Blog Content Creation - Create High-Impact, Evergreen Traffic Pulling Blog Content Consistently
The challenge most bloggers face is keeping their content fresh, high-impact and laser focused on their targeted market without reiterating what's already been said.
Boring! New content is the only way to keep up with the need to bring new readers and keep old readers coming back.
Don't reiterate what's been said already, say something new better.
#1 - Maintain a diary of new ideas and thoughts.
Write down every idea you have for creating new lively content for your blog.
If you think of it, at some point, you'll use it -- if you can remember it.
By writing down every idea in an idea-journal, you'll have all those complicated ideas waiting when the content comes to you.
Record each idea you have, even if it seems inappropriate at the time.
Eventually, that idea may be just the concept that rocks your blog to the top of the charts.
Just imagine, an idea you didn't think had merit, shows up just in the nick of time to save the day and drive massive amounts of traffic to your blog because it wasn't the same old thing you'd been posting for ages.
Rock those ideas forward with creative concept projection and make them work for you.
Just because you've used an idea from your idea journal, don't mark it off.
You'll be using those ideas over and over again.
#2 - Focus ideas and concepts on topic discussions.
Coffee drinkers don't always talk about coffee in a coffee shop.
The ideas that spring forth from a coffee shop discussion more often than not, have nothing at all to do with coffee.
They're brilliant and relevant to the coffee shop, just not about coffee.
In fact, in any given coffee shop, the topics of conversation among coffee drinkers is probably relevant from one conversation to another, because folks who visit a given coffee shop live in close proximity with other coffee drinkers.
Your ideas may not be linked in any way to the actual topic of the blog, but they'll be relevant to other discussion topics and your readers if you find a way to connect the dots.
As the writer of your blog post, it is your responsibility to connect those dots.
Bring the reader back to the topic of the blog, even when you're not writing about the topic.
Some writers do so with a relevant connection between the topics.
For instance: I often relate saying my granddaughter spouts in marketing blogs, by mentioning her "marketing techniques" as playful, exuberant and fun.
It works.
#3 - Master the art of personal connection with relationship building blog posts.
When you genuinely care about your reader, the interactive relationship between you and your readers on your blog will become obvious within your posts.
You'll connect specifically with a given audience.
That audience will connect with you.
Every blog post will resonate with your audience and they'll be posting responses, either directly on the blog or to you personally if they have your email address.
You'll know you've achieved your goal once your readers begin telling you their story.
Boring! New content is the only way to keep up with the need to bring new readers and keep old readers coming back.
Don't reiterate what's been said already, say something new better.
#1 - Maintain a diary of new ideas and thoughts.
Write down every idea you have for creating new lively content for your blog.
If you think of it, at some point, you'll use it -- if you can remember it.
By writing down every idea in an idea-journal, you'll have all those complicated ideas waiting when the content comes to you.
Record each idea you have, even if it seems inappropriate at the time.
Eventually, that idea may be just the concept that rocks your blog to the top of the charts.
Just imagine, an idea you didn't think had merit, shows up just in the nick of time to save the day and drive massive amounts of traffic to your blog because it wasn't the same old thing you'd been posting for ages.
Rock those ideas forward with creative concept projection and make them work for you.
Just because you've used an idea from your idea journal, don't mark it off.
You'll be using those ideas over and over again.
#2 - Focus ideas and concepts on topic discussions.
Coffee drinkers don't always talk about coffee in a coffee shop.
The ideas that spring forth from a coffee shop discussion more often than not, have nothing at all to do with coffee.
They're brilliant and relevant to the coffee shop, just not about coffee.
In fact, in any given coffee shop, the topics of conversation among coffee drinkers is probably relevant from one conversation to another, because folks who visit a given coffee shop live in close proximity with other coffee drinkers.
Your ideas may not be linked in any way to the actual topic of the blog, but they'll be relevant to other discussion topics and your readers if you find a way to connect the dots.
As the writer of your blog post, it is your responsibility to connect those dots.
Bring the reader back to the topic of the blog, even when you're not writing about the topic.
Some writers do so with a relevant connection between the topics.
For instance: I often relate saying my granddaughter spouts in marketing blogs, by mentioning her "marketing techniques" as playful, exuberant and fun.
It works.
#3 - Master the art of personal connection with relationship building blog posts.
When you genuinely care about your reader, the interactive relationship between you and your readers on your blog will become obvious within your posts.
You'll connect specifically with a given audience.
That audience will connect with you.
Every blog post will resonate with your audience and they'll be posting responses, either directly on the blog or to you personally if they have your email address.
You'll know you've achieved your goal once your readers begin telling you their story.