- Blogging 101: Build An Audience Like A Comedian Make
- Blogging 101: Build An Audience Like A Comedian Gets
To succeed as a blogger you must be diligent, methodical and have something to say people are interested in hearing.
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.
Jun 29, 2016 Blogging is a powerful way to grow an audience and build trust with them before pitching your online course. By providing free content through blog posts, you attract people who are interested in learning from you and may end up paying you just to get your advanced material. Blogging 101: Know Your Blogs Audience Find The Ideal Reader Who Loves Your Content Blogging One of the biggest things to help you boost your blogs traffic is to learn more about your blogs audience, and then make sure your content and promotion of content caters to them.
If you're looking to start a blog, or you're already knee-deep in blogging, you've likely scoured the ends of the earth searching for ways you can make money blogging. While there are plenty of options, to really make money blogging, you have to ensure that you hold steadfast and true to a certain set of criteria. If you can do that, then you'll likely succeed in the long term. Fail to do that and you'll see your efforts fall flat at best.
Overall, there are 10 primary ways you can profit from your blog. But before you get there, you have to build a great blog with useful content. Now, that could take a long time, or it could be done in a shorter time span. Gerard Adams built Elite Daily and sold it within three years for $50 million to the Daily Mail.
Of course, that might be an rare example, but there are plenty of blogs out there that are churning six and seven-figures per year like clockwork. It isn't easy, but it is possible. Just like Roger Bannister's four-minute mile, it's much easier to achieve a goal after you've witnessed someone else do it.
So if you're looking to start a blog in the near future, or you're already a blogger, there are certain things that you need to know and adhere to.
What makes a blog successful? Every blogger who's experienced some semblance of success knows that starting a blog isn't a walk in the park. Not only do you need to get it off the ground and address a variety of issues, but you also need to provide constant attention to it. It takes a significant amount of work to get a blog off the ground. This is definitely not for the faint-hearted. Here's what you need to do.
1. Regularly add compelling content.
Not just a couple of times per month. Weekly. You need to build compelling content that attracts a specific audience. The more niche your blog is, and the bigger that niche, the more success you'll experience sooner. Some bloggers, like Mashable's Pete Cashmore, are known to do five or six pieces of content per day, every day, for a year or more before really picking up steam.
Related: How to Start a Blog and Make Money Online
2. Nurture and grow your audience.
It's not just about consistent blog content, you also have to nurture and grow your audience over time. That means responding and replying to comments, building a community through email marketing and creating a Facebook Group where you can converse regularly with them.
Related: 10 Smart Ways to Earn or Build Backlinks to Your Website
3. Engaging through storytelling.
The better you are at telling stories, the more likely you'll succeed with blogging. The fact is that people want to consume engaging content. That happens through the vehicle of a powerful story. The better you are at related concepts through storytelling, the quicker you'll be able to grow your blog's audience.
4. Strategically attracting readers.
You have to strategically attract readers to your blog. Whether that's through understanding SEO and online marketing or by guest blogging on other popular blogs, this has to be done the correct way. The more you know and understand about the mechanics of these strategies, the better and quicker you'll be able to grow your audience over time.
Related: 3 Reasons Why Your Blog Sucks
5. Staying topical.
Blogs are built by staying topical. That's how readers are attracted. If you're writing about technology news, don't start doing self improvement. If you're discussing ways to make money, don't start talking about health insurance. Get the picture? Stay topical so that you can provide some certainty to your audience about the topic and make search engines like Google happy.
And the 10 Ways to Make Money Blogging
There are 10 paths to profit with your blog. The better you understand webinars, sales funnels and conversion rate optimization, the more likely you are to churn a profit early on.
It takes time. So don't get discouraged in the beginning days, weeks or even months. You're going to need some persistent effort to see things through. However, if you stick it out, you could generate numerous streams of passive income from your blog and even potentially quit the everyday hustle and bustle of the rat race.
1. Advertising
Advertising income from platforms like AdSense and others isn't going to necessarily pay the bills unless you have significant traffic. Ads tend to slow a site down, which affects the user's experience, which in turn affects visibility on search engines. It's also important to be careful not to place too many ads above the website's fold.
