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“PB138: Challenge: Create a List Post” plus 1 more

“PB138: Challenge: Create a List Post” plus 1 more

Link to ProBlogger

PB138: Challenge: Create a List Post

Posted: 02 Aug 2016 12:30 AM PDT

CHALLENGE 1 CREATE A LIST POST

Challenge: Create a List Post

This is part 1 of our 7 Days to Getting Your Blogging Groove Back Challenge that we kicked off in the last episode of this podcast.

To recap –

Today's Challenge: Write a List Post

In this episode I talk about different types of link posts that you might consider writing and given you a number of examples from my own archives to check out.

Listen to it in the player above or check out episode 138 on iTunes here.

  • Write and publish a List post
  • Head to the FB group (search for ProBlogger Challenge Group on FB) and look for the update I've done there were I call you to share your list posts. Share the link. Only new posts please.
  • Take a few minutes to check out, like, comment on and share other people's lists.

In Today's Episode List Posts Can Take a Number of Forms

Further Resources on Writing List Posts

Full Transcript Expand to view full transcript Compress to smaller transcript view

Hey there and welcome to Episode 138 of the ProBlogger Podcast. This is challenge number one of our seven days to getting your blogging groove back challenge that we kicked off in the last episode of this podcast. If you haven't listened to that episode, I really do strongly recommend that you go back to Episode 137 which just goes for 13 minutes, and it gives you an overview of what we're doing in this challenge.

To recap, everyday for the next week I’m going to suggest a particular style of blog post for you to create. It can be a written piece of content, it can a video, it can be a podcast, whatever you choose to do. My challenge to you is to create and publish that piece of content and to join our ProBlogger Challenge Group on Facebook and to share the post that you've written so that we can check out each other's blog posts.

You can find all the details of the challenge and today's transcript and show notes at problogger.com/podcast/138.

Let me tell you what today's style of blog post will be for you to create in the next 24 hours. Today, I want you to create a list post. This is the easiest type of post that I could come up with for day one to help you ease into this particular challenge. I decided a list post would be a good one for a few reasons.

Firstly, it's something most of us are familiar with, we've all read them. Most of us as bloggers have probably created them. It's also something that can be done relatively quickly depending on how you approach it and I’m going to give you some options that you might take with your list post in a moment.

Also, in my experience, it's one of the most effective ways of creating content and it's something that appeals to readers. It can be the type of post that can attract a lot of eyeballs and it can be accessible to those readers.

A list post works for a number of reasons. Firstly, they're scannable. They tend to keep you from rambling although that does depend on the style of list post that you choose. I guess they do keep you a little bit more succinct, they're readable. It's very easy to consume a list post, particularly if you format it well. They can be comprehensive if you want it to be and they can also be pretty light. They can also be very persuasive, you can come up with twenty-one things in your list post that can really add a lot of weight over time if people get right through in that list.

They can be easy to write, I actually find them quite easy to write because you come up with an outline first of your twenty-one posts or however many points you want to make. And then, you just fill in the blank after that. They're very shareable and they're the type of content that does get shared around a lot. There's been studies done into that. They can enable you to communicate something that can be quite complicated in a fairly easy to understand way. They break things down just by the factor that they affect that they are a list. List posts can be a great type of content to write.

Most of you have probably done plenty of list posts in the past and may not need to listen to anything else. But if you want a few tips on how to do it and how to approach this challenge, there are three types of list posts that I would suggest you consider. Really, I guess it's about the complexity of the post.

The first one that I would suggest you consider is the simple list post. This is where the vast majority of your whole post is a list. You might want to write a short introduction or a short conclusion with a call to action at the end. But the list itself makes up the bulk of the post. The post itself may not even have an intro outro, it might just be a list.

An example of this is a post that I published on ProBlogger a little while ago now called Twenty-One Ways to Write Posts That Are Guaranteed to Grow Your Blog. When you go and look at this, the whole post is a list. It's just twenty-one short phrases or sentences. Some of the only have three words, some of them have up to nine. It's a very, very simple list. You could read it in fifty seconds even though there are twenty-one points there. You could probably read it in half a minute.

