Want More Blogging Success? What Happens When You Find It.

This is post number one hundred and four this year. It was meant to be my one-hundredth post, but life got in the way (I’m not going to bore you with the details), and my Wordless Wednesday post from a few weeks ago earned the honour of being post number 100.

When you think about it, one hundred and four posts in ten mouths seem like an awful lot. Am I overwhelming readers with too many posts, or do you want more? I’m averaging nine monthly posts, which appears to have become a good balance.

If you asked me, ‘Am I publishing too many posts?’ I’d respond, ‘Do what feels best for you.’ However, we should never forget our audience, so there’s no harm in reaching out and asking. Without you (my audience) reading these posts and engaging with me, this blog would be like arriving on a barren planet. And nobody wants that.

I’d be interested to know how many posts you have published in 2024 and if you’re happy with that number. Let me know in the comments.

Let’s discuss other blogging topics

Did you see my recent post about whole blog posts being shown in emails? No? It’s titled ‘WordPress: Excerpts Are Working Again!‘ It’s worth reading if you only want an excerpt of your posts to show in email notifications and want visitors to visit your blog to read them. Reading posts by visiting a blog is a much better experience than reading them by email, especially since some blocks do not appear in emails, making posts look odd and broken.

There are many reasons to encourage visitors to visit your blog, one of which is that they are more likely to engage with you if they are on your blog (rather than reading from an email). Furthermore, visitors can explore your blog, catch up on posts they have not read, and check any links. This brings me nicely to the subject of engagement.

Are you engaging or comment spamming?

As regular visitors to my blog know, I am passionate about engagement in the blogging world. Recently, I came across an alarming article stating that engagement has decreased to an all-time low in blogging. How sad is that? However, when you look at some blogs with low engagement or, conversely, blogs with numerous non-engaging comments, it is evident that this is happening.

Here’s an example. I recently discovered a writing challenge blog and wanted to get involved. But when I checked out some of the comments left, I knew that participating would not be worthwhile. With lots of non-engaging comments such as ‘Nice one’ and ‘great attempt” being left on stories, nobody wanted to engage with one another. It was a barren planet. I left with a heavy heart.

When I publish a post, it’s the engagement I crave. So when I publish a short story or piece of flash fiction, I look for feedback beyond being told it was a great story. Engaging feedback is critical for all of us to improve our writing.

Do you agree? Do engaging comments help to improve your writing?

Take action if you want engagement

This may seem like a shock-horror move, but I’m now marking comments such as ‘nice’ and ‘beautiful post’ as spam. Leaving short comments all over the blogging world is like leaving spam everywhere. We all know how spam can cause frustration and diminish the enjoyment of blogging.

One main reason readers do not leave engaging comments is a lack of time. However, many who offer that excuse leave non-engaging comments everywhere. They spend the time they could have used to leave an engaging comment, posting numerous non-engaging comments everywhere. The flash fiction challenge I mentioned earlier seems to confirm this.

Some bloggers believe that nobody will leave comments on their blogs if they don’t comment, so they leave short, non-engaging comments everywhere. Honestly, that’s a crazy thought.

Before I finish discussing engagement, I want to reassure everyone that they should not feel obliged to leave comments on any of my posts. I won’t be upset if you don’t comment, but I will mark comments as spam if they are those pesky, non-engagement comments I mentioned. One engaging comment every once in a while is worth a thousand non-engaging comments.

I don’t know about you, but it makes all the difference if somebody wants to engage with me and does so in a way that proves they’ve read the post and are interested. Do you agree?

Please preview your posts before publishing them!

Did you know you can preview your posts before publishing them? It seems that some bloggers do not know they can do this. From seeing upside-down images to posts with a terrible and hard-to-read layout, there is no excuse for anyone not to preview their posts before publishing them. It’s so simple to do.

Before publishing a post, click the little ‘laptop computer’ symbol at the top right of the page on which you are drafting the post. You will be able to see a preview of your post as it will look on a desktop computer, tablet, and mobile phone. Plus, and this is fantastic news, WordPress has now moved the ‘preview email’ option to the same menu for how your post will look in an email.

Image showing the preview post and email option on WordPress.
Always preview your posts and WordPress notification emails before publishing them.

Thank you for making that option more accessible to find, WordPress.

There is no excuse for sloppiness in ensuring your posts and WordPress notification emails are at their best for your audience.

