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ProBlogger: 5 Bloggers Who Started a Blog in 2017 and Survived

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ProBlogger: 5 Bloggers Who Started a Blog in 2017 and Survived

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5 Bloggers Who Started a Blog in 2017 and Survived

Posted: 26 Dec 2017 05:00 AM PST

Started blog in 2017

When you start a blog, you understandably look for advice from experts to help get you started. You look at countless blogs in your niche – ones that have probably been going for a while and enjoying various types of success.

It can be quite overwhelming, and sets you up for the comparison game and ‘perfection paralysis’ – not wanting to hit publish until your blog looks perfect.

Just recently we asked the ProBlogger Community to submit their stories of starting a blog, and their tips for those  considering starting a blog in 2018. We received so many stories, some of which have been published on the ProBlogger podcast.

Today we're sharing stories of those still in the early stages of starting a blog who haven't forgotten those early frustrations, and have tips that might help you at at the start of your blogging journey.

We've summarised their responses below, and included a link to their recordings (mp3 files) so you can download and listen to them in full.

Real Life Minimalism – Roshni F. Ghandi (May 2017)

Roshni is a lawyer and entrepreneur who discovered the importance of having systems in her personal life and business. It  inspired her to start her blog Real Life Minimalism in May 2017 so she could help others.

Summary of Roshni's Start a Blog Story

Hindsight: Roshni was grateful she took the time to understand the technology and tools such as WordPress.

Mistakes: Before discovering ProBlogger, she heard advice to create webinars and funnels and forgo blogging. She finally realised a blog is a foundation, and started one to support her business.

Successes: Roshni has made a lot of connections and friendships through her blogging, and has been approached for collaborations off her blog that have helped support her business.

Tip: Her tip is 'Know-Plan-Evolve'. Have a bird’s-eye view of what you want to create, listen to your audience, be flexible and open to change, and avoid distractions.

Good Life. Better. – Jenny (July 2017)

Started blog in July 2017

 

Jenny made a lot of changes in her life including taking control of her finances, becoming healthier and losing weight. She also started thinking and planning more about her career and retirement. She realised there were very few positive stories on the internet for women who needed to do the same, so she started her blog Good Life. Better. in July 2017.

Summary of Jenny's Start a Blog Story

Hindsight: Jenny was glad she just jumped in with one post and hit publish. She learned as she went, and invested in learning WordPress by watching videos.

Mistakes: Jenny was getting overwhelmed. She wanted to do everything at once, and was even dreaming about how her sidebar should look like rather than getting good sleep. She also fell into the trap of buying too many books and courses. She realised she needed to work out her priorities.

Successes: While she’s enjoyed meeting the blogger community where she has received a lot of support, she realised she needed to write for her avatar, not other bloggers. Another big positive is having a creative outlet.

Tip: Look long term. Be okay with having your first year as your learning year and getting to know your audience.

Engage Weddings – Becca Poutney (August 2017)

Becca had a local networking group for local wedding suppliers, and realised that people getting married didn't know about them. She started her blog Engage Weddings in August 2017 to help people getting married discover local wedding suppliers.

Summary of Becca's Start a Blog Story

Hindsight: Becca is grateful she had a strategy for what she wanted to achieve and the content she wanted to create in the first few weeks. Having a networking group of contacts also made everything a lot easier, as she was able to source guest content from other suppliers.

Mistakes: Becca made the mistake of thinking her blog could grow quickly and fast. She realises now that it takes work, and is excited for the future.

Successes: Her established network of contacts enabled Becca to use her blog to promote and run a successful event, bringing together 21 suppliers and 75 guests.

Tip: Before you start, find a network of other bloggers, businesses or people in your niche (either online or in real life) to help inspire and support you.

Inspired Life in Greece – Dena Argyropoulou (September 2017)

Dena uses her blog Inspired Life in Greece as a platform for self-expression, and to document how moving from California to Greece (where she’s from) gave her the courage to live a life aligned with who she is. She share tools and resources to help her readers define their authentic life, and plans to add online courses, products and coaching services.

Summary of Dena's Start a Blog Story

Hindsight: Dena is grateful she didn't spend time doing things like designing a logo, and instead used the time to create worksheets for her newsletter subscribers.

Mistakes: She chose an easier platform instead of going with WordPress and. She's now switching over to WordPress with some help.

Successes: To discover she could share good stories as a writer (her normal creative outlet is graphic design) and receive positive feedback from her readers, which has given her great confidence.

Tip: Find balance between self-expression and creating content that’s valuable to your reader.

Levels of Gray – Kenobi Pollard (December 2017)

Kanobi's blog  levels of gray is the newest of the five, starting in December as a personal journal for Kanobi to share her thoughts on photography, beauty, travel and style. She wanted to document the levels of gray in people's lives after being laid off from her corporate job last year, and was determined to start a blog in 2107. It took her all year, but she's done it.

