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The Essential Guide to Growing Your Blog on Minimal Time

Posted By Darren Rowse 7th of January 2009 Blog Promotion, Featured Posts 0 Comments

This is a guest post from Leo Babauta of Zen Habits, author of the new best-selling book, The Power of Less.

If you’re like most bloggers, you probably want to grow your readership as quickly as possible, but don’t have much time.

Unfortunately, blogging usually takes a lot of time — writing blog posts takes up a fraction of most bloggers’ time, as they also check their stats and earning multiple times a day, customize their blog design, try out new blog ad systems, comment on many different blogs, spend a lot of time doing email, and so on.

If you let it, blogging can become two full-time jobs. But get this: you can grow your blog quickly on very minimal time, by setting limits and focusing on the essentials.

I’m just one example: I grew Zen Habits into a Top 100 blog within its first year even though I was working a full-time job and doing free-lance writing on the side — giving me only about an hour a day to work on my blog, total. I probably could have spent more time blogging by working in the evenings or on weekends, but I have a family that’s more important to me than blogging.

So how did I grow Zen Habits so quickly on so little time? Well, I figured out through experimentation what grows a blog the quickest, and I learned to focus my time on those things. And guess what? Checking your blog stats and earnings — even though it’s the thing than many bloggers do most throughout the day — doesn’t really grow your blog, at all. What does? More on that below.

Limits

The key to growing your blog with minimal time investment is to set limits on how much time you’ll spend blogging. As I said, blogging can easily expand to fill your entire day, if you let it. In fact, whatever time you allocate to blogging is the time that blogging will take.

So limit your time to something manageable … for me that was 1 hour a day, for others it might be two hours or even three, and for still others it might only be 30 minutes. It really depends on how much time you have. Don’t spend less than 30 minutes on blogging, though, if you’re really serious about it. I’d say an hour to two is ideal. Any more than that and you’re not really setting limits.

So what happens if you set a limit of say, 1 hour? You could waste that hour by doing fruitless tasks, and then your blog will get nowhere. But if you’re smart, you’ll focus on the key tasks that will really help your blog, and nothing else. By setting limits, you’ll force yourself to choose only the most essential tasks.

If you gave yourself 4 hours a day, you could do a lot of tasks, but maybe only 1 out of 4 of those tasks would really grow your blog. If you gave yourself 1 hour a day, you’d have to eliminate 3 out of 4 of those tasks to fit within the time limit, and (again, if you’re smart), you’ll choose the most effective tasks.

Set a timer each day and work within the time limit. And while you’re doing so, be sure to do the most effective tasks first, and if you have time left, go to the next most effective tasks, and so on.

Essentials

So what are the most effective tasks for growing your blog? It depends on your blog, your goals, your niche, your target audience, and other such factors, but below I’ll share the things that work best for me. Other top bloggers might have different findings.

Experiment to find your essential tasks, and once you’ve found them, focus on them completely. Here are my essential tasks for growing a blog:

1. Writing outstanding articles. This is the No. 1 essential, by far. If you only do one thing each day, this is it. A great post might take more than an hour — that’s OK, do half of it today and half tomorrow. The main reason people come to your blog, and the main reason they’ll keep coming back or subscribe, is because your content is amazingly useful (or interesting, or both). So focus on creating those posts they’ll really want to read. You should be coming out with outstanding posts, with catchy titles/headlines, at least once a week, and probably 2-5 times a week (I am for 4 these days but had 5-6 in my early days).

What is a useful post? Well, this post is an example, I hope — it contains a lot of valuable info and tips on something that people really want to do. Check out Zen Habits for more examples — I try to make almost every post an outstanding one.

2. Linking, and link-bait. This could fall under the same category as the above tip, but sometimes it gets overlooked. Linking to other blogs is a great way to help out your fellow bloggers, get them to notice you, and build up some link karma. You could do it with a daily or weekly links post, but too many of those can get tiring for readers, so I recommend you keep it to weekly at most. Instead, link to other blogs from within your useful posts, and sometimes you might consider doing “linkbait”-type posts where you do a really useful post that links to a lot of other bloggers — for example, my “Top 50 Producitivity blogs” post that I did more than a year ago … a lot of bloggers appreciated being in that post, and just as I sent a lot of traffic their way, they sent some back. Everyone wins.

