5 Things You Should Do While Building a Personal Blog

by Brian Burns on 3 March 2010

in Blogging, Social Media

Personal blogs, developed for personal branding outside a company or organization, are becoming increasingly popular. The people who develop them are finding that the increased name-recognition, online popularity, and search engine optimization benefits can actually be helpful for their business goals. Notable examples include: www.tammycamp.com, www.gwenbell.com, and www.andrewhy.de.

This article covers 5 things you should do if you’re considering building a personal blog, or want to improve the one you already have. It’s not intended to be a step-by-step guide — there’s much I won’t cover here — and other points will be covered in later posts.

1. Find a design that suits you

It’s important that personal blogs be well-designed, both for aesthetics and to make it easy for visitors to find and use the content you produce. It’s important also for your design to reflect you the person, as it’s the first impression many people will get of your personal brand.

I prefer Wordpress as a blogging platform, and with a eaily-customizable theme like Thesis, it’s relatively simple to modify your blog with your own pictures, colors, and layouts. Only moderate skill in HTML/CSS is required.

2. Make your contact info accessible

In ideal cases, visitors to your personal blog will want to reach out, and extend their contact with you — whether it’s to propose a project, exchange an idea, or just to say hello.

By making your contact info invisible, or nearly impossible to find, you make it hard for them to take this step, and lose out on the benefits of a possible connection. Instead, feature your contact info in an accessible place, and make it as easy to find as possible.

I usually recommend that contact info be put somewhere on the front page of a personal blog, as well as be put in a separate ‘CONTACT’ page.

3. Be consistent with your posting

It goes without saying that a personal blog needs great content in order to thrive. What people often overlook, however, is the consistency with which content is published. It’s important to establish clear patterns of posting so visitors know what to expect, and have a reason to check back on a regular basis.

The actual timing and amount of posts will vary from blog to blog, and should be determined with what best fits your schedule and goals. Though some bloggers recommend up to 2-3 posts/week, I think 1 post/week is sufficient in most cases.

4. Integrate your social media profiles

Personal blogs work best when they act as portals to your other personalities and profiles online. A personal blog should be linked with your social media presence(s), receiving traffic from places like Twitter and Facebook, and directing traffic out to the same places. The interactions that happen around your blog, thus, can carry over and grow in other places.

The easiest way to integrate your social media profiles on your blog is with customizeable ‘buttons,’ that lead back to your profiles. A wide variety of these buttons can be found at www.mysocialbuttons.com.

5. Interact with other blogs

Personal blogs work best not as singular points of information in a vast Internet universe — these usually come off as narcissistic — but rather as pieces that contribute to a whole. Personal blogs work best when the author plugs themselves into other blogging communities, and regularly puts energy into building outside relationships.

This can be done by guest posting on other blogs, writing posts that are part of a series with other authors, commenting on other blogs, or linking to content from your blog and social media profiles. Mix up these approaches for the best results.

Conclusion

There is no silver-bullet to building a great personal blog. The most successful approaches integrate blog building and posting best practices, and allow ample time for the blog to grow slowly over time. Remember that the biggest benefits might come months, if not years, down the road.

  • Ryan Cook
    Great content! I'm trying some of these things on a new site I setup, but doing them for myself? Not motivated enough for that yet...
  • Thanks, Ryan -- I'm glad you found it useful
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