I apologize for not keeping up with the blog tips posts. All the stars have to align *just so* in order for me to be able to write them. I have to be in the mood to sit down and write about blogging and I’m not usually in the mood. These posts take far longer to compile and write than my typical posts, which usually take no more than 20 minutes to throw together. I also realize that there are a few of you out there that actually think that I know what I’m talking about, so I feel like it’s important to make sure that whatever I say is accurate and makes sense.
Here’s the thing, I actually do know what I’m talking about when it comes to these blog tips. I know! I’m so conceited! (Actually, no I’m not.) It’s just that having blogged for over THREE WHOLE YEARS practically makes me a shawl-wearing, bespectacled, rocking chair sitting wise blog-grandmother. There are definitely bloggers out there who’ve been at this whole online writing thing for far longer than me, but there are FAR MORE bloggers who haven’t made it beyond the first year (or even just a few months.)
I’ve considered quitting so many times for a good reasons and for immature, huffy, jealous reasons. The writing, the commenting, the social media interaction all take up a lot of time and it’s easy to get overwhelmed, I’ve come *this close* to quitting because I felt overwhelmed and guilty when I couldn’t keep up with it all. After three years, I do occasionally think that the most recent post I’ve written will probably be the last because there is no possible way to come up with another unique topic, yet somehow I always come up with something to say.
And then there’s the whole jealousy issue. I know that I’m often jealous of others writing talents. There have been times that I’ve felt bitter about the same people getting invited to all the fun things or other’s subscriber and comment numbers. I know there are a handful of people who claim to be immune to the jealously, but I also know that I’m not the only one who has felt this way.
I have a super secret, super special way that I’ve been able to overcome all of this and still continue to blog.
IT’S ALL ABOUT YOUR PERSPECTIVE.
The end.
Okay, fine, I’ll elaborate. (Consider yourself warned! You may need to grab a snack. I’ll wait.)
1. Blogging and all related activities DO take time. The key is finding the time to do what will most benefit you and your blog.
Unless your blog IS your job, and even then, YOUR LIFE OUTSIDE OF THE COMPUTER SHOULD COME FIRST. Don’t worry about it if you haven’t replied to every comment or visited every unread blog in your Google Reader. There’s no need to fret if you haven’t written anything on your blog in several days, your loyal readers will still be there when you get back.
If your online, blog related time is limited, then be sure that you’re spending your time wisely. Commenting on other’s blogs is time consuming but it is the one of THE BEST WAYS to gain readers for your own site. Leave comments on “popular” blogs AND blogs you’ve never heard of, this is an activity very worthy of your time. (Hint: The popular bloggers probably aren’t trying to be jerks when they don’t reciprocate comments, they are busy JUST LIKE YOU!)
If you see no traffic from posting your links on Twitter, then don’t spend ALL of your time tweeting. I know that I have spoken at length about StumbleUpon and what a great source of traffic it can be, however if it’s not working for you? Then it’s a waste of your time! Don’t bother!
Here is some more detailed information about managing your time in the blogosphere. (I’ll be updating that post soon-ish!)
2. You will be stricken with all sorts of writing ailments including (but not limited to) writer’s block, fear of being too open and honest, super self-consciousness due to overexposure, and jealously of other’s superior writing talents
In any given week, I’ll suffer from one or ALL of these things. EVERY BLOGGER feels this way at some point.
Whenever I feel like I’m suffering from writer’s block, I sit down at my computer and just start writing. I write whatever is on my mind. Occasionally I can mold a post from the words, sometimes there’s nothing to salvage, but at least I was writing. The cure for writer’s block, for me, is NOT not writing. Another trick that I use is to look at photos I’ve recently taken and write a post based on one of the shots. There are also lots of sites that offer weekly memes or writing prompts that can help you get over the hump.
