Facebook Pixel
Join our Facebook Community

Luck is a Curse. How NOT to Relaunch and Rebrand Your Blog. There May Be Tears.

Posted By kellydiels 4th of December 2009 Miscellaneous Blog Tips 0 Comments

A Guest Post by Kelly Diels. Image by Cayusa

Part 1. Blogging, Before I Got the Bright Idea to Relaunch and Rebrand: What I Did Right. Maybe.

luck.jpgHere’s my curse: I’m lucky. Things always seem to work out for me and even when they go wrong, they’re never actually as bad as they ought to be. I’ve never had a white knight ride into my life on a unicorn but things have never been so bad that I wished for one. Lucky, lucky me.

Why is that a curse? Because, when planning (ahem. I use the word loosely) to rebrand and relaunch my site using WordPress and a professionally designed theme, I counted on Plan A working.

That was my first mistake.

My second mistake: When scoping (hahahahahahaha. sure. THAT’s what you call it) out the conversion, I expected Plan A to take place in a miraculous, lucky context.

The planets and stars would align in the House of Luck and the wind would be at my back and I am remorselessly killing the English language one mixed metaphor at a time.

Because I’m lucky, after all.

Lucky Blogging. The Beginning. It is Seductive.
Fortunately, when it comes to blogging, I didn’t do EVERYTHING wrong.

Here’s what I did right.

I started blogging because I needed to write. Luckily, I’m a half-way decent wordsmith so that part came easily.

Then I got lucky and people started reading my blog. More people than I know. Friends of friends. Strangers. You. I can’t believe my luck.

Then I started trying to figure out how to properly blog. I found ProBlogger and it’s archive of awesomeness.

Google and luck were on my side and also gave me White Hot Truth and I went to a fire starter and it lit me up. I thought, yes, I CAN do this. I can live like an artist, baby. I will.

Then, by sheer, random dumb luck, I found the World’s Strongest Librarian and he pushed me to start guest-posting.

(First I mulled on it for, oh, three months because although I’m sassy in text, I am ridiculously timid about making requests. My askus requestus muscle is highly underdeveloped. Offer to write something, for free, for someone else? THE NERVE. Case in point: I wrote a piece I intended for ProBlogger and then was far too scared to actually submit it. So I didn’t. I sat on the completed, undeniably awesome essay for ten days until I had a WTF moment and sent it. Luckily, Darren liked it and used it. WTF moments are important.)  

So I started guest posting. More people came to read my site and said nice things and started following me on Twitter. I love Twitter, maybe even more than Facebook.

And I love Facebook something fierce and unholy because my future website developer/designer friended me there.

Lucky Blogging Makes You Uppity and Think You Can Change The World Or At Least Your Site.

My facebook designer friend and I became real, offline friends. IM conversations, cupcakes and a festival were involved and then it turned into a business relationship.

It was time to redesign my site. (I say redesign, but “design” is an overstatement for what I originally slapped together, so the “re” is a hairy lie.)

Now, luckily, thanks to the genius of The Internet and Facebook, I had a designer/friend whose work ethic and aesthetic I trusted. I could say bad words and be anxious and require handholding – while toggling back and forth between states of extreme control freakiness and childlike need for reassurance – and as a friend/vendor she’d be obliged to provide it. Lucky, lucky me.

So, in my blogging journey this is what I did right:

  • When I started, I just started. I started somewhere/anywhere and figured out my focus and my mission as I went. This took six months
  • I wrote good stuff
  • People liked it
  • I sought out expertise and experts and handholders
  • I made friends. (If I was an internet marketer, I’d say I ‘networked’ but really I’m too socially awkward to network. It is juju love and cupcakes or nothing, baby.)
  • I grew my blog organically until it – and I – needed a focus, a brand, a name, and a proper design
  • Then, because I had friends, and had been following in their illustrious footsteps, I knew how to undertake the focus/name/brand/proper site challenge. I thought.

I was lucky. In the first six months of blogging, I did just enough right to think that wings and prayers and hot content were enough. Curses.

Still Lucky-Blogging. Tragedy Looms.