This is an example of a very simple list post. That may be what you choose today. I actually find list posts, some of you might look at it and go, "Oh, that's too light." Sometimes, by the fact that they're so few words in there, you get straight to the point in each point you’re making, they can actually be very powerful. I've seen a number of people use this technique to communicate really powerful things in very few words.

The challenge when you’re writing such a short post is to choose the right words and to make them powerful words. You may choose to do that today. Secondly, you might choose to do a longer list post. The last example that I gave you, those twenty-one things that were just very short, light sentences and each point can be very effective because it's so to the point, but it can also sometimes be too light to convey a more complicated message. You may actually frustrate your readers if you do too light a post.

Most of my posts I would say are longer list posts that I've done. These are where you come up with your list and you might have a heading for each point which might be similar to that simple list and then you might write a paragraph on each of those headings. Or, you might write two or three paragraphs. Again, I'll give you some examples in today's show notes. Firstly, a post I wrote a few years ago called How to Take a Great Group Photo. This is on Digital Photography School. How to take a photo of a group of people.

Whilst that title doesn't indicate that it's a list post, it actually has twelve tips. I could've probably titled it Twelve Tips to Take a Great Group Photo but I kind of sometimes don't like numbered type posts. They tend to convey something to your readers, so I decided just to title it How to Take a Great Group Photo. But if you look at it, it's a list post. There are twelve tips, each of them has a heading, each of them has one to five paragraphs under that heading and most of them has a photo as well to illustrate the point.

Similarly, another post I did on Digital Photography School, Twenty-One Tips For Amateur Wedding Photographers. Again, very similar style heading for each of the twenty-one tips. Underneath, there was a paragraph or two as well. This is a bit more comprehensive than your simple list post, it allows you to go into more depth. Also, the thing I like about these is that they link out very often to other things that you've written in your archives. Particularly look at that Amateur Wedding Photography one, most of the points there's links to other things that I've written. This is one of the things I love about a list post is that it enables you to sneeze people out into your archives.

The third type of post that you might like to choose today is where you just use a list within a post. You might choose to write something more in the format of an article, or an essay, a long format piece of content and then use lists within that as well. That can also be very effective. I'll share examples in today's show notes of those types of posts. It's sort of an essay but there's these lists within it as well. That can help to illustrate several points along the way in your article.

Now, I know some of you are listening to this challenge today and are cringing, you may even be crying. List posts are very popular with bloggers. As a result, some bloggers don't like them because they can be overdone in some niches. Sometimes, people go list posts are too light, they're too fluffy, I write much detailed content. Of course, it all comes down to how you want to approach it today. You could make almost any style of post lighter, it's not just list posts. You can write an opinion post that's light, you can write a review post that's light. You can also make list posts very meaty as well.

If you’re saying to yourself I’m not doing this, I don't want to sell it, I don't want to write a list style post, I challenge you to write a meaty, comprehensive list. For example, I've used this example before on this podcast, my post on ProBlogger My Ultimate Guide to Making Money with the Amazon Affiliate Program. I'll link to it in today's show notes. It's actually a list post. In fact, it's two lists if you look at it. There's an extended introduction with newer sections in the introduction and then there are thirty tips that have several paragraphs of information.

The total length of that article was seven-thousand and seven-hundred words long. As I said two episodes ago on this podcast, it's an evergreen piece of content that continues to drive hundreds of visitors to my blog everyday, if not thousands. Hundreds of thousands of people have read that post, it's seven-thousand words long, it's a meaty post. I would argue it's probably my most comprehensive post on the blog. It's broken down into lists.

I think that the list format of that post makes it much more readable, shareable, and much easier to understand. If I just chosen to write more of an essay style post, I don't think it would've been read as much as it has. It wouldn't have had as much impact upon my readers.

I challenge you, if you are thinking no, I’m not doing a list post, they're too light. Write a meaty one, write the most comprehensive list post you can possibly write if that's where you’re heading.

A few last tips on list posts. Think about your formatting, it's really important to make it scannable, to use headings, to use bullets if that helps. If you’re doing a simple list post, one of those really light ones, it's probably appropriate to use bullet points. If it's a more comprehensive post, I would encourage you to use headings and subheadings and to consider breaking the post up with images as well.