Finally, how are your blogging stats performing?

I’m delighted that my blogging statistics have rocketed this year. I’ve surpassed last year’s total number of visitors and views to my blog. But to make things even better, 2024 is on track to be my best year ever (in the ten years I’ve blogged) in terms of viewing statistics and engagement. I believe this disproves those who tell you that you must publish posts every day for your blog to be successful. You don’t need to force yourself to blog every day.

A blog’s success depends not on how often it publishes posts but on the quality of those posts.

Thank you to everyone who visits my blog, reads my posts, and engages with me. Without you, Hugh’s Views and News would never have reignited my passion for writing and engaging with others.

How are your blogging stats this year? Tell me in the comments section.

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97 responses to “Want More Blogging Success? What Happens When You Find It.”

  1. […] gonna focus more on leaving comments as well to get the discussion going in the blogosphere. That’s a tip after reading Hugh’s post about it. Hugh also left a comment which made me a bit braver, so I’m trying this out and we’ll […]

  2. V.M.Sang avatar

    Hi, Hugh. First I would like to thank you for your helpful posts.

    I try to blog once a week, usually on Tuesday. Sometimes I can’t manage Tuesday, and sometimes I find I have something to say that can’t wait, so I do an extra post.

    I used to stress about posting regularly on Tuesdays, but I decided to chill out. If I can’t post Tuesday, it’ll be another day, or even none that week.

    I usually try to give comments that are more than spam, but occasionally I’ve been guilty of it, I’m afraid. In future, I’ll just ‘like’ a post rather than post a meaningless unengaging reply.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      You have an excellent attitude for blogging. I love this bit of your comment –

      ‘but I decided to chill out. If I can’t post Tuesday, it’ll be another day, or even none that week.’

      As I said in the previous comment, the occasional short comment is acceptable. It’s when all you’re doing is leaving those short, non-engaging comments everywhere that it can be like leaving spam. But there’s also nothing wrong with clicking the ‘like’ button after reading a post and moving on.

  3. Treechange Life avatar

    Hugh, your blogging frequency is exactly right – no sooner does it occur to me that I haven’t heard from you for a while than bam there’s your next valuable post! Thinking of my blog, I’ve only published twice this year and that makes me very sad – I’d like to publish each month but battle perfectionism and self-confidence. I’d love to be part of a blogging group which supports each other. I have lots of ideas, but each blog idea takes me soooo long to birth! I need to trust my relative process. I spend a lot of time consuming other blogs and would like to find that consuming/creating balance. Thanks for another great post.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Don’t feel sad for not having published more posts. Be proud of what you have published, and draft your next post only when you have something to say and the time to do it. Even if it means publishing once every three months, it’s better than not publishing at all.

      Some of my posts can take weeks to write. I’m not a fan of posts that are written and published immediately. You can always tell which ones have been rushed, and they generally get little, if any, engagement apart from short, non-engaging comments from the same readers.

      I’m glad this post has helped.

  4. TanGental avatar

    Ah, me. If only I was as good as my intentions.. the odd short comment does slip out. I will take myself to a dark place and impose corrective measures
    As ever, thanks for the tips; excerpts turned on, cap’n!
    I’m not sure how many posts this year. Less than before because of the mid year break. Still, I’ve not yet found it a chore and have taken away the important lesson; blog when I have something to blog about, not to some self-imposed schedule.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      The odd short comment isn’t bad; it’s the ones from the same bloggers who leave nothing but short, non-engaging comments everywhere I’m referring to, Geoff.

      Not finding blogging a chore is always an excellent sign that you’re not allowing blogging guilt and stress to ruin the enjoyment blogging brings.

      I don’t have enough fingers and toes to count the number of bloggers who announce a blogging schedule only to fall away because of the stress it can cause. Blog as and when you have something to say, rather than believing that your blog will become a dead planet if you don’t publish something every day.

      1. TanGental avatar

        It can be a tough lesson to learn, that not posting doesn’t mean people will ignore you in the future. I wonder how many who we’ve seen over our ten years blogging (yes I’m a 2014 baby too) have disappeared from self induced stress.