As your readership grows (and it WILL grow), your concerns about what and who you blog about will become a concern. The more people that read you, the more you may become self-conscious about what you should and shouldn’t reveal. BUT WHAT ABOUT AUTHENTICITY!?! It seems to be a buzz word these days around blogging. My personal ever developing philosophy about this is that I never write something that would intentionally hurt another person. I don’t share EVERY detail of my life, but I also don’t only write smooshy, feel good posts. I also include my mistakes and heartaches.
While at Blissdom, I attended a writer’s workshop led by Megan from Velveteen Mind, Arianne from To Think is to Create, Deb from Deb on the Rocks, and Amber from The Run A Muck. In the session, Megan mentioned that she was listening to the audiobook, Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within (Disclosure: Affiliate link). The point that Megan explained that most struck me was that if there’s a writer whose work makes you crazy envious, instead of being jealous, begin to look at that writer as a teacher from whom you can learn. Another thing that this workshop spurred within me was that in order for me to be a better writer, I have to start thinking of myself as a REAL writer, not just some pretend wanna-be that has no talent.
I realize that my style of writing isn’t everybody’s cup of tea. My writing isn’t eloquent prose, expertly crafted with $20 words and perfect grammar. I think that my strength is my ability to craft a story in such a way that others can relate. It’s taken YEARS for me to recognize this strength and for me to OWN this strength. Each one of has a writing strength. Find it! Not to be cliche, but find your voice and hone it. Your writing may not be for everyone, but don’t try to write in a way that isn’t truly you.
3. We ALL get jealous of other bloggers.
I love this tweet from @MindiCherry (Moms Need to Know)
It seems like every week there’s another top blogger list published, the same eleven bloggers have been invited on yet another fabulous trip, and you hear that another blogger has a book deal. Maybe you wrote your heart out on your latest post and only received a few comments, you lost 100 subscribers overnight, or you don’t have as many followers as you’d like to have on Twitter. It is HARD not to let these things get you down. But hear this!
YOU CANNOT LET OTHER PEOPLE’S SUCCESS GET YOU DOWN!
DON’T LET YOUR STATS DEFINE YOU! (comment numbers, page views, @replies, subscriber numbers)
Sorry to shout like that, but I really need you to hear those things. In fact, I’m going to shout them again.
YOU CANNOT LET OTHER PEOPLE’S SUCCESS GET YOU DOWN!
Most of the bloggers that seem to have what you want, whether it’s their comment numbers, perceived stats, or free trips didn’t start blogging a week ago. They’ve been working hard for what they’ve received. They are engaging writers, great at building their community, excellent at networking and have developed relationships with the “right” people. Guess what? YOU can also do those things! It just takes time, patience, skill, and networking.
I was recently named as on of Babble’s Top 50 Mommy Bloggers. To me it was a HUGE honor, I’d never been named to a list like this one before. But what does it really mean for me? I’m not thinner, my boobs aren’t perkier, I’m not suddenly recognized in the grocery store by adoring fans, and I haven’t been offered a job as an Editor for a major publishing company. I didn’t even get a trophy! What I do get, is at least 100 more product review requests in my inbox per week now, not exactly something that makes me jump with joy.
DON’T LET YOUR STATS DEFINE YOU! (comment numbers, page views, @replies, subscriber numbers)
I’ve said before that the size of your blogging community is only as important as YOU make it. If you have 10 loyal readers, that is AWESOME! If you have 1,000 loyal readers, that’s AWESOME, too…not awesome-er. The thing about stats is that there may never a number that truly satisfies you. I’m not saying that you won’t one day have 500 or 2000 or 10,000 subscribers (or whatever your goal may be), but I am saying that even when you get to that magical number, it won’t feel as great as you thought it would. The quest for MORE, in terms of blogging, is insatiable.
Instead of focusing on THE NUMBER, focus on your community. Come to truly appreciate those who DO read your blog and interact with you on Twitter. Remember your original reasons for blogging and what makes blogging fun. I know that logging into StatCounter is NOT usually fun, but emailing back and forth with a reader can totally make your day.
