Ads 468x60px

Nine More Blogging Milestones to Celebrate - DailyBlogTips

Nine More Blogging Milestones to Celebrate - DailyBlogTips


Nine More Blogging Milestones to Celebrate

Posted: 29 Jul 2014 02:11 AM PDT

A while back, I wrote Nine Blogging Milestones to Celebrate, starting with "Getting Your Blog Up and Running" and finishing with "Getting a 'Thank You' Email from a Reader".

It's been great to hear from DailyBlogTips readers over the past few months, in comments, by email, and in the Get Blogging forums, about the progress they're making …

… and perhaps you're one of those who've hit all (or most!) of the milestones on that list.

If so, today's post is for you!

These blogging milestones are the ones that you might reach after a few months – and in some cases after a few years – of blogging.

I'm going to number them 10 – 18 so that they follow on from the first nine. Again, I've tried to present them roughly in the order you're likely to reach them, but of course this will vary depending on your niche, strategies, etc.

Milestone #10: Reaching Ten Published Posts

Milestone #2 was publishing your second post. Some bloggers start strong, but run out of ideas and motivation pretty quickly – and they abandon their blogs with just a handful of posts.

If you can get to ten published posts, you're doing very well. You've probably got to the point where you've used up all your initial ideas, and you've started to come up with some new ones. (If you're feeling a bit stuck, try 10 Blog Post Ideas You Can Use Right Now.)

Milestone #11: Getting Your First 100 Subscribers

If strangers are reading your blog, you're definitely doing something right! Most bloggers (me included…) start out with a handful of friends and family reading. It can be slow progress in the early days, but you should see a constant upward trend in subscribers to your blog (or email newsletter).

The day you break triple figures – 100 subscribers – is definitely one to celebrate. It might not sound like a lot if you make the mistake of comparing yourself to massive blogs in your field, who may have 100,000 subscribers … but if you think of all those people in a single room, you'll realise it's a really big audience!

Milestone #12: Calling Yourself a "Blogger" or "Entrepreneur" or "Writer"

What you call yourself is important because it's about seeing your blog as a business, and about starting to "step into" your new identity. If you eventually hope to be a full-time blogger, this is a great step on the path to get there.

You don't have to use one of those specific words, of course. Perhaps you're a "life coach" or an "online marketer" or "social media expert". Whatever your niche, you can find a job title or description that fits well.

Milestone #13: Writing for a Blog You've Admired for a Long Time

When I got started blogging, it was a huge thrill to get posts onto blogs like DailyBlogTips, ProBlogger and Copyblogger. (In fact, I was so nervous about submitting to Copyblogger, it took me a whole week to gather the courage to email them my finished post!)

It's a wonderful feeling to see your work on a blog that you've admired for months or even years. Sadly, this is a milestone that a lot of bloggers never reach … or put off for a very long time. The truth is that you've probably got a better chance than you think, especially if you read our post Five Simple Ways to Make it Much More Likely Your Guest Post Will Be Accepted.

Milestone #14: Having Someone Influential Share One of Your Posts

This milestone often goes hand-in-hand with the previous one, as influencers tend to stick with major, well-known blogs (they don't normally have much time to go around looking for up-and-coming bloggers).

Your guest post could easily be retweeted by someone with a huge following – and even though the link itself won't be to your blog, many influencers will include your twitter name (e.g. mine is @aliventures).

Milestone #15: Creating Your First Product

At some stage, you'll want to go slightly beyond writing posts for your blog and produce a valuable resource for readers. For most bloggers, this will be a freebie to give away – usually to encourage email subscribers (though occasionally just to get more traffic and attention, with no opt-in required).

Whatever your product is – a mini-ebook, an audio recording, a video, a cheat sheet – creating it will teach you a lot, and may well involve a bit of a learning curve. Again, this is a milestone a lot of bloggers put off, but if you can find just 10 – 15 minutes a day, you could easily create a simple free product within a month.

Milestone #16: Getting Your First Negative Comment

This might seem a strange milestone to include, but I believe your first negative comment is worth celebrating. Yes, really!

Most bloggers will get a handful of comments in the early days, from friends, family or fans. These are often along the lines of "great post, I really enjoyed it." But a negative comment suggests you've become popular enough to attract a much wider audience – including people who don't "get" your blog or who aren't a good fit for you.

If you've been particularly anxious about negative comments, receiving one can actually be something of a relief: you might be upset at first, but you'll quickly find you deal with it and move on

Milestone #17: Running Your First Survey

You may want to wait until you have 200 or so readers for this, as you'll inevitably find that most of your readers won't take the time to fill in a survey, and you want to have a reasonable range of responses.