2. Podcasts
While podcasts might not results in a direct income, they do help to build and nurture audiences, and you can use that platform to further promote your blog and its content. Like blogging, you have to stay consistent with this if you want to build a big audience over time.
3. Affiliate marketing
This is a relatively quick path to profit. Even if you have a small audience, depending on the earnings potential per sale, you could make a decent revenue with affiliate marketing. However, if you have a sizable list, this is far more feasible from early on to promote to your audience.
Related: The Affiliate Marketing Model: A Blueprint for Success in the Gig Economy
4. Events and webinars
Blogging 101: Build An Audience Like A Comedian Make
Another great way to make money from your blog is to host events and webinars. These can be in-person meetups, conferences or virtual gatherings. It's entirely up to you. You'll likely make the most amount of money quickest through this particular source. Think about adding value at the front over all else and the profits will eventually follow.
5. Premium content
Create a premium content area and charge a monthly fee for access. You can place your best content here behind a pay wall. If you have a burgeoning online community and readers trust you to deliver value, and you're great at building instructional blog content, consider premium content with monthly subscriptions.
Related: 21 Ways to Market Your Business Online
Blogging 101: Build An Audience Like A Comedian Gets
6. Digital info products
From ebooks to audiobooks and other digital info products, these make for a great source of revenue from your blog as long as they are relevant to the topic you're known to be writing about. It takes significant work to create value-laced digital info products, but it's well worth it. When you combine these with an effective sales funnel, the sky really is the proverbial limit.
7. Courses
Courses are great ways to make money from your blog. You can sell them directly on your blog, or you can leverage platforms out there like Udemy, Ankur Negpal's Teachable and Jonathan Cronstedt's wildly-popular Kajabi platform. While Udemy takes a significant portion of your revenues, platforms like Teachable and Kajabi are designed more for internet marketers.
8. Physical products (ecommerce)
Blogs are a great way of attracting readers into ecommerce stores through Shopify or another platform. Building useful posts that act as product reviews or other information about the industry your products are in is a great way to entice readers to come and visit your blog.
9. Email marketing
Of course, email marketing is one of the biggest ways to make money blogging, but it requires an audience. You've likely heard that the money is in the list, and no truer words have been spoken. The estimates are approximately $1 for every subscriber on your list per month if you approach it the right way. Build a list early by creating a lead magnet and an email warming sequence, even if you don't have a product to sell yet.
10. Selling services
You can sell numerous services from your blog such as coaching, design, consulting and others as well. No matter how you look at it, blogs are a great source of driving organic traffic. You can also use it for stealth marketing by using a Facebook or Google Pixel to remarket to those users once they've visited your content by presenting a relevant advertisement to them across the internet.
This post may contain affiliate links which may give us a commission at no additional cost to you. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
The idea of blogging is appealing to almost everyone I meet. “It looks like so much fun!,” they say. “And you can really make money?”
It is, and you can, but just like any undertaking, the bloom can fade from the rose quickly, especially if you’re not seeing the growth you anticipated or immediately finding the traction that seems — although it’s usually not — to just happen to some people.
Even more frustrating is when you’ve been blogging for a while, doing all of the right things, following all the blogging tips and tutorials you come across, and after building an audience, it plateaus. Sure, you love having a loyal following, but why do people stop coming on board?
I wanted to share some best practices for bloggers of all niches, sizes, and levels of experience. We are going back to the basics with a little Blogging 101. These best practices certainly don’t guarantee that you’ll become the next millionaire blogger, but keeping these in mind may at least keep the fun and excitement going for a while.
![Audience Audience](/uploads/1/1/9/6/119672061/661507805.png)
Blogging 101: How To Build And Grow Your Audience
START SMART
When you’re first launching a site, it can be very tempting to choose a hosted platform like Blogger or WordPress.com, or to go with a free theme and the most basic of designs. There’s nothing wrong with that, and some of the most successful bloggers started or maybe even still blog that way.
