Facebook Pixel
Join our Facebook Community

Rookie Lessons for New Bloggers

Posted By Darren Rowse 21st of December 2009 Miscellaneous Blog Tips 0 Comments

Guest Post by Katie Kimball from Kitchen Stewardship.

I know how it feels to know absolutely nothing, and that’s actually a good place to be.

When I hit the six-month mark with my blog, I took time to sit down and digest the experience, and I was pleasantly surprised at how much one can learn about a totally new field in half a year. I wrote down my lessons, some “rookie strategies” if you will, thinking that although the perspective of a seasoned pro is incredibly valuable, there’s something significant about still having the eyes of a newbie.

I learned the basics by reading posts about blogging (at Problogger, of course). Anyone will tell you content is king, you should learn about SEO just a little, be consistent in writing, interact with readers, comment on other blogs, etc. As I forayed into the blogosphere haphazardly, I had to use my own uncanny powers of perception and a hefty dose of common sense to figure out a myriad of little intricacies. Want to know how to enter carnivals effectively? Why you need a gravatar and should learn to play the fool? How about my number one tip that helped me hit 1,000 subscribers in 9 months?

Enter a New Society

-1.jpgWhen I began blogging, someone told me “Welcome to the blogosphere.” I thought it was a nice sentiment, but now I realize that the blogosphere is more than a funny phrase. It’s a society all on its own, complete with traditions, customs and strict standards of behavior that would impress any cultural anthropologist. It even has a unique language that you’ll have to learn if you want to get by. Quick – define these words:

  1. SEO, WP, RSS
  2. carnival, meme
  3. gravatar, Photo Bucket, button
  4. Alexa ranking, Google page rank
  5. permalink, internal link
  6. retweet, DM, hashtag
  7. plug-in, widget
  8. bot, crawl, ping
  9. monetize, affiliate, disclosure
  10. sleep.

I wouldn’t have known what to do with that list at this time last year. In fact, I had to have someone explain to me what a “blog” was. Now I’m intimately familiar with all of them… except that last one. If you’ve mastered the list already, keep reading for some “finer points” that may be new to you.

Making Comments Count, Not Just Numerically

As I learned about blogging, I read everywhere that commenting on other people’s blogs is the best way to get your new blog “out there” and gain readership. However, you can scramble around the blogosphere all day long and leave nothing but a time-consuming anonymous trail if you’re not wise about leaving your mark:

  • You must have a gravatar, preferably a photo, definitely something memorable. On any WordPress blog, your smiling mug will hover next to your well-chosen words. People will “recognize” your face around the blogosphere, and if you leave thoughtful comments, they may visit your blogo-home to see what else you have to say. Don’t change this image too often, if at all. Take care in choosing a great pic that you’re willing to see every day for a few years!
  • Don’t be just you, become your blog. I had people as regular commenters and didn’t realize were coming back over and over because they were just “Sarah” or “Jen”. The photo helps, but also get in the habit of commenting as Name @ Website name so people connect you with your site and notice you more. I’m Katie @ Kitchen Stewardship everywhere I go.
  • Two “don’t” notes:
    • Don’t just say “great post” and think you’ve left a meaningful comment. You can say something significant in one sentence, but that sentence ain’t it.
    • Don’t constantly leave links to your own site. Shameless self-promotion is obvious, no matter how exuberant you are!
  • Of course, there’s already a great post on Problogger to help you learn how to craft quality comments.

Number One Way to get more Comments on YOUR posts?

Play dumb or make mistakes. If you write a fabulous, seamless post, you will likely get comments like “great post.” If you demonstrate that your knowledge is slightly lacking or ask a question of your readers directly or fumble around a bit, you will have people (women especially) clambering to help a poor soul out. There’s a reason women talk a lot… we like to give advice. Open yourself up to be the receiver of some advice, and you’ll get more comments.

By the way, when you respond to comments, try to use the person’s name. This way if your comment is ever separated from the original question, as mine were when I moved to self-hosted WordPress, your readers aren’t confused.

