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I'm Amelia and I help businesses to grow through practical simple marketing that works.
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Using a blog to promote your company is a simple strategy. The only catch is that you’ll need a constant supply of material to keep people interested and motivated.
To fill this void, you should establish a routine in which you regularly get feedback from your audience, brainstorm content ideas, write posts, and share them with the world.
There’s no perfect timetable that will work for everyone, so you’ll need to find what does. We’re going to explore how to create a blogging schedule that works to get it done.
Why did you decide to start a blog, and what do you intend to accomplish with it? Do you offer your readers direct sales of affiliate products? Or are you playing for the long haul in hopes of cultivating an army of brand devotees?
This is the starting point for deciding what kind of material will be created and how it will be created. To do this, you’ll need a variety of posts, and this will have serious implications for how you schedule your blog posts.
How often do you need to post to reach your target audience? After making this decision, you may begin to outline a plan for your blogging activities.
To fulfill a weekly publication schedule, for instance, you’ll need to plan out when day you’ll publish and when you’ll do the many tasks involved.
Maybe you’ll update on Fridays. On Wednesday, you should concentrate on background reading and outlining your work; Thursday is for writing; Friday is for revising and releasing your final draft. It’s possible that you’ll learn via trial and error that you require one hour a day, Wednesday through Friday.
But maybe you’d benefit more if you committed to using a single time slot each week to do all of your blogging-related duties.
If you want to write twice a week, on Mondays and Thursdays, you may use Friday afternoons to have both pieces written and finished. If you are unable to dedicate even a few minutes a day, this strategy may be more practical for you.
It’s important to take your time while developing a timetable that works for you, but it may take some experimentation to find the best method(s). Make sure you don’t waste too much time on preparation. Make a plan, stick to it, and see whether you succeed in reaching your objective.
As an example, if you plan to devote four hours every Wednesday morning to blogging, you may discover that you’re exhausted by the third hour. If you want to get anything done, you need divide the time up and do it across many days.
Half an hour a day may not be enough if you have publication deadlines to fulfill. I would suggest trying 45 minutes if that is the case.
It’s important to outline more than just the writing process. Mixing in videos requires more time for video creation. Finding and reviewing guest bloggers takes time if you want to allow them to publish on your site. Before clicking “publish,” you should always take the time to revise your postings.
Make a rough draft of your strategy and dive in; make adjustments as you go. The point is to find a system that works for you and enables you to regularly produce work of a high quality.
Do you want to learn more about blogging? Check out my course, BLOGGING ADVANTAGE, which teaches you the A to Z of blogging mastery and helps you achieve your business goals. https://www.ameliachampion.com/blogging-advantage/
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I'm from the corporate marketing world, and am sharing my skills to help small businesses grow.
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