Where should a new blogger get content? If I'm supposed to just get content from other websites how would I give them credit or do I even have to?
There are a lot of websites that you can hire people to write articles. www.hirewriters.com is one site Or you can write them yourself
If you aren't able to get content, you should create your own. Content is king and quality is important. If you are able to generate your own quality and unique content, you should. Why would you want a blog if you don't wanna write articles yourself? That's my 2ยข.
I was about to recommend this site as well, I don't believe you will find better quality articles at a cheaper price to be honest. If you want free content then I wouldn't hold out much hope of getting anything of good quality unless you accept guest posts and even then the good quality writers will be put off from writing for a PR0 site. If you do accept guest posts then make sure the links they include in it are relevant.
In my opinion, nothing beats your own written material. While I'm happy to look at guest posting, nothing will take the place of my own personal writing of posts. I like to help people get started with Wordpress and making money online in general... I can't really outsource that - because no-one else has my knowledge and experience. If I outsource an article, I'll end up spending nearly as much time editing it to meet my standards as if I'd just written it myself. If you create a blog without any desire to express yourself and help others, then you've just wasted your time. Now I know that some will point to various auto-blog plugins, and compiling content in other such ways - I just defy someone to point to an Authority blog in a given niche that relies on such methods. I want to read real content, with unique and useful ideas that I can use. If your blog doesn't give that to me, I'm clicking away... if your blog does give me what I'm looking for, I might even bookmark and return again. Now - how do you write content? Easy... first go to the article directories such as Ezine Articles, and do a search for your topic... read and get some ideas... then jump over to Yahoo Answers and do the same thing. Settle on a SINGLE QUESTION that you want your upcoming post to answer. The question becomes your title... any sub-sections dealing with the question become <h2> or <h3> tagged... and then just fill in the answer from your own knowledge and from re-stating what you've read in other articles on the same subject. Compile a list of bloggers in your same niche, and go back through their old articles - anything catch your eye that they have on their site that you've not addressed on your site? There's another good idea for content. And, the perennial content idea... the 'list'. 25 Best Wordpress Plugins 5 Ways To Lose 5 Pounds This Weekend Google's 200 Ranking Factors 101 Ways To Increase Link Popularity And so on... Just pick a topic, pick a number... and start writing! Content creation is so easy that I have far more ideas of what to write about than I have time to write it - so I'm concerned when I see people who don't know what to write about. Find a question... then answer it.
Blogs only do well when the websites have lots of unique quality content. You need to be blogging daily with high quality content that is not available somewhere else to get results. If you cant write very well yourself hire a high quality writer to do your blogging for you. On my blog for example I get out about 25 pieces of content a week and about 9 of them is mine and the others are from my two writers. Just look at what all the big blogs have in common......high quality content that people want to read and share.
I think I'll disagree with this. It's simply not possible to have high quality content, and do it daily. Really superb posts that draw in tons of traffic can take HOURS to write... my better posts are often written over a period of days... I do agree that frequent posting is worthwhile - but once or twice a week is more than adequate - and the higher quality of posts you'll get by not trying to force a post each and every day will pay off in the long run. I can point to any number of successful blogs that update as infrequently as a few times a month.
No, you are not "supposed to just get content from other websites" - that is theft. If, and only if, a site says you can use their content on your own site, you must follow their policies - that often means including back links and/or a author bio. If you are starting a new blog and can't write your own content, I would question why you are starting the blog in the first place.
You should be using search engines and social media to find topics that inspire you. For example, conduct a Google News search for the latest developments or checking the Trending Topics on Twitter.
You can use articles from article directories such as ezinearticles.com but you will need to link to them.
I wouldn't recommend going that route. Better to write your own content or hire someone else to write for your site directly.
If you don't have inspiration and you are not A writer simply get a VA to have it done. Content creation is very important now especially when everyone is focusing on it. So, don't write unless you are not sure on the quality.
I would suggest you go to Google and type in your search. There should be a lot of information on Google unless it is a very rare niche. Once you found something related to what you need, re-phase it using your own words. You can also find 2-3 article on web. And combine the main points, write the article in your own words.
ezinearticles.com is a good place to go find what you want. Because it is a popular article directory and many writers submit their work there. But don't copy. Need to re-phase using your own words.
No. No. No. Write your own stuff. Re-phrasing is stealing. Terrible Advice. Actually, with ezinearticles, you do copy. That's the whole point. Read the Terms of Service before you give bad advice. - http://ezinearticles.com/terms-of-service.html - "Respect the copyrights of the authors by publishing the entire article as it is with no changes."
I believe after the recently updated Panda, Penguin and Hummingbird algos, Google can easily spot content that's rephrased and rejects it as redundant. Right?
I had a pet-related article stolen from another site, posted on Yahoo! Answers which in turn was reposted via syndication on a major pet food company's site. Before I filed the DMCA, the pet food company's page was listed 1st, despite being a copy of a copy. 5-year-old content of mine was copied to Wikimedia last year. Someone on Etsy used it too. I ranked third for it. On others, I was relegated to the "similar results omitted" link. I've come not to believe much of anything Google says about how it treats stolen and copied content anymore. If it can't figure out the right thing to do with exact copies of content, I doubt they will be figuring out rephrased any time soon.
So your content, in spite of being original, was marked as similar by Google and the exact copies were listed at top in their search? Something unbelievable indeed! I wonder why some people shout at the other end 'Duplicate content will be banned', 'Google isn't accepting copies now' and stuff! Do these Panda, Penguin and Hummingbird updates have no effect on redundance? If so, spun and stolen content will continue to thrive.
It seemed, years ago, the algorithms were actually better in handling stolen content. First posted generally meant first indexed. Some thieves would race to put stolen content from little/new/weaker sites on ones that were getting indexed quicker. Often the thief could get indexed first and fool G into thinking they were the original. But, for the most part, the original source was listed first in the SERPs. I'm seeing more powerful sites get the nod as the original now. I'm also seeing 'fresher' content with less meat outranking high quality pieces that simply have not been updated in a while. Google has to answer the question of which is more important to them - indexing the entire web or only indexing the original sources. It would stop a lot of the garbage if the algorithms simply didn't index duplicate content at all or at least went back to the first written, first ranked approach. I just don't see them ever doing that. The bright spot is that one can generally beat most of the thieves in the long run. They're lazy. They're cheap. That makes them vulnerable to DMCA complaints. That also means they often find their get rich plan or ebook only makes the snake oil salesman of an author money. They usually give up and their sites either go offline, sink into oblivion or eventually get deleted by their web host.