This guest post is by Anish Majumdar of DashAmerican.com.
The most valuable piece of writing advice I ever got was from an editor at a print magazine after I’d handed in the first draft of an article. I’d spent hours poring over old issues to “get the tone right” and had fought my natural style every step of the way. The end result? A returned draft shot through with corrections and a one-line response: “Write from the inside and trust that we’ll get it.”
As a ProBlogger reader, you probably already know how rare it is to come across a site devoted to blogging that actually offers something besides the same old “rules” recycled in various forms. You know them: keep pieces short. Use bullets. Link to other articles, etc.
While it’s comforting, especially when you’re starting out, to find something—anything—to model posts after, it’s critical to understand that a reader will forgive a strong voice almost anything and a weak voice almost nothing.
Are the rules you’re following helping or hindering your voice? Here are the three biggest blogging “rules” I’ve broken … and the unexpected results I’ve enjoyed.
1. Make posts scannable
There’s a line of thinking behind blogging advice posts that insist pieces must be kept short and stuffed full of typographical tricks like boldfacing and bullets that assumes a typical reader has Attention Deficit Disorder. If you don’t hustle to offer value and get your point across at a glance, they’ll simply move on.
There is another way.
I was recently in the midst of writing a deeply personal account of growing up with a family member suffering from schizophrenia and realized there was no way to make the post scannable. The paragraphs were long. Themes wove in and out of each other without clear sections. And inserting bullets would wreck the overall flow. Anticipating a post that would sink without a trace, I hit “Publish” … and got the strongest reader response of any piece I’d ever written—as well as a Facebook recommendation from an influential literary magazine editor.
I challenge you to, in the words of Jim Carroll, “hustle like a cheetah instead of a chimp.” Don’t worry about gaining a reader’s interest. Don’t waste time with tricks we’ve all seen a thousand times before. Instead, write in a way that gets your heart racing—and locks in a reader from the first sentence.
2. Stay on topic
A blog that’s stuck in a rut is like a relationship where you do nothing but the same routine day in and day out: eventually, things will fall apart. Don’t get me wrong—I’m not saying you shouldn’t hold true to the underlying theme of your blog. You should. But endlessly recycling the same types of posts under the rationale of “that’s what my readers want” is not only shortsighted, it’s just plain wrong.
Sure, you may be receiving a steady stream of visitors now. But are they sticking around? Are they engaging in a satisfying way? Or are they dropping in to quickly scan the latest post or two and flitting off? Experimentation, planned for and consistent, is the lifeblood of blogging success, and can open up new vistas of personal expression.
I use the following strategy to keep things fresh: every third post has to be new. Not an idea based on an existing post. Not something I’ve pulled out of the “evergreen idea bag” which I assume every blogger has for those days when inspiration doesn’t come.
I’m talking about trying something you’re not sure you can pull off.
For me, that’s meant writing posts on current events, conducting interviews with people I admire, and opening the door to guest posts. Some of these gambits have worked. Others haven’t. But here’s the amazing thing: regardless of how far I stretch, the true fans, those who get it always stick around.
Dare to tinker with your formula. Your readers will respect you for it.
3. Be an authority
In the 10+ years that I’ve been earning a living writing, I’ve spent more time feeling insecure than an authority. I’ve pitched stories that haven’t gotten published. I’ve started projects that have stalled. There have been days when I’ve hated every word I’d committed to paper, and others where I’ve expected to make a huge impact … and haven’t. This comes with the territory, and yet we often feel the need to hide it, as if readers will flee at the first sign of vulnerability.
When I first started expressing my perceived shortcomings and fears on my blog, I felt hideously exposed. There went any claims to being an out-of-the-gate success. But what I received in return were readers who responded to who I was as a human being. They felt invested in my journey because it mirrored their own: what more can you ask more?
Which blogging “rules” have you broken? Let me know in the comments!
Anish Majumdar is the creator of DashAmerican.com, a blog devoted to the cross-cultural experience. If you’re interested in real-life stories detailing epiphanies, embarrassments, and all stops in between, please stop by!
