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Your New Beauty Blog: Ohuhu Laptop Desk

August 17, 2016 · Leave a Comment

To have a successful blog, it is absolutely imperative to have When you first start out your blog, you will probably be using your phone camera for pictures. That is perfectly fine when you are getting started, but when it comes time to grow your blog, or if you want to look professional from the beginning, you will want to explore the concept of camera tethering.

In short, Camera Tethering is hooking up a digital camera to your laptop so that you can see the image on a large monitor as you take it. It saves time and produces a far better picture. If you use Adobe Illustrator, you can even process pictures as you go. It really brings you to the next level of blog photography.

Ohuhu Laptop Desk

Ohuhu Laptop Desk

 

However, finding a good setup for camera tethering is tricky. That is why I like the Ohuhu Laptop Desk. It is a laptop desk on wheels, with a large and secure section for your laptop, and a separate smaller section for your camera. Once you attach the camera to the laptop, you can see if the picture is framed on the laptop screen, and then you can take the shot. Once you take the picture, you can easily examine it to make sure it is how you intended it to look, and then make any adjustments needed.

Each piece of the desk also angles, so if you are at an odd angle, then you can adjust the table part of the desk pieces so you can see the screen clearly. The stand is also adjustable, so if you need the camera or desk to be higher or lower, that is no problem at all.

Ohuhu Laptop Desk

 

The package comes with all the pieces needed to assemble the desk, including a screwdriver. I assembled it in less than 45 minutes.

I’m quite glad to have this desk, as tethering on a fixed, non-adjustable desk was getting to be a bit of a pain.

Find it at Amazon.

Ohuhu Laptop Desk

I received this product in exchange for testing and review purposes. If you have any questions about my experience with it, leave it in the comments section below, and I’ll do my best to answer it!

Posted by Style Chicks / Filed In: Tips for New Bloggers
Tagged: Blogger Tips, Blogging, Camera Tethering, Oahu Laptop Desk, Photography

Your New Beauty Blog: Project Management with ProjectPlace

April 25, 2016 · Leave a Comment

We’re continuing our series on tips for starting your new beauty, lifestyle, and/or fashion blog. Hopefully now you have firmly in mind your vision for your blog and your future goals. Now it’s time to get started!

So…what’s the first step in getting started?

If you want a lively, successful blog, it is likely that sooner or later you will have to take on a team. Writing articles, scheduling, taking photographs – it is a lot of work and your strengths may not play to all of those points. Figure out who you want your team to be. Do you want to take on staff? Do you want to work with friends? Either way, you are going to need a way to collaborate with your team members.

After having tried many Team Management software programs and apps over the years, I learned about and have come to really like ProjectPlace. It allows you to break down each series, article, promotion, etc. into steps and it lets your team know who is responsible for what and when the deadline is.

There are several nice features about ProjectPlace. The main one is the flexibility. It provides you with a framework of core Team Management action items. You can take that framework and use it however is best for your team. Let’s take a look at some of the features to better explain what that means:

My Overview

This is one of my favorite features. When you are working with a team, ultimately you only care about what YOU have to do. Yes, you want to see the whole project succeed, but if you have built a great team that you trust, then you only have to worry about your portion of the work. When you log into ProjectPlace, the first tab that opens is My Overview. This is the screen that tells you what you need to do right now, what is pending, and what your future projects are. The left side of the screen has two tabs: My Work and Done. My Work lets you organize your time: what you need to do today, what you are doing tomorrow, and what you are doing later. You can add tasks, add details, make notes about your progress, or jot down ideas for something you have to do tomorrow. And then there is the blissful moment that you move things to your Done tab, and it is off your list!
My Projects takes up the right side of the screen. It allows you to break down projects into an extremely detailed plan. This is where you assign team members to tasks and check in on progress. You can change details at any time: perhaps an article took on a different angle, a deadline shifted, or you have to shuffle responsibilities between people. This is easy to do. If you are like me and you are always feeling like you forgot something, My Projects is fantastic because it lets you break down a project into such finite detail that any forgotten detail becomes obvious. It will be a real weight off of your mind.

Pending Projects

Running an active blog means planning not just days but months ahead. This is why “Pending Projects” is a great tool. It is the tab located next to My Overview and it contains all the projects you are juggling at once. If you make full use of this great tool, you will have enough projects in there that you will have to use the search feature, and I found that it is excellent for finding projects easily. It is also nice that you can form ideas slowly before assigning people or deadlines. As soon as you come up with an idea, start flushing it out and it will come together quicker than you think. It really is nice to take a look at your blossoming idea and realize it is ready to be turned into a fully formed project.

