“How to Fail Productively as a Blogger” plus 1 more |
How to Fail Productively as a Blogger Posted: 26 Oct 2012 01:02 PM PDT This guest post is by Bea Kylene Jumarang of Writing Off the Rails. During one of my blocks of free time, I found myself watching a video from Tim Harford, an economist and a writer. In it, he was discussing his three rules for failing productively, and those rules were the beginning of a love affair for me. Before you think I fell in love with him, that's not it. I fell in love with the rules, and they've changed my life for the better. Today, I'd like to share those rules with you, along with a concrete process for applying them to your blogging. It's my hope that if you care to listen to what this post says, the rules and the process will change your life too. What you'll need
Tim Harford's three rules—blogger’s edition1. Be willing to fail a lotIf you're blogging for the long haul, I can guarantee that you'll run into hundreds, if not thousands of setbacks. Dozens of your posts will languish without comments, your analytics will be a constant flatline, and it will seem like no one really gives a darn. What matters is that you'll chug on despite everything. In simple words, be willing to fail—a lot. 2. Fail on a survivable scaleThis rule can mean two different things, depending on what stage you're at with your blog. If you're still a beginner, congratulations. You're already failing on a very survivable scale. It's unlikely that a bad post will kill your blog, so you'd better appreciate the benefits of smallness. On the other hand, if you're a big blogger, you’ll take a little bit more care. Hopefully, you'll use your experience to the full, and by this time, you should already know what works along with what doesn't. If you plan to take a risk, put thought into it so you'll fail in a way that you and your blog can survive. 3. Make sure you have what it takes to spot a failure, and fix it, earlyDon't let issues or problems fester. As soon as you identify something that needs correction, get to correcting. The faster you respond to a crisis, the faster you can learn and deal with its potential repercussions. Also, don't close yourself off from the problems other people point out. When they tell you something needs action, act on it, instead of pushing your own primacy over the situation. A process for productive failure1. Know your systems, behaviors, and habitsAs I said in the introduction, failures are incredibly important as revision triggers. They tell us that something needs to change, and that action needs to be taken. That said, you'll never maximize a failure's usefulness if you just let it pass you by like a little tumbleweed. Instead of pushing the failure to the back of your mind, bring it to the forefront. In fact, log it. Remember the notebook or the spreadsheet? This is your time to use it. For the next week, just log your failures. Relevant data points include the following, though this list is just a suggestion. Feel free to customize and add!
For the Failures part of your log, you can do the logging in a text editor or something like that. Just make a note in your log whenever you didn't do something you were supposed to. You'll see why this is important in Step 2 of this process. How can you keep up the motivation to log stuff? Make things easy for yourself. As soon as you boot up your laptop, open your spreadsheet. Before you start a task, enter your time in, and remember to enter the time out when you’re done. In my personal experience, just seeing the spreadsheet on my taskbar has been enough motivation. There will be times when you forget to log things, and that's alright. Don't beat yourself up, but keep logging as much as you can. As an important note, don't do anything to your log yet. Logging is not the time to reflect. Like Tony Stark says in the Avengers movie, "I can't do the equation unless I have all the variables." Wait for the variables, alright? No equations yet. 2. Make sense of the dataAfter one week of logging, you should have a pretty detailed spreadsheet, with all the data points that matter to you. Now that you have enough information, it's time for analysis and reflection. Below are some suggested questions to ask yourself as you review that data.
Once you're done with these questions, you probably have a reasonable overview of your real behaviors and limits. What you discover may be intuitively known to you, or it may come as a complete surprise. The point is, now you finally know the truth, and you can back up what you know with data. As far as your failures go, this is the time to be honest with yourself. Find the real reasons for why you failed. No one will see your log anyway, so there's no reason to lie. What matters is that you'll finally get an idea of your real excuses, strengths, and pain points, which will be valuable in the quest for improvement. 3. AdaptThere's no point in all your logging and reflection if you aren't willing to act on what you've just learned. All the data in the world won't matter if you just let the information languish. Because of that, it's time for you to create your plan for improvement, and to chart your new course based on the realizations you've arrived at. Below are some actions you can take.
The last thing to do, of course, is to implement your action plan, and then log the results. See if you're less stressed, happier, or anything like that. Just make sure to note what happens. 4. Keep failingTim's first rule is to be willing to fail a lot. Inherent in that rule is the need to keep trying new things, and yes, to fall in love with trial and error. You see, according to Tim, complex things often benefit from such an approach. In the first place, trial and error gives you a very definite result, e.g. it worked or it didn't work. And though it may sound pretty surprising, blogging is actually a complex thing. In fact, I view it as a complex system, and evaluating my results often makes me use systematic thinking. If you don't believe me, have a think about how many variables are in the equation. You have things like search engine optimization, social media influence, number of newsletter subscribers, heck, even the keywords in your domain are a variable. That said though, maximizing trial and error necessitates having many things to test out. If you're wondering about how to do that, I have short process outlined below.