The Importance of Links

Google acknowledges that your site is the real deal when other sites link to yours. Friendly links also help real people find your site. You can obtain links in the following ways:

  • Comment on another blog and leave your URL (on Blogspot you may need to choose the Name/URL option to help yourself out).
  • Write something that another blogger enjoys – they may link to you later. If you’re savvy about it, you can leave a link on one of their posts or send a direct email invitation to a series or the like.
  • Of course, there’s a Problogger post on the subject… but he doesn’t include this next one!
  • Enter carnivals.

Is Entering Carnivals Worth It?

Thou must enter carnivals. At least in the mommy blogger and real food blogger world, my niches (vocab alert!), there’s no easier way to get a link to your site than by entering the ubiquitous carnivals out there on the web. (What’s a carnival, you ask? It has nothing to do with elephants, let me tell you.)

When a blogger hosts a carnival, they choose a theme and generally a day of the week, and on that day you can input your blog’s name, post that applies, and the permalink (URL that goes directly to the post) in a form at their site which will then become a link to yours. Carnivals are also called memes, especially when one includes a list of questions to complete. (Read more about memes here.)

-1.png
This is one of my favorite carnivals demonstrating how many blogs do it, with a Mr. Linky system for linking up.

Here are Katie’s tips for carnival success:

  1. At first, enter any carnival you can find. When you’re a nobody, a link is a link. This is how you get people to find your site on the vast Internet.
  2. You can enter a post in more than one carnival.
  3. Always follow proper carnival etiquette: be sure to put a link back to the host’s carnival page somewhere in your post. I usually create a bulleted list at the bottom of my page with this format:

Google likes it when I make the name of the site into a link, and I also link that carnival’s permalink to the carnival name so my readers can find it.

  1. Once your site becomes more well-established, you can become more savvy about being selective with your carnival entries. Check your stats to see which carnivals generate hits. Some will bring in four visitors, some 50-100. Clearly you can prioritize and focus on the carnivals that bring you readers. Also, if you’re running low on time, enter carnivals at sites with better Google page rank or Alexa rankings (for the link recognition).
  2. There’s a fine art to getting genuine clicks from a carnival.
    • Be wise about how you word your entry. Instead of just using your post or blog title like this: cooking from scratch, you’ll get more people interested in clicking to your site if you’re creative or controversial, like this: Should SAHMs cook from scratch?
    • Use caps to draw attention to your entry, but not excessively.
    • Standard entries include your name @ blog name and your subject. If necessary to be more appealing, leave out your name and even your blog name. Draw them in…
  3. I absolutely assumed that getting listed on a well-known site would generate a lot of clicks, but that’s not necessarily so. The sites that have active, strong communities are the ones who have readers interested enough in clicking on their carnival links. I’ve been published at or linked to from all three of these “big” sites: Blissfully Domestic, Tip Junkie, and 5 Minutes for Mom. (Note: Blissfully Domestic as both a contributor in the food niche and in the weekly Tuesday carnival I am Blissfully Domestic; Tip Junkie’s Submit a Tip; 5 Minutes for Mom’s Sunday Around the Blogosphere, twice as a feature and a few times in the giveaway linky.) Only one of them resulted in triple digit hits: publishing a tip at Tip Junkie. The others? Only single digit rewards.
  4. Sometimes the best carnivals to enter are those that are not weekly but a special feature. They often have a theme that readers are interested in, therefore folks are more likely to click around. The only way to find these is to be a regular blog reader. Another favorite blog hosts great carnivals like this one:

-2.jpg

An incredibly comprehensive list of carnivals can be found here and another here (although outdated – I left a bunch of updates in the comments!), and find lots of carnivals at www.blogcarnival.com. This latter style of carnival also gives you an SEO-friendly link to your home page.

Are Some Links Better Than Others?

Quite simply, yes. I can link to your site all day long, but if I’m just a little “write about my kids for grandma to read” website, Google doesn’t care. Here are two things to watch for to tell when you’ve hit upon a site worth linking to:

  1. Google page rank
  2. Alexa ranking

You can install the SearchStatus bar for Firefox here to find out how various websites rank. It shows up at the bottom of your computer screen, and when you see a Google rank higher than your own or an Alexa rank lower than yours, you’ve found a site worth spending time at.

