9 Popular Blogging Tips To Kickstart Your Blog For The New Year

These 9 popular and easy blogging tips will help bring you and your blog success. Are you missing out on any of them?

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Are you missing out on any if these popular blogging tips?

1. Add Excerpts To Your Blog Posts.

Excerpts are a great way to entice readers to click the ‘read more’ link to your post.

Did you know that WordPress offers bloggers a way to add excerpts to posts?

If you don’t add excerpts to your posts, WordPress takes the first 55 words of the post and uses them as the excerpt. This can often cause confusion to readers, especially when sentences are cut off midway.

If the opening sentence of your post does not entice readers, you could be missing out on many more new visitors reading your posts and engaging with you.

I added the following excerpt to this post.

Are you new to blogging or thinking of starting a blog? Are you already a blogger who wants more readers, followers and success for your blog?

These 9 tips will guarantee you success.

Adding experts to your posts is easy and an excellent way to promote and entice readers to want to read them. Here’s how to add an excerpt.

  • On the draft page of a post, scroll down to the except box in the setting section of the post.
Image highlighting where to add an excerpt to a blog post on WordPress
Add an excerpt to your blog post before publishing it.
  • After adding the excerpt, publish or schedule your post.
  • The excerpt will be displayed on WordPress notification emails.

Tip: When drafting excerpts, ask yourself what excerpt would make you want to read the post.

2. Change This Setting And Watch Your Blog Stats Boom.

  • Ensure you view your blog’s dashboard in Default View (not Classic). To do this, click the View button in the top right corner of your blog’s dashboard.
  • Go to Settings – Writing on your blog’s dashboard and look for the Feed Settings box.
  • Turn on the Limit Feed To Excerpt button. Users will then need to visit your site to view the full content of every post.
  • Click the Save Settings button.
Image highlighting the Limit Feed to excerpt only' button on WordPress
Ensure you slide the Limit Feed to excerpt only’ button to the ‘on’ position

3. Engage With Your Audience And On The Posts Of Other Bloggers.

I recently came across a blogger who complained that everyone ignored her. She claimed that nobody left comments on her posts. However, I’d left comments along with other bloggers. The problem was that she only replied to comments with a ‘thanks.’ No wonder other bloggers and I got fed up with leaving comments.

Engagement is a two-way thing.

If you don’t engage with more than a ‘thank you’ to every comment, then visitors will soon get fed up with trying to engage with you.

Make your comments and replies to comments count. Instead of telling a blogger their post was great or that you loved it, expand on why you thought it was great. Most bloggers want to engage, especially when leaving comments that offer feedback and discussion.

By fully engaging with your readers, you’re likely to get them and more visitors wanting to engage with you. They’ll likely follow your blog if they want to engage and see that you engage with others who leave comments.

However, don’t leave dead-end comments where the only response can be a ‘thank you.’ If you’ve nothing of value to add, click the ‘like’ button and move on. Never feel guilty for not leaving dead-end, pointless comments.

The more you engage with your audience and other bloggers, the more you’ll reap the rewards of your blog becoming successful and a place other bloggers will want to visit and engage.

If English is not your first language, then don’t be afraid to leave a comment in your native dialogue. Free online translation tools, such as one from Systran.Com, are available, so bloggers can translate your comment. My thanks to Renard Moreau for recommending Systran.Com.

4. Reduce The Size Of Your Images Before Publishing Posts.

If a blog post takes too long to download, most visitors will likely get fed up and move on.

One of the biggest causes of a blog post taking too long to download is that the images and photos within the post are too big. They also take up lots of space in the media library.

Before placing an image or photo in a post, reduce its size.

The majority of the photos and images in my posts are no more than 900 x 675 pixels. I’ve found that the quality of images and pictures this size are still excellent, plus they take up much less space in my media library.

Many apps and software allow you to reduce the size of images and photos, but many are not free to use. So be careful when choosing.

To reduce the size of images and photos on an iMac, open the image, click on Tools and then on Adjust Size (both found in the toolbar).

