This guest post is one that I’m excited to publish – it’s by Tina Su from ThinkSimpleNow.com – a great blog that I’ve been a big fan of. In it Tina will share some of how she’s grow her blog from 0 to 2000 subscribers in just 90 days.
How I Got 2000 Subscribers in 3 Months
Hi, my name is Tina. I started a little blog called Think Simple Now on September 27th, 2007 with zero experience in blogging, internet marketing or writing. By the time Christmas came, 3 months later, I had 2135 subscribers.
I’m new to blogging, in fact, I read very few blogs. I also do not follow any blogs on blogging, with the exception of a couple of articles read from doshdosh and problogger very early on.
I often get asked how I did it, and I decided to compile this article as a record of my experience with hope that others might benefit from what I’ve learned. I want to show you that it is possible to achieve your blogging goals starting from scratch, using my case as a live example. I’ve learned that there are no real secrets to blogging success, all it really takes is a deep desire to do so, along with an urge to action.
I have three important reasons why my blog has been successful:
- Concrete Goals & Focus – You can’t get what you want if you don’t know what you want.
- Content Creation – Where I spend most of my time. Content and understanding your audience is king.
- Getting the Word Out – Actionable tasks I did to market my blog. All are easily reproducible by anyone. But only focus on this after area 2 have been in place. Without content, all your marketing efforts will be ineffective.
Each step builds on the last, so it’s important to follow them in order. Let’s break each step down into details.
1. Concrete Goal & Focus
Why Goals?
It is important to understand why you are starting a blog. What is your motivation?
I had 3 motivations (in order):
- To share my knowledge and experience through my own personal growth on topics surrounding personal empowerment, mental well-being and finding happiness. These are the topics I spend my free times thinking, reading and talking about.
- My dream is to work in the self-improvement field. I have many product ideas around ways to improve lives. I wanted to create my own audience, before working on these ideas.
- Achieve my financial goals such that I can leave my job and commit to my self-improvement ventures full-time.
What?
Defining my target niche and the topics I wanted to cover was tricky, but ultimately vital to the success of any business or project. I originally wanted to start a blog around things I’m interested in: self-improvement, photography, technology and entrepreneurialism. I realized that a messy combination of topics might confuse people. Ultimately, if I wanted more subscribers other than my family and friends, the site cannot be focused around me, but rather focused around what my audience needs and wants. My target niche is health/wellness or personal growth. My topic areas are: creativity, clarity and happiness.
Goals
We cannot get what we want if we do not know what we want. Sure, you can say, I want to be rich or happy. But what does that mean? It is important to set clearly defined goals before you start any new venture. Your goals need to be measurable and dated. I find it helps to regularly come back to evaluate my goals. I do this monthly in a traffic journal recording my progress: unique, page views, subscribers and revenue.
For example, my goal when I started was:
By December 31, 2007, I would have 1000 uniques, 2500 page-views monthly, and 100 RSS subscribers.
This goal was revised on October 22 after reaching the original goal:
By December 31, 2007, I would have 5000 uniques, 20,000 page-views monthly, 400 RSS subscribers, $100 in ad revenue.
The new goal was reached on November 29th. At this point, RSS subscribers had reached over 1500.
Summary & Action Items:
To summarize, the following are the major points for the area of ‘Concrete Goal & Focus’. If might be helpful for you to answer these questions (on paper or type in a doc).
- Why – What is your motivation? Why are you starting this blog? What are you doing that’s unique from existing blogs?
- What – Who is in my audience? What topic areas will I cover? Describe my blog using 3 words.
- Goals – Set a specific and measurable goal with a date. Come back to evaluate this goal and your progress periodically.
2. Content Creation
We all know that content is the most important piece, but how do you generate content such that people will want to read, reference and subscribe to it?
First, recall the last time you subscribed to a blog. What was it about the content that made you want to subscribe? The reasons will likely fall into one or more of the following:
- Highly value-packed content.
- It provides practical solutions to a perceived need you have.
- You enjoyed it. It was highly entertaining.
- You personally connect with the content and style of writing.
- You felt inspired and motivated.
Now, put yourself in the position of a reader to your site. You know who they are from exercises above. Ask yourself, which of the above situations can your content satisfy? Keep these points in mind when writing. Always write with the intention to generate value and produce work that will benefit others. If you don’t, it will show in your writing.
I obsess over my content, not only because I feel responsible for my readers and want to give them the best quality that I can produce, but it is the only way a new reader coming to your site will want to stay and come back.
Try different styles and test which your reader responds to the most.