A survey is a great way to set yourself up for success with Milestone #18, as it allows you to find out who your audience are, what sort of content they really want, and even what they'd be willing to pay for a product or service that you might sell. If you're not sure what to ask, check out the list of questions here.

Milestone #18: Selling Your First Product or Service

You might have made a little bit of money initially through advertising (see Milestone #7) or through affiliate sales, but eventually, you'll probably reach a point where you want to create and sell something of your own.

For me, this has been by far the most effective way to make money blogging, and chances are, you'll find the same. The first sale you make to a customer will demonstrate that you have something valuable to offer that people want to pay for – and it's likely to be the start of many more sales.

 

Good luck hitting these milestones! If you've already achieved some of them, a huge well done – do let us know in the comments. And if you have any different milestones to add, please leave those in the comments too.

 

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!


What Makes DailyBlogTips Readers Choose YOUR Blog? - DailyBlogTips

What Makes DailyBlogTips Readers Choose YOUR Blog? - DailyBlogTips


What Makes DailyBlogTips Readers Choose YOUR Blog?

Posted: 28 Jul 2014 05:07 AM PDT

Last week, I asked you what makes you choose to read a blog regularly.

Is it the useful content?

The professional design?

The engaging writing style?

Or something else entirely?

Lots of you responded with great, thoughtful comments.

I’ve picked four to share below, but you can read all the comments on What Makes YOU Decide to Read a Blog Regularly?

J.K. Riki wrote:

Personally I don't visit ANY blogs daily. The only websites that receive a daily check from me are message boards, because I'm responding to different people who have responded to me. Twitter is another that falls into that category.

Some sites, however, I check "regularly" meaning every few days or once a week. For those it boils down to repeat posts of useful content. I check animation websites for news in the industry or tips and tutorials, and things like Daily Blog Tips (again, about once a week) to see the headlines of the past few days and if there's anything that I should look further into. This keep me from becoming an Internet Zombie of sorts, which is a problem I had for many years. I had my "regular" sites and became so engrossed in checking them all that I didn't get anything accomplished. So now I try to avoid that.

I generally only subscribe to a site's newsletter if it's an infrequent send-out. I immediately unsubscribe to mass emails that are daily or even every other day. My inbox is full enough, I don't have time for such frequent updates.

Ryan Biddulph wrote:

The blog must be related to sharing blogging tips, as that's my blogs theme these days. This is a biggie.

The content must be original and engaging to draw me in. I've read many posts over the years and need something to stimulate the senses, and to keep me interested. As for engaging, I love when bloggers ask questions of their audience. It proves that they're listening.

Here's another biggie; comments must be open. I appreciate CopyBlogger and other sites that bring the comments to social because of spam issues but they lost a reader the second they did that.

If I'm to become a regular reader I want to be able to: share my thoughts on the blog itself, add value to the post itself, potentially have other bloggers or readers click through to my blog, so we can build bonds, and yep, I want to leverage my presence through blog commenting too.

Jane wrote:

I usually don't subscribe to any blog just by reading one post. Even if that one post is outstanding I usually stick around a while to see how the rest of the content is.

If I find the content to be truly delivering (not just salesy, marketing stuff) – I surely do subscribe, provided the topic/niche of that blog is of interest to me.

Steve B wrote:

1. The blog would have to blog about something that really interests. May change as my personal interests change.
2. The writer would have to write in a style that I like and can relate to.
3. A majority of the posts would have to offer something of value. Like learning something new, or maybe they provide something that will benefit me.
4. There are a ton of blogs out there, so I try to limit my subscriptions to a handful so I can actually read the posts and not simply deleting them from my inbox.

In general, the common themes I saw emerging in the discussion were:

  • The blog is relevant to your interests
  • Consistently goodcontent, not just one great post
  • Feeling a connection to the blogger (Antionette Blake said “When I feel as though the blogger has become a 'part of the family' I make sure to read their blog daily.”)

By far, the most important thing was really good, relevant content; a few readers mentioned things like “design” and “headlines” but it was clear that none of you subscribe to blogs unless the content is truly worth reading.

Many thanks to all who commented! The key lesson here is that people won’t read your blog unless the content is really good, and it’s clearly on-topic for them (which means it’s important not to write about several different, disconnected topics).

Would YOUR blog attract the readers quoted above? If not, what changes can you make to improve?

 

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!