Category: ARWB Events

Sunday Link-Up {Jan. 4, 2014} and January Instagram Challenge

 

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 Beginning  this week and continuing throughout the month, our members are encouraged and challenge to participate in the #ARWB January 2015 Instagram Challenge. Get your creative and photographic juices flowing, chase away the gray days, warm up your spirits and connect with our membership.  You only need to post one photo a week, but feel free to post whatever inspires you.  Be sure to use the hashtags #ARWB #photochallenge and the one for the weekly theme.  If you haven’t started following us on Instagram, go do that today.  Have yourself some fun!  The more that participate, the merrier we’ll be.

Be sure to tag @arwomenbloggers and follow along.  See you on Instagram

  Let’s see what you’ve been up to on your blog!

 

Arkansas Blog Linkup


Handmade Ornament Exchange Linky

 2014 ornament exchange

 

This is our third year hosting a Handmade Ornament exchange amongst our members. Participants are each assigned a secret pal and then make a handmade ornament to send to them. We encourage participants to then blog about the ornament they received and link back to their partner’s blog.

Today we invite all who participated to link their blog posts related to the exchange. I have already seen a few of the ornaments and they are amazing. We have a very talented group of ladies so you will want to check out each of these posts!

If you missed the ornament exchange this year be sure to check back next October when we do sign-ups for the 4th annual exchange.

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Best of Bentonville {Beard Foundation Benefit}

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I was pleased to represent Arkansas Women Bloggers as a guest of Crystal Bridges  at the Friends of the Beard Foundation Best of Bentonville Benefit held at 21C Museum Hotel on November 8 featuring the culinary work of Chef Rob Nelson of Tusk & Trotter American Brasserie, Chef Matt McClure, a Beard semifinalist for best chef Sotuh,   of The Hive and Chef Bill Lyle of Eleven at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.  Chef Case Dighero served as emcee of the event while engaging the audience during interviews with the chefs and tales of their experiences at chef’s boot camp at the Beard Foundation in New York City.  It was especially interesting to hear their thoughts on sourcing locally produced foods for their restaurants.  Eating locally from our Arkansas producers and farmers is near and dear to my foodie philosophy. All of the dishes presented during the evening were prepared with ingredients from farms and orchards in Northwest Arkansas.

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I will be sharing the recipe for this spectacular dessert of Sticky Toffee Pudding and Arkansas Black Apple Ice Cream created by Chef McClure.  You’ll be able to view that on my blog soon

beard foundation group with alice

A strong supporter of the culinary opportunity and development as well as the arts in Northwest Arkansas, Alice Walton, chose to entertain her weekend guests by treating them to the Best of Bentonville dinner.  Phyllis duPont Wyeth, wife of Jamie Wyeth , and her sister Mimi duPont Abel Smith, were highly complimentary of Crystal Bridges and the NWA area.  The Jamie Wyeth exhibition opens  at Crystal Bridges in the summer 2015.

Come join me on my blog as I share dishes from our dinner menu.

MENU
Hors d’Oeuvre
Ozark Pumpkin Arancini 
Duck Prosciutto–Pepper Jelly Canapés 
Chicken Liver Pâté 
Black Walnut Moonshine Cocktails 

Dinner
Assorted Breads > Garlic–Montasio Cheese Gougères; Skillet Cornbread; and Fried Pork Rinds 
Glazed Sweet Potatoes with Pecans and Brussel Sprouts 
Braised Arkansas Rabbit with War Eagle Mill Barley Risotto, Minted Black Apples, and Carrot Caramel 
Marinated and Grilled Venison Flank Steak with Stewed White Beans, Ham Hocks, Tomato Confit, Pickled Shiitake Mushrooms, Grilled Scallions, and Mountain Bird Coffee Red Eye Demi-Glace 
Sticky Toffee Pudding 
A selection of fine wines will be served with this dinner.

 

debbie and beth beard foundation

 Many thanks to Beth Bobbitt, Media Relations Manager at Crystal Bridges, for extending the invitation.

 

 

Cajun’s Christmas Camp Blogger Event

cajuns-wharf-5By Sarabeth Jones

Recently a group of Arkansas Women Bloggers enjoyed a lovely Saturday afternoon at Cajun’s Wharf in Little Rock, where they were treated to wine & whiskey tastings, food, and fun. During lunch, they passed around heaping plates of yummy food and tried every dessert, loudly declaring their favorites.

cajun's collage

A highlight of the afternoon was a cooking demonstration by Mary Beth Ringold, the owner, who prepared mussels in tomato broth while simultaneously talking through the proper way to brine a Thanksgiving turkey. Beautiful decks overlooking the Arkansas River were the perfect place to wind down the event as bloggers tried out Cajun’s special holiday cocktails, the Christmas Martini and the Holiday-De-Do.