Here’s a post by Megan from Velveteen Mind that speaks to not allowing your stats to define you, go read it! I also suggest reading this post from PhD in Parenting that discusses reasons to check your stats, none of which say anything about your stats defining who YOU are.
4. Unless you are a robot, your feelings will probably get hurt at some point.
I am honored and humbled that so many of you comment and subscribe to my blog. Unfortunately since there are more than 25 of you, I’m just not able to read every one of your blogs. I used to have time for reciprocating every comment, I also used to have only one child who napped twice a day and gave me four whole hours of complete, unadulterated commenting time. These days, I’m lucky to get four hours A WEEK to devote to blogging. It gives me the nervous tummy to think that I may have hurt someone’s feelings because they’ve been a loyal commenter and I’ve barely acknowledged their existence.
People seem to get hung up is on the perception that “popular” bloggers don’t make any time for other, smaller bloggers, that they appear to only interact with the other elite. Perhaps this is true for some, not every blogger out there is interested in expanding their already ginormous community. I’m not immune to the feelings of rejection by other bloggers, but I’ve stopped interacting (and even reading) many of the people that I know have little to no interest in getting to know me. However, I suspect that most “popular” bloggers are interested in interacting with their readers, but are limited by time.
My feelings have been hurt too many times to count since I started blogging. My most favorite blogger of all time (formerly) absolutely crushed me when, the day after I first began this Blog Tip Sharing series, she wrote about how ridiculous it was to tell other people how to blog and she just couldn’t understand why anyone cared about making their blog better. I’ve had my feelings hurt over emails I’ve sent that have gone unanswered. It hurts my feelings when I’ve replied a ridiculous amount of times to someone on Twitter and they’ve NEVER responded. Sometimes when I see that someone isn’t following me back on Twitter that I think should be following me, I’ll do the quick unfollow-refollow because SURELY the fact that they aren’t following me is a mistake!
Trolls can also show up uninvited to your blog and wreak havoc. I’ve had my fair share of trolls, they are particularly fond of my posts about Alabama. I could shoot off indignant replies or post their IP addresses on my blog, but I’m a firm believer that if you ignore them, you take away their fuel. There is only so much room in my brain, I simply do not have the space available to allow people full of negativity take up that space.
*********
I hope that this post has served as some sort of blog induced frustration therapy. However you’re feeling, both the positive AND the negative feelings, have been felt by all of us. It’s not easy to pour your heart out online or write sometime brilliantly funny and feel like you’re not getting noticed. We’re bloggers! We’re narcissistic! If we didn’t care at all about getting some sort of accolades, we’d all be writing in a private forum.
Make the decision in your mind that you’re okay with how much time you devote to blogging, your writing abilities, and make peace with your stats and popularity status.
(I’d been working on this post for two weeks when I noticed that Loralee‘s post about blogging and jealousy had been syndicated at BlogHer. I decided to go ahead and post this, even though the subject matter is so similar, I think there’s room for two parallel viewpoints.)
Previously in this series: Writing Tips, Blog Promotion and Social Networking, StumbleUpon School, Blog Design, Sidebars and Pages, Building your Community, Developing your Brand











My blogging anxiety tends to ebb and flow. I go through periods (right after BlogHer last year, for example) where I think, “Why don’t I have more readers? Aren’t I witty and a good writer? What’s wrong with me? What’s the point anyway?”
Then, I have other phases (like now, thank goodness) when I think, “It’s just for fun and my high school biology teacher and my sister college roommate read it . . . so that’s cool.”
Thanks, as ever, for your honesty and your thoughtfulness!
.-= mep´s last blog ..And now it’s time for a couples skate. =-.