Summary of Kanobi's Start a Blog Story

Hindsight: Kanobi is grateful for all the blogger podcasts (such as Darren's) she listened to before starting a blog, and the advice she received from them.

Mistakes: She went through six changes of blog design before starting, with friends and family supporting her along the way. But she wishes she hadn't told people about her blog before she even had a concrete vision of what is was herself.

Successes: She has been surprised to get positive feedback on her writing. While she's not generating the traffic she'd like to yet, her blog has already helped her reach people who may not have already known her. And she's really happy with the experience she's gained thus far.

Tip: Find a topic you're passionate about, and distinguish your voice rather than losing your message because you're caught up in what everyone else is saying.

Start a Blog in 2018

If you’re planning to start a blog in 2018, check out their blogs so you can see what a new blog actually looks like. We hope you enjoy discovering some new bloggers, and enjoy their stories.

Also consider joining our free course starting on 10th January 2018 with Darren.

 

The post 5 Bloggers Who Started a Blog in 2017 and Survived appeared first on ProBlogger.

      

ProBlogger: 225: How One Nutritionist Uses Her Blog to Grow Her Business

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ProBlogger: 225: How One Nutritionist Uses Her Blog to Grow Her Business

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225: How One Nutritionist Uses Her Blog to Grow Her Business

Posted: 22 Dec 2017 12:00 AM PST

How One Nutritionist Uses Her Blog to Help Grow Her Business

Here’s another episode where I hand the podcast over to you, our listeners, to tell your stories and tips of starting and growing your blogs.

In today's episode I've got Aussie blogger Nina—one of the attendees from our recent events in Australia. She came to our mastermind day, and I really enjoyed getting to hear a little bit of her story there. And I wanted to include her story today because it illustrates another model of building an income around your blog.

Links and Resources for From How One Nutritionist Uses Her Blog to Grow Her Business:

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Darren : Hey there and welcome to episode 225 of the ProBlogger podcast. My name is Darren Rowse and I'm the blogger behind problogger.com. A blog, podcast, a job board, an event, a series of ebooks, and soon to be a course designed to help you to start an amazing blog, to create fantastic content for it that will change your reader's lives and to build some profit around your blog. You can learn more about what we do over at problogger.com.

In today's episode, episode 225, we're continuing our series of blogger stories. This started back in episode 221. If this is your first one in the series, you might wanna go back and listen to that one. I explained this series a little bit in more detail but basically we're giving bloggers who are listening of this podcast a chance to share their story and some tips that they have.

This is all part of our Start A Blog challenge. We really want this series to inspire as many people as possible to start new blogs. We're going to launch a course at the end of this series, second week of January, to help you do that. It's a short course which will walk through some of the technicalities of starting a blog but also help you think about how to build a profitable blog and get some of those foundations in place before you start. If you are thinking of starting a new blog or you know someone who you think will be a great blogger, send them over to problogger.com/startablog and you can sign up there to be notified when that course goes live.

In today's episode, I've got another Aussie blogger. This is Nina from Australia and she's one of the attendees from our recent events in Australia. She came to our mastermind day and I really enjoyed getting to hear a little bit of her story there. I wanted to include this story today. It's very short, it's very simple, because, I think, it illustrates another model of building an income around your blog which we don't talk about enough. I'm gonna leave it at that. Nina is a Nutritionist and she is using her blog to, I guess, help her to build her private following and find some work. I'm gonna hand it over to Nina, it's a very short episode, and then I'm gonna come back at the end and just make a few comments and give you a few thoughts on what Nina says.

You can get the show notes today and find Nina's blog, whatsforeats.com.au. You can find the link to that and the full transcript over at problogger.com/podcast/225.

Nina: Hi there! My name's Nina and my blog's called What's for Eats? You can find that at whatsforeats.com.au. I started What’s for Eats? back in 2010, after I have graduated from a Graduate Diploma in Human Nutrition. I was really struggling to find work. I mean, here I was, a freshly-anointed nutritionist with all of this new knowledge to share and nowhere to share it.

Blogging seemed like the perfect opportunity to practice my health, writing, and spread, and I cringe to say this now, messages about "healthy eating." When looking back at what I did in starting my blog, I'm most grateful for just starting and putting my stuff out there. I do have perfectionistic tendencies and I think that I was lucky to start blogging at a time when there wasn't that explosion of health-related blogs like there is now to give me that comparison paralysis.

If I look back on the past seven or so years that I have been blogging, I don't think there's anything I wish I had never ever done. Everything I have done has been a learning experience to get me to where I am today. Without trying things to see that didn't work for me, I would not have been able to hone in on my audience, and my vision, and my values. Of course, looking back, it would have been great if I had started up my list sooner or been an earlier adapter of using Facebook for my business or using Instagram or getting on video.