 

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cajun's collage 2

Sarabeth Jones
Sarabeth Jones is a creative at Fellowship North who enjoys all kinds of artistic work; her latest project is bringing the national live-reading show Listen To Your Mother to Little Rock. She lives in Sherwood with her husband, Bryan, and their kids, Elizabeth, Jonathan, and Will. She loves to write about they way they make her laugh on her blog, thedramatic.com.

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Living and Telling Great Stories: AWBU {Part 3}

 Storytelling for Storyliving, Grand Adventure, AWBU, 48 walks

Back in September at AWBU I talked about Living and Telling Great Stories.

I keep talking about storytelling because I really believe it is the best way to build a following around your blog.

People LOVE a good story.

So I already shared about two kinds of stories you can live and tell on your blogs, The Sacred Everyday and The Noteworthy Days.

But then there’s a third kind of story to live, and it’s what I like to call:

The Grand Adventure

A grand adventure is an epic you can climb inside of. It’s a story that takes some dreaming and some planning.

It’s a story that makes you excited to get out of bed in the morning. It’s something that heightens your senses. It makes you alive to life. It’s a story that makes you want to keep blogging.

It can take a lot of different shapes but it has to be something that is uniquely you.

By that I mean that you can’t compare your grand adventure to someone else’s. Or you get in trouble.

My current grand adventure is called #48walks, and it’s part of my attempt to embrace where I live and the fact that for the most part, we walk everywhere. All the walks I’ve done this year have been leading up to longer walks, and specifically, a long walk across England that I did in September.

The Coast to Coast Trail in England is 191 miles. It sounded pretty impressive to me. I was actually kind of scared I wouldn’t be able to finish.

To me, it sounded like a Grand Adventure.

But as soon as I said that my Grand Adventure was going to be walking from the west coast of England to the east, I found out that 10000 people walk it every year. Someone actually ran it in five days. In 1991, someone ran the entire route in just under 40 hours.

I know of someone else who is going to run across the entire USA. Another blogger is currently walking across the whole world.

So if I start comparing my adventure to others, pretty soon I feel like it is no big deal that I walked across England, and I start thinking that maybe I should find something more original.

That’s when I have to stop and remember:

This is my Grand Adventure. For me it’s a story worth living and a story worth telling.

Your Grand Adventure is going to be something that makes YOUR heart beat faster. Because we’re all different.

Maybe your Grand Adventure is…

eating only food you cook for a year.

giving away all your possessions.

having coffee once a week with someone new.

filming heirloom recipes internationally.

raising a significant amount of money for a worthy cause.

a trip around the world.

running a marathon.

For me, it was going for a long walk.

Even though all grand adventures are not the same, all Grand Adventures seem to have some of the same elements.

So besides the fact that it EXCITES YOU, here’s how you know you’re setting out on a Grand Adventure:

A Grand Adventure involves RISK, even the risk of FAILURE.

So your adventure should have some elements that stretch you. That push you to the limit of your strength or your skill set or your mental prowess.

It is going to stretch you and there will be hard work involved.

And there could be failure. And that’s OK.

In fact it’s best to acknowledge up front that you could completely fail at your Grand Adventure.

But that doesn’t mean the adventure wasn’t worth taking.

Your grand adventure is your story arc. It’s this beautiful design that shapes your life for a season. But the point of the arc is to give us something to live through. Not necessarily attain something.

It’s the journey not the destination.

We’ve all heard that before, but when you step back and look at someone’s story it’s all this bit in the middle of the story arc that is interesting, that keeps you engaged.

And living through the journey is what changes us. Molds us. Shapes us.

You cannot ever fully prepare for A Grand Adventure.

There are unpredictable elements for which there is no preparing.

No matter how much you prepare, you never feel ready to take it on. At some point, you just go for it. This is where a blog comes in really handy in living a big story, because at some point you put it out there that this is what you are going to do, and then there’s more pressure to actually do it.

I find that it helps if you have to commit to something. Again, put things on the calendar. Meetings. Tickets. Commitments.

So you have to start.

And then in the middle of the journey all kinds of things happen that you didn’t plan. Here are some quotes from Donald Miller that I used at AWBU this year about the harder bits of a Grand Adventure:

The negative turns in a story is what makes it interesting. Don’t be discouraged by negative turns. If you understand that this is what makes it interesting, then you don’t give up when you encounter a setback. Plus the pain makes the ending more beautiful.