Adding further reading to the post, the points that you write can be a really effective way of making your post more comprehensive, more useful to your readers, but also getting people to visit other parts of your sites.

Lastly, if you want some more step by step tips on how to create a great list post, check out today's show notes because there I’m going to link to a great post that Ali Hale wrote on ProBlogger a couple of years ago now, it's called Ten Steps to The Perfect List Post. Itself is a great example of a list post and it contains some really good advice from Ali there. Check out today's show notes over at problogger.com/podcast/138 to get a link to that.

Lastly, you don't have to write your list post As I said in the introduction to this challenge, you can actually create a list post in other formats. A list could be the basis for a podcast. Ten Tips to something. A list could be the basis for a talking head video, it could be the basis for an infographic or some other visual content as well. Feel free to take this in any direction you want, the key here is that you are creating something in that format, in that style. Be creative, make it relevant to your audience.

The challenge today, write and publish a list post. Head over to our Facebook group. If you haven't already joined, search for ProBlogger Challenge Group on Facebook or look for the link in today's show notes and look for the update there that I've done where I call you to share your list posts. Please try to get them all in the one spot there. Share a link to the post that you've written and please only share new posts that you've written for this challenge. Don't just go into your archives and find a list post. We want you to do this challenge to create new content.

And then, the last thing is to check out what other list posts people have submitted there and to like them, comment on them, share them if they're relevant for your audience as well.

I really look forward to seeing what list post you can create today. You can take this in any direction as well, you could write about five tools that you use, you could write a step by step guide. That's something you could write about five habits of great photographers or great bloggers or whatever it is that you’re writing for. You could write five mistakes that new people in your industry make. You could write five books or blogs or YouTube accounts that everyone should check out. You should write five reasons that you love something or five values that shaped you. There's a whole heap of different ways and it doesn't have to be a list of five things.

I look forward to seeing what you create over in the Facebook group and I'll talk to you again in 24 hours. This is daily challenge for a whole week here on the podcast so make sure you're subscribed to the podcast to get notified of that. Thanks for listening, I'll chat with you tomorrow.

If you know another blogger who you think should join the challenge, let them know about it. Share it. The more people that are involved in these challenges, the better. It's amazing when we have a large number of people and they have shared niches, the collaborations that can come as a result of this.

The last time I did a challenge like this, I saw a number of really amazing collaborations emerge. I saw people collecting products together as a result of some of the stuff that they did. I saw people partner up, I saw people become friends. Do invite other people, it's great to have a large amount of bloggers participating in these challenges.

Lastly, if you do think it's relevant for your audience, I'd love you to link back to these show notes as inspiration for your post today. You don't have to do it but if you think other readers that you have might find some value in participating in this as well, link over to the show notes so they can see where you get the inspiration for the post as well.

Thanks for listening, I'll chat with you tomorrow.

How did you go with today's episode?

I look forward to seeing the list posts you create today. You could take it in any direction. I'll talk to you in 24 hours.

Enjoy this podcast? Sign up to our ProBloggerPLUS newsletter to get notified of all new tutorials and podcasts below.

 

The post PB138: Challenge: Create a List Post appeared first on ProBlogger Podcast.

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Optimise Your Blog with Google Search Console: A Treasure Trove of Traffic

Posted: 01 Aug 2016 07:00 AM PDT

eDLHCtzRR0yfFtU0BQar_sylwiabartyzel_themapBy ProBlogger SEO Expert Jim Stewart of StewArt Media.

Google Webmaster Tools had outgrown its moniker and become such an invaluable tool for more than just webmasters – SEO professionals, business owners, app developers, web marketers, for example – that Google thought it apt to rename it to suit a more diverse user base. Hence in 2015 it was renamed Google Search Console.

So for those new to Google Search Console, what is it?

Google Search Console is a free service that allows you to monitor and maintain your website when analysing search results. I cannot stress how important it is to implement the use of Google Search Console on your blog, as I see far too many bloggers ambling along without it when it can add invaluable insight into how you should be optimising your blog's performance.

Google Search Console offers in-depth knowledge about your website. Whereas Google Analytics tells you how your users reached your site, the Google Search Console tells you how the Googlebot sees your site. This includes all errors it encounters, how quickly pages load, who else is linking to your site as well the ability to submit sitemaps and what users type into Google to find your site.