-2.png

-3.png
This is what the SearchStatus bar looks like. Unobtrusive at best.

As you can see, my Google rank is a 3, and Problogger is a 6. Guest posting here is a great idea! You won’t see many non-corporate sites any higher than a 6 (10 is the highest). The higher your Google rank, the higher Google puts your pages when people search.

Alexa rankings work opposite: lower is better. New sites start out in the millions. I’ve taken Kitchen Stewardship from over 400,000 at the end of August to well under 200,000 less than 3 months later. Mr. Rowse is sitting pretty at 2,467. (That’s really low, in case you’re wondering.) Paying attention to these rankings is one reason you still want to link up at the “big” sites I mentioned above, even though direct hits may not be plentiful.

Participate in the Internet Time Warp

Everyone knows that once you get on the Internet, you don’t come out again for two days. I suppose some people can get out of the Internet-suction within hours, but you never do just one thing. If you’re going to blog, you might as well do as the Romans do and try your darndest to draw people in to your site until they feel an overwhelming urge to add you to their reader!

The best way to draw people in is to provide ample opportunity to exercise their mouse finger. That is, give them something to click on. Anytime you can link to your own content within another post, do it. At the end of your posts, it’s not a bad idea to give your reader even more to click on. Keep them at your site reading quality content for 15 minutes, and they’re likely to add you to their reader and come back for more.

I use WP’s Link Within plug-in to help with this, but I also try to provide manual links at the end of most posts that compliment the post itself. I use headings like “Other Fall Recipes” and “More Ways to Save Time in the Kitchen” and list three great posts, using intriguing titles – not necessarily the actual title of the post.

I also have a standard closing to all of my posts. It explains the mission of my site (for the sake of new readers), invites people to click for RSS feed or email subscription (links included), and tells them where to find the latest Monday Mission (a feature at Kitchen Stewardship). You can see it in the screen shot above. I manage this function with my “endnotes” page, explained below.

Finally, use your sidebar to your advantage. Be sure to share your latest 5-10 posts somewhere near the top to capture new readers. You might also consider listing “5 Most Important Posts” or something similar in your sidebar. I keep a list called “Currently Featuring” right at the top for any series, giveaways, carnivals or special posts that I have going on.

Choose interesting tags and categories. One thing I wish I would have done is to be more cognizant about my categories and chosen phrases that would really pique folks’ interest and get them to click. Mine aren’t so hot right now! Put yourself in the shoes (computer chair) of your reader. What might you stumble across and be interested in enough to click?

Sanity Savers for Bloggers

First, realize this:

  • There is always more to do in the blogging world.
  • Sleep is secondary.

Then try to pick up some tips to streamline your time at the computer. Organizing my information has been invaluable. I quickly learned that, although I love composing my text in MS Word, links don’t always copy over well. It’s too easy for a small mistake to happen, and I don’t have time to test all my own links every time I publish. When you want to include internal links (links to your own content) often, use one or both of these two strategies:

  1. Keep all your permalinks in a text doc. Every time you publish a post, view it and copy the URL to the post (from the web address bar) into a Word or notepad document. Mine is titled “000 post links 000” so that I can see it easily as I Alt+Tab through my open windows. Don’t bullet or number them, just paste the links in.When you need to link to something, use the “Find” function (ctrl+F) in Word and type part of the title of your post. Then you can easily copy and paste the URL into a new post as a link, or into the comments at other blogs when applicable. I promise this is much quicker than finding a past post via your website’s search bar or in your WordPress dashboard. The latter in particular takes such a long time. This is also how I find a post when I need to edit/update it after publishing.
  2. Create a “page” (not a post) and give it a parent page in case you ever accidentally click “publish”. On this page (mine is called “Endnotes”) place anything that you’ll use often: certain graphics, your post closing text, some favorite posts, written for draw-ëem-in purposes and linked to the URL already, and your carnival favorites. If you have this open in another tab while you’re composing a new post, you can easily put your closing and some effective internal links in your new post with a quick copy and paste. For organization’s sake, I always have my dashboard, then comments, then Endnotes page in tabs in that order when I’m working on my blog. List the carnivals you’ve found like this:

You can quickly copy a handful of appropriate links over to your new post and enter those carnivals in a very short amount of time. When you go to the carnival, you should make the words “My Favorite Carnival” a link to that specific post. You can enter many carnivals very efficiently this way if you have a flexible post! I keep a list of my favorite carnivals that generate the most hits organized by day in a text doc as well.

