Blogging Tips: The First Year

Lately, I’ve been receiving emails and messages from other bloggers asking for tips and advice on how to expand their blog, how to get more subscribers, how to take photos, etc. I thought I’d answer these questions and more in a series of blog posts. If you have further questions, please don’t hesitate to ask me. I love to read and answer questions (and comments!).

Blogging Tips -The First Year

When I first started blogging almost a year ago, I was looking for a way to relieve stress and to distract me from my personal and professional life. I had just finished my degree in dental hygiene and took my licensing exam. Unfortunately, because my patient had not qualified for me to work on, and I lost time looking for a second patient, I didn’t pass the exam and had to wait another year before the exam returned to my area. I was disappointed and devastated by the set back and needed something to distract me.

Around that time, I browsed so many food blogs, admired tons of mouthwatering photos, and had just begun playing around with recipes. I wasn’t completely new to the blogging scene, but I thought that I’d start a brand new blog dedicated to recipes.

When I first started back in November 2013 (just two weeks until one year!), I actually used Blogger because I was more familiar with it. I’ve played around with blogs before, but it was never anything that lasted long because I was always busy with school. I even had one post on Blogger for Cooking with a Wallflower, but that recipe never made it onto this site. At least, not yet. Go ahead, click on the link, and I think you’ll see why. =)

My friend, Emily, from Emily’s Daily, suggested that I try WordPress. So I did.  After playing around with both sites, I decided that WordPress was a better fit for me. I liked that I had more control over how the site looked. It really depends on your preference. Some people like working with Blogger more than WordPress. I recommend trying both to see what you like.

Those first few months, I didn’t get many views. Then again, I wasn’t really consistent on posting either. I was just excited to get 5 views a day, then 12.

Soo much has changed since then.

As I created more content, more recipes, I began to receive more views and subscribers.

Cooking with a Wallflower Stats

Some months you’ll do better than others. Some days you’ll have a post that goes viral as I did in May, and then there are other days when barely anyone views your post.

What really works is consistency. Make sure to post every few days to keep your readers interested. If you post, let’s say, every three months, your readers won’t know if you’ve quit or if you’re ever going to update, and you may potentially lose a reader.

I like to post every other day. That’s just my preference. Here’s a little peek at my schedule. I can only cook and take photos twice a week: Wednesdays and Thursdays. So I do what I can to make the best of the time I have. I like to store my photos on my laptop and write my posts the day before or the day of when the post goes live. They’re rarely ever scheduled far in advance unless I’m on vacation. I like pressing the publish button too much.

Everyone is different. What works for me might not work for you.

Writing posts isn’t as easy as people might think. Non-bloggers don’t realize how much work it takes to create content, to take photos, to write, to edit. Lots of steps, tons of dedication. But if this is what you’re passionate about, go for it! It’s a slow process. You’re not going to gain viewers overnight. But in the end, if this is what you’re passionate about, it’s worth the time and effort.

In the next couple weeks, I’ll be posting more to this series. Stay tuned!

You’ll get to see how I changed my technique and went from the first two images to the last image in less than a year using the same camera. You can click on the image for an enlarged view.

Food Images over the Year

If you have questions, please feel free to message me. I’ll be happy to answer them to the best of my abilities and include them in my posts.  Or if there’s something you want me to address first, let me know.

242 comments

  1. Phil says:

    As someone that is new to blogging (I’m a little late to the party I know), I appreciate your tips here. It’s tough, in today’s instant gratification world, it’s good to hear that some things just take time and a little bit of work.

    Thanks

  2. bikeandbackpacker says:

    Hi! Thank you for liking my post. I ended up in this post of yours because I’m still a newbie blogger, and I found this tips helpful. Thank you for sharing 🙂

    Oh, I want to ask you a question if you don’t mind. Do you think it’s important to have our personal domain site, like without wordpress.com in the end of the site?

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