Keep Your Eye On The Prize But Don’t Lose Sight Of The Joy Of Pet Blogging
Guest post by Blog Manager Robbi Hess
It's all about blogging, blogging, blogging, tracking your followers and likers and the number of re-tweets
you garner, right? Well, not so much. Yes, you want to make certain that your pet blogging is reaping the rewards you'd hoped for, but for every pet blogger the "rewards" are different. There are pet bloggers that blog for the sheer joy of sharing their love of their pet in particular or pets in general and then there are pet bloggers that blog for the opportunity to become known to make money or to be known as the expert in their niche. Whatever your reason for blogging, make certain you don't lose sight of the joy that you get from the task.
If, like most of us, you are blogging as a way to make money or connections, here are five things you want to avoid when you're blogging and using social media:
- Don’t get bogged down in too many social
media sites. Choose the sites that make the most sense. If you’re a pet
blogger, then the BlogPaws Community should be a jumping in point to
communicate with like-minded pet bloggers. Regardless of whether you use
Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Google+ or Instagram, make a commitment
and build a following and post with regularity. Having a diluted presence
on multiple sites won’t likely help you build a fan base. - Speaking of followers… don’t get
stuck on the numbers. Yes, someone can say they have 20,000 Twitter
followers but are they quality followers? Are they retweeting you? Are
they in your niche? Will they be the followers that you will market your
site or your blog posts to? Numbers may look nice on paper but they aren’t
everything – it’s engagement that matters most. - Do you
have a social media strategy? While posting frequently is great, if you don’t
have a strategy, chances are you’re not getting the engagement you’d hoped
for. A social media strategy includes which sites you will post to in
addition to the type of content you post to each. You need to balance your
posts with “sales pitches” and those that show your expertise and
engagement in your niche. - Keep
track of what works. If you write a blog post that garners you myriad
comments, is that something you can replicate? What was it about that post
that appeared to resonate with your readers? Do you have a trusted circle
of friends that you can run post ideas past to gauge interest? Are you
keeping up with industry trends? Blogging or posting social media updates
about what is happening today will help your site and your posts rank
higher. - Blog
about what you love. If your blogging becomes a chore and is an uphill
grind, it will show in your writing. Blogging for, and about, pets should
bring you joy. If it isn’t, take a step back and try and determine what’s
changed. Have you lost your focus? Do you feel you’ve run out of things to
say? Do you need to tighten or rethink your social media strategy? Reach
out to your circle of pet loving friends and ask for help!
What social media tips can you offer? What do
you love the most about being a pet blogger?
These are good tips.
I love dogs, so it is a great topic for me to blog about.
I can use a better social media strategy….better work on that!
Mary
Great post. Exactly right! Thanks for keeping the love alive.
Thanks for writing. Use your social media sites to help spread the word about what you’re blogging about!
Thanks for the post. It is so true. Keeping a a clear focus on why I blog vs counting the readers, has help me stay authentic and not get caught up in the numbers. My blog is actually more a journal that has allowed me to make new virtual friends, then a commercial endeavor to live on. That is the way I like it. Having a social media strategy is key though. Otherwise, it just gets too overwhelming. Thank you again. – Lorian (the human at DogDaz)
I can’t agree more about the numbers game.
I have been blogging since 2002, finally giving my cats their own blog in Jan. 2010.
My ambitions, hopes and dreams as a writer have evolved in a decade, but if I’d paid attention to the fact that I get maybe 40 real people a month leaving comments, and 3000 spammers a day doing so, I might have quit years ago. 😀
Now, I’m interested in chapbooks, and ebooks, have a Facebook Writer’s page, and am attending my first Blog Paws conference.