Single Greatest Tip?

You’ve been waiting for that number one subscribers’ tip, haven’t you? I’m hoping the answer is “guest posting at Problogger” myself… Honestly, beyond writing fabulous, amazing content that people care about, you need to believe you’ve got something good, work hard shamelessly promoting your own site, and get lucky sometimes. When a random site that has well-established readership links prominently to a post you’ve written because the author just happened to love it, that can garner more hits and subscribers than anything you can purposely do. You just have to make sure you have a few methods in place in case that happens to draw those readers into the Internet time warp, and you’re well on your way to a readership boost.

Katie Kimball is a former teacher, at-home mom, and newbie blogger at Kitchen Stewardship, which is dedicated to balancing nutrition, environmentalism, time and money through the eyes of faith.

About Darren Rowse
Darren Rowse is the founder and editor of ProBlogger Blog Tips and Digital Photography School. Learn more about him here and connect with him on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
Comments
  1. Katie, I’m hard-pressed to think of much to add for a rookie blogger’s round-up, which makes it just a bit tricky to add a meaningful comment! ;)

    In fact, add a couple of checklists or worksheets to this… and hey, presto, you’ve got yourself a great ebook for emerging bloggers who are just past the newbie stage and looking to ramp up their game.

    Nicely done!

  2. I’ve read Katie’s blog, which is in my niche, and admit to being jealous of her subscriber count (but my PR is higher!). Seriously, thanks so much for sharing your amazing tips.
    -Hannah

  3. Wow. This was an amazing post, Katie. My blog is extremely new, but what I’ve noticed is that commenting, reaching out, guest posting and writing your own high-quality content is the fabulous four.

    In the future I have plans on just focusing on guest posting a lot more. My goal for 2010 is to write 100 guest posts. Again, this post rocked ;)

  4. Katie

    This is a great list of lessons that can be applied to blogging regardless of category. I think that one of the things that is interesting is that alot of the things you talk about here don’t really become evident till you’ve been around for about 6 months because then you have enough experience, analytics data and posts to really understand it. I think that having a strategy in the beginning is good, but the real focus of the first 2 months should be purely on content and connections.

    Regarding your thoughts on commenting I hate the great post comments. I’ve found that getting more involved on a few blogs and actually writing lengthy comments is much more useful than writing great post on 40+ blogs. I Think really the goal is to build a community more than anything else around your blog. Anyways you’ve shared some wonderful ideas here. I’ll have to revisit the blog carnivals.

  5. wow, there is a ton of good information here for beginning bloggers (like myself). Thanks, Darren — I’ll be rereading this one a few times.

  6. This is a great post that clearly communicates some of the main hurdles that bloggers hit when they are in the formative stages. I think there is a five stage process to forming a blog, and most rookie/new bloggers do not get past the forming stage. It is a lot like the 5 stages of building an effective group: Forming, Norming, Storming, Performing, Reforming…

    Get these tips under your belt and start performing!

  7. Nice and detailed post. A very good read for newbie bloggers who want to do achieve some good online using the blogging medium.

  8. Wow – I have a lot to learn! My new blog is just a little baby, just one week old. But I’m looking forward to seeing where it goes in the next year or so.

    Thanks for the great tips!

  9. I’ve been blogging since 2007 and learned some things from your post. Thanks! I never enter carnivals but you’ve convinced me. And I never leave my site in the comment section either. Is that OK to do if there is already a “website” component, or is that where you meant? Thanks!

