There has been a lot of discussion lately about blogging frequency. Some feel it’s a good idea that it is best to post everyday or multiple times per day. Others think that maybe a little more time between posts would be a good thing. This has been a topic I’ve been trying to get a handle on lately. Luckily BloggingExperiment.com compiled a great list of quotes on the subject from a collection of posts from ProBlogger. I was convinced, but it wasn’t easy.
Part of me thinks it is more important to just get content out there and get readers. The more your name is out there, the more you are front of mind. The other part of me thinks it is more important to have quality content. So, it is the quantity versus quality debate. The real winner is and always should be quality. In every part of life it should be quality.
In these discussions it is typically implied that more time between post will equal higher quality. I think it is easy for a beginning blogger like myself to think that just taking it slower and writing less frequently means that I will produce better content. But I know me. I know that if I’m not actually writing content that I won’t be writing good content either.
So, for me, agreeing with the fact that quality is more important than quantity, I have to be active in my writing even on the days that I’m not publishing. Below is a list of actions that I need to keep in mind in between publishings. These actions intertwine and overlap but…
And the cycle continues. Most of us, for the different topics we are working on, will be doing different actions at the same time. This is good. As long as you can keep your topics straight and separated, do it. Others, really, can only work on one topic at a time. Do what ever works for you.
Some bloggers write in a way that they have a surplus of posts. Sort of like an emergency fund for blogging. I have tried this, but I’m having trouble keeping it going. But there is real value in it. It would be easy to think that we can write junk but save it for a couple days and it magically becomes quality. Be aware this doesn’t happen.
For me, it’s easy to get caught up in pretending like I’m doing action number 1 (research and inspiration). I could surf the web all day long if I were allowed. I love it, but I have to balance. For others, the pitfall might be somewhere else.
How do you balance the different actions to produce good content?What other actions do you throw into the mix? How do you balance all the tasks
Our lives are overflowing with information. Everywhere we look we are being screamed at by all sorts of media: books , movies, magazines, blogs, podcasts, newspapers, TV shows, and much more.
At some point we have to make a decision about what to do with it all. We have to either turn it off and throw it away, ignoring it all because we can't take anymore. Or we have to sort the wheat from the chaff, figure out what it is telling us, consider what we can learn from it, and implement that practices that can make us better.
Lernr is about that process of learning what we can from different sources and applying it to our lives.
The man who doesn’t read good books has no advantage over the man who can’t read them.
~ Mark Twain
Brad Kelly
January 27th, 2008 at 7:38 pm
Brad, thanks for the link. You make some great points. As the lapse of the last two days can show, I too, have a hard time keeping a bank of posts going. I wanted to automate the last week or so of this month as an experiment, but only wrote a few days. I guess I’m still trying to figure out what works best for me.
I have probably a dozen ideas in the bank at any given time, but I agree that quality should come first and they’ll remain ideas until I’m in that “mode” to develop them.
Thanks for giving me the opportunity to stumble across your blog, it sounds like we’re at a similar point in the journey. Great theme btw!
Brad Huntsman
January 27th, 2008 at 7:46 pm
Thanks for commenting Brad. After rereading (again) what I wrote following your link, I hope that the positive comment didn’t get mixed with the negative comment following. The two are separate.
It is difficult to have a surplus of ready to post posts. I would put having ideas and partial posts ready to be worked on and finished as part of the planning stages.
Ben at BloggingExperiment.com wrote about this recently. http://bloggingexperiment.com/...../trackback
Brad Kelly
January 28th, 2008 at 12:02 pm
I noticed a guest blogger at John Chow mentioned something similar, as far as a backlog of “postables” is concerned. I thought it might be of interest to anyone reading here: http://www.johnchow.com/6-ways.....spiration/.