3. Guest posts. If you’re not writing guest posts every week or two, on blogs that are bigger than yours (even just a little bigger is good, but the bigger the better), then you’re not really trying to promote your blog. In my early days, I did 2-3 guest posts a week on other blogs, and as a result I was everywhere. It’s the best way to promote your blog on other blogs, because you’re showing the other blog’s readers how good you are. Be sure to write your absolute best whenever you do a guest post.

4. Commenting. First, be sure to read through the comments on your blog and respond if you can — this could take just 10 minutes if you do it quickly. Second, spend another 10 minutes if you have the time to comment on other blogs — and don’t just spam them, but actually say something relevant, useful and interesting. It helps you get noticed, and helps you become a part of the network of blogs (especially in your niche).

5. Email and networking. It’s important to respond to reader email, and to network with other bloggers through email, IM, Twitter, etc. Networking helps you to grow, definitely, but if you let them, these connectivity tools can overwhelm your day. So put them last, and limit them if you can. If your time is limited, just do the emails you can process in 10 minutes. Increase that to 20-30 minutes if you have more time, but don’t spend hours on these tools.

Minimize Non-essentials

Just as it’s important to focus on the essentials, it’s crucial that you limit and try to eliminate the non-essentials as much as possible. While you have to work on these things a little, now and then, don’t let them fill your allocated blog time.

1. Blog stats and earnings
. Sure, I like to check my stats daily — but only once a day, and only for a minute or two to make sure everything’s OK. In the early days I became a little obsessive about checking blog stats and earnings, but after a little while I figured out that it wasn’t a smart use of my time. Blog earnings (from ad networks such as Google Adsense) are fun to look at, but if you’re like most blogs you won’t make a lot of money in the early days, until you have a lot of readers. So focus instead on growing the readers, and worry about the earnings later.

2. Ad networks. Many bloggers get excited about earning a side income (or even a main income) from their blog and throw every ad network possible on their blog — in fact, the ads often overwhelm the content. But that’s counterproductive — readers don’t go to a blog to read the ads, and if there are too many ads, the readers might leave or unsubscribe, never to come back. Instead, consider putting no ads, or as few as possible, in your early days … you’ll miss out on very little in terms of earnings, and you’ll probably grow even faster as a result. At any rate, fiddling with ad networks is very rarely worth your time — it does nothing to grow your blog.

3. Blog design. A good blog design can definitely help grow your blog — if it’s clean, uncluttered, attractive, and professional-looking, I think a lot of readers will be more likely to stick around. But spending a lot of time on your design when you could be writing great posts is not a smart use of your time. Instead, pick a clean, uncluttered theme, customize it as needed, and leave it alone. Maybe once in awhile you can remove a little clutter to make things more attractive, but most of the time. leave it alone.

4. Blog memes. As far as I can remember, I’ve only participated in one blog meme — those things where bloggers answer the same 5 questions (or whatever) and “tag” other bloggers to do the same. That’s not because I’m stuck up, or think these memes aren’t fun. They are fun. But they’re rarely of much interest to your readers, as they’re not that useful. Sure, they like to read a little about you, but too often and you’re just stroking your ego. Stay away from these memes if you’re looking to maximize your time.

5. Reading lots of other blogs. Don’t get me wrong — you have to read other blogs, especially in your niche, to stay on top of things. But if your time is limited, your reading time should be limited too. Reading 50 blogs instead of 10 doesn’t grow your blog any more.

6. Plugins and widgets. WordPress plugins and widgets, while fun to play with, don’t grow your blog very much, if at all. Don’t mess around with them too much. Focus on content.

7. Social media. Some bloggers spend a LOT of time on Digg, StumbleUpon, and other such social media. And while it can help tremendously to have a popular post on one of these social media, spending time on them isn’t the best investment of your time. Very, very few bloggers ever become a top user on these sites — it’s really hard, and worse yet, it takes a lot of time. A better use of your time is to write a Digg-worthy post, or a post that will spread like wildfire on StumbleUpon or Delicious — not because you’re friends with lots of the users, but because it’s insanely useful, interesting, controversial, or what have you.

