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Blogspot vs. Wordpress
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Other followers that I have are indie authors who are happy with my reviews of their work or who hope that I will one day review their work.
I prefer Blogger because the SEO (Search Engine Optimization)is better. Most of my views come from Google searches. My WordPress blog was practically invisible. Almost no one ever accessed it. I abandoned my WordPress blog and brought it to Blogger. It now has more views in six months than it had in its entire history on WordPress. Seriously, views are more important than followers.

I definitely see more "real" traffic on WordPress, with real people following, viewing, and liking my posts. Blogger sometimes gets traffic and sometimes not, but the numbers artificially inflate, due to the odd bots like vampirestat and adsensewatchdog making it look like I've had bunches of views.
I do have links to each of them on the other blog's site, so people can cross back and forth, but I've found that the slow & steady growth approach is fine by me. I'd rather have a few people who want to read what I have to say than hundreds who "follow" but ignore two of every three times I post.
I think the best way to get people to notice your blog is to visit theirs, comment when you have something to say, and interact in general on places like GR.

I've decided to set up a little experiment where I have one blog one Blogger and Wordpress that look as much the same as possible so only the differences I can't change will be left. I'm also going to be posting the same thing on each blog, except that I'll definitely be taking advantage of the free abilities offered by Blogger as I mentioned above. You can check it out if you want:
Wordpress:
http://sabrinagiles.wordpress.com/
Blogger:
http://sabrinagiles.blogspot.com/

I've decided to set up a little experiment where I have one blog one Blogger and Wordpress that look as much the same as possible so only the differences I can't change will be left. I'm also going to be posting the same thing on each blog, except that I'll definitely be taking advantage of the free abilities offered by Blogger as I mentioned above. You can check it out if you want:
Wordpress
Blogger

One of the authors here on GR, Raymond Esposito, has a terrific blog, http://writinginadeadworld.com/, and he's the one who taught me about replying to those who comment. I'd said something once on his blog about commenting too frequently, and he replied that he welcomes the comments, because otherwise, he's just talking to himself. Since then, I've been careful to reply on my own blog, even if it's just to thank someone for stopping by.
I'd be happy to check out your blog(s).



I'm also getting really fed up with Google's obsessive plot to get everyone using Google+ so no Blogger for me...
I don't pay for Wordpress though so it is a little more limiting, I wish I could change the template colours but, alas, I won't pay so I can't.

http://www.bekahcat.wordpress.com
That's why I kind of left Blogger behind for a long time, but I go back to thinking about it every so often because Wordpress has its flaws too. With Wordpress you have to do an upgrade to upload videos, or at least more than one video, and I can't do any of my giveaways with the rafflecopter widget. I can't post gifs either, so that does limit the kinds of posts I can put on my Wordpress blog, which continuously saddens me because I've been thinking about making video blog posts. Not so with Wordpress.
Sometimes I really want to switch back to Blogger, but the connectivity thing makes me nervous. I don't know if anyone's had the same problem with that as I have, but I would really like to know how bloggers on Blogspot seek out other bloggers in their same category? Or any category? If I'm right in saying the connectivity between bloggers is a little harder than on Wordpress, then I ask how you did it. How did you get all those followers on your Blogspot blog?