My luck held. My brain was on. I researched the design process. I researched sites I liked for inspiration. I thought about architecture. I thought about aesthetics. I thought about branding. I chose a developer with whom I actually wanted to work. I wrote a design brief, which forced me to clarify my vision, articulate it and map out the objectives for the site. My design brief gave my designer targets to hit and a guide for decision-making. She liked it and referred to it often. She told me so.

I invited feedback on the design and made changes. We tested the site. It was ready. It was time.

And then…

Part 2. My Blog Relaunch/Rebrand/Redesign: What I Did Wrong. No Doubt About It.

Luck was my lady. I had been blogging for six months and everything I tried, worked, and worked easily.

Then I made some quick, on-the-fly, hosting-related decisions and it all came crashing down.

Literally. There was an FTP error and internal permissions problem and what my hosting provider described to me in confidence-inspiring, technical language as a “zit”.

My new, pretty site? Nowhere to be found. My old ugly site? Also missing.

My sanity? See above. The same answers apply.

My Luck Runs Out. My Hosting Company Hates Me. Worse, It Is Indifferent.

In the midst of the bleeding and the bullets and grievous wounds inflicted upon me and my blog by my apparently uncaring service provider, I had a talk with a friend who manages huge communications projects with fancy, schmancy interactive sites. It went like this:

Friend: Can I suggest something?

Kelly Diels: Please.

Friend: Look at your site as your third child and guard it accordingly. Anytime someone is going to touch it, ask the following four questions:

A. Is it necessary?
B. What is the change?
C. What is the impact of that change?
D. What is the implementation/reversion plan? If the change goes to poop [KD note: he said a bad word here, but I’m prettying it up for you], how do I get back to my original state?

Your site must be up 24/7 as you never know who might be trying to access it. You probably have this in-hand but just my thoughts.

Kelly Diels: That was good. A little structure would have been useful…and preventative. I did not scope out the conversion process at all.

Friend: See your site as priority #1 and question and approve any changes made to it. Own it. It is not a toy. It is your business.

Kelly Diels: That is good advice.

Friend (pressing his luck): Thank you. Can I feel your breasts?

Kelly Diels: No.

Luckily, Boot-straps Are Good For Self-Flagellation, Too. Indulge Me.

You see what kind of emergency state I was in? I was soliciting advice (wise, as it turns out) from a very, very bad man.

I blame the trickster luck for my dilemma. If I wasn’t so lucky, all the time, I probably would have been more cautious. Maybe I would have done my research and made a plan. I certainly would have done things differently.

What I would do differently:

  1. Research service standards and guarantees.
    • I should have researched service standards for hosting and compared them. If something is wrong, how fast does it get fixed?  
    • I should have researched the internal business processes for hosts. If something is wrong, do I call and it gets resolved right now? Or does a queue ticket get issued and the techies get to it when they get to it?
    • I also should have researched what my current host would need from me to expedite transferring my domain to another hosting company. (Heads up, service provider.)
  2. Compare real costs. I would have consciously evaluated whether it is a good idea to choose a hosting provider that does or does not have a toll-free number. The company I chose does NOT have a toll-free number. I saved money by choosing a low-cost hosting package but then paid the difference -and then some, over and over – in long-distance charges. This is false economy.
  3. Question everything. I should have scoped out my hosting questions, up front, as part of the project plan. Instead, I chose the path of (apparent) least resistance, which was to stay with my current provider. (Heads up, current provider.)
  4. Invite feedback. I would have invited my developer’s opinion about companies she’s used (and loved!) in the past. I would have asked questions and solicited advice from my friends in the know about this sort of thing before I started, instead of in the midst, from the trenches, whilst under fire and bleeding.
  5. Question everything. Again. I would have asked my lecherous friend’s evil genius questions (above) about every single detail and at every decision point. For example, because my developer told me to, I switched my hosting from Windows to Linux. I made this choice without hesitation or investigation. This switch is exactly what caused the problem and caused my site to go offline for four days (and counting – at the time of writing it is still down). I didn’t anticipate the consequences of my decision because I didn’t think through the decision in the first place.
  6. Cop tools. Whatever it is that you’re doing, you are not the first to do this, so learn from the mistakes and successes of others. Ask them for their tools. My friend, for example, sent me a change management log to track edits and decisions to my site. It is usefulness gone Excel. My body parts are still off-limits, though.
  7. Formalize. Undertake and scope your own projects as thoroughly as you would for a client. Scope it. Question it. Plan it. Record it. Measure it. MANAGE it.
  8. Own it. Lead it. You ARE the leader. I would have taken my own business advice about blogging and owned it. Yes, it is a wise business decision to outsource the stuff I’m not good at; but I didn’t need to give away my authority, too. I should have assumed a Project Manager role instead of a passive client role. I should have forced myself to understand every single step and hurdle instead of thinking someone else would handle it because that is her job and she knows what she is doing. (She did it and she does.) This doesn’t mean that I would force myself to be well-rounded – which is a waste of energy – but I should have understood the issues and approached this more strategically.
  9. Anticipate problems. In addition to my lucky, cursed Plan A, I should have had Plan B through Z. I should have anticipated and assumed SNAFUs and adverse conditions and strategized accordingly.
  10. Eat your mistakes whole and do it better, next time. Please.

