Aqua Pebble

bookdtI recently started a blog which has been surprisingly successful.  From the very first month, I had an enormous response.  It is still growing briskly and lots of very nice people write me to tell me how much they like my site.  It has been a fantastically rewarding adventure!

For me personally, the success has been more shocking than surprising.  I’ve never written for an audience before.  As a senior media executive, I made a point of not having any writing ambitions.

I have always believed that business side people should stay out of creative people’s way.  They should be given clear guidelines and left alone. So I never gave the idea that anybody would want to read my writing a second thought

When I first started my blog, I read lots of advice about how to write a blog – most of it good.  However, I have also found that my experience managing online and offline publications has been very helpful as well.

These are some insights that have helped me and that I haven’t seen elsewhere.  I hope you find them useful too.

Write, Then Start: Professional publications don’t launch right away.  There are always at least a few practice issues.  Writing four or five posts before you actually launch your blog is a good way to get a sense of what you actually want to write about and to develop your voice and style.

The short delay in launching your blog is meaningless, but the practice and insight you will gain will be invaluable.  Launching with multiple posts also helps you get off to a good start.

Maintain a Reserve: Always keep posts in reserve.  My blog is more topical than timely, so this is easy to do.  However, even if what you are writing about is more time sensitive, you can still keep a reserve of less time sensitive posts.

Keeping a reserve will help you to post regularly and get over dry spells.  You will be able to write more when you have ideas, less when you don’t, and still maintain regularity on your blog.

Write what you know, but also what you don’t: Over my career I’ve managed to amass a certain amount of knowledge and expertise.  There are some things, even technical subjects, I can write about almost off the top of my head.  My readers seem to appreciate getting the benefit of my experience.

However, there are other interesting and important topics that I do not know much about.  I still write about them, it just requires a bit more effort.  The process of discovery and learning is probably where I personally derive the greatest value from blogging.

Build Content Clusters: Most interesting topics are too big to tackle in one post.  Using multiple posts to flesh out a big idea will help you keep each post focused while still keeping the overall theme in mind.  You can then link the posts together within the text.

Content clusters have lots of ancillary benefits. Search engines love them and it lets your readers continue to explore a topic in depth without having to read through an overly long post.  It also adds an atmosphere of depth and expertise to your site.

Don’t Follow all the Rules: As I mentioned above, there is lots of good advice for bloggers around.  However, the advice is general.  You will need to find what works for you.

Use advice to help you, not to make you a prisoner.  What might be a flaw on most sites can actually accentuate the uniqueness of your own.  I don’t mean to say that you should ignore the rules, but developing your own style and voice is essential and that often requires doing something different.

Get Some Editors: Professional writers do not publish without being edited.  This goes for Pulitzer Prize winners as well as for lowly staff writers.  Even if you’re blogging just for fun, it’s important to get feedback.

Another important point is that you need more than one editor.  Expecting the same person to review all of your posts will most likely result in a lost friend or a ruined marriage.  Spread the wealth a little bit and try to send drafts to people who will actually be interested to read them.

Some of my most successful posts have been the ones that my friends had trouble with.  They didn’t tell me they hated it, they just didn’t show much enthusiasm.  I asked a few pointed questions, found out what the problem was and fixed it.  Those have been some of my best posts.

If you are trying to say something important, it’s probably going to be hard to write.  Some “fresh eyes” can be invaluable.

Don’t Try to Make Everybody Happy: Some people will like what you write and some people won’t.  In fact, some people will hate it and tell you nasty things.  That’s just a cold, hard media reality.

Focus on pleasing the people who have an affinity for your subject matter and your perspective.  Trying to please everybody will guarantee that you will excite nobody.

Consistency and Surprise: The legendary editor Dick Stolley has had an amazing career.  He discovered the Zapruder films that captured the Kennedy assignation, managed Time Magazine and created People Magazine.  He probably knows more about successful magazine writing than anyone alive.

He told me once that a great product has “Consistency and Surprise.”  He meant that it is important to set readers’ expectations with some guiding principles.  However, it is also important to break your own rules sometimes.  Regimentation creates order and familiarity, but too much of it becomes stale and boring.  You want to add some spice to the soup every now and then.

I hope that these tips have been helpful and that everybody’s blogging experience will be as rewarding as mine.  Good Luck!

Greg Satell

http://www.digitaltonto.com/

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7 Comments so far

  1.    Lee on November 10, 2009 11:34 am      Reply

    Thanks Alex — that is sooo cool :)

  2.    Greg Satell on October 14, 2009 9:17 am      Reply

    Thank, Priyanka. I’m glad you found them useful.

    - Greg

  3.    Priyanka D on October 14, 2009 8:05 am      Reply

    Good tips

  4.    Greg Satell on October 11, 2009 7:38 pm      Reply

    Lee,

    I think that’s good advice.

    I would also add that one thing I see peo­ple do is add updates at the bottom.

    - Greg

  5.    Lee on October 11, 2009 7:13 pm      Reply

    Steve, I per­son­ally don’t think there is right or wrong rules when it comes to things like that. It is your blog and if you would like to improve arti­cles go for it.

    The only time I prob­a­bly would not improve a post is if it has been repub­lished and I also would not dra­mat­i­cally change a pre­vi­ous post most espe­cially a com­mented post that refers to the con­tent. For me improve would mean to pol­ish up the lan­guage, gram­mar and style.

    If I felt an old post was that bad I would most likely take it down.

    As for cut­ting up old posts that could be used as a strat­egy to renew a really old post that is no longer read and has great con­tent. I pre­fer shorter posts and when I can I try to use a 300 — 400 word bench­mark. But that is my style and you need to go with what works for you.

    I agree with Greg about rules :)

  6.    Greg Satell on October 11, 2009 2:24 am      Reply

    Steve,

    I’m not the best per­son to ask, because my site has been up less than two months. How­ever, I’ve made changes and I don’t see any­thing wrong with going back and improv­ing your article.

    A blog is not a test of skill, it is there for peo­ple to enjoy. If you can improve past posts to make them bet­ter, why not?

    The one thing that I wouldn’t do is cut up past posts. I’m sure a lot of peo­ple liked them just thew way they are. You can of course write smaller posts based on the longer one.

    - Greg

  7.    Steve Yousten on October 10, 2009 10:22 pm      Reply

    Some good (if painful) truths up there. A com­ment and a question:

    It’s so easy to just sit down and tear off an arti­cle and so much harder to make some­one read it and cri­tique it for you that the temp­ta­tion is to not have peo­ple look at your work before post­ing it.

    If you’ve already got a site up that’s been run­ning for awhile, is there value to going back and rework­ing old posts (for exam­ple break­ing a long arti­cle up into clus­ters as you advise or adding a graphic, etc) or just apply changes going forward?

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