Effective Blogging In Your Downtime

by David on January 13, 2012 · 41 comments

This is a guest post by David Sumner from twago.

Except for the lucky few, most bloggers have to fit their passion for writing in and around their 9-5 jobs.

Unless you’re a professional freelance blogger earning good money from your blogging (which let’s be frank most of us aren’t), and the only time you can dedicate to your blog is in your free-time, then you’ll need to hone your writing skills and blog to the world without becoming a social outcast and gluing yourself to your laptop all weekend.

However, blogging on the weekends or at other times brings with it a whole host of distractions and issues that are designed to make it more difficult than ever to focus on your writing.

Let’s take a look at some of the unique challenges of blogging in your spare time;

Effective Blogging

Getting Into The Blogging Mood

While the attraction to sit on the sofa in front of the TV with your laptop is hard to resist at weekends, this half-way house between blogging and relaxing will make the quality of your writing suffer. You will be distracted by your family or flat-mates, and the urge to do housework and answer phone calls will overwhelm you.

In order to increase your productivity at weekends try to find a quiet place in the house, or (when it’s sunny) sit outside. Even going to the park can give you time outside of the house and give you the freedom to concentrate on your blog post and get your thoughts in order without any distractions.

However, whilst I’m not suggesting that you cut off all social contacts and retreat into the woods to ensure that you can blog in peace, by visiting friends and attending parties or family arrangements you are killing your blogging time.

The best way to maintain a balance (without letting either your social life or blogging suffer) is to either create a strict window in your weekend dedicated to your blog, or to set aside a particular night of the week. After all, writing in the week can also be a great way to switch off from the hassles of the workday.

Using Apps To Brainstorm Your Writing Ideas

There are some great apps out there that can help you jot down your creativity at all times, thus cutting down on the need for extensive research time at the weekend.

The best thing about apps is that they allow you to balance work and play with absolute ease and flexibility. If you’re struck by a creative bolt of lightning in the middle of the night or on the train journey home from work, then apps such as evernote allow you to keep a track of your creative thoughts and inspiration on the go.

The app allows you to store notes, create timetables, create a virtual brainstorm and even doodle. The app itself is free (for the standard version) and can really aid your weekend writing skills by allowing you to brainstorm in the week while you’re stuck traveling to work.

Maintain Writing Regularity

One of the fundamentals of blogging is the necessity to create a constant supply of content for your readers. In order to grow the reputation of your blog and acquire more readers, you must be creating fresh and unique content on a regular basis. This means that whilst the option to go travelling on the weekend with friends sounds great, if you neglect your writing because of this then you’ll find out pretty quickly that your readers will stop coming back to your blog.

Therefore, if you’ve got some big plans for the weekend then make sure to devote some more writing time beforehand and automatically set your post to be published at the usual time of publishing. This way you can enjoy your trip to the beach or the mountains without taking a guilty conscience with you.

Give Your Posts A More Personal Edge

Experiment with combining your personal life with your writings. If you’re busy moving house, or planning a holiday, or even panic buying for Christmas presents then incorporate your “crises” into your posts.

These articles allow you to present a more down-to-earth side to your writing that will enable you to really connect with your readers. Plus it cuts down the research time for your posts and you’ll have an endless wealth of content ready to flow from your latest adventure. Also, it’ll make the task of writing for your blog much more fun and make it less of a chore.

This “human” content can provoke your readers into leaving more comments and thus increase the social interaction on your blog as well. But if your blog has a reputation for quality, authoritative posts then still maintain the balance between on-topic content and off-topic content. Moreover, remember the old adage about the balance between personal and public. Whatever you write should be 100% personal but not 100% private.

These are just some of the tips that I try to live by in order to maximize the efficiency of the writing I do in my free time, what are yours?


Top 10 Search Terms:

• effective blogging • blogging on the weekends • effectvie blogging • Blogger downtime • weekend parties blog for guest post • The core fundamentals of effective blogging • taking advantage of down time • night parties blogs guest post • houses this blog uses premium commentluv -the version of commentluv on this site is no longer supported • blogging during weekend


THIS IS A DO FOLLOW BLOG --- ADD YOUR COMMENT

Article Written By David

David from twago, Europe's largest online platform for customers and freelancers collaborating together on projects in the fields of programming, web design, graphic design, translation and copywriting.

David has written 1 superb article(s) on this blog


{ 41 comments… read them below or add one }

Jacko January 13, 2012 at 3:24 am

Excellent post. You have to be productive to be successful however if motivation is an issue that is an indication that your topic may not be compelling enough for you to continue blogging about.