But if you’re serious about growing your blog, and aren’t just testing the waters, I encourage you to go all in. Choose a platform like WordPress.org (my favorite) and invest in self-hosting. It may cost you as little as $5/month but immediately sets you up to be a more professional blogger. It opens up all kinds of opportunities for monetization, should you choose to go in that direction, and it saves you a lot of time and stress if, down the road, you decide to move to self-hosted from hosted.
61 mods. I also find that committing even that small amount of money keeps bloggers motivated — it’s easier to walk away or get frustrated when there’s no skin in the game, so to speak.
And once you’re started, no matter what platform you’ve selected, make sure to immediately paint on your blank slate. Create an About page, a Contact page, a Policies and Privacy page, and set up the categories and/or tags that you think you’ll most often be using on your site. Make the navigation and design as easy and elegant as you can. Simple is fine.
EARLY ON, ESTABLISH A POINT OF VIEW
The beauty of blogging is that it’s your space. It can change as you did. When I started my site in 2007, it was under a different name and I wrote about wanting to lose weight, wanting to start running, and healthy food recipes. After a year or two, the weight was gone, I was a dedicated runner, and I’d realized that I hate cooking, so my life perspective was very different. After a series of poorly executed branding changes, I finally discovered what I’m really passionate about: helping inspire busy people to get fit and helping bloggers grow their sites using social media and marketing. BOOM.
Through these changes, I made sure that my About page and other branding was crystal clear. So if you read my site in 2007, you knew what I stood for, just as you do now. Make sure you let your readers know what they get when they subscribe to your content — and if it changes, make sure your established POV changes, too.
FOLLOW THE 20/80 RULE
You know the 80/20 rule, right? 80 percent of the time do one thing (eat healthy, for example) and 20 percent, do the other (indulge in chocolate cake!). I love this, but in terms of blogging — especially when you want to grow — I think most people think they should spend 80 percent of the time marketing their own content and 20 percent on others’.
It’s the opposite. I encourage bloggers to spend enough time on their own content to create quality posts and promote them well, but spend much more time engaging with other bloggers. Comment on, share, pin, tweet, etc. their links. If you are compelled, do a roundup of other people’s posts on your site so you have the benefit of new content on your site but celebrating the work of others. Truly, this can make a massive difference.
REMIND YOURSELF WHAT YOUR REAL GOALS ARE
One of the biggest things that comes up when I chat with bloggers — either casually or because they’ve booked a consultation with me — is that they get frustrated with their analytics. They feel they don’t have enough pageviews or Facebook fans or Twitter followers or email subscribers or insert-your-metric here.
Most of the time, though, when I ask them why the numbers matter so much, they can’t give me a good answer. I dig deeper and ask why they blog and the answers usually come down to “because I love to write,” “because I want to help people” or “because I want to make money.” The first two reasons really can’t be measured with pageviews. They can be measured in lives changed — emails from readers thanking the blogger and insightful comments shared. And that can mean bloggers with 10 monthly pageviews are a success, based on their own criteria.
Do the numbers matter? Sure, they can. If you’re making money on the number of pageviews or subscribers you have, it can be upsetting to not see them grow. And everyone wants to know that their work is appreciated by as many people as possible. But if you’re getting frustrated, and it’s taking the fun out of blogging, why not take an analytics break? Take 7, 14 or even 30 days away from checking numbers and get back to the why of blogging.
Bottom line? YOU DO YOU. The moment you try to be like everybody else, and follow the same “how-to” guides is the moment you lose the spirit of what makes your site so special in the first place. Growth comes with authentic, passion-driven posts.
- How To Use Twitter Analytics To Build Your Social Media Strategy- Apr 5, 2017
- How To Keep Your Readers Engaged- Jun 29, 2016
- Keys To Creating Content With Viral Potential- Mar 16, 2016
- 5 Tips For Healthy Living- Jan 8, 2016
- How To Back Up Your Blog- Nov 23, 2015
- 7 Tips For Successful Blogging- Oct 28, 2015
- Blogging 101: How To Build And Grow Your Audience- Jul 14, 2015
- 5 Steps To Making Money Blogging- May 20, 2015