So now you understand how imperative it is that you implement Google Search Console on your blog. It will help you understand how Google views your website so you can optimise its performance for better search results.

Adding Your Site in Google Search Console

If you've never used Google Search Console before, the first step is to add your site and verify it. Google needs to know that you are the site's owner, webmaster, or authorised user. Once established, Google Search Console will give you all the insights into the inner workings of your site, and that's not something you want an unauthorised user to have access to.

It's a simple process to add your site to Search Console. Firstly, log in to your Search Console account with your Google account here and enter the URL of your selected site in the box next to "Add Property." Once you've typed in the URL, simply click on the "Add Property" button and voila! Your site has now been added to your Search Console account.

welcome-gsc-1

You will then have to verify your site. If you are on WordPress, this is straightforward.

Verifying Via WordPress

If you are on WordPress using the Yoast plugin, verification is straightforward via the Webmaster Tools tab.

Go to your Search Console account; enter your site URL into the "Add a Site" box and click continue. You will then need the verification code. Use the HTML tag under the Alternative Method. Only copy the code that is in the parenthesis after "content."

verification-gsc-2

Then log into your WordPress site. On the left side of the dashboard is a menu. Click on "SEO." On the drop-down, click on "General."

Click on the "Webmaster Tools" tab and copy the code into the "Google Search Console" section. Click "Save Changes."

yoast-gsc-3

Go back to your Google Search Console account and click on "Verify." All things being equal you should now have connected and verified your site. You are now ready to submit a sitemap.

How to Submit a Sitemap

Sitemaps are files that give search engines and web crawlers important information about your site regarding how it is organised and the type of content your site contains. Other information is included, such as how often your site is updated, metadata, and information about videos and images.

Submitting a sitemap to Google Search Console ensures Google is more efficient when crawling your site. You won't be penalised for not submitting a sitemap, so don't think it's compulsory. It is beneficial to submit a sitemap, especially if your site is new, or you have a large site with many pages that aren't well linked.

Go to your Search Console dashboard and select the site you wish to submit a map for. (You may have more than one in your account.) Select "Crawl" from the menu and "Sitemaps" under that. There is a button in the top right hand corner marked "Add/Test Sitemap." Clicking on it will bring up a text box into which you can type the location of your sitemap. If you used Yoast to generate your sitemap it can be found at /sitemap_index.xml or /sitemap.xml.

submit-gsc-5

Once you press "Submit Sitemap," you have successfully submitted a sitemap!

Finding Site Errors

At some time or another, regardless of how fastidious you are, chances are high that your website will experience errors. Before you are notified of errors through your readership, you can use Google Search Console to notify you of problems. If you wish to check a site for errors, click on "Crawl" on the dashboard and then select "Crawl Errors."

This will take you to the crawl errors page, which displays any site or URL errors found by Google's bots whilst indexing the page. They are displayed in a graph with the errors listed at the foot of the page. Clicking on them will reveal a description and further details. You should make a habit of recording any site errors you've discovered. Capture screenshots if possible. Notify the person who is responsible for fixing said errors (if that isn't you!) so the problems can be rectified.

errors-gsc-4

There are so many more features in Google Search Console that I hope to cover in future articles, for now I hope you can now see how important it is to set up Google Search Console for your site. It truly is the command centre of your website, offering valuable visitor statistics, error identification and location, alongside the ability to use this information to optimise your site to streamline performance and increase your readership. This guide should make it easy to set up and verify Google Search Console, making it work for you.

Jim Stewart, CEO of StewArt Media, is a recognised digital marketing expert. Jim is ProBlogger's SEO expert and will share his vast SEO knowledge to equip you with the systems and skills to optimise and monetise your blog using tried and tested techniques. What Jim doesn't know

The post Optimise Your Blog with Google Search Console: A Treasure Trove of Traffic appeared first on ProBlogger.