Click here to find out how to reduce the size of images and photos in Windows 10 and 11.

How do you reduce the size of images and photos on your blog? Tell us in the comments section.

5. Categorise Your Blog Posts.

Categorising your blog posts is essential when helping visitors find information.

Never categorise any of your blog posts as Uncategorised. It’s not helpful and only makes the blog’s owner look lazy and not care about their followers or visitors.

However, don’t use too many categories. A long list of categories can confuse readers. Cut categories down by adding sub-categories. Click here to find out more about categories and tags.

Important information: You may have already heard the cardinal tagging rule on WordPress.com, but it’s worth repeating: you should never add more than 15 tags and categories (combined) to your post; otherwise, it won’t show up in the WordPress Reader. This cap is used to keep out spam blogs — you need to ensure that your tags are only those most relevant to your post.

6. Blog Post Titles

I’m always shocked by the many boring and dull titles I see bloggers using for their blog posts. They don’t give me any incentive to want to read the post. Other than those who read every blog post some of these bloggers publish, nobody will be enticed to read posts that don’t draw you to click the ‘read more’ button.

Given that the first thing the majority of readers see is your blog post titles, make the titles count. If the titles of your posts are bland, dull, and uninviting, they won’t entice readers to want to read the post. You could be losing out not only on lots of new followers but lots of engagement.

When thinking of a title for your blog post, ask yourself what would make you want to click the ‘read more‘ button.

If you struggle with thinking of good titles for your blog posts, use a Headline analyzer such as Coschedule.com. It’s free to use and challenges you to come up with the best titles for your blog posts.

The title of this blog post scored 92 out of 100. That’s the highest score I’ve achieved when creating a blog post title.

Important Tip: Never duplicate your blog post titles or use the same titles as other bloggers. Why? Because SEO, such as Google and Bing, rank blogs lower that contain duplicated blog post titles.

7. Ensure Links In Your Posts Do Not Close Your Blog Down.

Do you find it frustrating when you click on a link in a blog post and a new window opens on the same page you are reading? When this happens, most readers won’t return to the page they were reading, thus losing the possibility of leaving a comment.

When creating pingbacks or links in posts, ensure you turn on the ‘open in a new tab’ button by sliding it to the on position.

Image highlighting the 'Open in new tab' button on WordPress
Ensure your readers don’t lose the page they’re reading when clicking on links.

Visitors won’t lose the page they’re reading when you switch on this button when creating pingbacks and links.

8. Don’t Become A Blogging Spammer.

What do I mean by a blogging spammer? Somebody who leaves uninvited links to their blogs, blog posts or products in the comments section. This also includes bloggers who leave a link to their blog in all their comments.

Fortunately, the antispam system on WordPress sends the majority of these types of comments to my spam folder.

Only leave links in comments when invited to do so by the blogger you’re leaving a comment for. If you need more clarification, ask first before including any links.

I get comments every day that include uninvited links. Most go straight to my spam folder, and I mark as spam the ones that don’t. You’ll never find comments that include uninvited links in the comments section of any of my blog posts.

9. Slow Down

I’ve witnessed many bloggers become overwhelmed with blogging because they try to do too much in the time they have available to blog. It often results in what is known as Blogging Burnout.

Blog at a leisurely pace. You don’t need to participate in all those blogging challenges. You don’t need to read and leave comments on all the posts of the blogs you follow. You don’t need to follow the blog of every blogger who follows you. Only read and comment and follow the blogs that interest you.

Never feel obliged to read, comment and follow because they read and comment on your blog posts.

Slow down. Enjoy blogging. Never allow it to overwhelm you or make you feel guilty or stressed.

Let’s wrap it up.

