Tag Archive: regularly posting on your blog

How often should you post in your blog?

Fairy Blog Mother

At my brother’s 40th birthday party last month my father came up to me and said I was looking podgy, just like my great aunt Margaret. Well, that raised my ire (if not my blood pressure), partly because my great aunt was morbidly obese and a hypochondriac, and partly because it was true (ideally I should lose three stone or 42 pounds).

So since then I have been down the gym every week day (can’t quite manage the weekend), pounding away on the treadmill in the hope of losing a bit of weight, the spectre of my terrifying relative looming up to goad me to keep wobbling on…

Treadmills are great places to think, and I wondered if all this consistent activity was doing any good (though the scales said otherwise). With my brain switched into blog mode, I remembered I’d recently read that blogs become more successful the more you post. This is obviously true, as all this new material constantly being churned out is like a continuous buffet for the search engine spiders, who feast on this content before returning it to be indexed.

Prolific bloggers post several times a day. Woah, why? I hear you ask. Well, if your blog’s purpose is to make money through the advertising and affiliate links it contains, this can only be achieved through a constant flow of traffic, and continuous indexing of your posts, combined with your audiences subscribing to RSS feeds and newsreaders, traffic alert systems and social media scrutinising, will bring in the necessary quota of readers to make your financial ventures successful.

But what is the optimum minimum? Three times a week – quite a respectable and achievable goal. I manage this for my boss’s blog, but not my own, partly because I have other commitments after work (going down the gym for example) that take up my time. You can see from your blog stats that consistent posting will easily maintain your traffic and readership loyalty much more than a flurry of activity followed by a period of famine. Spiders are hungry and need continuous feeding, and if neglected may easily search their nourishment from elsewhere.

And what if you want to start up a blog or resurrect it from a period of abandonment? Then you need to publish as many days as you can (a bit like me going down the gym) as consistently as you can manage with the correct kind of content (or diet) that will sustain interest and build up a following. Reduce the size of your blogs (I’m sure mine are far too long) by breaking them down into many subjects that can be posted independently, and keep an editorial diary to stimulate and store new ideas to prevent a post drought. Watch out for another post about what to write about soon – there, I’ve given myself another subject to research and deliver to you!

How to stop your blog from failing

Both kinds of blog

A blog should be a medium for communicating with your readers. They are somewhere to provide interesting information that will educate your audience, produce compelling content that will explain your business in a different light, provide an insight into another side of a topic, and allow you to express your knowledge and expertise within your niche.

Self-hosted blogs allow monetizing, such as affiliate links, badge advertising and other ways of making money, but if your blog is geared totally towards selling, that’s where it will fall down. You could use WordPress to adapt your blog into a website (or blogsite), with pages that contain selling points for services or products, but it should not resemble a blog that’s sole aim is to sell.

Blogs should be subjective and informative, and unless you’re really famous or a particular personality, talking totally about yourself is a turn-off. OK, occasionally turn the conversation around to include an anecdote that might explain a point better, provide a story that would be of benefit for your readers, or relay a funny incident to provide some light entertainment, but if the posts are constantly about you, it’s not a good idea.

A blog with nothing in it is ‘like a cheese sandwich’. What this means is without regularly posting on your blog, it quickly becomes stale and a neglected blog will soon appear ‘dead’. Blogs thrive on new content, just like the search engine spiders who are programmed to visit blogs far more frequently than websites, and your regular visitors will soon tire of looking for new posts which never come.  What would a new visitor think if they arrived on your blog to find the last post was over three months ago?

If you are blogging to raise your profile, and increase the exposure of your business, don’t give up too quickly. Just as with networking and other forms of marketing, it can take time to build relationships with your readership, the blogosphere, the search engine spiders, and other social media users. Longevity helps blogs become established, as does the quality of the content and the prowess of their authors.

Writing good posts takes practice, and as you gain in experience, you’ll learn from others in the same niche (if you follow their blogs, which I thoroughly recommend) and pick up good tips. To master your technique may even take years (I would certainly give it at least six months), and if you consistently contribute during that time, just think what a mind of information your blog will become by then!