      

ProBlogger: PB137: Challenge – 7 Days to Getting Your Blogging Groove Back

ProBlogger: PB137: Challenge – 7 Days to Getting Your Blogging Groove Back

Link to ProBlogger

PB137: Challenge – 7 Days to Getting Your Blogging Groove Back

Posted: 01 Aug 2016 12:30 AM PDT

Podcast Challenge Intro

Challenge: 7 Days to Getting Your Blogging Groove Back

Have you lost your blogging groove? It's easy to do – particularly in the middle of a year when so many other aspects of life compete for your attention and where motivation can sometimes go missing.

If your blog is feeling a little stagnant – today is for you. In fact this whole week is for you because this episode starts a week long daily series that is all about getting back into the groove of creating great regular content for your blog.

Whether you're feeling disillusioned, uninspired, uncreative or just a little bored with your blog – over the next week I want to invite you to tune into this podcast for a series of short daily challenges to create some great pieces of content.

Note: this episode can be listened to here on the shownotes (the player is above) or in iTunes here.

Here's how it'll work.

Every day at 7pm Eastern Australian time I'll publish a new podcast that issues you with a challenge to create a piece of content in the next 24 hours.

Note: Here’s the time it’ll go live in a few other timezones:

  • Los Angeles: 2:00am (it'll be there to listen to at breakfast)
  • New York: 5am (listen on the commute)
  • London: 10am (listen over a mid morning cup of tea)
  • Delhi: 2.30pm (listen before the kids get home from school)
  • Singapore: 5pm (listen on the commute home from work)
  • Sydney: 7pm (give up Netflix for a week and listen on the couch)

Each day I'll suggest a particular style of post to write. I'll share a few tips on how you might like to tackle it and in the shownotes share a few examples of posts others have written in that style.

Your Task Will Be to Do 3 Things:

  • Write Your Post – Come up with a relevant topic for your blog and write a post in the style of the challenge and publish the post the same day
  • Share with Other Challengers – Join the ProBlogger Challenge Group and share with others participating in the challenge. The group adds accountability and networking opportunities.
  • Visit Other Challenger Posts – Leave a comment or follow on social media

To Get Started:

  • Join the FB group (search for ProBlogger Challenge Group)
  • Make sure you're subscribed to this podcast so you get notified when each episode goes live
  • Clear a little time in your diary each day to listen to the challenge (I'll attempt to keep them short) and to create your post.

Update: one more thing you can do before we start if you have time on your hands today is to brainstorm ideas that you could write about and try to get in touch with what your readers needs are.

One episode you might like to listen to to help with that is episode 11 in which I share a technique for coming up with hundreds of blog post ideas to write about.

Full Transcript Expand to view full transcript Compress to smaller transcript view

Have you lost your blogging groove? It's really easy to do particularly in the middle of the year when so many other aspects of life compete for your attention and where motivation can sometimes go missing. If your blog is feeling a little stagnant, then today is for you. In fact, this whole week is for you because this episode starts a week long daily series of podcasts that's all about getting back into the groove of creating great, regular content for your blog.

My name is Darren, I’m the founder of ProBlogger. Today, I want to kick off seven days to getting back your blogging groove. You can find today's show notes with links and all the information about this special challenge in the Facebook group that I've started to help us run this challenge over on today's show notes at problogger.com/podcast/137.

Most bloggers lose their blogging groove at one time or another. For sometimes, it's because life gets busy. In other cases, they feel like they're running out of things to say or that they've said everything before. In other cases, it's because they're not seeing the results that they were hoping for, their expectations don't meet the reality, and sometimes it's just not flowing.

When those things happen, one of the first things to be impacted is our content. This is something I've been through many times before. I’m sure most of you listening, if you've been blogging for even just a few months, can relate. Sometimes, the quality of our content is impacted and other times it's the quantity and regularity of our content. For many of us, it's both.

This happens to us all as bloggers. Sometimes, to get back on track, we need a little help to give our blogs a bit of intense attention, an intense burst of attention to get things firing up again.

I remember when this first happened to me, the first time I had a blogging slump back in 2003. I've been blogging for about six months and after taking a two-week holiday with Vanessa, I came back to my blog feeling completely out of the routine and also feeling a bit disillusion with the progress that I made in those first six months.

The first six months of your blog is typically a pretty slow, hard slug. I wondered at that point whether I should give up and found it really hard to get back going again after that break. I was particularly finding it hard to come up with ideas for the blog post that I wanted to write.

