How to Start a Blog: A Beginner’s Guide

in bloglife •  7 years ago 

How-to-start-a-blog-.png
The Internet today makes it easier to use a content management system. This is basically an application that takes care of creating, managing and publishing digital content.
The second thing you need is good hosting.
Web hosting is where your site data is stored. The servers of the company take care of whether your site loads quickly, and is always live. So make sure you choose a good one.
You’re basically leaving the maintenance of your website in their hands, so you don’t need to worry whether the server is secure, fast enough, performs well, or shows errors. That’s their responsibility now.
Whenever something unexpected happens, you’ll simply reach out to a member of the support team and let them handle it immediately.
Your job as a blogger is to create quality content and build an audience. Everything else, if left in your hands, can only block your creativity and desire to grow.
Usually, once you find a host you’ll be given easy steps on how to make your site live in a matter of minutes. Together with choosing your domain name, and installing a content management system on it.
Once you do that, you can let search engines know your site is ready for them to crawl it, even though there’s no content on it yet.
You can tackle the dashboard, the back-end, and learn a thing or two about how it works by watching quick tutorials.
You don’t need to hire a specialist, even when your site grows. But it pays off to be curious, and to care about what you do. As then you’ll love learning new things about blogging and running a website, and make small changes to see how it performs.
That was the more technical part. And it too is quick and easy thanks to all the applications we can make use of.

  1. Building Your Online Brand
    You need to know how to start a blog, because this is the beginning of anything you’ll be doing online and how it can help you build a name for yourself.

Once the site is live, there are a few first and key steps to take. I believe you’ll enjoy these, will feel more professional, and will make it a habit to update them frequently.

  1. Have a well-written About page.
    Branding is about you and anything you do online. Be sure that the second most visited page on your site will probably be this one, after the homepage.
    That’s because people want to see a face behind the platform, and to know more about you.
    You might not be comfortable putting up pictures or sharing a lot about you in the beginning, and that’s okay.
    But soon you’ll need to do it. You have to put yourself out there if you want to do serious and genuine business, and become known in the niche.
    Add a Contact page next. Include all possible ways for people to contact you. You have no idea how many doors this opens up to you.
    Get on social media and link to the site from everywhere.
    Networking is something you must do frequently, if not all the time. It begins by answering comments on your blog and being available through email and phone. But also by being social on networking sites.
    To this day some of the busiest bloggers and entrepreneurs find time to say ‘Thank you!’ to new followers. To send a quick welcome message to those joining their community. Or even ask for feedback before they release a new product.
    That’s how you keep in touch with your current audience, and how you reach out to new people, who can potentially be interested in doing business with you.

  2. Tackle the design and usability of your new site.
    You know how it feels to enter a site that doesn’t look good. One which has annoying ads and pop-ups, that loads slowly, and with low quality images and unpleasant formatting.
    Chances are, you won’t visit it again just because of these elements.
    User experience matters more than ever today. And major search engines are aware of this too. That’s why they want you to focus on creating good content, and making it easy to read.
    Your site should have easy navigation, with the most important pages in the Menu above. And not too many buttons on a page, as that confuses the visitor.
    A good rule of thumb is to always keep things simple. Do that with colors, with having a purpose for any new design element you add.
    Often ask yourself whether everything that’s included on the page is necessary. Be okay with removing things often, so that you can only keep what’s essential.
    No one likes clutter. The minimalist approach always wins, especially in the design scene.
    It’s easier to consume written information when there’s a lot of white space, the font is clear and big enough, and the paragraphs are short.
    Also break down text with images, headings, quotes, or else. It keeps the reader engaged and they are more likely to read to the bottom.
    Be careful with colors too. These are a big part of your brand, so choose 1-3, and stick to them whatever you do. White space should always be present of course, but colors can be found in the logo, links, headings, or else. They are a nice touch, unless you overdo it.
    If you focus on providing value, then you’ll put yourself in the reader’s shoes and will make changes according to that.

  3. Creating Content and Being Consistent
    After understanding how to start a blog, it’s now time to ask yourself how to write your first blog post.
    The best advice I can give you is to simply hit ‘add a new post’ (this should be easy to find when using a CMS).
    Then you’ll be given a text editor where you can begin writing and formatting the content, adding images, tags and links, and optimizing it for a keyword.
    Build the habit of writing often, though. Even before you optimize and know how to format better.
    Once you have 20 or so posts on your topic, start telling others about the blog and make it look and feel better.
    It’s alright to change direction a few times, in terms of the language you’re using, your tone, the length of the articles, or else.
    Only practice can help you reach the right combination. And, of course, reading a ton of blogs in your industry to see what works.

• Conclusion
That’s how to start a blog the quick and easy way, and still do it professionally and let it be the foundation of all your next actions in the digital world.
Being a site owner is a must, but being a regular blogger will lead to so many opportunities. Ones we can’t even predict right now.
The good thing about blogging is that if you’re constant long enough, you’ll start seeing plenty of benefits.
That’s organic traffic and becoming a more authoritative site. A bigger audience and shares on social media. Attention from renowned publications. Readers leaving comments or even emailing you to say they like what you’re doing.
Eventually, that will lead to profits. How you’re going to monetize your site depends on many things, and it’s okay not to have the answer just yet.
Wait till you have some content. Till you build some traffic. And till you’re sure about your direction.
Then you’ll know whether you want to put affiliate links, build a newsletter and promote to the subscribers strategically, create your first information product, promote your freelance services, or build a physical product around your niche and see how it goes.
Over time, you’ll see that a combination of these is a smarter financial decision, as it will diversify your income and you won’t rely only on one income stream.
How to start a blog isn’t the hard part. Unfortunately, many people think it is and never give it a chance. They’re missing out on a lot.
Get a pen and paper, open up your laptop and start doing your research, in order to get closer to defining your niche today.
Then, simply follow the steps listed above on how to start a blog.

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Nice posts ! Followed you and upvoted 👍

Thanks .