  • Rather than allow WordPress to choose what words to introduce your posts, use your own excerpts.
  • If you want people to visit your blog, don’t display your whole posts in the WordPress email notifications. To get more visitors to your blog, switch on the ‘Limit feed to excerpt only’ button. Users will then need to visit your site to view the full content of every post.
  • Engage with your audience when replying to comments and when leaving comments on other blogs. Avoid leaving short, pointless comments that add no value. Always say more than a ‘thank you’ when replying to comments.
  • Reduce the size of images and photos before placing them on blog posts; otherwise, your blog may download slowly and force visitors away.
  • Categorise all your blog posts. Never categorise them as ‘Uncategorised,’
  • Make all your blog post titles count by giving them titles that will entice readers to want to read the whole post. Consider using a Headline analyser for them.
  • When adding pingbacks and links to your blog, always switch on the ‘open in new tab’ button so that readers do not lose the page they are reading when clicking on links.
  • Don’t become a blog spammer by leaving uninvited links in the comments section of other blogs.
  • Take blogging slowly. Don’t try doing too much in a short space of time. You’ll only end up feeling overwhelmed, stressed or guilty if you try to fit everything in when you don’t have the time.
  • Keep blogging a fun and enjoyable experience. If it becomes a chore, step back and take a good look at how you are blogging. Make changes. Only consider quitting blogging if you lose interest.

Are You New To Blogging Or Thinking Of Starting A Blog?

Click here to read an excellent blog post by James Lane that is full of essential information for new bloggers and acts as a gentle reminder for those who already blog.

What’s the best blogging tip you have? Do you have any questions about the 9 tips in this post? Leave them in the comments section.

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87 thoughts on “9 Popular Blogging Tips To Kickstart Your Blog For The New Year

  1. This post is so helpful, I am a fairly new blogger and still finding my way around. Went instantly to set up excerpts as you have advised and straightaway got several visitors to the blogs I have now added excerpts too. Will have to go back and do this to all my posts gradually now you’ve shown me what a difference this simple action can make. Thankyou!!

    1. I am delighted that this post was so helpful for you.

      I don’t know why more bloggers do not use excerpts to introduce their blog posts. It may be that some of them don’t know about this excellent feature.

  2. I really appreciate this post as a new blogger. I’ve just started using the excerpt feature but now that I know it’s important I’ll make it a habit.

  3. Hi Hugh, this is an excellent post that I need just right now. Your instructions are easy to follow, and some of the stuff I never think before. Well, I just started a blog, and I got confused everywhere. This is very helpful. Keep shining.

  4. A very good read! In fact, creating a thriving blog requires a lot of efforts. At first, I thought it’s not very hard, but I was wrong. 😅 Now I feel like it’s as hard as becoming a pro soccer player. I’m not joking!

    1. Many new bloggers believe blogging is easy. Many abandoned their blogs when they found out that it requires a lot of time and hard work. Over the 9 years I’ve been blogging, I’ve witnessed thousands of bloggers come and go.

      1. Another reason people abandoning is probably their blogs remained unnoticed for long and they got tired of trying? I’ve been in and out blogging (running photography websites) for 15 years. 😅 Nowadays, I don’t dream big. Just doing for my self-satisfaction!

        1. You’re right. Unfortunately, too many new bloggers become overwhelmed with blogging. They start to feel stressed or guilty for the wrong reasons. It should always be about fun and enjoyment. You either have to change how you blog or stop blogging when you lose the fun and enjoyment, and it becomes a chore.

  5. I recently unfollowed a bunch of blogs that I rarely read and others that haven’t posted in years. It’s definitely made the WordPress Reader experience less cumbersome for me!

    I used to use the Excerpt function faithfully, but for some reason, I stopped. I think maybe I didn’t like how it made some of my posts appear on my site or in email. I was probably doing something wrong, haha! Recently, I discovered the Read More block in the editor, which allows you to manually add a Continue Reading link to your posts. I like that it allows me to keep paragraph formatting, etc, vs. an excerpt, which puts everything on one line. It’s more useful on longer posts though, so maybe for my shorter posts, I’ll try to figure out how to do this excerpt thing correctly, because I do prefer that the entire post doesn’t go to email! 😀

    1. Oh, you can add more than one line on an excerpt, although I agree that they tend to be more for grabbing someone’s attention almost straight away; otherwise, readers may pass the post by. In any case, they’re far better than not having an excerpt and allowing WordPress to use the 55 words of a post as an excerpt.