Here’s the truth about telling great stories with your life. It’s going to sound like a great idea and you are going to get excited about it, and then when it comes time to do the work, you’re not going to want to do it. It’s like that with writing books, and it’s like that with life. People love to have lived a great story, but few people like the work it takes to make it happen. But joy costs pain.

Have you ever been in the middle of something hard and thought this: “I hate this moment but I’m going to love this memory.”

Donald Miller from A Million Miles

 

That last quote from Donald Miller perfectly describes so many events of my life. Even amazing events like being in Paris on Bastille Day often have a backstory of events that also made the day difficult.

All Grand Adventures are like this. They are made up of moments you hate and moments you love. In fact, it is the mixture of the memories of both are what make the story brilliant.

So there you have it. Three Ways to Live and Tell Great Stories on your blog: The Sacred Everyday, Noteworthy Days and The Grand Adventure.

So friends, go live the story that you want to write about. Then come back and tell me all about it.

If you plan a Grand Adventure in 2015, I would LOVE to know about it. Leave me a link in the comments! Or tell me on Twitter.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 2

By Elizabeth Michael

After you are sure you are up and running, you should go ahead and make three views: the master, sandbox, and unfiltered. The master is what you will look at every day and has all of the customization built in. The sandbox is where you will test the customization before you implement in the master. The unfiltered view is your fail-safe. This is your back up that you have not messed with at all. There is no going back once you have made changes in Google Analytics, so it is best to make these three views so you never ruin your data sets.

#8

From the admin panel, click the drop down menu under “view.” Then, click “Create new view.”

#9

Name your new view and then click “Create View.” Repeat this process until you have established all of the views you want.

From the drop down menu, choose the view in which you wish to view your data.

Now that you have Google Analytics working on your blog and have set up the different views of data, lets move forward with implementing some goals that will help you measure you business objectives.

#11

Google Goals track user actions and answer questions like “how often do they start the action?” and “do they complete the action?” You will want to set up your goal in the sandbox view first to test and make sure it is working properly. Once you know it is good to go, then implement in your master. Leave the unfiltered version untouched.

#12

To set up a goal, first click on the “Admin” tab and then click on “Goals.”

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Then click on “New Goal.”

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#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 1
#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 2 Scheduled for Nov. 1, 2014

 

 

#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 1

 By Elizabeth Michael

#1

 

Google Analytics is a powerful and easy-to-use tool that tracks your website traffic.  Google Analytics presents aggregated sets of data that can help you make business decisions. 

Bloggers can use Google Analytics and Goals to help measure successful content, important traffic patterns, flaws in the user’s experience, and much more. 

Google Analytics is extremely to use; however, there are a few strategic decisions you must make before jumping right in.

#2

 The Cycle of Success outlines a process that acts as a roadmap to your success as a blogger.  The inner circle represents the process that Google recommends that you follow when setting up their analytics tracking on your site.   You start with defining and setting your business goals.  Your goals should be straightforward and realistic.  What do you wish to accomplish with your website?  Generate revenue?  Page views?  Information downloads?  Defining your business goals will set the foundation for your measurement plan, the second step in the Cycle of Success.

 @3

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Above is an example measurement plan.  The steps to make a measurement plan do not change.  You can see an example a blogger may write on the right.  Here is a blank plan for you to try:

 #5

The third step is more technical in nature and nine times out of 10 you will have everything you need to implement Google Analytics and Google Goals.  Your technical infrastructure is your computer, software, etc.  Basically, it is all of the physical tools you will need to implement your plan. 

Creating your implementation plan will guide you through the implementation process, prioritizing what needs to get implemented first, and so on.  For a simple blog, you will not have any complicated customization to implement. 

How-to implement Google Analytics:

 First, you will need to set up your account.  Then, you will need to get your code.  Finally, you pick and install a plug-in for you blog.  Yoast seems to be very popular, but there are lots of options out there.

 #5b

 

Once you are logged in to your Google Analytics account, click “Admin” and then “Create New Account.” 

 #6

Click “Website” if you are tracking traffic on a website, or “Mobile App” if you are tracking an app.

 #7

 

Click “Get Tracking ID.”  This gives you the code you will enter into your plug-in.  Now, make sure your plug-in is correctly installed on your blog.  Go to the plug-in settings and copy and paste your tracking ID into the appropriate field.  Depending on which plug-in you choose, the steps may change; however, they should be simple enough to follow along and get your tracking installed correctly.  To test and make sure that you are up and running, access your website from another device.  Go to your Google Analytics dashboard and on the left hand side, click “Real-time.” You will see all of the users currently on your website.

 

#AWBU 2014 Google Analytics Part 2 – Scheduled for Oct. 29, 2014
#AWBU 2014 Google Analytics Part 3 – Scheduled for Nov. 1, 2014