The following are tips related to content creation that’s worked well for my blog:
- Intention – Set the intention to generate the best and most valuable content possible. Hold nothing back when you’re writing. Your honesty and genuine intentions will shine through in your writing. I like to write as if I’m talking to my best friend, giving them the best I have.
- Use Personal Examples – People love stories. This allows them to relate with you on a personal level and connect with you as friends.
- Pictures – Use appropriate and vivid images to go with your article. Whenever possible, always use images, but don’t over-do it. I would use no more than 3 images per article in a typical case.
- Length – I prefer to post less often and write longer articles that covers depth. I post twice weekly and at length 750-1500 words. The length is out of necessity to cover topics thoroughly. I do try to keep things concise. Make sure all content are relevant. Do not be verbose for the sake of length, it will show if your writing and will turn people away. If you were a reader, would you be able to focus your attention long enough to read the whole article?
- Lists – Use numbered lists and bullet points whenever it makes sense. Bold key words. These make reading easy and effective for scanning.
- Short Paragraphs – Be as concise as possible. During editing, see if you get the same point across using less words.
Summary & Action Items:
- Intentions – Have your reader’s best interest in mind.
- Needs – What needs are you fulfilling with your articles? Is it a need that people actually have or one that you think others need?
- Observe & Model – What kinds of articles do you enjoy reading from other blogs? Pick out common characteristics and model after them.
3. Getting the Word Out
Once I was armed with my goal of reaching 100 subscribers and had my content in place, I started to promote my blog. You may have the most valuable site in the world, but no one will benefit if they don’t know it exists.
Offline & Email
I pretty much lived and breathed my one simple goal of reaching 100 subscribers. Everywhere I went, I told people about my goal and my blog, and people were willing to help. This include every physical person I met and anyone who emailed me: co-workers, girlfriends of co-workers, friends of family, person sitting next to me on a plane, new friends I met on facebook, photography clients … everyone.
I added a note about subscribing to my email signature, so it appeared at the foot of every email I sent out. I emailed all of my friends when I launched, asking them to support me by subscribing.
Connecting with People
Connecting with readers and potential readers is an essential part of my blogging success. Not only does it help my blog grow, but I absolutely love it. I have made many good friends this way. When people like you and feel that your content is valuable, they will tell their friends about it. I quickly discovered that many of my readers were emailing links to others, and referring many new subscribers.
I’ve given extra effort to reach out and connect with others. It was a process which I took personally. I made sure every comment was responded to and no emails were left ignored. I no longer respond to every comment due to time limitations, but I still respond to every email. If a comment was especially good, I would email the person to thank them and include a copy of my response to their comments, especially if it contained questions.
I used to email every person who commented with a thank you note and would ask them to consider subscribing. Then I discovered the Comment Relish plug-in that did this automatically.
I also connected with people through facebook, by visiting groups in my niche and befriending individuals. I’ve made some great friendships this way, and was even inspired with new article ideas.
Leaving Your Mark: Comments & Directories
Comment in other people’s blogs, especially ones with related topics. Make sure to leave thoughtful and relevant comments, otherwise, it will be viewed as spam. I found a list of personal development blogs, and made a point to visit every one and leave a comment when appropriate. Again, make sure you are not spamming. Bloggers are often curious of who the commentators are and will visit your site. On popular blogs, you may need to leave comments regularly to be noticed. If your content is good, bloggers will link to you when appropriate, others may even add you to their blogroll.
I’ve submitted articles to article banks, blog carnivals, and rss feed directories. I stopped article bank submissions when I learned about the google penalties for duplicate content. In an effort to save time, I outsourced these three tasks due to their repetitive nature.
Networking with Bloggers
Reach out and meet other bloggers. You never know who you’re going to meet or how you will be able to help each other. I feel that you cannot do it alone, you need a community of friends. “We are stronger together than we are apart“. I recommend keeping a contact list of friends, so it’ll be easy to get in touch with one email. This is also valuable when you need last minute help with social media.
This model helped me tremendously: To get what you want, help others get what they want, first.: In a email reply from Maki, he ended his email with, “Let me know if you need anything,” which left an impression on me. From that point on, I told people about Maki’s site whenever I had the chance.
Since then, I started using it in my emails as well. But it is important to be genuine. Always lend a hand to help other bloggers (within reason) and do not expect anything in return. If they end up helping you, great, if not, I don’t recommend harassing them.