  10. This is a great post and incredibly thorough. I remember my first few months in blogging I had a huge learning curve and you’ve really nailed a few great points right on the head.

    You’re right about having a gravatar. You’re right about saying more than “Great post.” You’re right about a lot of things. New bloggers can definitely learn a lot from this post.

  11. I don’t have time to read another book!

    You know I was trying to avoid buying your book because before reading this post I thought I knew about blogging for dollars. I am going to buy your book after reading this post.

    I want six-figures from my blogs….

    Dr. Elon Bomani
    http://www.elonbomani.com
    http://www.mlmmysteries.com

  12. Not really sure about the whole carnival and meme thing. Sometimes they can seem like cheap attempts to build traffic. If they are genuine and interesting, then they can work very well, but it’s tough to start one without being too transparent.

  13. I think there is some great information and tips in here, but honestly, I find it very difficult to digest because of the way the post is set up visually. Perhaps it’s because the subheads don’t stand out (on my screen they are not bold, italic, or a different color or size). It’s hard for me easily process all the sections of information and keep organized in my head. Might have been nice to have broken up into three pages? Or numbered the points? Or at least bolded and colored the subheads. This probably just bothers me because I’m a graphic designer! Otherwise, great post and thanks.

  14. Katie, this post is fabulous! You know your tips work because you instantly gained THIS reader when you began commenting on my blog. :-) Thanks for your POV.

  15. Now there’s a post with some real meat!

    I’ve been blogging for a few months now and thought it was time to stop reading articles altogether, since most seem to say the same thing in a different way.

    Now I see that there are some things I’ve missed out on doing or simply didn’t know about.

    Thanks for keeping us educated!

  16. Great post! :)

    Seriously – you’ve given some great tips for a n00b to blogging: like me!

    I’ve been ‘personal’ blogging for about 5 years, but only in the last few months have I taken the next step up and I am now trying to do it ‘professionally’.

    I am amazed at the things I need to learn – things that I already thought I knew.

    Posts like this are helping me no end.

    Thanks!!

  17. Wow!!! What can I say – the Ultimate Reference Guide fantastic post!!!

  18. Thanks for the rookies guide i have been blogging for only about 6 weeks and there is a lot here that will help me. After reading this i have some homework for my Sunday afternoon, time to go set up a gravatar and then go carnival hunting.

  19. Congrats, you’ve come a long way in six months passing out such a valuable information for us “veterans” too.

    The post was filled with great tips for both beginners and more established bloggers, but I think the best one (and the one I’ve never seen before) was the tip to get more comments by playing dumb or making mistakes.

    That is priceless, and should make people less nervous about their typos and errors in the post too :)

  20. 6 months of lessons summed up in one article!

    If you’re new blogger, or about to start (about half of you are according the poll here), just print this article and tack up somewhere you can see it every day.

  21. I like this blog post. Awesome blog post, definitely.

    I think it’s some great points especially for a new blogger – I still learned a bit about carnivals yet, I have been blogging for over 2 years now.

    You really opened up the carnival thing to me. I heard Yaro talk about carnivals but I haven’t seen the benefits from it, but you pointed it out.

    The Blogsphere is much more than a society. It’s huge and bloggers (most of them) are friendly on show respect. The best thing is that people really want to help everyone and everybody – blogging newbie or not.

    There are so many bloggers, the bloggers are so kind to you. When you start blogging you just feel like welcome the first minute you start a blog!

    I for I think one week ago, installed an Alexa ranking plug-in in my browser and I everyday I check my ranking and other’s rank. I didn’t knew that Alexa rank meant so much in the ranks – even though I think that Google’s Page rank is better to look at when you are seeking links.

    Anyway, I think this post definitely was useful, thanks for the tips – especially on carnivals!

  22. As a blogger myself, many of these tips were already known, however the refresher is always welcome. Getting the same info drilled into my thick skull really reinforces the information and cements it into my brain permanently.

    The carnival information was most interesting to me, so I just wanted to say thanks, Katie! Great post. I’m heading over to your site now, just to check it out.