This is all basic project management stuff – which I know, and actually DO in my day job – applied to a context with which I’m not familiar (hosting, databases, technical details, design). I should have applied the skills and rigour of my “real” job to my own business. I’m still amazed that I didn’t.

I know why I didn’t. It was luck and freedom. They’re villains.

Part of the appeal of having your own business is the freedom to plot your own path and not be beholden by externally prescribed rules and processes. But some processes – like project scoping and management – are essential, and just because they feel work-like and bureaucratic doesn’t mean you should dismiss them. I will never, ever not scope a personal project again.

Luck and the Lady-Blogger. Not a Love Story.

Recently, I was interviewed as an “up and coming” blogger by another blogger. Srinivas Rao asked me how I figured out how to blog. Did I take a course, seek out resources and guides? Or am I making it up as I go along?

I said:
Oh, I am tap-dancing in the wind and the wind has no rhythm.

Until this week, that was both a flippant and a true answer. That’s freedom talking. And that was stupid.

The interview was for Srini’s blog called Skool of Life, which is very appropriate because the lessons I learned this week about how NOT to relaunch your blog are definitely school of life-ish stuff.

The best lessons usually are. I heard this on Twitter, so it must be true.

Luckily, I will do better next time. Because next time I won’t rely on luck.

Kelly Diels is a freelance writer and creator of the blog Cleavage (about sex, money and meaning, what’s not to love?) which has caused her to sob deep and wide rivers of tears this week. The blog is now fixed and prettier than ever. Please go look.

Comments
  1. i felt i am reading a novel :)

    A Real Reel Story of a Blogger…

    when will be ur next time when u will not rely on luck???

    Hmmm when willl i get success :-?

  2. Luck-Lady-Lesson-Love- Kelly Diels

    To Kelly – Thank you. You are reminding everyone to take care of their blogs. I often see many bloggers don’t take precautions in their blogs.

    To All – Remember, Your blog might be hacked,deleted or your hosting company might done some thing wrong. So take daily back ups of your blog. When you give control to some one over your blog, don’t let him to do with out your notice.

  3. Hi guys

    I like the way your friend give the advice. Yes, your website is not just a toy, it should be treated well since it is part of the business. If you will bring focus on your site then there would be a chance of better outcome.

    Kind Regards,
    Sam
    X

  4. Ouch! I just went and backed up my blog, just in case.

    I’m about to update my Web site (mostly text revisions, no major design changes), but I’m going to download that first too!

    By the way, I’ve had very good luck (er, should I put it that way?) with HostGator.

  5. Awesome. I like your unique writing style and I completely agree about just getting started. I don’t know if you meant it like that but you listed it as one of the good things so I’m guess it’s meant that way. Taking action and seeing what happens. Making mistakes and recalibrating is cool!

  6. You seem to be writing this to prevent others from falling into the same mistakes. And, indeed, I and I’m sure many others are taking close notes. But then again, in this business of blogging, the nly people who jump in are people who can do that, just jump in. I’ve come across people who plan and plan and plan and plan, waiting for all to be perfect, but they never get their site up and lose a lot of valuable time they could be out there, making our mistakes, and learning.

