Keeping up with my Sunday pattern of posting one from the archives, this post below was one of my very first written March 22, 2010. Upon reading it, I’m impressed this list still has merit nearly three years later…what tips might you add based on your own blogging journey? Lastly, how about publish your “First Blog Post?” (Still relevant and well written?)
From Soulati’-TUDE! Archives:
Now that Im officially a blogger, it feels pretty cool. Im eager to put all the back-end stuff behind me and concentrate on perfecting and building the network. Unfortunately, I need to dig deeper for the patience as its all part of the larger journey.
In spite of my short time here, there are tools a newbie blogger needs to stay the course. Let me suggest several based on direct experience in the first two weeks:
- Patience and Perseverance. Without high levels of patience, a new blogger cannot persevere.
- Tech Know-How. IT knowledge is not a necessity, although its a bonus. Some of the more daunting areas are installations, code, ftp, renaming files, creating databases on c-panel and so much more. When self-hosting a WordPress blog, be prepared to be frustrated.
- Know your limit. Hit a wall? Ask for help; hire the experts. I didnt, but needed to. (I had hit my wall, but a guy on Twitter blew me off for a week, and it angered me so much I insisted on doing this myself.)
- Time. Blogging requires more time. Obstacles and snafus galore and solving each take precious hours. See number two.
- Listen at a higher level. When speaking with clients, colleagues, friends, peers, listen for the next blog topic. After any conversation, if something strikes you, jot down key words to trigger topics.
- Keep a notebook, folder. Keep the notes, posts, items you read in a manual notebook or desktop folder.
- Rip tear sheets. Familiar with this term? Public relations practitioners use it when one of our stories weve placed hits. Get oriented to tearing out stories and filing into an idea folder. Im already tearing sheets from Advertising Age, BusinessWeek and the Wall Street Journal which offer an array of ideas.
- Follow and subscribe. No better way to get post ideas then to follow people on Twitter lists via or . Subscribe to blogs in a reader. That way when on the road, you can access posts galore and delete subscriptions not making the grade.
- Use a dictionary/thesaurus. Theres nothing like a good dictionary to help find the right word or look up a synonym. Each post Ive written has required reference to the dictionary. Im expecting a few grammar lessons along the way, too.
- Be aware. Being aware is more than just combing content for ideas. Curiosity is the first step towards greater awareness. Surf 10 minutes daily on Technorati and get a sense of topics, style, and popular bloggers content. With awareness comes relevance.
- Engage on Twitter. A blogger must have a Twitter account, but all tweeps dont have a blog. Twitter is the first best marketing tool for a blog; its a built-in audience who already finds you credible enough to follow. Blog posts are first promoted on Twitter. Whether you include Facebook in this marketing scheme is up to how you use it (friends/family or mix of business).
- Be responsive. When you post, the objective is to get attention. The ultimate goal is to get comments and furthermore subscribers. Answer everyone with appreciation who takes time to jot a note.
- Queue the posts. Its Sunday morning. Ive written 3.5 posts. Am thrilled to have something in queue for the week. Find that quiet time to draft skeleton content. Come back to it and edit. Find support points from the Web to empower the message.
- Learn! Already after a solid week of blogging, Im thrilled with learning opportunities. While I thought Twitter was wonderful, blogging beats it hands down. I now look at everything through the blogging glass is this a good topic? Is it a trend? Where can I find the data to support this statement? Do I need to back up my opinions? Shall I link to that site? Should I self-promote the blog on anothers post? Does this content resonate? Who cares?
- Respect one another. Everyone is entitled to opinions. Its what makes the blogosphere rich. Set a positive tone with the goal of garnering respect.
What might you add to the list, please?