I think that blog conferences can definitely mess with your head! I always feel so overwhelmed after them, learning about all the things I SHOULD be doing, worrying about all the people I met and how I was going to add them to my already monstrous blog reads, hearing about everything I missed…
Like you said, it ebbs and flows.
OMG – Just stumbled this post because it is SPOT ON! I was recently sucked into the whole numbers thing, wasting time on stats when I could have been writing or networking. This post was so well written and both newbie and veteran bloggers could each take away something from this piece.
I also read Loralee’s post about jealousy- the blogging kind and she too brought up so many good points.
What I am taking away from this experience is that there are no guarantees when it comes to blogging and readership works both ways – I am at this everyday and have worked hard to buid my community, exactly what you said in this post. There is no magic wand to bring readers AND keep them there. When I made the move to WP and many “loyal” followers didn’t return was a major blow to the blogging ego.
I am now at a place where I am focused on my writing and networking- and trying to enjoy the process without getting wrapped up in the numbers game.
Thanks for such a timely post.
.-= Theta Mom´s last blog ..A Big Announcement =-.
I lost readers when I switched from Blogger to WordPress, too. So many people didn’t realize I’d moved since they read in a reader and often skip posts. If the feed wasn’t updating, then they didn’t think to check in!
# 3 hit home for me when I read your blog!! I also wear Spanx
We are so on the same page. I absolutely agree with everything you wrote in this post.
*mwah*
Miss you!
.-= Trenches of Mommyhood´s last blog ..Ladies Night =-.
I always enjoy reading your thoughts on blogging. I treat blogging like it’s my job because my real job can get kind of boring and if I didn’t have all of my bloggy/twitter friends I’d go crazy.
.-= Connie @ Young and Relentless´s last blog ..Bring on the Fabulous! =-.
So many truths to this post. I wish that people would not tie their sense of self worth into the number of commenters or followers that they have on their blog. I wish that people understood that their blogs should be first and foremost for THEM, and if you attempt to cater to the rest of the world, you will always let someone down. And like you said, when you get 10,000 followers, will you be happy then, or will you still feel that “I am not as big a blogger as …”.
Yes, definitely good advice here, something we all need reminding of.
.-= ~ifer´s last blog ..New week, new start… =-.
great tips!
.-= Domestic Extraordinaire´s last blog ..Weekly Winners-Shots of our daily life Edition =-.
Hi, I found you via Scary Mommy. Great post. I’ve never actually read a post like this detailing blogger-specific “issues” but you hit the nail on the head — several times. I have actually been blogging for 4 (!) years and I am a “real” writer to boot (e.g. I make my living as a freelance writer) so I have been *consumed* w/ envy over stories of bloggers who just started a month ago, got mentioned in the NYT & get billions of subscribers & a book deal overnight. Still, I am extremely grateful for my small(ish), very loyal fanbase. Thanks for putting things in perspective.
.-= Abby´s last blog ..To My Son On His 1st Birthday =-.
It does sting when someone who’s been blogging a week gets sudden notice and accolades! I’m certainly not immune to that jealousy. I always wonder HOW they did it and if I could do it, too!
Jennifer, you have my total and absolute respect. Thanks for the time and anguish that you put into writing this post. As a newbie on the scene, I REALLY appreciate your insight. I’ve been scared to check my stats just because I know once you start it’s hard to stop and clearly I’m at the very beginning of my love for blogging. And I can’t wait for the day when I actually have more than 5 comments on my posts outside of my bff and mom. That being said, I look forward to growing and learning from you. Thanks for being a great teacher. Keep up the fantastic work!
.-= NotJustAnotherJen´s last blog ..Idol Thursday: Girls rule, boys don’t =-.
Oh I so agree with everything you said here. I’m coming up on 3 years blogging in May and while part of me is thrilled, another part can’t believe I’ve lasted this long. I go back and forth on how motivated I feel, especially having 2 blogs to update. I’ve struggled with feeling the ‘need’ to post rather than the desire to do so.
