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Saturday, November 29, 2008

Do You Have To Blog Full Time To Succeed?

You don't need to spend full
time hours on your blog in
order to succeed. 

Find out how I learned this
lesson and how you can change
how you go about building your
blog too...

--------------------- 

Hello ,

Is your goal to become a full time blogger? 

Do you like the sound of blogging for a living?  

Yeah, me too. At least I did anyway. But then I 
learned the truth. I don't like doing anything 
"full time".   

Even something as fun as blogging is not an 
activity I would want to do for the majority of my 
day. I like variety in my life and while I want 
blogging to be a part of it, I don't want it to be 
the main labor. I want to do it because I like it, 
not because I need to do it to make a living.  

I remember when I first decided to become a 
serious blogger. I monitored some of the other 
professional bloggers, the guys and girls making a 
living from blogging. Darren Rowse 
[www.problogger.net] was of particular influence 
on me because he was doing very well, had started 
off as a complete Internet beginner and was from 
Australia like me.  

I tried to emulate Darren's blogging style. I knew 
I had the skills to do it and in fact more 
experience than Darren in a lot of ways because I 
had been working online for over seven years while 
he started much later. I had plenty of material to 
blog about so I knuckled down and committed myself 
to posting multiple articles every day.   

It didn't last long. 

Maybe I was lazy, maybe I was blindly following 
someone else's lead without really thinking it 
through. Whatever the reason I wasn't cut out for 
writing blog posts each and every day. My blogging 
strategy had to change...again.  

Darren and many other bloggers are machine-like in 
how efficient and how frequently they can pump out 
good content for their blogs. These people work 
hard. They enjoy solid rewards for their labor, 
but my motto is not to work hard, but to work 
smart, so I needed another way to make blogging 
work for me.  

REALIGN YOUR GOALS

I'm going to assume you are like me. You blog, you 
want to blog, you enjoy blogging and you want to 
increase your blog traffic. Most importantly you 
want to do it quickly and efficiently and not 
waste time putting energy into activities that 
don't produce fantastic results.  

The first thing you have to do, and this is what I 
did when I decided full time blogging wasn't for 
me, is to decide what your blog is for - what you 
want to get out of it and consequently what your 
audience should get out of it as a result?

I decided that I would use my blog for two main 
activities -   

1. To dump all my knowledge built up from years of 
working online into article and audio format. I 
wanted a repository of my skills and experience.  

2. To increase my exposure and enhance my 
credibility - to improve the "Yaro" brand.  

With these two goals in mind I went to work 
producing some big meaty solid how-to articles, 
stuff you would read in books and manuals on 
Internet marketing.  

I didn't bother blogging too much about news or 
linking to other blogs in my industry at this 
point because those activities were not aligned 
with my goals. I wanted my best stuff out there so 
other people could learn from me and I could 
demonstrate that I was an expert in my field.  

In your case your goals should dictate what you 
want to achieve with your blog.  

If your blog is designed to help you get freelance 
writing gigs, then publish lots of original 
creative articles.  

If you are interested in selling your consulting 
services then go to work putting out articles and 
case studies on the work you have done.  

If you want your blog to become the news source 
for everything related to Michael Jackson 
celebrity gossip then aim to post multiple 
news-bite sized articles per day.  

The point is to define your objectives and work to 
your goals. Don't follow someone else's goals just 
because they appear to be doing well.  

THE LAZY BUT SMART BLOGGER

I want to be clear about one point - you *don't* 
have to work hard to be a successful blogger. 

You don't have to post an article each and every 
day. You don't have to create something of 
'genius level' creativity each time you blog.   

Ahh, see, now you can relax.

Of course if you don't write articles you won't 
get traffic but as long as you post something 
interesting, creative, practical or valuable every 
once and a while your blog readership will 
increase. People that like your work will look 
forward to it regardless of how frequently you 
post. A little anticipation is a good thing.  

When you start to post regularly, not hourly or 
daily but at least weekly, people adjust their 
expectations accordingly. Remember you don't owe 
anyone anything when you blog. Blogging is only 
about putting in as much effort as is required to 
meet YOUR goals.   

If you post new articles six times a day people 
will start to expect it from you. You will start 
to expect it from yourself and blogging will feel 
like a job because of pressures to publish a 
certain amount of new content each day.  

Now if that's your goal, that's fine, just 
remember you can change things if you find 
yourself suffering because you set unrealistic 
goals. Don't ever feel obligated to do anything.  

In my case I started to post between one and two 
big articles per week and about one or two 
podcasts per month. I'd also do a little news 
linking or track-backing of other articles I had a 
strong interest in during the "heat of the 
moment". I could brain-dump my thoughts quickly 
and effortlessly into a blog post whenever the 
inspiration hit me.  

I did most of my early foundation blogging while 
at work. I worked at a computer help desk with 
Internet access so I could blog in between helping 
people at my job.  

I ended up blogging collectively for maybe 2 hours 
per day on average and I still managed to grow my 
blog traffic to 1000+ daily readers within a year 
and then 5,000 by the end of the second year, and 
I didn't have to post each and every day to do 
it. There is a smarter and easier way to get blog 
traffic. 

Here's to your blogging success,

Yaro Starak
Entrepreneurs-Journey.com

PS. If you like the idea of working smarter but 
not harder on your blog and would like to learn 
how to get the most out of those two hours per day 
you spend on your blog, I invite you to join my 
coaching program. 

Blog Mastermind is all about finding the highest 
points of leverage when you blog so you work less 
for more reward. It's not a walk in the park, but 
it's not about working 8 hour days on your blog 
either.

Find out more here -

The Expert