I think I have to acknowledge that me going back to university to try and become a dietitian, changing careers, and now working for myself has been partly due to my blog. I had an established online presence when I applied to study Dietetics and I think that didn't go unnoticed by the selection community at the university I attended. That online presence also opened a lot of doors for me once I was qualified. It was a very different story when I started looking for work as a new dietitian with an online presence compared to back in 2010 when I started my blog and I was a new nutritionist without a blog or any social media accounts.

I always thought I can only make money from my blog if I were selling a product or doing sponsor posts and things like that. But, after attending ProBlogger Evolve this year, I realized my blog has been, probably, the biggest contributing in me generating a lot of my income as a dietitian. By having a place online to, essentially, sell myself and my skills, I've been approached to work on a variety of interesting projects. I've branched out into food photography and I've found my niche area online that I love.

Essentially, success for me hasn't been about page views or email subscribers, it's been the ability to move out of the Monday to Friday 9:00 to 5:00, and work for myself, build working relationships with people I wanna work with, and work in an area that challenges and energizes me everyday.

If I'm having to think about my number one tip for new bloggers, I understand the value in finding a niche and identify your ideal client or audience before you start blogging. There's also a lot of value in doing lots of planning around the structure and the look of your blog, getting content ready before you go live, all those things. Basically being prepared and ready to go with some direction. I think my tip for new bloggers is if you really wanna blog, just do it. You can waste a lot of time in this planning preparation stag trying to get everything just right and never end up getting to the actual blogging part of it.

Like I mentioned earlier, I'm where I am today by just doing stuff and working things out and tweaking things as I went along. It took me a couple of years to really find my niche and my ideal audience. While I'm not a mega online success, I've found my people and my people have found me online. That's what's making being online and blogging just that much more satisfying. If I did all of the things that we're supposed to do before starting a blog, I reckon I would still be here seven years later waiting to start.

Darren: That was Nina Mills from whatsforeats.com.au. Thank you so much for sharing your story, Nina. Great to hear from you. I did wanna share Nina's story today for a couple of reasons. Firstly, because she's blogging with a model which, I guess, we used to talk about a lot in the early days of ProBlogger but we don't talk about quite so much these days.

She's blogging, I guess essentially, to build an income indirectly. She's using her blog to build her profile which is opening doors for her to firstly, get into a university, sort of her studies, but secondly to find work. You heard her during that little story where she said that she used to think that you can build money by selling ebooks and selling something on your blog. But, essentially, what Nina has discovered is that her blog is enabling her to sell herself and her own services. This is something that I think more and more people who are in business, whether they are freelancers, whether they are coaches, whether they are health practitioners, or whether they are legal practitioners, whatever it is really.

If you've got a service to sell, if you've got a business of your own, I think that is a really great reason to start a blog. To monetize it with advertisers, and with ebooks, and courses, and all those types of things may actually be distracting your readers from the number one income stream that could potentially be coming from your blog, and that is the income stream of you and being able to sell yourself in some way.

I wanted to include this story today because I know that  a lot of listeners of the podcast, readers of ProBlogger do have, I guess, brick and mortar businesses or businesses where they sell themselves in some way, and yet they're trying to monetize through selling, advertising, or creating ebooks and that type of thing to sell. There is another way. Maybe your blog actually is better monetized by selling yourself in some way or a combination of selling yourself and other products as well.

The other thing I loved about Nina's advice is it goes, I guess, something that I've been saying for a long time now. You can spend a lot of time getting your blog ready to launch but never actually launch it. If you do all the things to try and get it perfect before it launches, the chances are some of us will never ever launch our blogs. You heard Nina talk about having perfectionist tendencies there, that's something I know many of us can relate to. I, for one, am glad that I started my first blogs rather impulsively. I didn't allow my own perfectionism to get in the way of starting my blog because, I too, think, I would probably be still thinking about starting my blog if I had allowed my perfectionism to get in the way.

If you are a perfectionist, I wanna encourage you to sign-up for our Start A Blog Course. But, also, I wanna encourage you to find an accountability partner and to commit to them that you are going to launch your blog by a certain period of time. Maybe a week or two after you start the course. We do not want our course to get in the way of you starting that blog but we do want our course to help you along that journey. Do the work to be prepared. Do the work before you launch as much as possible. But, launch. You gotta launch that thing. You've gotta resist that temptation to waste so much time getting it perfect and never actually getting to blogging itself.

