When you publish a new blog post, how do you get the word out? Do you
manually go to several different social networks and share your post, or do you
let a WordPress plugin or Web service do
the work for you?
There are many ways that you can automatically share your content on the
Web, and we’ll go over 10 of those methods below.
The Facebook Auto Publish lets you publish posts automatically from your
blog to Facebook. You can publish your posts to Facebook as simple text
message, text message with image or as attached link to your blog. The plugin
supports filtering posts based on custom post-types as well as categories.
The Social Media Auto Publish lets you publish posts automatically from
your blog to social media networks like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. The
plugin supports filtering posts based on custom post-types as well as
categories.
Publicize is part of the popular Jetpack plugin. It’s an obvious choice
for automatically sharing your posts on several social networks at once, since
many blogs are already using Jetpack.
You can currently share to Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Tumblr, and Yahoo.
Setup is easy and done via the Sharing sub-menu under Settings. You can choose
which posts to share and which social networks to share to on a post-by-post
basis.
This plugin automatically shares your posts to Facebook and Twitter,
along with a predefined message. WP-AutoSharePost is a bit more technical than
Jetpack Publicize, since you’ll have to create a Facebook app and Twitter app
in order to share your posts. However, it supports Bit.ly URL shortening, which
is great for tracking your links.
Additionally, the plugin grabs comments from Facebook (related to the
post) and adds them to your blog comments section.
1-Click is a plugin with many features, including the option to
automatically share your blog posts on 30+ social networks. You can
automatically share to: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Delicious, Diigo, Tumblr,
Foursquare, and more. You can also customize the message to be included with
your shares to Facebook and LinkedIn, on a post-by-post basis.
SocialPublish shares your blog posts to Facebook and Twitter as soon as
they’re published. You don’t have to create any Facebook or Twitter apps to use
this plugin. Simply sign up for a SocialPublish account (it’s an actual Web
service) and then connect your accounts. Like Jetpack Publicize, you can choose
which social networks to share to for each post. You can also choose to add a
custom message, but it’s not required.
NextScripts is by far the best plugin for auto-posting to numerous social
networks. It supports 18 social networks (more coming soon), including
Facebook, Instapaper, Google+, LinkedIn, Pinterest, StumbleUpon, Tumblr,
Twitter, YouTube, and more. You can even post to multiple accounts on the same
social network (i.e. multiple Twitter accounts, multiple Facebook pages).
The plugin makes 100% white labeled posts, meaning the posts will look as
if you posted them directly – no “shared via NextScripts.com or posted by SNAP
for WordPress” messages.
Social is another plugin that only shares to Facebook and Twitter, but it
goes a step further by pulling in reactions (from Facebook and Twitter) and
displaying them inline with your regular comments. You can publish to multiple
accounts on the same social network, and you can customize the messages
associated with your posts. Social requires the use of custom apps in order to
share to your accounts.
Although Dlvr.it is a Web service, as opposed to a WordPress plugin, it’s
still an excellent tool to automatically distribute your blog to your favorite
social networks. Dlvr.it supports Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Tumblr, and
App.net. Once you sign up, simply enter your RSS feed, choose the social
network you want to post to, and you’re all done. Dlvr.it also lets you post to
Google+ Pages, but only if you upgrade to a Pro or Ultimate plan.
IFTTT is my preferred method for automatically sharing my blog posts. I
use recipes for each of the blogs that I own and for the blogs that I
contribute to. Each recipe involves the Feed channel (or you can use the
WordPress channel) along with a social channel like Twitter, Facebook, Buffer,
and HootSuite. This makes it easy to keep up with all of the blogs that I’m
sharing from within a single interface.
My favorite thing about the IFTTT method is that I can send new RSS feed
items (new blog posts) to Buffer and HootSuite, two services that let you
schedule your posts as opposed to having them all post at the same time. This
helps to cut down on noise and makes your shares look more natural.
Hope this
post is helpful to you??? Drop your questions below.
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