Bloggers: find your voice! | Her Nashville, May
In this month’s issue of Her Nashville Magazine, I touch on a topic I’m often asked about: how to establish a consistent, relevant voice for your blog.
It took me years to find my blog(s) obsession, tone and style. Along the way, I discovered that while search engines love–and drive many, many random surfers to–my posts about nail polish and Steve Sullivan’s hockey comeback, my actual readers prefer less “stuff I like” and more teachable-geek-and-career-moments. My metrics spoke to me; I listened and adjusted my content accordingly.
If you’ve been blogging for a while, I’d love to hear about how you’ve found and continue to fine-tune your written voice. In the meantime, here’s a teaser from my May column:
Obsession is key.
Pick a topic and make it the only thing you write on and rant about. For example: my FlackRabbit blog is about PR and geek stuff. When folks visit my site, they expect to read about those things and nothing else. I love hockey, but I don’t blog about it. I also love my husband, but never write about married life. When we have kids one day, I will not turn FlackRabbit into a journal about motherhood. If I did any of those things, I’d lose my audience. The plain truth is that hockey, hubby and kiddos aren’t what my readers signed up for and I respect that.Get to the point.
The headline and first paragraph of each post should clearly explain what your visitor is about to read. If she has to try too hard, you’ll lose her. Sound harsh? Think about your own Web-surfing strategy—you know what you want and the Instant Gratification Fairy on your shoulder says you deserve relevant information NOW. If you don’t find them within the first few seconds, you move on. Your audience is no different. Sure, they love you, but they are kind of busy. They’ll appreciate the fact that you don’t waste their time.
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you definitely need to be passionate about your blog subject otherwise it’ll just get lost in the ether. that said, you also need to be diplomatic and to a degree, unbias. it took me sometime to develop useful content that wasn’t just a rant/appraisal.
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Hi Matt, thanks for your comment! I couldn’t agree more; it takes some time and discipline to advance past the “rant” stage of a blog. If you dig through my archives, you’ll see those posts. If I rant now-a-days, I at least try to include some teachable moment for my readers…
Margie´s last [type] ..Bloggers- find your voice! Her Nashville- May
Lol, I dread to think back to some of my old blogs which comprised of nothing but “I hate the world” type of stuff! I did start blogging a long time ago when I was in my teens (when there was no such thing as WordPress and everything was done manually!)
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