I’m so glad that you’ve made it these 3 years – you’re one of my favorite blogs to read, even if I don’t comment here as often anymore.
I love you. ?
I can’t wait to see you this summer. (You are going to be at BlogHer, right?)
.-= sam {temptingmama}´s last blog ..Fixture =-.
I’ll be there! Hope we get to hang out more than just a few minutes!
I found you via Scary Mommy and I’m so glad I did! Thank you for taking the time to post this honest, insightful and truly helpful post. I’m 6 months into blogging for “others” as opposed to the family blog I’ve been keeping for a while, and I really needed to read a lot of what you just wrote. It gets hard ot keep things in persepctive sometimes. Off to browse your other posts now!
.-= Danielle from A Few of My Favorite Things´s last blog ..Now That’s Clutch! {GIVEAWAY} =-.
I love, love, love this post! You said it perfect! These are all the things I have been thinking over the last couple of weeks. It is like you were reading my mind or something. Have you hacked my computer?! Kidding. Thanks for writing this. Nice to hear it from someone else. I have been struggling with the amount of time I have been putting into the whole blogging thing and questioning what I really want out of it. Great post, love it!
Wow what an awesome post! Thank you so much for writing this. I am new to the whole blogging world {about a year} and at times it is frustrating and overwhelming. You put everything in perspective for me. Blogging is an outlet for me and I really enjoy it, even though at times it can feel like too much. So thank you for such a wonderful, honest post.
What a fabulous post!
Someone suggested I check out your blog today and then I saw this post on twitter- I’m glad I came by!
.-= Shell´s last blog ..Post-its: Will These Make Sense in the Morning? =-.
I usually just lurk around here, but this time I had to leave a comment.
I’ve gotten my feelings hurt a handful of times, too, in just exactly the situations you’re describing. The longer I blog, the more used to it I get, I guess, but it still occasionally stings.
Also, I LOVE your blog tip series. I’ve learned a lot from. So your former blog crush? I don’t like her.
.-= laura @ hollywood housewife´s last blog ..journal march =-.
Spot on! Well said. Funny I had my feelings hurt recently by a fellow blogger, but boot straps up and a post came out of it to boot. Not a whiny kind of post, I positive one. We have to remember to keep learning!
.-= Denise´s last blog ..Countertop Aesthetic, Good Bye Coffee Pot, Hello Water Kettle… =-.
This was so awesome! Oh my goodness, thank you for articulating all of these things. I am going to book mark this page and come back to it everytime I need a hit of some positive and truthful advice.
I loved this!!!
Sadie at heyMamas
I just started this whole blogging thing (2 days in and going strong!).
I’m pretty psyched to have stumbled upon your straightforward advice so early in the process. I’m hoping it’ll help keep my expectations in check …right now I’m just hoping that someday someone comments on something
Thanks for the excellent guidance.
.-= The Yogini Cowgirl´s last blog ..working moms miss magical moments… =-.
Love love love this post! I think that all bloggers can relate and have felt these things (whether they want to admit it or not). I know I certainly have. But… I keep plugging along. Sometimes writing a lot… sometimes writing a little. Sometimes I try to network and build like crazy… sometimes I just write and comment minimally and just for fun. Sometimes I stress over it… mostly I try not to. My little blog will be 3 years old next week. (And, you commented on a post right at the very very beginning.) 3 years… crazy right?
.-= Colleen´s last blog ..Wordless Wednesday – Sisters =-.
Thanks. I needed to hear this.
Will stop back and read the comments after my nap (I find I learn so much from the comments as well); Hells yeah, I’m getting in some extra shut-eye today on my day off
Genius as usual!
Thank you! I was reading scary mommy’s blog about blogging tips, when she also mentioned you, and here I am! I am new here and appreciate the easy to understand tips you have! I needed to hear them…!
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This post is exactly what I needed today. Thank you!
Carri´s last [type] ..Seinfeld of The Blogosphere