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Is 2019 the year you want to write a book or a blog?

January 22, 2019 by JaneSutter Leave a Comment

Write a book
Writing a book takes discipline and patience but it can be done!

Judging by the emails and calls my business, Sutter Communications, has been getting, it seems many people have made a New Year’s resolution to write a book or finish the book they started many moons ago. Or they’ve resolved to learn how to blog, or blog more consistently or grow their blogging audience.

If you’re one of them, here are a few tips that work for me.

Resolve to spend 15 minutes a day on your writing.

Of course, you can do a lot more, but 15 minutes seems do-able, right? You’d be amazed at how going slow and steady brings actual results. I learned this when I was researching and writing a thesis, while working many hours as an editor at the Democrat and Chronicle. Once you start writing, I’ll bet you find it so fun you’ll spend more than 15 minutes on it!

Related: 5 Takeaways from State of Blogging Industry report 

Set up deadlines.

You want to write a book? “Deadline is the greatest motivator” became my mantra years ago, when as both a reporter and then an editor, I realized that deadlines are critical to getting work done. It’s too easy to put off the writing. Want your book to be printed in time for holiday sales? Then do a back-out schedule that makes that happen.

Related: Got writer’s block? 5 quotes from Ernest Hemingway may help

Take a class.

You go to the gym to get stronger and in better shape, right? Then taking a class can do the same for your creativity and desire to write a book. Fiction, non-fiction, poetry, blogging, whatever your genre, I recommend you check out the classes at Writers and Books.

I’ve been on the faculty there for almost four years, and I’ve also attended classes and author talks. You’ll come away inspired and more than likely, you’ll meet some fellow writers who may become life-long friends and a great support system.

Over the next two months, I’m teaching Blogging 101, Blogging 201 and a new-ish workshop called Social Media for Writers. You can see the entire list of Writers and Books offerings here.

Hope you find these tips helpful. What works for you?

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Filed Under: Blogging, Book writing, Publishing, Writing Tagged With: blogging, self-publishing, writing a book

5 Takeaways from State of Blogging Industry 2017

June 13, 2017 by JaneSutter 1 Comment

State of the Blogging Industry 2017
State of the Blogging Industry 2017 report reveals that social media is a key source of web traffic.

Are you blogging and wondering how your efforts and results compare with other bloggers? ConvertKit recently released its comprehensive State of Blogging Industry 2017 report based on surveys with more than 850 bloggers.

Here are my five takeaways from that report:

Unique subject matter is king.

The most popular blog topics are these seven: personal development, entrepreneurship, small business, online business, productivity, marketing and lifestyle design. If you’re writing in those arenas, it’s time to think about how can you make your content truly unique.

Have a strategy to meet your publishing goals. 

There’s a gap between intent to publish and actually publishing. That should come as no surprise to us bloggers. The State of Blogging Industry 2017 report shows that for the most part, no matter how the bloggers stated they intended to publish, they actually published fewer posts. That held true for bloggers intending to publish one post per day; three posts per week; two posts per week; and one post per week. Bloggers who intended to publish just one post every other week or one post each month tended to match their intentions with their output.

If you have a strategy, you are more likely to succeed in your goals.

Related post: 5 Ways to Make Money From Blogging

Increasing the time lag between when you write a post and when you intend to publish it can help.

When I teach blogging at Writers and Books, I encourage students to create a blogging calendar that lists the topics and dates for upcoming posts.   But I’ve only touched briefly on how writing a post days in advance can help with consistency, too. The State of Blogging Industry 2017 report showed that 52% of bloggers write either the day before or the same day as they plan to publish. I’m guilty of doing that too often, too.

As the report states, if you write a post one month in advance, it gives you the opportunity to fine-tune it even more; to share it with a trusted person for feedback; to add media to make it more engaging, and so on.

If something urgent comes up the day you want to post, if you have the blog already written, you won’t have to delay posting it.

If you’re not collecting email addresses, you lose a measurement of success.

I’m a firm believe that email marketing is the best way to grow an audience. The State of Blogging Industry 2017  showed that bloggers judge success more by total site visitors and social shares. I’m with ConvertKit on this one, as their report states: “To turn a blog reader into a customer, you have to have a way to get back in touch, and that almost always means turning them into an email subscriber first.”