I got onto the phone with a friend who was also a blogger. This friend actually had emailed me and said that they noticed I hadn't been posting and wondered if everything was okay. I got on the phone with him, I explained my feelings and told him that I was thinking about giving up. He pretty much gave me a rev up, he told me to get back on my blogging horse. I remember those words.

When I explained to him that I was just really struggling to come up with topics to write about, he offered to help. What he offered to do was to come up with ten blog post ideas that I should write over the next couple of weeks. He said trust me, I'll choose something that's relevant to what you’re writing about, what I think you can write about, ten topics. It was almost like an editor saying to a reporter, "Go and write this article." This was something that appealed to me because I was struggling to come up with ideas. I was up for the challenge.

There was something about working with someone else to help get going again that really did help me a lot. I have to admit, his suggestions stretched me quite a bit. Some of the things that he suggested I write I would never have naturally come up with myself. But because I felt a bit accountable to him, I decided to push through and I did all ten posts over the next twelve days which were actually more than I'd ever been writing before. I used to only write a few days a week at that particular point.

Before I knew it, I was back in the groove. It's this experience that gave me the idea for this next week of challenges that I want to issue you. Here's the challenge that I've got for you. Whether you’re feeling disillusioned, uninspired, uncreative or maybe just a little bored with your blog, over the next week I want to invite you to tune into this podcast for a series of short, daily challenges to create some great pieces of content.

Here's how it's going to work. Every day at 7:00PM Australian Time, I’m going to publish a new short podcast that will issue you with a challenge to create a piece of content in the next 24 hours. If that's too much for you, you don't have to do it within 24 hours, that's just what I’m telling people to do. If you want to take it slower, you can.

Each day, I’m going to suggest a particular style of post to write. I’m going to share a few tips on how you might like to tackle it in the show notes and in the podcast itself. I'll give you a few examples as well of posts that I've written in that style and other people have written as well.

The challenge is three-fold. You have to do three things to fully participate in this. Firstly, come up with a topic that's relevant for your readers and write a post or create a piece of content in that style and publish it if you can on your blog on that day. That's the first part, that's the main part. This is a content creation challenge, it's to help you get back into the groove of creating content.

The second thing I'd love you to do is once you've written and published the post, the next part of the challenge is to share it with everyone else doing the challenge. To do this, I've set up a Facebook group that will be a temporary group, this is something that I don’t know will continue beyond the end of this week. It's purely for those of you who want to participate in this. We've already had over 400 people sign up for it, and I haven't even announced what we're doing yet.

The idea of the group is to keep us accountable to this challenge, to support each other through it, to help us get to know each other, and who knows? Out of this type of challenge, I've seen collaborations appear and friendships start as well. It's really to keep us accountable, give each other a bit of support, and it might just help you find a few new readers and connect with some other bloggers who might be in your niche as well. I’m already seeing that in the Facebook group, people saying, "Hey, I blog about that too. Let's talk."

To join this Facebook group, there will be a link in today's show notes at problogger.com/podcast/137 or you can do a search on Facebook right now for ProBlogger Challenge Group and it should hopefully come up in the results. But again, they're on the show notes.

First part, you've got to write a piece of content or create a piece of content, it doesn't have to be written. Secondly, I want you to come into the Facebook group and share that piece of content that you've written so that we can see it. This will help everyone because it will give us another example of that style of content but it might also just drive a little bit of traffic to you.

The third thing that I would love you to do is to commit to reading at least four or five other posts that other people in the challenge have written. If we can all visit four or five posts a day and show a little bit of support to the other participants, we're all going to get a little bit more traffic and we're all going to get a few more comments hopefully in our blog. If you see a post that you really like, share it on your social network. Pay forward the love. Hopefully as a result of this, we will all get a little bit more traffic and we'll all learn a bit more and ultimately get back in that blogging groove.

To be clear, I’m going to suggest a style of post for you to create, a style of piece of content. You choose the topic that will be relevant to your audience. Some of the styles that I’m going to suggest are going to be very easy for you to do because you will have already written in those styles, in fact you might already write all your posts in that style. Some of them may take you into new territory, they may stretch you a little. That may be a bit uncomfortable for you but I encourage you to push through because you might just find in being stretched to write a new type of post that you'll find a new post that might be a regular part of your blog.