  23. A lot of great tips here, thank you for sharing! I especially liked the idea of creating a page for endnotes and permalinks. I did both before I even finished your post. :)

  24. I wish just wishing there was some sort of notebook feature where I could put links and html I plan to use over again when I read your post. Along with your other ideas, the Endnotes tip will be a great help to me. Thank you!

  25. Dmytro says: 12/21/2009 at 9:24 am

    Love the post, the only thing I wasn’t familiar or haven’t done yet that you mentioned was the carnivals (even though I knew about them before) and I’ll be definitely looking more into those.

    There’s one thing I don’t agree with you on and that’s copying and pasting your “endnote” into every post. I’ll eat my hat if there isn’t some simple plug-in or hack that would allow you to change the endnote content and have it changed on every single post. Doing this manually puts you at risk in case you ever want to change your blog description/endnote content.

    I also wish you explained more on why we should keep permalinks of all our posts in a Notepad document rather than simply using WordPress search to find them.

    Anyway, again, great and juicy post! Loved it! =)

  26. Great post!

    (just kidding)

    The LinkWithin WP plugin is excellent. I love that it randomly grabs an image from the post so I don’t have to worry about picking and choosing.

    Also, thanks for sharing your tips on how you copy-paste content that’s universal for your posts. I should start doing that. Thanks!

  27. Although I have been blogging for money for around two years I still consider myself a newbie and think there are some suggestions and tips in that post that will help me improve my game. :)

  28. Some great ideas here and lots of practical advice.

    I like your idea of using notepad to save the links to all your posts. If someone created a WP plugin that made it easy to retrieve the URLs to your old posts by searching by relevant keywords I’d buy it!

    Good luck with your blogging.

  29. An alternative to keeping a text document with all your posts’ urls, is to use Google to search your site. For example, to find my post about 501(c)(3) vs 501(c)(6) nonprofits, I type this into Google:

    501(3)(c) site://stormyscorner.com

    And the first link is my blog post.

  30. holy cow that was a long post Katie. With all that information, a newer blogger like myself will need to print it out and follow it like a guide. Impressive!

  31. First introduction to carnivals. I like that one.

    You say “you need to learn a little about SEO.”

    I find that you need to learn a lot about SEO. There are so many decent small business sites that sit on page 5 of Google’s results because they have no idea how to build links.

  32. Really great post. I’m not exactly a rookie but this is my first serious blog and I’m determined to make it work. I’ve heard about carnivals before but guess I thought they weren’t common anymore.

    I have one more tip to add to your list which seems to be working for me…

    Create an Amazon profile with a link to your blog and then comments on relevant books, create lists, etc. Twitter also seems to bring a decent amount of targeted visitors.

  33. Great tips here.

    I think it’s important to add one boring but practical one, though:

    Back up your site as often as possible.

    I run a tiny blog about learning English and had always assumed nobody would ever bother to hack it or try to cause me any problems.

    I woke up yesterday to find someone had hacked my site, changed the admin username and password, and deleted some of my posts. For a few minutes it felt like my whole world had fallen apart.

    Luckily, I was able to change the username and password back using myphpadmin and I had a backup of the posts. It was still a very important lesson for me, though.

    I’ve made my little blog more secure now and would suggest any new blogger does the same right from the beginning. You’re never too small for hackers to target you.

  34. I still have a little baby blog – just a couple of weeks old. So this post is invaluable to me!

    I’ve just read it twice and there is so much good info!

    Thanks for taking the time to put so much wisdom in one spot.

  35. “Play dumb or make mistakes – Open yourself up to be the receiver of some advice, and you’ll get more comments.” – Kate, this is by far the best single piece of thinking here that is a way of thinking not written much about elsewhere.

    Although I agree with the concept of “owning” your niche and being an authority… sometimes it’s taken too far where the blogger becomes bigger than the conversation him/herself. A lot of times, it’s better to just say “hey, this is what I think, I could be wrong, can someone tell me why I am or not?”

  36. Blogging tips, especially those targetted towards new bloggers, rock when they actually come from someone who experienced it LATELY.

