of the links below for illustration). I admit that I'm borderline here but jacobshare.com also points to this blog. In my case, I'm adding 3 blogs written by friends. One has high traffic, one has low traffic and the other I'm not sure. Go ahead and visit their blogs to see which is which ??eval ***Start Copying Here*** 1) Write a short introduction paragraph about what how you found the list and include a link to the blog that referred you to the list.eval 2) COPY the ENTIRE List below and add it to your blog. To avoid duplicate content and increase the amount of keywords your site can accessible for, go ahead and change the titles of the blog. Just don't change the links of the blog. 3) Take “My Adds” and move them into the “My Originals” list. 4) Add 3 Brand New Narcissistic Bloggers that you know of My Adds: David Slade Netanel Jacobsson Tom Raftery The Originals: Gary Lee Ed Lau John Chow dot Com Nate Whitehill Stephen Fung Michael Kwan Jeff Kee Stuart Hannig Hannes Johnson Nomar Nathan Drach Saman Sadeghi Bob Buskirk Jon Waraas David Lithman

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.