Don’t be shy, people are incredibly kind creatures by nature. Drop them an email to introduce yourself, either make a genuine comment about their site, or ask a simple question. Do not start email conversations with asking to be linked, asking to review your blog, asking too many questions. Avoid philosophical questions, keep emails short, be friendly and honest. Try practicing on me: Feel free to drop me a line to introduce yourself at tina[at]thinksimplenow.com
Linking
I linked to other blogs whenever possible in my articles. It doesn’t cost you anything, and helps someone else out. If you feel uncomfortable with this, ask yourself, would you like to be linked by other blogs? If the answer is yes, then remember my motto: “To get what you want, help others get what they want, first.”
Through my linking to other blogs, not only have other bloggers noticed me but I have made many new friends. As a result, I’ve also been linked by larger sites like lifehacker, dumblittleman and lifehack.
Social Media & Networks
In the first few weeks, I was getting like 15 hits a day, mostly from my mom and boyfriend. One day, I was blessed with 150 hits coming from StumbleUpon based on a user submit. I was fascinated and was determined to become a power user. You can check out my profile here. I did well on StumbleUpon using the same motto: “To get what you want, help others get what they want, first.” If you want user reviews, give lots of user reviews to others. If you want others to stumble your pages, stumble other people’s pages. Again, do so without expecting anything in return. And, when you do receive something, treat it like a gift and thank the giver.
Just as I was starting to feel de-motivated, my big break came on November 17th when one of my stories made it on the front page of Digg and subsequently on the front page of Del.icio.us. Digg now had my attention. Using the same motto as all my efforts above, I befriended Digg users and became a loyal contributor of the community. I like to Digg top upcoming stories (close to becoming popular), newly submitted stories and ones submitted or favored by friends. If you want to get a Digg user’s attention, start Digging their submissions regularly.
I like to keep a consistent profile across all social media sites I participate in. Use the same avatar image and use the same username. Your image and username is your face to the network, people will recognize you if they find you in other networks such as Mixx, Propeller or Twitter. But if you use different images, it’ll be difficult to keep track for your online friends. Also, I don’t recommend changing your avatar often. Some users on StumbleUpon will regularly update their image, this is really confusing and forces me to remember them by username only.
Summary & Action Items
- Tell everybody and ask for help: in person and over email
- Connect with readers via email
- Install Comment Relish
- Comment on other blogs
- Link to other blogs whenever you can
- Make 5 new blogger or social media friends weekly
- Join StumbleUpon and Digg
Parting Words
I often hear people say things like “I just can’t get people to subscribe. What can I do? My advice is to stop repeating this sentence and start focusing on what it is that you want, instead of what you lack.
Develop the mentality of abundance instead of competition. Focus on your readers, obsess over their experience, have a clear goal and go after it with your whole being, without a minute spent on reasons why you will fail. I have seen over and over again that:
When desire is mixed with faith backed by massive action, the probable becomes possible, every time. No exceptions.
I wish you continued success with your blogging and other life ventures. Keep your head up high.
About the Author of This Post:
Help and support Tina by subscribing to her blog at ThinkSimpleNow.com to get motivational and empowering articles like this one delivered twice a week. She’ll love you for it. :) Read more about Tina here.
Congrats, Tina!! To come so far in 120 days is truly amazing. Keep up the hard work. Thank you so much for sharing in such great detail how you accomplished this wonderful task. :)
Shana
I’ve had some negative experience with Comment Relish… my users revolted and since then I dont’t use it anmyore.
Indeed most points that Tina mentions are not unheard of, but what makes it special is we now have a live case study of how things work and a lot of stuff that I’ve read on problogger as well as many other blogs being used effectively ..
and since greg mentioned Comment Relish I thought I’d add in that personally I have liked ti when I see a note of thanks from a blogger for commenting.. haven’t tried it on my blog coz my host doesn’t support it..
@darren – it would be nice if we can get bloggers who do exceptionally well like Tina on a more consistent/regular (i mean fixed. like once every fortnight or month) basis.. I think it would be a nice addition here if it were possible..
Darren… I’ll have to disagree with you today. This post is pure bulls… This lady got a lot of subscribers just because she got a new, good idea and that’s it. There’s no need for all that cheap thing about content, focus, etc. If it were for most of the blogs out there should have 2000 subscribers in 3 months! I should have 3000 subscribers at this point if it were for all that!
I have content, I focus and I do all that simple sh… this lady wrote about, but I do not have a great, new idea that can please the rest of thew world. Simple. Let’s stop the fancy words please.
Inhale….
Exhale…
Ah! I feel better now! This is much better than going to the psychologist! Sorry for the outrage!
Good article and good blog. I came across Tina’s site a while back and what she said about her attitude is true.
I really agree and respect how Tina can reach her goal..