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          I certainly know of a few who left blogging because they felt guilty that they couldn’t keep up with reading and commenting on all the posts of the blogs they follow. We all go down this road, but there’s also an escape route of not worrying if we can’t keep up. One action I took to help was to unfollow many blogs I was only following because they followed me. All of the ones I unfollowed weren’t really publishing content I was interested in. I just felt obliged to read and comment because they were doing the same with my blog. That was a big mistake. And I felt much better once I realised the mistake I was making.

  5. petespringerauthor avatar
    petespringerauthor

    I share your philosophy, Hugh. Likes mean nothing to me because it takes next to no effort to do that, and we know that some people like our posts without reading them. I find those serial likers a bit amusing. Do they think we won’t notice they’ve liked eight of our posts in two minutes? 🤣 It’s always about engagement for me because I want to interact with my readers.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I never check or want to know who has pressed ‘like’ on any of my posts or those of other bloggers, Pete. As you rightly say, I want to give my time to readers who wish to engage. ‘Like’ spammers should be ignored, including those who click ‘like’ on all the replies I leave. They’ll never get my attention.

  6. Sam avatar
    Sam

    I appreciate the tip on not Spamming but engaging. I had thought I should reply to every comment on my blog, but often there isn’t much to reply to other than a “thank you” for commenting. I’m trying to respond if a new thought, or to converse in differing opinions but some times they’re just staying they agreed with my post.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      I always find that those comments where all you can say is ‘Thank you’ are best dealt with by simply acknowledging the comment with a ‘like.’ They obviously do not want to engage by leaving such comments, so I would not worry too much about it. Engage with those who clearly show they want to engage with you rather than those who are simply just leaving a comment to inform you that they visited.

      I’m glad this post has been helpful, Sam.

  7. AM avatar

    This post was really needed as well for me. Thanks for sharing. I agree with you on a lot of things you wrote. I also mark too short comments as spam. Still, both comments and views are so far down it’s devastating sometimes to see it. I’ve written a few more personal posts lately that I really want people to read and comment on, but they get like 9 views and at best one comment. Something has happened with WordPress and it’s such a sad development.

    I’m glad your stats are booming, though. I hope I will get the stats back along with everybody else that suffers from this.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Don’t let the drop in stats and engagement disappoint you. It happens to all of us at some point in our blogging journeys. However, if it continues, I recommend taking a step back and examining your blogging strategy closely so you can determine why it’s happening and fix the issues. I’ve not seen anything in the WordPress forums about it being a bug on the platform. From what I’m hearing, stats are up, although engagement is a little down for many.

      Followers will read what interests them. For example, I have little interest in poetry, posts that do nothing but complain (where the blogger is doing nothing to help themselves) and posts from bloggers outlining their everyday lives. I’m also not interested in posts where bloggers answer questions (unless it’s about blogging) or where they have been tagged to write and publish a post. But that’s me. Others will find those kinds of posts interesting. Some readers will pick and choose which posts to read, especially if you publish a lot of posts in a short space of time. They only have so much time to read and comment, so your posts need to be ones they’ll definitely not want to miss.

      1. AM avatar

        That’s some great insight. Thanks!

        I’ve been doing what I’ve been doing for months so I don’t understand if it’s something I’ve created. Perhaps the weekly blogging challenges are becoming too boring for people, but without them – I’d often have no clue on what to write and I feel that the daily writing is very important to me.

        I would like to write more personal, but even those posts lately have been getting such few reads that I feel like it must be something else wrong here.

        some of the blogs I follow have talked about dwindling stats, so I’m not wrong, but it keeps being so low. My stats are less than half now and it’s been like that for months.

        Perhaps blogging is only working if you do poetry? I don’t know. I am not that interested in that either to be honest.

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          There are many ways to attract visitors to our blogs. We shouldn’t just rely on the WordPress Reader and emails. I get a lot of visits from social media, especially X, but you have to be prepared to work hard and engage with other users there, too. Otherwise, it won’t work.

          SEO is also essential for attracting visitors, especially new ones. After the WordPress Reader, Google and other search engines have brought me the most traffic. However, SEO won’t rank blogs with no engagement (or those short, non-engaging comments) or blogs with poor content and weak post titles. Whenever I create a blog post title, I ask myself, ‘What would make me want to click ‘read more’ or find out more?’ I go with that, although I also use a free headline creator for my blog post titles. That also helps bring in traffic. And whilst not everyone will read the post or leave a comment, some do and then become regular contributors.

