By Barry Bell on December 29 2005 4:30 pm (17 comments)

So you’re gonna turn ‘pro’ in 2006. Join the club. Just make sure you avoid these big, bad traps first…

Trap 1 - You’ll start reading far too many other blogs.

Don’t get bogged down in what’s happening across the web. Take an interest, yes, but don’t let it rule your working day. Get rid of at least half of your RSS subscriptions. And check the rest no more that once a day. Don’t spend hours browsing other blogs. And quit analysing the hell out of what other people have written. Just get your head down and concentrate on developing your own stuff. Try to forget that other blogs exist for at least a few hours of the day. There are no rules, so do things how you want to do them. Be yourself. Find your own path. Wax on. Wax off. That’s what’s important.

Trap 2 - You’ll worry about speaking your mind.

Don’t. Just don’t. Who cares if someone disagrees with what you say? Who cares if your point of view is controversial? Who cares if you get edgy comments from people who think differently? Or from people who claim to know more than you? Remember, there’ll always be someone who tries to be louder, brasher, bolder, and more knowledgeable than anyone else. Including you. And it’s generally these people who fall flat on their arses first. So speak up. Be honest. Be brave. And get your point out there.

Trap 3 - You’ll spend half your time trying to keep up with someone else.

Think about it - there’s very little chance that you’re the only blogger covering your particular topic. And there’s every chance that they’ve got more time to spend writing posts than you. It’s a fact of life. So why try to keep up if you know it’s not going to happen? Writing more posts just to match the pace means that all you’ll do is dilute the quality of your content. It’s a downward spiral, I tell you. But I’m not suggesting you give up. However, what I will suggest is that you think about how you might develop your own angle, view, treatment, or tone of voice on your particular topic so that you stand out in other ways. Just do it sooner, rather than later.

Trap 4 - You’ll get pissed off that your blogs aren’t making much money.

Before that happens, ask yourself these questions. Did you start your blog with the intention of making money? And if so, how long ago did you start it? If it was more than 12-18 months ago, and you’ve spent all that time working hard on generating content (and monetizing it), and you’re still not reaping any rewards, then yep, it probably is time to stop. But if you’ve only just started because you’ve heard that people can make six figures, or even if you’ve been blogging for up to six months, it’s going to take time before that cash-ometer starts filling up. And lots of it. In some cases, it might take up to a year or two. Patience is definitely a virtue.

Trap 5 - You’ll want to start more and more (and more) blogs.

Hey, everyone’s an entrepreneur - why go out and get a real job in the real world, when you can do it all in your bedsit wearing your spiderman pyjamas? So c’mon everyone. Let’s all set ourselves a target of launching at least one new blog every week in 2006. Why? Because writing blogs is easy, isn’t it? A couple of posts a day on 5, 10, maybe 50 blogs and in 3 months, you’ll be loaded, right? Wrong. The trick is to limit how much you take on. It’s all subjective, but the more you stretch yourself out over multiple blogs, the less time you’ll have to spend on each. And I’m not just talking about writing them - you need to market, monetize, and maintain them, too. Plus, if you might have a family, a real job, and a bunch of other stuff that all puts huge demands on your time. I know it’s tempting to launch as many sites as you can, but make sure you know your limits.

Once writing becomes boring, or it feels like a chore, or it takes up too much of your time, you’ll lose interest. And the whole lot could sink without trace almost as quick as you can click that Wordpress ‘5 minute install’ button.


Barry Bell is a Freelance Copywriter and Recruitment Communications Specialist based in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK.
Contributor profile: http://wurk.net/profile/admin
Website: http://barrybell.com

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Comments

  1. By Hsien Lei
    December 30, 2005 @ 8:54 am...

    Oh my. You’ve really described me well especially traps 3 and 4. And this post is exactly why I’m going to be sad when you stop writing blogging.wurk.net.

  2. By Christina Jones
    December 31, 2005 @ 4:28 pm...

    I agree totally with Hsien - all the way. Is it really necessary for you to quit this blog??? You have caught me on trap 2 and 5 to a tee. I love working in my Spiderman jammies - although today I am wearing my Texas A&M Aggie Jammies! Gig-em!

  3. By Barry Bell
    January 3, 2006 @ 11:27 pm...

    Hmmm… maybe I’ll stick around. I kinda enjoy writing this one.

    I keep wanting to get snarky, though.

  4. By Jim Sheppard
    January 3, 2006 @ 11:34 pm...

    Shit… that’s me exactly - 1 though 5!!

  5. By Christina Jones
    January 3, 2006 @ 11:52 pm...

    I’m pretty sure that snarkiness goes along with the job. At least if you want to be competitive with all the other bloggers blogging about blogging. Well most of them anyway. That is what would keep me from doing it, I am just not so snarky. Unless provoked. :)

  6. By Hsien Lei
    January 4, 2006 @ 2:01 am...

    You keep wanting to get snarky? I thought you were already being snarky? Perhaps I need to redefine snarky for myself.

    I really think you should keep writing blogging.wurk.net. What you write is totally different from the other guys. You’ve got vision!

  7. By Cary
    January 9, 2006 @ 3:50 pm...

    haha, excellent post! I’ve fallen into every one of these traps at one point or another…in fact, I recently realized that not only was trying to keep up with competitors a bad idea, but subscribing to them and seeing how much they were posting was depressing me…

    So, I cut them from my feeds last month and I ended up really enjoying what I was doing again, instead of just trying to keep up with the rat race–I get enough of that offline!

  8. By mojotek
    January 9, 2006 @ 4:17 pm...

    Wow… you summed up a few of the ‘issues’ I’ve been having lately. It’s quite easy to get sucked into those traps, and bloggers should definitely remember that the most important factor to consider is their own content and whether or not they enjoy creating it and can continue to create it.

  9. By Jason Lending dot Com
    January 9, 2006 @ 8:17 pm...

    I am just getting started blogging. You have an excellent site that I sure I can learn alot from.

  10. By Clark
    January 10, 2006 @ 3:16 am...

    It’s wonderful to work in your pj’s - though mine are Calvin Klein.

    I certainly fall into the starting too many blogs trap. It’s tough to manage more than one site alone - I have noticed one of my sites has suffered from lack of effort and it’s a shame. I still want to launch more though.

  11. By Easton Ellsworth
    January 10, 2006 @ 4:24 pm...

    Trap 1, blecch - that’s me! To repent of that, I’m cutting myself loose from as many feeds as possible (read about my feeds) and striving to limit the time I spend reading. Also, I’m trying to read and post in a continuous motion. I look forward to being more effective this year than I was in ‘05. Thanks for these great ideas … we all ought to avoid these blogging traps!

  12. By miscblogger
    January 10, 2006 @ 7:28 pm...

    i’ve got to remind myself to take heed to your 5th tip. what do you think of having just 4 blogs?

  13. By Barry
    January 11, 2006 @ 10:19 pm...

    I think it depends on the individual - what you feel comfortable with, how much time you have to be able to spend on each blog, etc, etc.

    For some people, one blog is enough. For others, ten blogs. Only you can make that decision.

Trackbacks

  1. Good Blogger » Traps to Avoid in 2006
  2. Holiday Link Dump: Blog Tips at ProBlogger
  3. Thatedeguy : Traps to avoid whilst blogging
  4. xavodim.com » Blog Archive » Professional Blogging Links

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