My target is to improve my writing especially in grammar .. Honestly my English s**k….
It is important before I really serious to find some great niche..
I’ve been looking for something like comment relish for a couple weeks. Thanks for mentioning it. I’ve installed it and can’t wait to see how my readers like it.
3 months = 90 days? ;p
A few of the links are broken.
I haven’t checked them all but the links to ‘article banks, blog carnivals, and rss feed directories’ don’t work for me.
Great article! I’ve been a fan of Think Simple Now for a bit and I think she nails it when she talks about the importance of content as well as helping others.
I think another summary would be to be generous with your content and offer value. All the promotion in the world wont work if you’re not providing useful information of benefit to readers.
The part about keeping a consistent avatar across social networking sites is very useful to me. I’m just getting started, both with blogging and with social networking, and that’s not something I would have thought of right up front.
Nice post, I feel motivated :D
@Darren: The link that says “one of my stories” is also broken. Feels like an extra quote (“) mark typo.
I know Feb this year has 29 days but 3 months = 120 days is a lot of stretch. LOL
overall I think this is definitely a very helpful and motivational post for sure. One of the big things I think Tina left out however is how helpful having the right theme can be for gaining readership as well.
While the numbers on my blog http://www.blogaboutbeer.com aren’t anywhere near Tina’s yet, I did a complete overhaul of my theme this past weekend — making the site much more streamlined and “clean” looking — and I’ve already seen an increase in page hits, new RSS subscribers, and adsense clicks.
Playing around with the look & feel of your blog until you come up with something that works very well for you, your readers & your content is something that I’ve found equally as import to everything Tina mentioned.
Excellent article. Probably one of the best how-to pieces for bloggers that I have read. Not only have I bookmarked it, but I am going to print it out and keep it with my notebooks.
Thanks!
Good tips, and especially interesting to see how well Tina’s done in so short a time. I launched a new blog on Jan 1st and am seeing some slow growth, but still struggling to get things off the ground — I suspect, from reading Tina’s advice, I may need to be a little more pro-active.
Thanks, Tina!
Ali
Great content + great attitude + infectious spirit = success!
I might ad that Tina is an awesome networker. She does anything you ask as far as promoting something you need and in turn you can’t help returning the favor because she is so willing to do what it takes to make others successful. She is an asset to the blogosphere.
Great article Tina and well done on reaching then surpassing your initial goals. It’s interesting to read an article like this that takes you through the process from start to finish and beyond. :)
TIna gives me the impression that she is very kind-hearted writer.
The more I read about quick successes with blogs, the more that the social network seems to play a role. It takes a giantic effort to spent as much time as tiny obviously did to grow her blog so quickly. This always seems to be minimized to a couple of examples of hitting digg or stumble upon. Its much more likely that hours upon hours of every day was spent linking, commenting, reviewing and using the social networks to expand things. Its not as simple or easy as often written. I would have liked to see more stats or numbers on how much time was spent, how many reviews, comments and things tiny did to develop her readership.
The only thing I haven,t really have been doing is leaving articles at a blog carnival or anything close to that but If any blogger want to network please leave me a comment at my blog it is coming up fast and I want some blogger friends with big dreams
I have liked ti when I see a note of thanks from a blogger for commenting.. haven’t tried it on my blog coz my host doesn’t support it..
Wow. I really need to sit down and write those out. The more I took blogging seriously, the more I actually fell into those steps, but didn’t realize it. Thank you so much for that post.
1. 120 days is *not* 3 months!
2. The link to your StumbleUpon profile is broken
3. Your increased subscriber numbers has as much to do with using photos of relatively attractive young women as it does to the actual content of your blog.
Excellent article and your approach is basically a business plan for new bloggers. I’ve been blogging on and off for a few months with varied results, but will now use some of your tips to set goals and content.
One thing to add which I believe is important is ones blog layout. Simple and well laid out blogs (with minimal advertising) like yours are important to attract readers. I am still trying to figure out the optimal layout given my limited web skills.
Balancing content, revenue and the reader experience is the triple constraint I am constantly battling. Looks like you have it solved.
Cheers,
Andy
http://www.financeviewpoint.com
Great achievement and a great blog post, keep up the good work
Tina,
Thank you so much for your inspiring article! I’m sure you will have more and more subscribers in the coming days. And you deserve every bit of it!
Have a wonderful day! :)
Manu.
Thats’s a great article, thanks.
Thank you Tina! A very detailed (and inspirational!) recount of your rise to fame. Your approach has certainly worked, and I can’t wait to try it out on my blog. This goes without saying, but I get the feeling that you worked relentlessly to get your blog to where it is today. I guess that’s just another lesson in knowing what you want and pursuing it with force.