    We’ll try not to make the same mistakes. But, then again, the mistakes are the opportunities to learn very very quickly.

  7. All modifications that you make to your blog can be a hazard. I always backup everything before every change so I do not loose anything. In my opinion, being carefull is the only way to avoid those nasty situations.

    Thanks for the reminder Kelly!

  8. I have nightly scheduled backups of all my servers running between midnight and 4 am (depending which server is being backed up). I take a second backup manually before making any significant changes. I host all my own sites; no shared hosting here. And I never, NEVER use Windows. Never use FTP, either, come to think of it.

    The one thing I can’t figure out is, what (in this context) was a “zit”?

  9. Hi Kelly,

    Thank you for taking the time to write this out for all of us. I play around a lot with the look of my site and it has had significant problems shortly after. I am too plugin happy and I think I’ve lost potential subscribers for a glitch I didn’t realize until much later in the day.

    I also made the entire blog go down early on and the person helping me was like “STOP touching stuff, stop looking around, don’t go in there, you don’t know what you are doing”…. So now I wisely leave things alone and wait for her email when there is something funny going on.

    Thanks again for the good reminder
    ~Justine

  10. Hi Kelly:

    Yours luck isn’t such a curse. At least it moves you to action instead of endless, anxious thinking and “concepting.”

    This reminded me of a tip in Seth’s post today. “Don’t have any meetings about your web strategy. Just do stuff. First you have to fail, then you can improve.

  11. What a great guest post. When redesigning your blog, I always setup a test blog and try every thing out before I change anything. This protects my investment, my blog.

  12. Luck is something im in search of, I believe this world has no justice it has only luck. I think hard work can build only huts not awesome palaces. I don mean to be an outlaw, but i feel when life does a lot of injustice it doesn’t matter if you do a bit to others, for your better future. I always think if there was any way i could just hack in to google and change my pr. Well WILD DREAMS.

  13. Very funny Kelly, I’m laughing out loud while absorbing it all at the same time..still laughing about the WTF moments. I have plenty of those.
    Thanks for sharing. I think many of us don’t think it through just like you did, despite not having six lucky months at blogging. We just want it over and done with so we can get back to blogging.
    My blog is my baby, and I’m going to be a more hand-on parent from now on.

    Going over to your blog to take a peek at your Cleavage..;)

  14. I like that “Third Child” notion.

    Currently in the process of switching hosts. Going very slowly because I *do* know how tricky it can be, even when all the stars and planets are lined up.

    Vishal: Justice is something we give to the world, not something we get from the world. The world may be unjust, but we as men and women can choose to be just.

  15. So, where is the luck right now? It is in my blog, just meet her there. :D

  16. “Success is a dangerous thing. It tricks successful people into thinking they can’t fail.” -Bill Gates, Pirates of Silicon Valley

    Hey Kelly,

    Struggles are blessings in disguise – they train you to be cautious and an effective worker.

    Like you mentioned, being lucky eventually caused a problem. But, the resulting struggle was the blessing in disguise that pushed for a cautious and effective approach.

    Here’s to utilizing our struggles, getting the positive from them so we become better at what we do and don’t make the same mistakes twice.

    Thanks for sharing you honest, humorous (and a bit sexy) story,
    Oleg

  17. Frist – thanks for the reminder. Luck is always on my side too, but back up plans are important. And you give some good, actionable information.

    But second, and more important – Lady you can write!

    It’s 7:30 ish where I am. I haven’t even had my coffee yet, my eyes are half glued glued half shut but I thought I’d pop into my reader and see what was up in the blogosphere. Just intending to check the headlines and bam! yours caught me.

    And then the first paragraph. And then I started sweating. Ok, she’s talking about how things always go well, but I know disaster is looming! Oh, there it is – tragedy. I couldn’t put it down as they say. How will this drama be resolved? Will our heroine survive? Will her luck be restored? Whew! Yes, all is now right with the world.

    It’s a gift. Yes, you can study writing skills and techniques and you can do all of the technical stuff to make sure your blog doesn’t disappear into the nether regions of cyberspace but it’s great to have that raw talent. That style that is uniquely yours. Writer Dad has it. You have it. Thanks for sharing it with me, the Wannabe.