Social media is the best source of website traffic for blogs.

I want to preface that statement by saying that’s true for “non-pro” bloggers.

The ConvertKit staff used U.S. Census data on median household income to categorize bloggers as either “pros” or “non-pros.” Pro bloggers are defined as people who are earning what can be considered a full-time living from their blog, at least $72, 165 annually in households with children or at least $33,805 annually in a household without children. Non-pro bloggers are people earning less than those income amounts.

The top source of blog traffic for the pros was organic search. The No. 2 source of traffic for both pros and non-pros was direct traffic, such as when someone types your website URL into a search engine to reach your site.

Will you make any changes to your blog practices based on these findings?

To read the full report, click here. 

You might also be interested in:

Upcoming event: Rochester Women’s Network June Networking Event. 

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Filed Under: Blogging, Social media Tagged With: blogging tips, social media, State of Blogging Industry 2017

5 ways to make money from blogging

January 5, 2017 by JaneSutter Leave a Comment

There are a variety of ways to make money with a blog but you need strong traffic to do so.

Do you blog and want to earn money for doing it?

In preparation for an advanced blogging class that I teach, I read a couple e-books written by people who, through trial and error, now make money from their blogs. The books are How to Make Money Blogging by Bob Lotich and How to Make Money from Blogging by Liam Price.

I’m going to share some of their strategies and tools, but I want you to know that both authors emphasized that it takes a long time before you start to see real income. That’s because you need to spend time building a following. (How to build your following is a topic for another post.)

Direct sales

I do think the best way to make money off your blog is by using it to sell your products that you’ve created (like books or E-books or guides or software or CDs or DVDS) or your services (counseling, writing and editing, etc.). You’re using your blog to share your expertise. I’ve successfully used a blog to sell my books Sutter’s Sodas Satisfy: A Memoir of 90 Years of Sutter Drug Co. Click here to read that blog.

Be a brand spokesperson or ambassador

A lot of companies that make products, such as food items or clothing or electronics, are looking for people to blog about them. The companies provide you with the products for free, and then you also receive money for blogging. In the interest of ethics, please make sure that you disclose you are being paid but that your opinion of the product is your own (assuming that’s the deal). A Rochester-area blogger who does this quite well is Melissa Rosario Bailey, who blogs at Hungry Food Love, and uses food products in her recipes.

Google AdSense

Google AdSense is a free way for you to run ads on your blog. You choose the type of ads you want, such as display ads or text ads. You copy and paste a piece of code onto your site where you want the ads to appear. Advertisers bid for your ad space in a real-time auction. You get paid for ads being seen or clicked on. This is called CPC or cost per click. You get money from Google when you reach a certain payment threshold that you’ve set. You have to apply for this program, and it’s not really known how Google decides whom to accept. Your chances are better of course if you already have considerable traffic to your blog.

BidVertiser, Infolinks and Revenue Hits are other options, and there are more. These probably have a lower acceptance threshold than getting into Google AdSense.

Affiliate links

Having affiliate links on your blog means that you recommend training programs, services, or products. When someone buys that program or service through the affiliate link, you earn a commission. There’s no additional cost to the consumer. It’s best to offer products you use or have used, or that are developed by people you know and trust. This also gives you an opportunity to bring to your readers information on programs, etc., of which they may not have heard.

Here’s a good post from Problogger on affiliate marketing on your blog.

BuySellAds.com

Your blog needs to be getting at least 50,000 impressions a month to qualify for BuySellAds.com, which connects advertisers to you as a publisher.

What’s your best option?

While there are many ways to make money from your blog, I think most businesses are using their blogs to show their expertise and credibility, which can lead to sales of products or services. Still, it’s worth exploring these other options to bring in additional income.

Have you made money from your blog? I’d like to hear about it.

 

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: advertising, affiliate links, Google AdSense, money from blogging

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New book focuses on magic, love, healing on Seneca Lake

The trilogy about the American-Giroux family is complete with the publication of “That Old Lake Magic: A Search for Love and Healing on Seneca Lake” by G.A. Brandt. Here’s the plot: “JOA Giroux has devoted nearly a decade to helping unwed mothers and children in Ottawa, Canada, at the Giroux family’s charitable foundation. She is near […]

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