6 Steps to a Better Blog – Registering a Domain

February 8, 2010 · 11 comments

6 Steps to a Better Blog – Part Two

In the first part of this series, we looked at the importance of owning your own domain. You should know what a TLD, sub domain and SEO is by now. As mentioned, each of these subjects can become deeply involved, and in this tutorial only the basics will be addressed. Again, this is all you need to have a site or blog up and running.

The next part, Registering a Domain, is a detailed procedure of exactly how to do that. The video in this part should be particularly helpful with this process.

As always, help me to help others. I hope to see enough interest in this series to make it worthwhile. If you can comment with a different way, maybe a better way, help your fellow beginning bloggers or site-builders.

Part Two >>

{ 10 comments }

Yogesh Mankani February 9, 2010 at 6:04 pm

Wow..Thanks, looking for another part of the series.Told you I am not going to miss any..Great work you are doing for new bloggers :)

Hal Brown February 9, 2010 at 6:38 pm

Thanks Yogesh. Knowing I'm helping someone makes this a whole lot more fun to do.

ileane February 9, 2010 at 11:22 pm

Hal,
This is a great read packed with valuable info.
I hear a lot of complaints in the forums about GoDaddy's hosting. It must be kinda weird having a “dual-brand” personality. Good registrar – awful host.
I hope that at some point during this series you will address importing a blog from a free service to a self hosted domain. My daughter wanted to import her WordPress.com blog but she has hosting with 1and1. “Mommy” couldn't help her with the transition because 1and1 is not one of the hosts recommended by WordPress (she didn't tell me until it was too late).

I mentioned earlier that I lost the original comment while I was at work. IE7 and Disqus do not talk to one another – when you hit submit a transparent black haze takes over the entire window that resembles a cosmic black hole. lol

I hope I didn't forget anything that I wanted to say, if I think of something, I'll tweet you.

Thanks.

I look forward to the next installment.

Hal Brown February 9, 2010 at 11:43 pm

Thanks for the comment ileane. First, GoDaddy was not always a 'not so great' host. I'll get into that in the next part, about how to choose a host. There is a lot to cover with that, as well as a lot of controversy. What I can give you is the benefit of my experience with a lot of hosts.

I'm not sure I understand about your daughter. She wants to move her blog *from* 1and1 to Wordpress? Or the other way around? If she is moving from 1and1 it won't be any different than any other host. I can't do it in a comment, but moving from one host to another is doable. Bear with me and I'll explain how that is done later in this project. One point to remember, just because Wordpress does not recommend a host doesn't mean that host won't work. If Wordpress is running on a host then obviously it will work. Separate Wordpress the software from Wordpress the web site. Two different things.

I hope that makes sense and helps.

ileane February 10, 2010 at 12:43 am

Hal, Sorry for the confusion. She has a WordPress.com blog and now she wants to move it to a self-hosted WordPress blog. She has her domain name already thebondgurl.com and she paid for hosting with 1and1 but doesn't know how to import her posts from the .com blog to the self-hosted one. I hope that makes the question more clear now. Thank you.

Hal Brown February 10, 2010 at 11:23 am

Answered personally. I hope this works for you ileane.

missy February 10, 2010 at 11:56 am

I thought I put a lengthy comment on here yesterday – did I not?

Karen Black February 10, 2010 at 1:12 pm

Thank you for this very helpful series.

Hal Brown February 10, 2010 at 3:13 pm

I believe it was on the intro page.

Hal Brown February 10, 2010 at 3:13 pm

Thanks Karen. You're most welcome.

Comments on this entry are closed.

{ 1 trackback }

Previous post:

Next post: