Simple Ways You Can Improve Your Blog
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If your creative business relies on your content marketing or if your content is your business, there are a few ways to improve your blog.
As the year comes to a close, you’re celebrating your yearly achievements but also planning how to improve and grow your business in the new year.
I’ve been doing a lot of number crunching, thinking about how I can reduce my expenses and overhead while increasing my profits.
I’ve been strategizing about how to monetize my blog content, how to grow my freelance content writing business and be more productive with managing my time.
A part of that process has included reviewing my blog and thinking about how I can make it better. The process made me realize that there are parts of the blog that have been neglected. There are pages, posts, images and links that need to be fixed up and remedied.
If your creative business relies heavily on your blog or if your blog is your business, then you don’t want to lose out on attracting new readers, subscribers, clients, customers or income.
There can be quite a few things to be done to improve your blog for 2018. It’s easy for the every day stuff to get abandon when we’re all so super busy trying to be overnight success stories.
But it’s the smaller tasks that can sometimes be the most important and what’s going to keep your blog looking and running at its best.
Simple Ways You Can Improve Your Blog
1. Review Your Mission Statement. Developing your mission statement and identifying the purpose and goals of your business is really the first step in brand positioning.
Mission statements are for anyone—freelance service provider, consultant or blogger—who wants to better understand who they are and what they intend to do.
A mission statement reminds you why you are blogging in the first place. It helps you, your team, and even your audience understand what you are doing.
As we head into the new year, review your mission statement—whether for your blog or your business, to ensure its still clearly defines your approach, how you like to do business and explains your “why.”
2. Do a Brand Audit. The purpose of a brand audit is to figure out how your business is performing in the eyes of your customers or readers.
A detailed audit should show how your brand supports your overall goal—be it to increase traffic, retain readers, increase subscribers, or improve sales conversions.
An internal brand audit could include examining your brand positioning, voice, brand values, culture, USP and product.
You should also do an external brand review. Do an analysis of your logo and other brand elements, advertising, SEO and social media.
In doing a brand audit, don’t just look at your colours and whether or not choosing pink or yellow was the proper choice back in 2017.
Consider your target customers, your marketing plan, your niche area of business, your competitors and your pricing. Review your social media engagement and website traffic.
An ongoing analysis of your brand’s performance will inform if your targets are being reached.
3. Do a Blog UX Audit. A
Most of us (present company included) are not
. But we can still use available resources to do our best when it comes to creating the best experience for our audience.Understanding how people view your website is super valuable.
Use sites like Similar Web and Visitors Detective to see how your competitors stack up.
Through a UX audit you can discover why conversions are low, how to enhance onboarding, why retention may be low, or any other issue you’re currently experiencing with your blog.
4. Create an Editorial Calendar. In its most basic form, a content calendar is a schedule of what you’ll post and when you’ll post it.
Pro bloggers and those who blog for business (like us) know that the best way to manage our blog content is by using a blog editorial calendar.
When you’re a growing company, your approach to connecting with users and telling your story online needs to grow, too, so using a notepad or “winging” it each week, won’t cut it.
Holidays, sales, and other special dates can’t sneak up on you when you plan for them. Mapping out your schedule will help you define the overarching themes you want to cover each week.
You can use your calendar to plan out your email marketing alongside your social media posts and see areas of overlap that might not have been clear otherwise.
Most importantly, a content calendar will get you in the habit of posting consistently and get your year off to a right start!
5. Create a Blog Post Promotional Plan. The mistake many new bloggers make is writing a handful of short, poorly-written blog posts each week and posting it on their social media channels once.
At that rate, it’ll be hard to grow your blog and increase traffic. More experienced bloggers rely on composing one really great, lengthy (1,000 words) and well-researched blog post, then spending the next two to three weeks promoting it in various formats.
Authoritative blogging website, Blogging Wizard published The Definitive Blog Post Promotion Checklist which rounds up all the ways you can promote each of your blog posts thoroughly.
The checklist includes social media, email lists, online communities and groups, content syndication, leveraging influencers and re-purposing your content.
Don’t just post one and done.
6. Update Your Top-Performing Blog Posts. O
Use Google Analytics to determine which of your posts bring in the most traffic. Then update those posts by adding more text to update for accuracy, review the grammar for clarity, replace outdated stats and replace internal links with more current resources.
7. Send a Survey to Your Email List. The main draw of email surveys is interaction. By sending out a survey, you are essentially giving your audience an invitation to say what’s on their minds.
With a good email survey, you can learn exactly which areas of your business are in need of improvement. An email survey can also play a key role increasing loyalty. This comes from gathering feedback that exposes what customers like, and don’t like about your business.
Use a platform like Survey Monkey to send a survey to your email list. By asking the right questions, you can quiz your audience on areas such as content, product development, services, support and pricing. You can also find out what it takes to keep your customers and audience around.
8. Create an Email Welcome Series. How you “welcome” your subscribers can increase the odds of them engaging early in the customer life cycle and it can improve your list quality.
In MailChimp, you can use automation to make sure each new subscriber receives a welcome email.
Think of it as the start of a conversation. The best welcome programs use a series of emails to build and maintain customer interest.
When someone signs up to your list, you can send them a friendly welcome email series to introduce yourself or say thank you.
E-Book: Blogging Resources
I’ve had my fair share of trial and error with everything from hosting to themes to plugins and editing software. To help you out, I’ve created an e-book with all my favourite websites, tools, apps and platforms.
If you’re just getting started as a blogger or online content creator, download this e-book of blogging resources to help get your started on your blogging journey.
[sdfile url=”https://seegirlwork.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Blog-Editorial-Calendar-Template.xlsx”]
A blog is a living and growing entity. There will be projects you want to complete, services you’ll want to promote, products you want to create and money you’ll need to make. Keep the health of your blog, your business and overall content on the right track.
Photo by Jennifer Brister on Stocksy
Comments: 10
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Habitual Mom
Wow–this is INCREDIBLY helpful. The Blog Promotion concept is especially helpful–it is so easy to get caught posting all over SM when a new blog comes out. Better to be more strategic! Thank you!
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Alethea
@habitualmom:disqus amazing! So glad you found it useful. Yes, strategic planning will pay off in dividends. Thanks for the love!
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Alania H.
Alethea, Alethea, Alethea…This post is absolutely wonderful and informative. I am a new blogger so every bit of research helps when it comes to improving. In this new year, I am learning that everything takes time and organization; and I can truly say that without a schedule or plan you begin to feel lost and rushed. Thank you so much for sharing!
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Alethea
@FortheloveofNia:disqus glad it was helpful! Looking forward to seeing your blog grow in 2018 🙂
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Adam Connell
Hey Alethea,
Just wanted to swing by and say thanks for mentioning Blogging Wizard – much appreciated!