Flickr: Jazz up Your Social Blogging
Writing by Social Marketing Journal on Wednesday, February 27, 2008 Comments Off
Flickr is a very useful tool to social bloggers, because a blog post with an image starts out with a definite advantage over a blog post with no image. A picture book is easier to read than “War and Peace.” The image on your blog post will draw in people who wouldn’t have stopped otherwise. And a GOOD image will make your words more memorable, more effective long-term.
Flickr hosts a seemingly endless stream of images, and you can freely use many of them for social marketing, no strings attached. Many images can be used commercially. You can even modify many of these photos. What’s the catch? Just give attribution to the photographer … a link under the image, back to their website.
If you also need photos for your commercial blog, go to Flickr and search only within the Creative Commons photo area … millions of photos are available for commercial use. Just click on the “Attribution License” category to find photos available for commercial use and which you can modify as you like.
Now click on “browse popular tags” and click on the appropriate keywords. If you don’t find them, use the Flickr “Search” box to enter keywords about the image you’re looking for. It may take more than 1 search (different keywords) to find what you want. When you see a result you like, click to see the full-size image. If you like it, then clicking “some rights reserved” brings up the Creative Commons license.
If everything checks out, download the image and use it on your blog as you want. Be sure to add a photographer credit under the image (“Photo by …”). Link the photographer name to their Flickr profile page.
Comments Off Category: Social Blogging
Read similar posts in Social Blogging
- Twitter to Start Charging for Business Accounts?
- 13 YR Old Launches Social Networking Website ScotBlog.net
- To Tweet or Not to Tweet? That is the Question
- Social Blogging Goes To The Next Level
- Should Twitter Reverse NoFollow?
Subscribe to our RSS feed
No comments yet.
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.