    Carnivals are truly amazing when you know how to apply it for your blog just right. I also have had many people aorund me talk about it, but never really got around to utilizing it much. In your case, you seem to have had much success with it, so I’m a little motivated to try them out for the first time.

    Awesome post Katie. :)

    By the way, I just want to thank you specifically for the tip regarding keeping all your permalinks in a single notepad. I always just used my Dashboard to find my old posts and never really realized it was “slow,” but relative to your technique, it does seem SUPER slow! :D

  37. You don’t seem like so much of a newbie blogger to me. Thank you for these tips; I’ve already implemented a few of them. Wanted this to go on even longer, so I have to agree with the person who suggested this is material for an e-book.

  38. The Insights plugin is an easy way to search for and link to your blog posts right from your WP editor.

  39. I just started reading your blogs. Thanks for knowing what you are talking about and for sharing it with new bloggers!

  40. Nice article. The blog carnival concept is totally new to me; is that genre specific? Seems ideally suited for ‘best apple pie recipe’, or I suppose any ‘best …’ topic?

  41. Rebecca – I love the ebook idea!

    Hannah @ CM- If it makes you feel any better, I’m jealous of your PR. ;)

    Kerry Palmer @ Allthingsleadership – good job taking my advice to put your blog name in your signature…now I’m curious to visit yours, but no one else’s. ;)

    Cecelia – Yes, I just meant to make sure you utilize the “website” line in the comments, unless you have a VERY relevant post that would add to the conversation in the comments.

    Antti – I don’t know about allowing typos – I wouldn’t want comments saying “you misspelled such-and-such,” and I think correct spelling and grammar are part of the professionalism of your blog. Just admit it when you don’t know how to make sourdough bread rise or what exactly a term in your niche means.

    Dmytro – I don’t like searching in WordPress b/c it searches all the content, too, and you might not even find the post you’re looking for on the first page of the search. Ctrl+f and any word in the title is SO fast in notepad or Word!

    Thanks for all the kind comments so far! I’ll keep up with others, so feel free to ask questions of the rookie. ;)
    Katie @ Kitchen Stewardship

  42. LOVE the post Katie! I am just starting out brand new to blogging and can relate to a lot of the things you mentioned in the article, especially sleep. Since I have started, I found myself staying up until 4 or 5 in the morning working on my blog. I also find myself waking up early because I am so excited to get back to work on my blog. Its as if I do not want to sleep anymore!

    Thanks for letting me know I am not the only one that feels like there is always something to do in blogging.

  43. This post was super helpful to me. I started blogging in January 2009. The ideas featured in this post are great. I changed all of my posts on my blog so that I now have a standard closing. I learned from this post that simple changes and ideas can make a huge impact.

    Thanks!

  44. I am not a fan of maintaining a word doc for all the links when you can do that using your wordpress blog only.

    I prefer to have a page which lists all the posts like this

    http://www.codeitwell.com/sitemap

  45. i spent most of my time tweaking my blog layout, and realizes that it was a loss to my time. i should focus more on content and writing. nice write-up.

  46. Well, that’s true. However, you need to learn and develop constantly. Blogging is not all about posting, something you could learn and make money instantly. You need patience, devotion and knowledge in your subject before you could make it work.

  47. Thank you so much Katie for this wonderful article. You explained every aspect very thoroughly.

    Only thing that gets me a bit confused is your recommendation to put your websites name aside your own name in the commenting form. Isn’t that considered as spamming? I know it’s not a direct link but still.

    It would get very hard to read out the persons name when everybody would use it.

    But still thanks for a wonderful article. It was definitely a very interesting read!

  48. Oh my, guess it’s time for me to make another small update to my blog, like styling “best articles” in different way to make them more visible.

  49. I have learned something new today.I didn’t know what a Carnival is before.It sounds interesting.

  50. The thing that helped me the most is, “think in great pages.”

    When I thought about blogging, it was “too big.”

    When I thought a post at a time and a great page at a time, it helped me build momentum.

A Practical Podcast… to Help You Build a Better Blog

The ProBlogger Podcast

A Practical Podcast…

Close
Open