Think with your heart.

Reply

Karan Lugani January 13, 2012 at 7:21 am

Downtimes can turn to be a great advantage if taken with a positive node. I remember writing many articles in downtime which are helping me till date.

Reply

Marienne January 13, 2012 at 10:55 am

I can totally relate to this post. I agree that getting into the blogging mood can be very challenging. I’ll be using the apps you mentioned. Hope it’ll make my life easier :)

Reply

Tushar from BloggersEthics January 13, 2012 at 11:04 am

For bloggers who have less time for their blog like me, I believe two things are very important.

1. Write quality posts. if you will write once a week and that too a boring, already-read-somewhere post; it will do no good to your blog.
2. Giving personal edge is important because in that way readers connect to the story very easily

Reply

antodoms January 28, 2012 at 3:20 am

I agree To Tushar …. Writing quality post is not only required for people who don’t write regularly but also for people who write 1 or 2 articles a Day, as According to new Google update’s there is less significance to the quantity than the quality…. So even if you write around 5 crap posts a day or you write 1 awesome post a week the later is only going to benefit you in getting good traffic via Google….. Moreover apart from writing SEO is a major factor which affect the readership of a blog…. Even if you have a high quality blog and you ignore SEO then you wont rank high, ultimately its again a crap content invisible on internet….

Reply

Kelvin Entrepreneurs January 13, 2012 at 11:21 am

Really great post David, thanks for sharing this because I notice I waste most my weekends just not thinking about my blog when I started out until recently when I began to use my weekend effectively. And truly I have seen the impact on my blog… Thanks

Kelvin Igbinigie

Reply

Anna January 13, 2012 at 2:18 pm

This could not be more true considering the fact that most of us have a regular job outside the blogging life. Then again writing 1 or 2 hours gets most of us relaxed, so it`s actually a part of everyday routine. Weekends are there to be weekends and in most cases those 2 days “off” can really boost your writing over the week.

Cheers

Reply

junta January 13, 2012 at 3:14 pm

I do use my Android Notepad to Brainstorm Ideas.. Evernote is kinda overkill for this task…

Reply

James Greg January 13, 2012 at 3:25 pm

Distractions can make a good work go drastically wrong and when writing a blog, it should be done at ease and with good reasons. Anything wrong can crash your image which takes a long time to build. But it is man’s nature to be where it is all happening and this can sometimes make you forget the points you have in your head to write them down. When I was a student I studied maths and science with the music playing in the background, it raised my spirits and keep me safe from boredom, but when it came to languages it was complete silence and distractions caused to forget.

Reply

Adrian from Panoramic Universal Ltd. January 13, 2012 at 4:30 pm

In blogging the main Issue is regarding the way we think. Generally a person chooses a topic and then he decides to write about it and he does it. but the downside is that The blogger didn’t think about the people’s way of thinking towards that Topic.

Reply

Lily Rose January 13, 2012 at 8:03 pm

I agree that we shouldn’t break all social contacts as we write, i actually have to do so at least for an hour a day. I’m just one of those people that needs to have undivided attention when working and others simply distract me too much.

Reply

Amal January 14, 2012 at 1:48 pm

I am a blogger and my personal opinion is that blogging should be chosen as a profession only after he gets a job. Because blogging involves risk (every job has, but little more) and it is not perfectly okay to leave your career unprotected. A simple Panda update may take all our search engine traffic.

Reply

andy January 14, 2012 at 10:40 pm

I think most people have certain times of the day when they are most creative. Personally I can write much more quickly in the early morning or late at night than in the middle of the day.

Reply

Jane from Sony Nex review January 14, 2012 at 11:33 pm

Really nice post. These are very useful steps for bloggers to succeed in the long run. Provision of human touch is more important. Everything should not happen mechanically.

Reply

Michael January 15, 2012 at 7:41 am

A lot of great ideas here. I think sticking to a regular scheduled of writing is key to staying sharp with your writing skills. Also it is a great way to get better at writing as well. You did a great job with the guest post David.

