MySpace Crossposter plugin review for WordPress
Yesterday friend and fellow blogger Daniel Scocco posted the 16th part in a series about generating website traffic, Promoting your content on social networking sites. Outside of Twitter, Daniel admits he doesn’t do much in the form of utilizing social networking or media sites to drive traffic to his site, but I have. Leaving a comment in the article about my experience with MySpace specifically spawned a conversation of sorts in the comments of the article.
There is some validity to using MySpace as a way to generate traffic to your site, but as I explained in the comments of Daniel’s site, it’s very short lived, but a nice spike when it happens. The drawback however is time, it simply takes a lot of time to make blog posts on MySpace linking back to your own blog’s article, same goes for bulletins. Being the wonderful thing that is the Internet, I set out to find a way to have WordPress automate this for me, and that is what this review is about.
A very short and quick search on Google led me to the MySpace Crossposter v2.0a plugin for WordPress. It is almost totally what I was looking for. As described on their site,
The WordPress to MySpace Auto Crossposter is a WordPress plugin that publishes all of your WordPress blog entries to your MySpace blog at the time of publication. This allows you to publish as usual on your WordPress blog, but to also capture and retain your MySpace audience without any extra effort.
Each time that a new WordPress post goes live it will automatically be sent to MySpace for publication.
Users of the plugin have the option of publishing a notification or a whole story to MySpace.
Perfect! The download is just like any other plugin, in a zip file. Extract it and FTP it into the \plugins directory of your web server. Login to the admin panel of WordPress, activate the plugin and then go to Settings > MySpace Crossposter to configure it. I will warn that this plugin is not nearly as simple or clean to install as most all other plugins are. Once you land on the configuration page you need to enter the Database settings from when you originally setup WordPress. The settings are located in your root directory on your web server in the config.php file, which I had to download because I honestly didn’t remember them.
Once that is taken care of, enter both the URL to your blog and your blog name, along with your MySpace login email and password. Lastly is the option to post Notification style, which is a link to your blog, the title of the article posted and a direct link to it, or Whole Blog Entry, where the entire blog post will be republished on your MySpace blog. Default setting is to Notification sytle, which is what I’d suggest leaving it as, it will help drive more traffic to your site and you won’t have to worry about formatting issues.
Click Submit and the settings are saved, you don’t have to do anything else besides write new content. I tested this out and it worked flawlessly, posting a new blog post on my MySpace page mearly seconds after it was published on my site.
The benefits of doing this are many, most importantly it exposes your articles to more people right away and it also helps create back links into your site. While I don’t foresee this as being a huge source of traffic, it is none the less a source. For those people who are active on MySpace and have a lot of friends, it couldn’t hurt at all and it takes no time to do, since it’s fully automated.
Hopefully they can automate the need during intial setup to have the database information already inserted as I think a few bloggers might be turned off by the thought of screwing up their MySQL table information. The whole process took only a few minutes to install and configure though, so I can’t complain.
Now if only I could find a WordPress plugin that would do the same with bulletin postings on MySpace, I’d be fully automated and could spend more time writing. This is a plugin I’d recommend to anyone who is looking for an easy way to cross post articles to the largest social networking site on the internet right now.






16 Comments
I’m no fan of myspace, and people say not to double post your content on the internet, but I think this is a great idea. Makes me wonder if they have something similar for facebook . . . I’m guessing so.
This is a very helpful tip. I first had a TypePad blog but abandoned that for a free Myspace blog. Now I’ve migrated to my own WordPress blog but miss the traffic I used to get from all my friends at Myspace.
Im glad you guys liked the plugin, it can be very useful if you are running a business myspace account.
They do – Wordbook. Should be in the Wordpress plugins directory, or simply search from within the plugins section of the current version of Wordpress.
I added the plugin but get this error:
Fatal error: Cannot redeclare class myspace in /home/kabaithr/public_html/wp-content/plugins/myspacecrossposter_v2_0a.php on line 76
and this is what it says on line 76:
class myspace {
would you know what I need to modify?
Any help would be very much appreciated!!!
@Yemoonyah I think it has something to do with the plugin itself. Might be worth searching this specific topic in google as well as email the developer of the plugin. He should be able to help you out straight away.
@ Steven I left a comment on his site but he never replied
@ Mike Are you referring to the options page for the plugin? I can’t access it as I can’t even activate the plugin. If not, what MySQL settings are you talking about?
Thanks for the help
Are you using WP installed on your own server? What version WP are you using?
I’m on Bluehost and have 2.7 installed
I installed the plugin but it is not working at all. Is yours still functioning? I get no error message and I think that maybe myspace found a way to stop the plugin from working. Anyway just curious if it still works for you and if you had to update the code at all.
I am in a similar situation as you @mike Panic
Lost connection to MySQL server at ‘reading initial communication packet’, system error: 111
I contacted the developer of this plugin. He told me he won’t update it, because he doesn’t have time for it. When I asked him if he’d do it in exchange for money, he didn’t reply.
Since there are a few more people interested in an update: Does anyone of you have the ability to do it? Or do you know somebody who could do it?
Thanks for looking into this.I think that maybe myspace found a way to stop the plugin from working.