My most memorable take-away is: “To get what you want, help others get what they want, first.”
Thank you for being so clear and eloquent!
– Greg
Straight to the point and really a great inspiration. I’m new to word press but not to blogging. However, it is only recently that I have worked on expanding my readership and monetization.
There are a lot of things that can distract me from content and good use of my time–glitches on the new template are one. Taking time to interact with others takes my time too–time that I hope pays off with loyalty, referrals, and stable readership.
One of the things I find useful are the plug-ins. I use link love and comment relish to connect with other bloggers and those posting for the first time.
Look forward to more of your posts!
Tina, excellent article. Thanks for sharing this valuable info. Been a fan of your site from the beginning. Wishing you continued success!
This article is the reason Tina has done so well: clear, focused, well organized, highly readable, and top notch content that you can use. Thanks again, Tina.
this article was ridiculously helpful! thanks for the great ideas. i’ll definitely be checking out thinksimplenow.com
Great to see that someone using real tools, an actual real person, is doing it! Thanks for the post!
Maria :-)
congrats tina. the hard work has really paid off ;)
Hi Tina – great article. I like the way you added to that Napolean Hill quote at the end and sort of modernised it.
I didn’t have a clue about blogging and read several blogs on blogging and still do. What made you decide not to? How did you manage to learn about blogging so quickly?
Tina,
Great mix of mental success along with the action steps needed to bring that success into reality.
By providing value via your writing yet also focusing on bringing value to your networking channels, it became a self-replicating circle of success. Great job! :)
Great article Tina. Your blog is great and so are you, so you deserve all this success!
-Andrew Galasetti
Great information Tina – thank you for sharing your experience and insights.
Thanks so much guys! I appreciate your encouraging words.
I’ve been wanting to write this article for several weeks now and have been ‘writing in my mind’ for this article. Finally, I got an outlet and was able to put everything down on paper. Thanks Darren for giving me a space of self expression.
Yes, you guys are right:
+ 90 Days instead of 120 days.
+ StumbleUpon profile: artsytina
(It’s 6am in Melbourne, someone may fix it in a few hours.)
@Catherine Lawson – I love that quote too, and this one is a variation of the Napolean Hill quote. I read ZenHabits.net on September 25th and was blown away by the positive impact it had on me. I was inspired and knew that I can provide something that might help people, and complement ZenHabit’s material instead of being a competition of it. This was simply how I got started. I think I learned about blogging quickly from the sheer desire to do so without stopping once to ponder why I might fail.
With practice, we can all get better at this. I too am still working on it. :)
Great article,
I usually write down concrete actions i wanna take daily; such as
– write 5 insightful comments to blogs
– write 1 email directly to a blogger
– 10 minutes: keep contact with readers or customers
Then in the end of the day i mark those items off after i did it. By focusing on small, well-defined tasks, i’m much more motivated to do them on a daily basis. i put a little tool online which you can use for that.
Tina’s blog is great. I read it on a regular basis, even though it probably couldn’t be more of a polar opposite to my own blog, http://www.brianzafron.com. Nevertheless, she is really an inspiration and I look forward to her upcoming posts. Man, I sound like such a sap. Is that a tear? No… couldn’t be…. Men don’t cry.
TINA!
I’m so proud of you lol! It’s incredible that you’re a guest poster for ProBlogger
*everyone – I am an avid reader of Tina’s blog. From the instant I stumbled upon it, I’ve felt it was a goldmine*
This is an excellent piece – and yes, you answered my question as promised!
keep up the great work!
:-)
I really liked this article Tina, very inspiring!
This article is an inspiration!! I want to make a blog. Where do I begin?! I can’t wait to make the transition out of the day gig and into the blog gig.
Cheers,
Mike
http://www.myspace.com/guitarmikenull
One of the best articles I’ve seen on the topic. Who cares about the technicalities of 120 days V 3 months…
Hey Giullermo – you said -This lady got a lot of subscribers just because she got a new, good idea and that’s it- That’s the whole point!… make it A good idea, not a data dump of everything we know.
Power to you Tina.
Some great advice here. You are right about keeping a consistent image (avatar and username) across platforms. Content is king.
It is a real story, i witnessed from the beginning. I was one of the lucky bloggers who got in touch with Tina at the very beginning.
Tina, i am proud of what you achieved in such a short period of time. I feel very lucky to exchange e-mails with you daily.
Wish you all the best!
Cheers,
Mert