    Ohmigosh – I just wrote a fan letter! :) But I mean it – thanks.

  18. Bradley says: 12/04/2009 at 2:57 am

    luck may be a curse, but i sure wish i had some good luck once in a while!

  19. Bradley says: 12/04/2009 at 2:57 am

    luck may be a curse, but i sure wish i had some good luck once in a while!

  20. Bradley says: 12/04/2009 at 2:57 am

    luck may be a curse, but i sure wish i had some good luck once in a while!

  21. Was actually considering redoing the blog template over, because everytime a new blog post is published, gets the feeling there are bugs in the wordpress template. Perhaps it needs an upgrade or so, but will check it out

  22. What’s the difference between a WTF moment and an epiphany? The first is ‘what just happened and why, why, why’ (cue Nancy Kerrigan), the second is ‘Oh, okay, that’s it.’

    You crashed your cleavage? That’ll leave a mark. But it’s the price you pay for experience, right? Maybe that’s what your Friend saw and just wanted to make sure everything was in order?

    I like the ‘how-to’ elements you wrote. How to not run off screaming. How to not blame someone else even when it might be their fault. How to not sledge hammer your screen and hope the impact will bounce off those you didn’t blame, just so they don’t get away without consequences.

    Maybe you didn’t include the three how-to elements, but it feels like you did. Either way, I’m putting my hammer down.

    Unless you run a blogging empire like this character I follow on twitter named ‘Sir John’, one blog is a calling card. It’s a ‘how do you like me so far’ moment that either hooks a reader or glazes them over.

    I’m still wondering how an opening like “I woke up, got out of bed, dragged a comb across my head,” hooks anyone besides a latter day Beatles fan. Or maybe they were on to something?

    Thanks Kelly,

    David

  23. thanks for sharing your story kelly

  24. I treat my blogs like my children. I’ve been on a night out before and all I wanted to do was get home and work on my blogs.

  25. Kelly

    Ok now that you have scared me almost as bad as Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction (oh different time & part of life) … I am going to be changing my hosting as my site is hideous and needs some love and embracing. I am going to print this out and tape it on the wall so that as I go through the process I look over at it and be sure I do not muff it up.

    Thanks for sharing your story.

  26. Great story. Sadly, my blogs require more attention than my kids do. They scream more too.

  27. Thanks for this. That reminds me, I should go and back up my bog.
    Also a friend is thinking of re-branding and re launching, prehaps I should point him here for a quick read.

  28. Bless you.

    I am in the process of re designing and switching to WP now. I’ve been a passive client because I feel like I’m getting on my designer’s nerves. Thank you for reiterating that it’s ok to do that. This is my baby. And I’m paying her. I will no longer feel bad.

    And I am going to link to this page when I post my switching tips…it will be sure to bring you at LEAST 5 new readers. See how generous I am??

    You’re welcome.

    And I love you.

  29. I’m not sure what happened to my original comments. For some reason my comments disappear from certain blogs. Kelly, thanks for the shout out. I think you’ve taken some valuable lessons from the experience and turned into a great post for all of us. You’re quickly taking over the world.

  30. Great article. I also switched my blog from Windows to Linux and it brought it down faster than Tiger Woods’ marriage. Should have asked what the downside was.

  31. Well, you’ve got to know who you’re dealing with and get good people on board. Find people who know what they’re doing, who you can trust to take care of your baby and who will do it right.

    I’m a website designer and you won’t believe the number of people who get their gardener to set up their website. And they pay them to do it too. Not much but it’s still $500 down the toilet. Plus they end up with a website which says: “I’m a rank amateur and you don’t want to touch my products and services with a barge pole.”

    Better luck next time:)

  32. I’m late to the party, but I’m delighted – and gratified – that so many people found this cautionary tale useful. The best part of lessons learned is sharing them.

    @Lucifer mmmm I have a novel in me yet. I’m a blogger/frustrated writer.

    @Pascal wise words. Backing up…will do!

    @Samantha – I like his advice more than the way he gives it…but if you like his style I can set you up :)

    @Henri “recalibrating”. Perfect. Exactly. Thank you.