Focus

Even if you’ve set limits and identified the essential and non-essential tasks, it’s easy to get distracted. It’s important that you learn to clear away distractions, such as email, Twitter, IM, social sites and even general Internet browsing, so that you can focus on the important tasks.

If you look at the essential tasks that I listed above, most of them are writing — which means you could do them with the browser closed, in a word processor or text editor (this post is being written in TextEdit, for example). This really helps you to clear away distractions and focus.

Once you’re done with the writing, you can connect and comment and do email, but even then try to stay away from the distractions until you’re done. Then if you have spare time, feel free to go wild.

Read more from Leo Babauta in his new best-selling book, The Power of Less: The Art of Limiting Yourself to the Essentials … in Business and in Life.

About Darren Rowse
Darren Rowse is the founder and editor of ProBlogger Blog Tips and Digital Photography School. Learn more about him here and connect with him on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
Comments
  1. Really useful article, you’ve summed up pretty much everything.

    I like the concept of limiting the amount of time you work on the site to maximize it’s return.

  2. Excellent post, Leo.

    I’ve often wondered whether the reason many bloggers don’t succeed is because many bloggers are too comfortable. They have a comfortable income and a comfortable environment so there’s never any real incentive.

    In the same way, if somebody is able to devote 5 full days a week to blogging, they could become too comfortable doing the meaningless tasks that don’t help. I’m in this situation at the moment. Working 9-5 doing nothing but blogging and a little freelancing on the side. I seem to be managing it well, but there are some days when I get caught up in Twitter, Facebook and reading other blogs rather than doing something more productive.

    Fantastic advice, Leo. One of the best posts I’ve seen in a while.

    Thanks!

    Jamie

  3. Focus and prioritization s very important indeed.

    Social network like Twitter can be great way of expanding network but can be addictive. Again prioritize the important things that bring the best results.

    cheers,
    Matthew
    http://twitter.com/MatthewSM1

  4. Hello Leo,
    Its so strange to see many of you write unbelievably amazing, great, and very useful posts.
    You know what, I am sure many of the readers here who will read this will feel guilty of wasting time on checking their stats. Mostly earnings. Even a few cents earnings forces new blogges to keep checking their stats.
    Although new bloggers know all their mistakes mostly but are not ready to accept it.
    Such great posts like the one above have contributed a lot in improving the professionalism of new bloggers.
    Great post

    Regards
    Laksh
    http://makemoneyonline-withme.blogspot.com/

  5. This post is absolutely right on the money… I really like the “Minimize the non-essentials!”

    Twitter has become a great tool to notify existing readers of posts and expand the cathcment area of potential readers.

  6. Focus is the most essential point I feel.
    And if it is in synergy with hard work, there is no stopping you :)

    http://www.twitter.com/farrhad

  7. In addition to my previous comment:

    I forgot to mention, loved reading your post :)

  8. Pure Nuggets of Gold!!! Thanks for Sharing Darren and Leo

  9. Thanks for the reminder. Great advice. Nothing like limited time to focus resources. Deadlines, even if artificial, are useful for this. Reminds me of an observation that we tend to get more on the last day before a vacation than other days.

    Cheers,
    Harley Pebley

  10. Minimal Time is something I have in abundance.

  11. WOW! I needed this. Thank you. I will apply these at A MAUI BLOG…now. :).

    Aloha,
    Liza

  12. Wonderful tips here! I definitely need to limit the amount of time I spent on writing blog posts.

  13. That’s wonderful advise. Some points resonate with me too (like reading lots of blogs).

    This post complemented with Darren’s post on Social media Time suckers can save bloggers loads of time and help peeps focus on their blogging goals.

    http://twitter.com/ShriNagesh

  14. Great post. And best yet, you’ve stumbled onto a question that I’ve had before when you mentioned that you were a guest blogger on 2-3 posts a week on other blogs.

    I’ve wanted to do this for awhile but don’t know how to start. Can anyone offer any tips on this, or could you write another article specifically on this?

    How would I approach another blogger to ask to write an article for them? What’s the etiquette on your byline containing a link back to your blog? What’s the desired time in sending an email asking to write a guest post, to sending a follow up request when you don’t hear back (if at all?)

