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Q&A

How to increase my readers base for my blog?

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I recently started writing a blog. It's about many things: travel, food, my perspectives, photography, comics, movies and whatever thing I feel about writing. I'm using a WordPress blog. Since I'm being new to this, I don't have any readers (community). I don't want to be a famous writer or anything, but it'll be nice to have some people who read my literature.

What I need to know is:

  • Are people willing to read my blog? There are millions of books out there, so will they be interested in what I have to say?

  • If so, how can I show to others that I'm writing and how can I invite them to read? Or how can I create readers for my writing?

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This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/32479. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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2 answers

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Nobody can tell whether people will be willing to read your blog

There is no way to tell. First of all they have to like Blogs. Not everybody likes the style, some people prefer reading mostly books, some prefer mostly newspaper, some prefer magazines, some prefer blogs, ... Therefore the first thing to realize is that your target audience is limited to people who like blogs.

The next thing is the topic of your blog. Or topics in your case. You have a broad range of topics listed, so chances are people will find something there. But they will probably not find it condensed, because they won't like everything on it. You therefore have a target audience that wants a broad range of topics and probably likes your style of writing. People who want to only read something about comics will go to a blog that specializes on comics or they may only read those posts on your blog, so don't be discouraged if some posts will be better received than others.

Getting readers

The easiest way to go about this is to tell your friends and family. Maybe they will like it and tell other friends about it who might have an interest. Of course you shouldn't expect all of your friends and family to read everything from you. It's their decision how they spend their time and they may very well just don't like blogs. That's normal and to be expected, but maybe one or two will spread the word.

Other than that you may want to try and put links to your blog somewhere else. Be careful about advertising. For example randomly mentioning that you have a blog in an answer on StackOverflow may not help you much. But maybe you can go to SFF.SE and answer a few comic questions where you can reference stuff you have written on your blog. As long as you make it clear that it's your blog and make sure that the content you cite from your own site is useful for the question at hand this shouldn't be a problem. Be careful to still give a full answer, which means to cite or summarize everything relevant and only give the link for people who want to check that you cited (yourself) correctly or want to know more about the subject. Links can rot, stuff can be re-arranged and answers should therefore always summarize the important parts on SE.

This, of course, applies to other sites where you may be active, too. I don't know if you happen to be active in any other communities besides SE, but maybe some of them have places where you can show your blog. Maybe a chat? Or certain threads where everyone can post his own blog? Maybe a writers group that might be interested in reading stuff you wrote? There are lots of possibilities and as long as it's clearly not just advertisement, but really related to what that community is doing, mentioning your blog shouldn't be a problem.

There may also be sites that help you in this regard. Sites or chats where you can share the link and look at what other people are doing. This will also help you in getting an idea of what other blogs look and read like.

If all of this doesn't help you may want to have a look at communities you are part of and see whether they have blogs so you can write for them. Here comes my disclosure: I am sometimes writing short stories for the Universe Factory, which is an inofficial blog from WorldBuilding.SE. You can find the posts here on Medium.com. The list of blog posts can also be seen on WorldBuilding's Meta. One of our mods always makes one-week community events, so that people on WorldBuilding.SE can see the title of the newest blog posts and there are chat messages in the Universe Factory chatroom and the Factory Floor chatroom on WorldBuilding.SE. Medium helps you by providing stats like the amount of Views and Reads that you get and while I have not looked into it in detail as far as I know there is some way to monetize your work. You could theoretically for example write a few posts on your own account and a few articles for certain publications, like the Universe Factory. The latter would help you get exposure while the first one is easy to do and could be monetized if that was your goal. As there is already a big community your stuff will be shown to different people in their feeds and it might be easier to get new readers. Leaving the work about setting up the site and maintaining it to a company like Medium allows you as the author to focus on writing articles that your readers will enjoy.

If you can find a community with similar practices you may get a lot more exposure. It may still not be much, but it may very well be more than publishing on your blog alone.

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There is only one thing you need to grow a blog. It must be remarkable. By that I mean it must be worth remarking upon. This can be because it is great, solves a problem, is notably bad, or anything else. The only thing it cannot be is average. No one remembers average.

SO grows because whenever a developer asks a SO user "how do I find out about X?" the SO user can't help but remark that SO is the place to go. This happens because SO is worth remarking upon.

If you have yet to find it, dig up a copy of Seth Godin's "Spreading the Idea Virus". He talks at length about ideas and how they spread.

I assume that you have some readers already. Write for those readers. Write for them in such a way that they feel excited, pleased, enraged, or in some way provoked to a reaction. I strongly recommend writing in such a way that you satisfy a need or solve a problem for them that no one else can or has.

Once you have started to really scratch whatever itch your readers have, they will find it hard not to share your blog with other people. People tend to share things that will make them happy, look helpful, or seem interesting.

You can make sharing easier for them by providing the right social media links for quick and easy sharing, writing catchy headlines (CopyBlogger is a great place to learn about headlines), and asking them to share after a post.

You can reach new readers by guest blogging, commenting with great and insightful comments on related blogs, and generally being sociable. However, if you have not got anything that scratches an itch for your readers, then you are not ready to do that.

Everything that drives traffic to your blog is only of value to the degree that your blog has content that pleases, excites, or energises readers - in other words, it is remarkable.

If your content is good enough you can get away with bad design. Good design reduces the barrier to entry but really what makes a blog grow is great content.

I find that I get good success by monitoring Facebook groups for questions that I can answer and the writing blog posts to answer those questions. Then, when I publish, I share that post with that group knowing that there will be a hunger for that answer.

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This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/32532. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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