    @Jodi…hostgator. Hmmm. Will add to my list of potentials.Thanks.

  33. @Deborah yes – mistakes are the best teachers. And painful, too. But I don’t really regret it, because I learned a heap, have a pretty site, and turned the whole debacle into a ProBlogger pieces. Lemon. Meet Lemonade.

  34. @Michael. I believe a “zit” is when your service provider is too lazy to explain to explain the problem and doubts your ability to grasp the explanation even if it was offered.

  35. @Justine “STOP touching stuff…” – possibly my new mantra. Not just for blogging.

  36. @Lorraine Based on your note, I just went and read Seth’s post. Now I’m feeling accidentally very bright. He REALLY is a genius.

  37. @Mama Kat backatcha my attention-seeking poodle.

  38. @Gabe we can trade. Kids.

  39. @Sandra. I am pro-shameless flattery. It is a moral position. Thank you so much :)

  40. Haha! Absolutely loved reading that. You’ve got a great frantic/heart on your sleeve writing style, Kelly. :)

    My LOL moment – “My sanity? See above” hehe.

    I think something we should all do is make sure we create a backup. Jason posted here on ProBlogger a few weeks ago stating 3 simple steps to backup your blog – everyone should do this!
    https://problogger.com/how-to-backup-your-wordpress-blog-in-three-easy-steps/

    Sarge | BeginnerBlogger.com

  41. @Annabel, as Kelly’s designer and developer, I’d like to take exception to what you said but, I really can’t. It’s easy to look at Kelly’s words and interpret them as, “She had a shite designer/developer. Poor her.” This is just not the case. We struggled, yes, but it was part of the process for both of us. Kelly learned a lot about the design process and I learned a lot about the differences between hosts.

    For the most part, Cleavage’s revamp — especially considering it was a free-of-charge-design — was absolutely a labour of love. I helped Kelly because she is my friend and I look up to her as a woman and a writer. I will continue to help her with her site as she and I are an awesome team, in spite of what may be interpreted from this post.

    Best of luck to you all.

  42. @Annabel Maybe I gave the wrong impression in this piece – I’m over the moon with my designer/developer, Amanda Farough. She absolutely translated my vision into a reality and really captured the ‘me’ I wanted expressed.

    I’m not happy with how I managed the project, not her. As I said, I oscillated between control freakiness and childlike passivity and neediness. I should have circumvented that trap by approaching the whole thing as a project, to be scoped and risk-managed. Then I would have felt more empowered. And the hosting was the issue – I should have taken her advice because she’s been down this road before.

    And Annabel, I can tell you know your stuff because I looked at your blog (NICE!) and you said something that landed in just the right place: find someone you trust to take care of your baby.

    Yes. Amanda is that, for me. She’s still available to me at the drop of a hat/DM/IM, whenever I have a wobble. She fixes it. She’s all about making it right, right now. I have a few new projects in the works, and I’m taking her along for the ride. My hosting provider? No. No. No.

    Lessons learned? YES.

  43. @Playstead I feel your pain. OH HOW I FEEL YOUR PAIN.

  44. @Robert – I’m not saying DON’T do it. I am just say do it carefully, and investigate every detail. And take the advice of the experts you hire. They know better. Really.

  45. @Suzanne. I have totally dropped Glen Close/Fatal Attraction allusions into blog posts and no one ever picks up on it. Maybe you and I have just found our tribe. Or made it. So glad we’re in it together.

  46. You are reminding everyone to take care of their blogs. I often see many bloggers don’t take precautions in their blogs. If someone relaunch their blog then it will definitely affect the rankings of it, and by keeping this in mind you have to move forward.

  47. Kelly,

    You write really l-o-n-g posts. Do your readers like them? How many readers to you have?

    Rita blogging at The Survive and Thrive Boomer Guide

  48. I made friends. (If I was an internet marketer, I’d say I ‘networked’ but really I’m too socially awkward to network. It is juju love and cupcakes or nothing, baby.)

    I agree. I don’t network too, I make friends.

  49. Back up is a very important task :)

  50. Thank you for sharing the information.

A Practical Podcast… to Help You Build a Better Blog

The ProBlogger Podcast

A Practical Podcast…

Close
Open