          1. AM avatar

            Yeah, I tried social media but that’s a dead approach unfortunately. I did what I could to attract people there but to no avail at all, so yeah.

            I have my blog on Google, but very few clicks even though I try to write good headlines and have a description that should make people click and read, but they don’t.

            I have to rely on the reader at this stage. With my previous blogs, most of the readers came from Facebook (99% of them were friends) and a lot came from Google.

            Having a blog on WordPress.com is not that SEO friendly it seems, unless you pay for the business plan. You get more SEO features with that plan.

            1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

              You don’t need the business plan to get noticed on Google or other search engines. It’s all about using keywords and ensuring your posts are engaging and not duplicated (including the title). It’s one of the reasons why I removed the reblog button from my blog. SEO dislikes duplicated posts and duplicated blog post titles. It’ll rank them lower.

            2. AM avatar

              I know, and I don’t repeat titles and make sure I don’t. I use the correct tags as well and not too many.

              Google sucks at indexing my blog, though. About half are indexed last time I checked. And I can’t force it, because Google fails to index them no matter what I do so I just have to wait for Google to index and that might take years.

  8. Danny Watts avatar

    Hugh, did you resolve the email excerpt issue. I found WP reset a handful of settings and email excerpt was deactivated. I turned it back, emailing excerpts again.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      Yes, Danny, I resolved it with WordPress. It took some time, but I eventually reached someone who was very helpful. I’ve included a link outlining how to turn the excerpt setting back on. However, many bloggers who used that setting have still not turned it back on yet, and some of their emails look awful.

      WordPress: Excerpts Are Working Again!

      1. Danny Watts avatar

        I guess that makes me a lucky one (LOL). Doesn’t happen often. It would be in my best interest to review your link. Thanks Hugh

  9. Erika avatar

    I think so too, people should post as much or little as they want. Some bloggers have their routines on particular days and topics (like I have) and others post as they feel like – once a week, a month, or maybe several times daily. Some use it as a therapy tool and others to simply enjoy the communication with the world. However, it is totally individual and that is cool. I don’t feel overwhelmed by anyone, regardless of how much they are posting, since I only read when I have time anyway. So, keep posting as you enjoy it, Hugh.

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      What a great attitude you have towards blogging, Erika. If only those who feel obliged to read and comment on everything could hear or read your advice, it would do so much good and give a lot of reassurance. I always say, ‘Blogging is a marathon, not a sprint.’

      1. Erika avatar

        You know, if had not changed my blogging attitude to this point, this blog might not exist anymore. I had to find a solution that keeps me enjoy blogging, makes me share posts on a regular basis, but does not build up pressure. So, here I am! And your tips btw. confirmed me a lot! Thank you, Hugh!

        1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

          Likewise, Erika, if I had not changed how I blogged, my blog would have been deleted. At one point, this was a serious thought, but I’m glad I took advice, stepped back, and changed my approach.

          1. Erika avatar

            Glad you did, Hugh 😉

  10. Kay Castaneda avatar

    Hi Hugh, I’ve posted 18 blogs so far in 2024. My goal was to post twice a month. I feel I’m doing ok, but I want to get better. For me, blogging is work but I enjoy it. My main activity is working on my creative writing.

    I agree that bloggers must preview what they’re writing before publishing. In one of your previous posts, you talked about how to reduce blog notifications from others. I followed your advice. It helped so much! I can’t read everything! I really like one woman’s blog but she publishes every day so I choose one or two to read each week. Congratulations on reaching 100 posts this year!

    1. Hugh W. Roberts avatar

      When blogging is work, I think many aspects change, Kay. But when it’s done for pleasure, people shouldn’t get themselves into a frenzy believing they have to publish as many posts as possible and read and comment on everything.

      I’m delighted that previous advice I have given has helped. And choosing which posts to read and comment on rather than believing you have to read and comment on everything is the best advice. Well done for already doing that.

      And thank you answering my questions in this post.

Feel free to leave a comment. Engagement helps keep blogs alive and forms community.

I’m Hugh

Welcome to my blog. I’m delighted to have you here. This is the place to discover tips on blogging and WordPress, flash fiction, photography, and more. I enjoy engaging with my readers, so please feel free to explore, join discussions, and contact me. I’m happy to assist! Find out more about me and my blog by clicking the ‘Meet Hugh’ button.

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