Reply

Kostas from Online Opportunities January 15, 2012 at 2:24 pm

Blogging on weekend it’s certainly not an easy task since you need those 2 days to relax with your family and your friends. But blogging is not a strict 9-5 job so you can find a few hours to write a new post, the only requirement is to love what you are doing and not just write because you have to add a new blog post…

Reply

Matt Kinsella January 16, 2012 at 5:36 am

Finding it difficult to concentrate with a new baby in the house but it’s about making the effort and committing to it I think. I made a resolution to blog at least twice a week to motivate and commit myself to it. So far it’s working :-)

Reply

Nathan January 16, 2012 at 5:59 am

I tend to find that, when I can’t find anything to write about, it’s great to tell some story of story. It usually gets a great amount of readers and it’s also easy to write because you’ve just got to get it down on the page. Great tips by the way! :)

Reply

Barry January 16, 2012 at 8:54 am

As you have mentioned, it is very difficult to get into the mood to start writing in weekends. But, if you have passion for what you are writing, your thoughts will flow through your fingers into the PC automatically. You will be able to deliver your best even in holidays.

Reply

Sunny January 16, 2012 at 3:49 pm

Great tips for taking advantage of downtime.

One thing that really helps me is when I plan my posts during the week and then simply get cracking during my downtime. That really helps me make the most of any free time I have if there’s already a plan in place

Reply

Pete Goumas January 16, 2012 at 4:55 pm

Thanks for the advice, David. Using apps to brainstorm is a great idea. I’ll have to check out evernote.

Reply

Jason January 16, 2012 at 10:41 pm

Great post, with regards to the brainstorming writing ideas, I recently read a post that talked about struggling for inspiration for posts. It used the idea of taking a photo a day in order to gain inspiration, even if its just a photo from outside your bedroom window its surprising what it can lead to!

Reply

Mike January 17, 2012 at 1:08 am

I really enjoy the part about giving your posts a personal edge. Too often, people find themselves trapped in this “overly formal” mindset when it comes to blogging, without realizing that you need to have a unique voice in order to really get people to stand up and notice.

Reply

karan from facebook tricks January 17, 2012 at 6:01 pm

start blogging at a young age when you dont have those responsibilities:D

Reply

Felicita H. January 19, 2012 at 3:29 am

Wow, great article. I try to blog in my downtime as well but sometimes I can’t get in the right mood to do so. It’s typically while I’m busy that a thought strikes me so I now quickly write down what I’m thinking to post later on.

Reply

Daniel January 19, 2012 at 9:19 am

I sometimes struggle with inspiration. I think it depends on your blogs subject. Sometimes I have so many ideas I need a tool to note them down so that when I do have time I can refer to my list and hopefully put something decent together that people can relate to.

Reply

ben January 20, 2012 at 9:41 pm

I’m glad to see you talk about balance. If you shut out all people and distractions you also shut off a prime source for new material.

Reply

Jeremy January 21, 2012 at 11:38 pm

Great tips! Isolating yourself is definitely the way to go. I like to disconnect from the internet completely, but sometimes you have to research something really quick so it’s kind of a necessary evil in my view.

Reply

jb January 22, 2012 at 2:55 pm

always carry a note book, yesterday I had ten ideas for posts just whilst walking to the shops. I wouldn’t have remembered them without my notes.

Reply

Holly Jahangiri January 26, 2012 at 8:38 pm

“Whatever you write should be 100% personal but not 100% private.”

Lots of great tips here (what the heck is “down time”?) but that – from a writer’s perspective – may be the best statement of what I’ve been trying to get across to some young bloggers now, and you’ve phrased it beautifully. There’s a fine line between engaging and interesting enough to bother reading, and eviscerating your soul in public. But that gets the idea across pretty well, I think!

I’m going to have to look into Evernote again. I know many people swear by it, and I think I’ve just not used it effectively in the past.

This post is definitely a keeper – ironically, for those of us who look like the blogger in the image and don’t remember what “down time” really means.

Note: The CommentLuv link here isn’t self-serving – it actually goes to a post written by my friend and fellow blogger, Abhi Balani. He’s entered into Jane Sheeba’s blogging tips contest, and would, I’m sure, appreciate your support. Head on over there, if you will, and read his entry – then let him know your thoughts in a comment, and share the post if you like it! Thanks in advance. ;)

Reply

Holly Jahangiri January 26, 2012 at 8:40 pm

If the CommentLuv link doesn’t appear, click my name. :) Oh, Sushant – you wound me to the core, throwing me into moderation like this… has it been so long your gatekeepers now think I’m a spammer?

Reply

Ryan January 29, 2012 at 4:34 am

Getting in the right state of mind to effectively blog can be challenging especially with a busy schedule. Thanks for the article. I think it is all about making a commitment and sticking to it.

Reply

Leave a Comment

CommentLuv badge
This blog uses premium CommentLuv which allows you to put your keywords with your name if you have had 3 approved comments. Use your real name and then @ your keywords (maximum of 3)


whos.amung.us