      The ‘Read More’ block is handy for enticing visitors to find out more. Good to hear you’re already making full use of it.

  6. Very good tips here. I have never used the excerpt feature. That is a great idea, and I will have to look into it. I have only been on WordPress for about a year (was on Blogger for years before that), so the excerpt feature is new to me. Great post!

    1. Thank you, Pam.

      The excerpt feature is vital for promoting posts and enticing readers to click the read more link. I don’t know why more bloggers on WordPress don’t use them.

  7. This is a great post with tips for when you start a blogging, and really also for any blogger out there. I wasn’t entirely sure what the Excerpt function entails but you explained it very clearly. Lovely to hear the Excerpt is what others see in their WordPress notification emails and feeds when you publish. Do you happen to know if the Excerpt applies to SEO or say, shows up as Excerpts in Google searches?

    I so agree that engagement is a two-way street. When someone leaves a comment on my blog, I try to see things from their point of view and understand their perspective, and then build my comment around what they are trying to say. I try to be open-ended as possible in when responding to comments on my blog and also when I leave comments in other blogs. I try to focus on one or two particular points of the comment or post and engage with that, preferring to take some time reflecting on the comment or post.

    In the past I’ve seen some bloggers who mentioned they have a lack of space for photos on their blogs. So definitely agree that reducing the size of your photos is important. I’ve always reduced my images and storage space has not been an issue for me in the many years of blogging so far.

    When I started blogging I read somewhere that for tags, it’s best to have a maximum of 10 tags otherwise your post may not show up in the WordPress reader. I am not too sure if this is still the case, but as you mentioned, I have heard that it’s definitely not encouraged to have too many tags or categories.

    My blogging tip would be to have fun with blogging. There are no hard and fast rules, but there’s certainly blog etiquette and being considerate to others can go a long way.

    1. Thanks, Mabel.

      There is an SEO setting on the publish page of a draft post where, like excerpts, you can enter your own information. WordPress has also now included an SEO heading in the setting. You can use the exact words as your excerpt, but it’s better to use something different with keywords.

      Good to hear you’ve had no issues with storage space in your media library. You must be doing it correctly.

      The rule is to have no more than 15 tags and categories combined on a post; otherwise, it won’t appear in the reader. I think a far bigger problem is that bloggers use popular tags that have nothing to do with the post’s contents, thus luring readers to posts that do not contain the information they were looking for. It’s a sure way of losing followers.

      Having fun with blogging is what it’s supposed to be all about. I witness far too many bloggers rushing around, leaving short, pointless comments on as many blogs as possible in the limited time they have. That does nothing for their appeal to other bloggers and readers who see that they don’t want to really engage.

      Thanks so much for joining the discussion.

      1. I will have to look more into the SEO setting you mentioned. The Classic Editor is still more friendly to me. Maybe time to try something new.

        It is always lovely to get comments that do engage with your post, and I think it benefits both the reader and the blogger. For the blogger it’s a way to get feedback and for the reader, they are likely to take away something from reading a blog.

        Always enjoy your posts, Hugh. Wishing you a wonderful week ahead.

        1. I’m of the honest opinion that everything seems easier and more friendly until you try something new, give it a try, and ensure you have plenty of practice. The Block editor also offers users access to the Classic editor when needed.

          I’m no longer a fan of comments simply left to say ‘I’ve visited (although I may not have read your post). Most bloggers blog for engagement and feedback, although I know a few who simply blog to share their thoughts and don’t care whether they get comments. It can be a lonely world for them.

  8. As always a very good set of tips, and I can see why you have so many comments, and reads on this post already and thanks for sharing at SSPS.

      1. Congratulations, you will be featured as the top post for last week – What an awesome response on that post.

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