Post by account_disabled on Nov 25, 2023 9:00:19 GMT 3
First I do a skimming : I can't read all this material every day, otherwise I would only do that. I try to read in the morning from 8 to 9, then something after lunch and the rest finally in the evening. Reader care: Respond to comments It has always been my passion, not only to write quality content , but also to respond to all comments. Today the trend of closing the comments area in blogs is taking hold , a trend that I do not approve of in the slightest, but everyone is free to do what they want in their own home. Coincidentally, all those who have disabled comments on their blogs are successful people, who still get thousands of daily visits and hundreds of shares.
If we did it, we would have to close the blog. When to reply to all comments? I don't receive so many that I have to sacrifice hours of sleep, but in any case I decided to dedicate half an hour after lunch to this space for those of the new post and reply to all the others who arrive as soon as I can. I prefer to do this, otherwise I risk looking at the blog or Phone Number Data downloading email every half hour to see if there are new comments. Email: the devil's temptation Many people say that constantly checking your email wastes a lot of time and it's true. Only certain segments of the day should be dedicated to email, but I haven't managed to do that yet. So, yes, I'm one of those who checks every half hour. The work email excuse is precisely an excuse: we are human beings, not robots, so if we don't respond immediately, no one dies. The blogger may have other things to do, perhaps he is actually working for you who are eager for an answer.
Or maybe he is in the bathroom (even bloggers go there), or at the cinema (even bloggers get distracted and have fun), or writing a post or doing anything else that he is free to do. The search for ideas: the real engine of the blog This is the most delicate and also time-consuming part. The editorial calendar needs fresh meat every day, it must be filled with good ideas, ideas that generate content, not rubbish as filler.Looking for ideas and use various channels, but mainly my own blog. It may seem strange, after all when you leave a system, you enter other systems that can generate ideas. In fact, many come from outside, from reading other blogs, books, from comments left on my articles. I have never set a fixed time to look for ideas. I generally look at the editorial calendar and see where there are some holes, so I work to fill that void. However, the ideas have always arrived on their own and in the most disparate ways. Last week I was at the supermarket in the checkout line, with 7 beers in hand, and I got inspired for a blogging post.
If we did it, we would have to close the blog. When to reply to all comments? I don't receive so many that I have to sacrifice hours of sleep, but in any case I decided to dedicate half an hour after lunch to this space for those of the new post and reply to all the others who arrive as soon as I can. I prefer to do this, otherwise I risk looking at the blog or Phone Number Data downloading email every half hour to see if there are new comments. Email: the devil's temptation Many people say that constantly checking your email wastes a lot of time and it's true. Only certain segments of the day should be dedicated to email, but I haven't managed to do that yet. So, yes, I'm one of those who checks every half hour. The work email excuse is precisely an excuse: we are human beings, not robots, so if we don't respond immediately, no one dies. The blogger may have other things to do, perhaps he is actually working for you who are eager for an answer.
Or maybe he is in the bathroom (even bloggers go there), or at the cinema (even bloggers get distracted and have fun), or writing a post or doing anything else that he is free to do. The search for ideas: the real engine of the blog This is the most delicate and also time-consuming part. The editorial calendar needs fresh meat every day, it must be filled with good ideas, ideas that generate content, not rubbish as filler.Looking for ideas and use various channels, but mainly my own blog. It may seem strange, after all when you leave a system, you enter other systems that can generate ideas. In fact, many come from outside, from reading other blogs, books, from comments left on my articles. I have never set a fixed time to look for ideas. I generally look at the editorial calendar and see where there are some holes, so I work to fill that void. However, the ideas have always arrived on their own and in the most disparate ways. Last week I was at the supermarket in the checkout line, with 7 beers in hand, and I got inspired for a blogging post.