Archive for the ‘Blogging Challenges & Tips’ Category

Jun
29

Blogging tipsNow if you’d noticed, I had recently revamped my list of categories — categories that did not have many posts were merged, and categories with lots of assorted posts were broken up and named accordingly.

I’ve read somewhere that if you named your category “Miscellaneous”, chances are your readers won’t click on it because they have no idea what miscellaneous posts are. For all they know, you could be talking about what you had for dinner, or your pet tarantula, Richard..

In her book Blogging Tips, Lorelle vanFossen advices bloggers to determine the topics that they will blog about and categorize them before the writing process (but I guess you can also revamp it as you blog):

  1. Make a list of the things you want to blog about.
  2. Group all similar topics together.
  3. Under each topic, make a list of what you want to blog about.
  4. Examine your groupings and name it with a title that best describes the group.
  5. Begin with the most important category, then add as you blog.

In other words, be specific. Your readers aren’t stup*d. They want to know what’s in the link before they clicked on it. For example, all my posts on blogging challenges, memes and tags, photo hunts, WordPress and plugins are now categorized under the same (and straight-forward) names to make going down the list of categories easier for my readers.

So tell me, what do YOU think of my list of categories? Are they clear enough to you? Do you have difficulties guessing what’s inside each category?

And how much time to you spend on your categories? How do you categorize your posts?

Excerpt taken from Lorelle vanFossen’s recently published book, Blogging Tips: What bloggers won’t tell you about blogging. Have you ordered your copy yet?

5 comments
Jun
27
Psst…

Have you heard? At DumbShoppers, they do the reading and reviewing of products and services, and YOU just do the shopping! :)

Blogging tipsWith the increasing number of bloggers who tell you how to optimally monetize your blog, surely there are something they aren’t telling you?
Bloggers won’t tell you that:

  1. blogging takes a lot of time,
  2. you will probably never be adequately compensated for your time blogging,
  3. blogging is about doing better than your competitors,
  4. you will get slashed, based, maligned and savaged by other bloggers,
  5. you will get burned, scalded, tarred and feathered by commentators,
  6. if you don’t know what you want out of blogging, you won’t get it,
  7. blogging is physically and mentally hard work,
  8. blogging involves networking,
  9. you will probably regret your domain name, and that
  10. there is a life outside of blogging.

Ahhh… There IS a life outside of blogging. And the irony is that we almost always spend THAT life outside blogging thinking about blogging!

So if you’ve been blogging for a while, have you discovered anything by yourself that you wished somebody had told you before you started blogging? As for myself, I often wished that somebody had told me how addictive it is to tweak my blog themes because I’d never stop until I’m satisfied with it. And boy, it IS time-consuming!!

This is an excerpt from Lorelle vanFossen’s recently published book, Blogging Tips: What bloggers won’t tell you about blogging. For more information on these or other blogging tips, order your copy of Blogging Tips NOW!

6 comments
Jun
26

Blogging Challenges and TipsLorelle (yeah, the one who had recently published a Blogging Tips book) challenged her readers to describe blogging, and as much as I’d like to think this is an easy job, it isn’t. In fact, NONE of Lorelle’s challenges were easy — if they were, they wouldn’t be called challenges in the first place. Sometimes I wonder from where she got her tough ideas, hmm…

There is not a shadow of doubt that blogging IS indeed a full-time job. Whether or not one “works” as a full-time blogger, the act of blogging requires more than just one’s time. It requires one’s attention, effort and well, time :) When I blog, not only do I have to ensure that my blog looks presentable, I have to ensure that my images don’t break my theme and there aren’t spelling or grammar mistakes and at the same time, I have to catch YOUR attention and make sure you come back tomorrow. Now, that’s A LOT of work, no? :D

What does blogging mean to me?

Blogging is about learning. When I started blogging, I wanted to customize my Blogspot blog. I read up and learned whatever was necessary to hide the navigational bar at the top of the Blogspot page, I learned how to create lists on my sidebar and I learned how to make things look the way I wanted them to. I’ve spent countless hours researching and experimenting with my blog, and that was how I learned how Blogspot blogs function.

But when I hosted my own WordPress blog, I realized I had to learn a whole lot of OTHER stuff. I’ve learned about CSS and how it makes things easier for us, I’ve learned about widgets and what they do, I’ve learned about various plugins and how they enhance our blog functions and I’ve also learned a lil’ about placing ads on my blog!

Besides the technical stuff, I’ve also learned a great deal about bloggers and their blogs. I’ve learned about blogging, about maintaining my blog, about monetizing my blog and I’ve learned that there are a lot of bloggers who are willing to teach us stuff if we asked.

Blogging is about improving. I used to blog about what I had for dinner, and how my housemate cooked us spaghetti, and what we did to celebrate another housemate’s 21st birthday. I’ve read recently that nobody is interested to read about what we had for dinner, unless we run a food blog, and that changed my perspective on blogging.

I started blogging about what mattered to me — charity, conservation (of natural resources and the critically-endangered turtles), volunteerism and health issues (breast cancer, AIDS, yoga). I wrote more about my personal life, my relationships with people around me. I wrote about the river terrapins and what we are doing to save them from becoming extinct.

And I participate in Photo Hunts and Blog Carnivals and Blogging Challenges (like this one) to improve my photography, writing and blogging skills. And I’d like to think that I now write and blog better compared to 18 months ago :)

Blogging is about sharing. I wouldn’t have achieved so much without bloggers who were so generous to share their knowledge with me. As such, blogging has also taught me to share my knowledge and mistakes so that new bloggers get to learn from them. I remember a saying that goes something like this:

Learn from mistakes that other people make because you don’t have time to make them all yourself.

How does blogging change my life?

Frankly, I can’t remember what I used to do during my free time before I started blogging. I only remember that I used to read a lot. In fact, I am still doing a lot of reading, though I’m taking much longer to finish reading a book, for obvious reasons :D

Blogging has changed the way I think and look at things. Whenever I take pictures of pretty things or see something unusual on the streets or hear something funny or even downright unacceptable or read a good book, I think of a way to share it with my readers without sounding boastful or arrogant (the internet has taken away a lot of warmth in our everyday conversations and misunderstandings are way too common these days). And you know what? Blogging has also improved my photography skills! :)

And what does it mean to work as a blogger?

It means you get to sit in front of your computer for lonnnggg hours, even on weekends. It means you don’t get to tell your boss you’re late because there’s a massive traffic jam when in fact you had just woken up. It means you can NEVER be AWAY from your work because well, your computer is just sitting on your desk, and that’s all you’ll ever need. It means you can be your own boss by dictating what you’re going to blog about on any particular day without having your manager/supervisor knocking on your door every 5 minutes to see if you’re done with the report. It means you can leave the phone ringing for all you care and not feel your colleagues’ eyes watching you. It means you don’t have to buy new work clothes because you can work in your pyjamas. It means your make-up set will last longer because you don’t use them much.

Heh.

What about you?

How would YOU describe blogging? :D

4 comments
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