Boards

This is where you monitor the whole of a project. It allows you to see your progress in a highly visual way that isn’t inundating, breaking down projects into small, easy to digest tasks. It also gives an overview of what has been done already, thus giving you a quick sense of where you are in the stream of the project, all at a glance.

Notifications

If you are assigned a new task or someone else has finished the task before yours, you get a nice little notification up in the right hand corner of the screen. Easy and manageable.

Does all this sound complicated? It really isn’t. In fact, ProjectPlace makes it incredibly simple, and if for some reason you are still stuck, it has little bubbles on the screen that take you through what each section does until you get the hang of it, which will be fast.

I highly recommend ProjectPlace if you decide to work with a team from the beginning of your blog. It also gives you the ability to work with a team that is scattered all over. Have a friend in Paris who is an amazing photographer? No reason to not work with her because she can’t meet you for coffee to plan a project! Even if you are just working by yourself, it makes successful blogging far more manageable and less daunting, which is a huge key to sustaining a blog long term.

ProjectPlace offers a free 14 day trial to get you started, and I’m sure you will be hooked as quick as I was! Sign up at ProjectPlace.com!

I received access to ProjectPlace in exchange for testing and my unbiased review and I was compensated for my time and effort, however, my experience with the product and the opinions expressed in this review are 100% mine.

Posted by Style Chicks / Filed In: Tips for New Bloggers
Tagged: Blogging, Blogging Tips, ProJectPlace, Starting Your Own Blog

Your New Beauty Blog: A Review of Halden Zimmermann’s Guide to High Impact Blogs

March 31, 2016 · Leave a Comment

Style Chicks will be 10 years old next year. 10 YEARS! Back then it wasn’t even called a blog – if you wanted to make sure someone knew what you were talking about, you had to call it by the proper name – weblog.

Since 10 years of beauty blogging is a decent chunk of time, new and aspiring bloggers will frequently reach out to us for advice. So we have decided to start a new feature on Style Chicks with tips and tricks to help get new bloggers going.

Our first bit of advice is to read some books, not just blogs (yeah, odd advice, I know.) There are some excellent books out there that take you from the absolute first steps of blogging. It isn’t a step to skimp on – if you don’t get the beginning steps right, you will either end up having to retool things later or, or worse yet, you will fizzle out and abandon your blog.

In the spirit of doing things right the first time, I have been procrastinating on starting this feature until I received an audio copy of Halden Zimmermann’s Guide to High Impact Blogs. This book covers the practical basics of starting a blog, and also covers the steps required to keep your blog going long term. Whether you want to monetize your blog or just want to speak to the world, this book is an excellent starting point.

The main message of the book is that a blog is a business. This rung very true for me. You might be balking at that as a concept – “it’s just a blog!” you might say. But consider this: there are businesses that never plan on making a dime, but provide a service. But the planning and implementation are largely the same as companies that have no motive other than profit. So even if you are just starting a blog as a hobby, you still need to run it as a business. This isn’t to scare you off. This is so your blog a) remains sustainable for as long as you choose to keep on blogging, b) can make you money if you choose to monetize it, and c) remains fun. Dealing with hassles that come with bad planning is a quick way for your blog to become a burden rather than an exciting outlet.

Once you have decided to start a blog, the next point I’m going to bring out from Zimmermann’s book might seem counterintuitive. Offer to guest blog (for free) on blogs you like. A lot of bloggers will take you up on it. I will probably take you up on it. What does it do for you? It establishes you as an expert in the field, and it provides a link to your new blog from an established blog with people who are already interested in what your blog talks about. It also offers a tacit endorsement from the other bloggers that you are an expert. This is definitely what a new blogger wants.

A point I particularly liked in the book is to consider if your content is “evergreen” before you publish it. Last week I was going through my first few years of posts. Some posts look distinctly out of place on Style Chicks today. They probably looked out of place then. I hadn’t considered my long-term goals for the blog; I just wanted to produce good content. This isn’t to say that your goals can’t change over time. I have taken Style Chicks in many different directions over time, but every business needs to shape-shift every once in awhile. In the constantly evolving world of the Internet, changing directions or refining goals is a fact of life.

As someone who has been blogging for a long time, this book rang true on so many levels and added clarity to decisions I made over time – good and bad decisions. So if you want to avoid the bad decisions from the start and intentionally make the good decisions, I highly recommend Guide to High Impact Blogs. I made so many notes and bookmarks myself – it really is an excellent guide. I have a whole list of points like these that I could keep talking about, but the book does a much better job of explaining it than I am!

Find Guide to High Impact Blogging at http://haldenzimmermann.net/.

Posted by Style Chicks / Filed In: Tips for New Bloggers
Tagged: Blogging, Blogging Tips, Books, Halden Zimmermann, New Bloggers

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