The benefits of blogging and blogging etiquette – Lynne Garner
I teach a number of writing
courses that encourage students to earn money from their writing. As part of their
marketing campaign I always suggest that writing a blog can be a good option. The
reasons I give are the very reasons I blog. They include:
- It provides you with the opportunity to exercise your writing ‘muscle’
- Blogging doesn’t cost you anything apart from time – so can be a cost effective marketing tool
- It allows you to create your USP by proving you know your subject – great if you want to impress an editor
- It enables you to reach a worldwide audience and market yourself and your work, even when you're asleep
Now when blogging there are
things you should do and things you shouldn’t. What follows are a few tips that
will hopefully help you create a blog people will want to visit plus a few tips on blogging etiquette.
What you should do when blogging:
One:
Don’t
just use it to sell, sell, sell. Write something of interest; create a blog that is
useful and provides information, just as I’m hopefully doing with these tips.
However remember a blog can be used as a marketing tool and include a link here and
there. Be honest you don’t get anything for nothing. As a reader I’m
more than happy to gain from someone’s knowledge with the only cost to me being
the odd link here and there (which I don't have to follow if I don't want to).
Two:
Include images of anything
related to the blog content, you or your work. It makes the page look more
enticing and allows you to ‘hide’ a little advert - hence the picture of my latest book – see point one.
Three:
Don’t moan about your
in-grown toenail, how bad your day has been or what you plan to have to lunch,
people don’t care. I refer you back to point one, so write something of interest or of use.
Four:
Ensure you proofread and
edit, make the work the best you make it. This will prove you care about your
work and hopefully encourage an editor to contact you and offer that book
contract you’re looking for. As someone who is an Indie publisher it also proves to possible readers of my work that I can string a sentence together.
What you shouldn't do when blogging:
One:
Use it as a tool to send
spam.
Two:
Steal someone’s copyright
(words and or images). You’d be annoyed if it were to happen to you.
Three:
Don’t be rude, cruel, incite
hatred, say anything that can be considered libellous, encourage someone to
break the law or say something you know is untrue. It damages your reputation,
will lose you readers and may lose you work. This also goes if you're leaving
comments on a blog post. What you write reflects on you and once your
reputation is damaged it can take a long time (if ever) to repair that
damage.
Four:
Don’t share information that
is personal to you or anyone else.
Five:
Don't claim to have done something you haven't or be something you’re not.
There will be at least one person who will know you're stretching the truth and
will let the world know. As with point three it will simply damage your
reputation and people remember.
Although writing a blog may
not directly earn you money you may find you get commissions based upon your
on-line presence. I know a couple of my writing friends have and I gained a commission from a US magazine from one of my crafting themed posts.
I hope you’ve learned a
little from this post and I’d love to know why you blog.
Lynne
As I’ve mentioned I teach a
few writing courses I thought just in case anyone was interested I'd included links to three of my
courses that start on the 7th March 2015:
See what I did there?
Comments
Jenny - by personal content I meant stuff that could possibly put yourself or a loved one in harms way. For example I have friends who on their Facebook status share something along the lines of "so a family night out tonight." Great house is empty, let's go rob the place!
Catherine - I have gained work from some of my posts and I know a few other writers who have. I feel they are along the lines of the 'clippings' I used to keep of my work in order to show an editor what I can produce.
Lydia - thankfully at the moment I don't have to impress the younger generation. It's editors I want to get in front of.