Hi Anish,
Thanks for this interesting post! There are serious hidden gems in there to take away. I would also add ‘thinking of user experience’, which means to spruce up our own blogs in a magazine style without too many advertisements crammed into the pages. As people do judge the appearance, if it doesn’t look good, chances are people are not coming back again
Good advice, Yang! Thanks for reading!
Great post….. always learn something new here, now just to put into practice.
I tried out your advice today. I’ve been feeling blue about my writing so I confessed it on my author blog. http://www.jenniferlynnalvarez.com/2012/03/day-67-author-insecurity.html
Thanks for your post, it encouraged me to open up to my readers! Jennifer
Thanks for reading Jennifer! Congrats on the author blog and novel!
Well, there are definitely times when trying different approaches will bear fruit.
Throwing in the occasional post to break up “Usual” theme, can have it’s benefits.
Some of the more successful sites(names) will throw in posts about whatever tickles their fancy, from time to time. Their sites stick to their broader theme, despite this.
Mmmmm……Be an Authority! That is an interesting one. This is one of the many paradoxes of Blogging. Wishing to be(become) an Authority, or have a site that can be considered an Authority site is well and good.
Though, in truth, even after becoming quite proficient through practical experience, a fair amount of research and a broad knowledge of how things work, we are still forever fluctuating somewhere between a very proficient student, and our much coveted “Authority site–Blogger” Status.
WoW!! Cool Tips Anish,
These are very basics of blogging and everyone should at least know these before entering to blogging world.
This is one of my dearest posts on Problogger – the author’s personality (consistently with his advice :D ) really shines through.
I truly enjoyed reading this.
Great post. As a veteran law blogger coming up on year #4, I can see that I do tend to follow the second and third rules that you are suggesting to break. After reading your thoughts, I am going to re-think my approach in my upcoming blog posts.
Thanks for the suggestions.
I know we are always being told that we should keep our blog posts short and sweet but, in SEO terms, anything less than 300 words just doesn’t cut it. I don’t know about you but sometimes my brain has trouble conjuring up enough words to make a coherent sentence let alone a 300 word post!
Very basic steps of blogging..Thanks for sharing your information and keep posting good stuff!
Thanks! I haven’t really broken any of these rules yet but am just on the verge to it, so it seems. I’m getting tired of “staying on topic” – I feel that it keeps me smaller than I am (and more boring than I am :lol:). And I am seriously getting ready to become more human and less of an authority. Connecting in a genuine way is so much closer to my heart – and so much more fun for all of us! :-)
Thanks for the encouragement!
Great advice! My previous blogs and websites I have started followed these rules.. My latest one, http://zombiezurvival.com/ is different. Not everything is “scannable”. I put a lot of time into researching facts and acting like the leader in the Zombie industry. The results show! Although this site is new, it has has more visitors than all my other sites combined!
As for staying on topic, I use sub topics. Like Zombie effects, the hit TV show The Walking Dead, survival tips, etc. I find this is staying on topic, but giving a little flexibility for the readers so they don’t get bored with, what you said “recycled posts”.
This is great advice everybody! I’d say follow it if you can. :)
very like
I loved this post probably because I’m verbose. :- ) I like to think of myself as an authority on Canada travel. Have done PR for the industry here for a long time and have traveled the country coast to coast tho’ we still have lots we want to see. Roadstoriesdotca, our Canada blog, is about people, places and things. Most of the posts are first-hand accounts which I think is important when travel blogging. On our latest road trip for example, we went to Grand Manan, New Brunswick to see how dulse is harvested. Dulse is a form of seaweed and considered a delicacy by many maritimers. My dad loved it. Through research and yakking with folks on the Grand Manan ferry, I got to meet the last of the dulse kings in a Grand Manan nursing home. I also got to see his dulse operation now run by his daughter and son-in-law. There’s no way I would have been able to get the story I did without going to Grand Manan.