    Thanks,
    Jess

    http://momelettes.com – Moms are beaten and fried. These tech tips will help!

  15. Just saw this on Twitter.com and I have to say that I like the short and sweet approach. It is easy to get “caught up” in the extra internet stuff such as widgets and not focus on what matters. I’m going to share your tips with my students because I want them to understand how to set up a focused and effective blog to help them in their career.

  16. your tips very usefull, and alot of experience, thanks for u

  17. Even though one does build a huge blog, the experience is the most rewarding thing.

    I never thought about limiting the time I spent while growing blogs. I usually have the habit of spending hours and hours together working on one of my blogs.. :)

  18. 2 hours a day is enough. But I can’t stop checking my stat (especially google analytics) and earnings always. Its time for a change.

    Excellent Post! ^_^

  19. I’m definitely guilty of the widgets trap. I’ve been fooling with them because some bloggers insist that they have grown their blogs tremendously from using them. Many of them have smaller blogs than I do, so I’m not sure how I fell into this trap.

    Thanks for getting me refocused.

  20. I just blogged on this this morning, not as well or indepth as you did, of course.
    Thanks. I’m saving this to reread when it gets too overwhelming again.
    Molly

  21. This was a great blog post… I know I spend way to much time looking at my stats, but they have gave me some insight on what search terms people are using to find my blog… clearlng out the clutter on my blog is one of the things I am focused on right now… thanks for the great post.

  22. Those are very useful tips, thank you.

    I’m starting a new blog, but I’m not so familiar with the niche (although I know the topic well). It seems like it will take lots of time to figure out which bloggers to focus on for linking, writing guest posts, etc. Are there any shortcuts for this?
    Many thanks.

  23. Excellent post. You are truly “walking the walk” – your suggestion to write good content and allow it to bring traffic your way based on its value (to its reader) is reflected here. I am still wondering how you know that I waste my time checking my stats when I should be writing :)

  24. Thank you for this great post.I’m quite busy with the school and this post comes in the right time for helping me to organise my time.

    Almost all you’re post are usefull and interesting but this is great.Se ya

  25. Back to the basics, no? I love it. I think 2009 will see more bloggers returning to these writing roots, and I see this as a good thing. It’s a lot easier to get over the mental obstacles of blogging if you can use this laser-sharp focus. Great motivation for the new year.

  26. I love the concepts of link karma and commenting. Help your fellow blogger and it will come back to you. Blogging can be a non-zero sum world

  27. most people recommended “Writing outstanding articles”..its easy to said but hard to do ..:)

  28. Leo

    Using a timer is a must because time has a way of escaping us whenever we start reading and commenting on other blogs. If I don’t use a timer of I’m asking for trouble. I have a timer of my desktop called “Cool Timer.” Simple but effective, it helps me get the job done.

    I agree, knowing your limits and focusing on both it and your strengths or overall goes is central to ones growth. Thanks for sharing your story. I’m starting Grad school again in two days and my time will be of the essence. I may have to resort to employing a similar type of system you used on writing quality blog posts for an hour per day and then continue writing the next day. Interesting idea on guest posting… but I think I see where you’re coming from.

    What rules do you have with regard to guesting posting? As far as, did the bloggers come to you or did you nicely request to post on their blog?

    You’re right about networking and email, forgot about it- don’t let it drain your time! When I first started blogging, these areas were my downfall. I check my stats maybe once a week, I don’t look forward to seeing those numbers, instead, I like to see comment numbers- interaction and community involvement is what matters. :)

    Leo, thanks for sharing! I enjoyed it.

    -Mig

  29. First off, you have provided some reassurance that I am on the right track with my own blog, so thanks.

    I do wonder, as some of the other commenters, how to get a guest post opportunity. Should you actually e-mail the post ahead of time or try to establish a relationship before providing the actual text?

    Thanks so much for the info!

    Shannan
    http://www.livingawholelife.blogspot.com

  30. Hello Leo. I’m still fairly new to blogging and so see myself doing a lot of the things you’ve called non-essentials. For example checking stats, tweaking blog design, and reading too many other blogs.

    I’m also spending 3+ hours a day blogging, but end up posting only a fraction of the posts I write.