I know some of you are listening to this and going, "I cannot create seven pieces of content in seven days." I completely get that. Life is busy. I will say that some of the things that I’m going to suggest are fairly easy to do, some of them are heavier than others. You may find some of them you can whip out pretty quickly but some of them you may need to take a bit more time on. You might like to spread this challenge out a little bit further, that's fine. You can do it over ten days or fourteen days or twenty days. I'll keep the Facebook Group live for at least a month so that you can get through it.

If you're listening to this and the challenge has already finished—a lot of our podcast episodes do get listened to months or years after I create them—that's totally fine. All you really need to do is work through the next seven episodes of this podcast in order and you can do it in your own time. You may even like to find another blogger that you can do it with to support one another through it as well.

My hope with this challenge is that in pushing yourself to create seven pieces of content in seven days or ten days or whatever you choose to do it over, that it will help you to get back into that creative groove. Perhaps, rediscover your love for blogging, perhaps find a new style of post that you can continue to produce.

I guess another thing I do want to say is that you can use this challenge to create different mediums of content as well. You may choose to write all of your blog posts and that's totally fine, most of the things I’m going to share with you I do have a written piece of content in mind that I have written in the past. All seven things that I’m going to suggest over the next seven days could equally be done as a video, as a podcast, or in some other form of content whether it would be an infographic or something else.

Be as creative as you like. You might want to challenge yourself to do seven videos, you might want to challenge yourself to do one podcast, one video, and five blog posts; it's totally up to you.

I’m really excited about this next week. I actually did this same challenge with a few differences about five or six years ago now on ProBlogger. It brought all kinds of opportunities out for those who participated. I’m really excited to see what will happen over the next week.

Here's what I would encourage you to do to prepare for tomorrow's first challenge. I suggest that you do three things. Firstly, join the Facebook group. Search on Facebook for ProBlogger Challenge Group or find the link on today's show notes. Second thing I encourage you to do is subscribe to this podcast if you’re not already to get notified of when each episode goes live.

The episodes will go live at 7:00PM Eastern Australian Time. I’m in Melbourne, that's 7:00PM Melbourne time if you’re in Australia. It doesn't really matter if you’re not awake right then, it's gone come up 2:00AM in LA, 5:00AM in New York, 10:00AM if you’re in London, 5:00PM if you’re in Singapore, 2:30 in the afternoon if you’re in Delhi. It doesn't really matter if you’re not there right at the moment. Just from when you hear that podcast, give yourself a 24 hour deadline to get a piece of content out.

Make sure you're subscribed, make sure you’re in the Facebook group. If you can, clear a little bit of time over the next week. Every day for the next week, it will be seven more episodes. To listen to the podcast, I'll try to keep them to 10 or so minutes, and then to create a blog post. Create a little time if you can.

Lastly, if you do get a little bit behind over the next seven days, I totally understand that. Life goes on, we have families, we have work, we have other commitments. That's totally fine. Take your time through it and remember, this can be done later as well. You may want to come back to this or you may be finding this for the first time when it's already finished, that's totally fine to work through the next seven episodes at your own pace.

Join the Facebook group, ProBlogger Challenge Group, make sure you’re subscribed to the podcast to get notified when they come through, and clear a little time in your diary each day for the next day to be able to participate in this challenge.

Lastly, once you've joined that Facebook group, introduce yourself there. I've pinned at the top of that group a little place where you can introduce yourself and it's amazing to see the variety of bloggers that we've got coming in from all over the world and participating.

Lastly, this is completely free. I’m not going to sell anything to you at the end of this, it's completely free. It's really for me, for my perspective, to help me build a bit of community amongst the ProBlogger readership and to get to know you a bit more as well and to see what you do. I really get a lot out of just reading the posts that you write and that gives me all kinds of ideas for future content as well.

Thanks for listening, look forward to connecting with you in the Facebook group over the next days. I’m excited to where this might lead for all of us. Thanks for listening, I'll chat with you tomorrow, 24 hours from now.

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The post PB137: Challenge – 7 Days to Getting Your Blogging Groove Back appeared first on ProBlogger Podcast.

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