Resources for further readingThis resource list introduces you to systems and design thinking plus the work of Tim Harford. Taken collectively, these resources have made my blogging and my life infinitely better.
Please feel free to comment and share your thoughts. Do you do any of these things already? Are you conscious about learning from failure in a systematic way? Let us know in the comments. Bea Kylene Jumarang is a blogger and fiction writer, obsessed with connecting writing to everything else. When she’s not writing at Starbucks, she’s investigating fonts for her upcoming e-book, Techified : Silicon Valley’s Secret Guide to Writing. If you want first dibs at the book, head on over to the Facebook page for her new blog’s launch. Once the blog goes live, you’ll be the first to know. You’ll also get the e-book, along with even more free stuff! Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger |
Weekend Project: Learning to Fail Posted: 26 Oct 2012 07:00 AM PDT This weekend, we’re taking a different approach with our weekend project, and touching on a topic that I think is overlooked a lot in blogging. And that’s failure.In a world like this, where it’s so easy to try new things out—new social networks, new product ideas, and so on—it’s also very, very easy to fail. Gone are the days when we’d get a standard education before we went out to work in a particular field. In fact, as I explained at a recent careers night, my Marketing degree was the first big thing I failed in! …but it wasn’t the last. As I explain in that interview, I spent my early years in a kind of “chaos” as I pursued all kinds of different interests. Many of them didn’t end in great “achievements”, which I guess you could take to mean that I failed in them, too. At the time, my parents were eager for me to settle down—to pick something and stick with it. We’ve probably all heard this advice at some point, and in some ways it seems very closely related to this idea of not “failing.” For a lot of people, simply following through with something—whether it’s working, or whether you enjoy it or not—is better than “failing” by dropping it. Dropping something is often seen as giving up, even when it makes perfectly good sense to do so. So there’s a lot of baggage around failure. And this weekend, we aim to clear some of it out, so you have room to fail—and learn—in your blogging journey. The half-full glassIt sounds patronizing, but I’ve found that when it comes to failing at something, a good way to stop yourself from focusing on the negatives is to look at what you’ve learned. I know that can sound trite‚ especially if the thing that hasn’t worked out is something you’re heavily invested in—financially or personally. But it’s true. I’ve started more than 20 blogs now, and obviously most of them haven’t lasted. Does that mean they’re failures? To you, maybe. To me, they were part of the proving ground that helped me develop the skills to become better at some things, and even have some successes later. In this way, blogging’s kind of like being employed—each job you take on helps you build skills that lead to the next job, and over time, help you develop a career. Of course, within each job—or each blogging task—there are plenty of opportunities not to succeed, and as they say, you can’t win them all. If you did, you wouldn’t be learning anything. Now, you might be thinking, “That’d be great—I’d love to know it all!” But we all have to start somewhere, and the only way to progress is through good old trial and error. The important thing, though, is to learn from those errors, and to feed back those learnings into what you do next—or next time. Surf the learning curveIt can be tough to handle failure—and in blogging, failure can be a very public thing. Even if your failures aren’t major show-stoppers, it can be really hard to persist when you seem to be faced with little failure after little failure. Sometimes we go through phases where nothing we try seems to work. And if we don’t know why, that can be very disheartening. That’s why it’s so important to learn to manage failure as a blogger. At any one time, you might have several fronts to fail on—you might be trying a new ad network or a different post style, tweaking your social media strategy, floating a new product idea with your audience, trying to grow your subscription rates—the list goes on. My approach is always to try to learn something from the failure. Even if I can’t work out what went wrong, I try to use the failure to direct my future efforts. So maybe I’ll try a different approach to using the same process or tool next time—or maybe I’ll decide to try a different approach or tool altogether, in the hopes of finding one that works for me and my blog. I think taking the time to reflect on the failure is important, too. Otherwise, you can easily fall into the trap of just banging your head up against a brick wall, rather than thinking creatively about other ways you could achieve your goals. There’s certainly a lot to think about when it comes to blogging failure, so I hope you’ll enjoy this weekend’s posts. In them, we’ll cover:
But first up, I’d love to hear how you handle failure as a blogger. Be honest—we’ve all done it, and we can all learn from each other. So we’d love to hear your stories and secrets for learning to fail. Originally at: Blog Tips at ProBlogger |
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