    So thank you for the tips! I’m going to work on becoming a better and more efficient blogger.

    -KyNam

  31. Thanks for the tips. I often spend too much time on the computer and blogging is definitely a big part of it. I just found this blog article through a recommendation on twitter and felt it was something I really needed. Again, thank you.

  32. Great post, Leo. I have recently started blogging and was asking myself some questions earlier tonight which have all been answered in this article. I am primarily interested in getting more traffic, if only to increase the amount of discussion that will take place.

    Like Jess who posed above me I am extremely interested in the idea of doing guest posts on blogs. Can anyone shed light on the best way to approach this? I’m mostly interested in what kind of etiquette one should apply when making ‘first contact’ with another blogger regarding a guest blog.

    Cheers,

    Joel

  33. Totally agree. Sometimes we just waste time over focus on certain area & forgot important tasks.

    Nice sharing, thanks.

  34. Now that’s what I call a useful article. Thanks for this, Leo… you just blew my biggest complaints (excuses?) right out of the water.

  35. Very good tips. Thanks for sharing.

  36. One thing I have never done in my 2-year blogging history is writing guess posts. Link-bait is a lot, as I’m writing a gadget blog, which quite some times, we do a blog post via other blog posts..

  37. you are totally right .Last week, i really identify write content is the most important key.But i think 70% people have experience to spend time to do some Non-essentials.

  38. Guest posts are great not only because they get your name out to a different audience, but because they allow you to refine your craft at another’s home.

  39. Another great post. Thank you for the reminder about limiting our time, and setting aside a certain amount of time for certain online tasks. It is just too easy to spend endless hours and not really feel like you’ve made progress. You are right that an hour of focused time can be way more productive than 3 hours of unfocused. I am definitely encouraged to limit myself starting now. Thanks

  40. *sob*
    This is so true. Articles like these really are worth reading. Its so straight to the point. Definetely a blog post worth bookmarking. Makes me want to buy his book.

    Thanks for sharing this information. It really does come in handy to follow you on twitter. Otherwise i wouldn’t have read this post.

  41. With minimalize our blogging time to productive way, it can be so impressed. Thanks to share your mind

  42. I’m sure Darren will also chime in, but to comment on Jess’s question — I’ve been approached by other bloggers to provide guest posts, but right now I’m looking to do more guest posting so am actually pitching ideas to other bloggers myself. I haven’t been super picky about byline. My philosophy is, make it as easy as possible for the other guy/gal, so I included my byline, blog title, everything he’d need to post, and that way my byline and bio were exactly what I’d want them to be.

  43. Thank you for sharing this information. I found it very informative and useful as I am still navigating through the world of blogging.

    Wishing you a scent-sational 2009!

    Patty Reiser

  44. Great collection of advices. Even I like the idea of setting aside a fixed amount of time for getting my blogging done.
    As I am writing on different blogs (and in different languages at that, which sometimes requires some time to adjust), my daily amount of time per blog unfortunately does not even come close to one hour.
    However, I have started to allowing allocating more time to different blogs on different days and minimizing the time for the other ones that day.

  45. Thank you, this post is exactly what I needed to be reminded of: don’t get sucked in! It is easy to get distracted, especially with everything going on in the world today. I definately like the idea of closing the browser while writing posts. I’ll be making that a normal practice. Thanks again, Mr. Leo and thanks for posting Mr. Darren.
    Sincerely Ron
    http://www.lucrativenicheblogging.com

  46. very interesting article, I agree with all the points reported in it

  47. EXTREMELY informative article, Leo! Thanks!

  48. ~”Minimise Non – essentials”….I think ‘ll print that up in big letters and stick it up over my computer ! Thanks :)

  49. wonderful post! i really needed an article like this, im in a juncture where i can spend only minimial time blogging and this post will help me a lot, i’m pretty sure i’ll refer back to maintain my focus and eventually make my blog successful while getting everything else other than blogging (like exams) done as well.

    thanks again Leo and Darren.

    Luqmaan

  50. Interesting post. It’s good to know where to focus my time, and to know what I can do better. I haven’t yet taken the time to explore guest posting. It’s that time thing. But I’ll give it more thought this year.

    Thanks,
    Jackie

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