If you are thinking of starting a blog, please head over to problogger.com/startablog. We want to see as many blogs as possible started in the month of January, early February of 2018. That's why we're creating this free Start A Blog course. If you know some bloggers, or if you've been talking to a group of people, perhaps a group of nutritionists that you're a part of, or perhaps it's a group of legal practitioners, or other people within your niche and you wanna start blogs together, now is the time to do it. Get a group together and sign-up to Start A Blog course and we'll kick that off in the second week of January.

Thanks so much for listening. This is the fifth episode in this little series. We've had a range of bloggers now. A nutritionist today, we've had a DIY blogger, we've had finance bloggers, we've had tech bloggers. A variety of bloggers there already. That's five in total that we've done so far. We have another seven to come. We are gonna take a little break for Christmas now so this is the last episode before Christmas and before the New Year. I did wanna pause at this point and just wish you all a happy holidays, a happy time of celebration if you are celebrating. I really hope that it is a happy time, a peaceful time, and a time where you are able to find some rest but also some inspiration for the year ahead. I really look forward to being a part of your 2018.

This podcast will be back on the first of January. We will be getting back into this series on the first of January and that week we'll be doing another five blogger stories and the following week, we'll do two more before we launch the Start A Blog course. Do watch out for our episodes in iTunes or your podcast listener. Of course, there's plenty of other episodes back in the archives as well if you do wanna keep working in this time that we're having a little bit of a break. We're at episode 225 today so there's a lot in the archives there. It's all still in iTunes. I think once we get up to episode 300, they'll start disappearing because you can't have more than 300 but you've got some time to dig into those early episodes now before they do disappear.

Thanks so much for listening. I hope you have a great end of year and I'll talk to you in 2018.

How did you go with today's episode?

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The post 225: How One Nutritionist Uses Her Blog to Grow Her Business appeared first on ProBlogger.

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ProBlogger: 224: From 5 to Over 1,000,000 Readers a Month – A Finance Blogger Tells His Story

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ProBlogger: 224: From 5 to Over 1,000,000 Readers a Month – A Finance Blogger Tells His Story

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224: From 5 to Over 1,000,000 Readers a Month – A Finance Blogger Tells His Story

Posted: 21 Dec 2017 12:00 AM PST

From 5 to Over 1,000,000 Monthly Readers – A Finance Blogger Shares His Story

Once again I'm handing the podcast over to you, our listeners, to tell your stories and tips of starting and growing your blogs.

In today’s episode you’ll hear the story of Robert Farrington, a finance blogger. After a couple of fairly unfocused years where he made no money from his blog, Robert managed to turn things around through storytelling and taking his readers on a journey. In his third year he made $30,000, and today he earns a high seven-figure income from his blogging business, with more than a million people reading his blog every month.

I love that how the bloggers in the series who’ve 'made it' to a full-time level are giving us insights into their early years.

This series is designed to give those starting out (or about to start out) some inspiration, along with some practical tips and encouragement for those early days.

It's part of the launch of our brand new Start a Blog course, which launches in the second week of January. To learn more about it, and get notified when it goes live, head to problogger.com/startablog

Links and Resources for From 5 to Over 1,000,000 Readers a Month – A Finance Blogger Tells His Story:

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Darren : Hey there and welcome to episode 224 of the ProBlogger podcast. My name is Darren Rowse and I'm the blogger behind problogger.com. A blog, podcast, event, job board, series of ebooks, and courses, all designed to help you as a blogger to grow your audience, to create some great content, to build community and monetize your blog. You can learn more about ProBlogger over at problogger.com.

In today's episode, we're continuing our series of blogger stories where I am handing the podcast to you as listeners of this podcast and the readers of the blog. To tell you stories, to share you tips of starting and growing your blog over these 12 episodes and they're daily at the moment so they're coming thick and fast. You're hearing stories of bloggers who started out, some of them a few years ago and some of them 10 years ago now to tell us some of what has happened since for them. They talk about their mistakes, their tips, the lessons they've learned and the good things that have come as a result of starting their blog.

Today, you're gonna hear the story of a finance blogger who started a few years ago now and it was a fairly lean start. He pushed through a couple of fairly unfocused years where he didn't really have focus for his blog, where he wasn't really making any money at all from his blog, but he pushed through it anyway to the point where in his third year, he began to get it together. In that third year, he made about $30,000 which was the beginnings of a new business that formed around his blog. Today, he has over a million readers a month and he's making high six-figures a year from that blog.

I'm not guaranteeing that if you take our Starter Blog course that you are going to get to that point, but really, this series is about giving you a little bit of inspiration, to tell you some stories of what could happen as a result of starting a blog, but also to give you some practical tips, and to give an insight into the beginning days of these blogs. One of the things I love about this series is that we are hearing from bloggers who have, to all intents and purposes, made it. They're at a full time level, they've built successful businesses but they're giving us little insights into their early years. I love that and I'm very grateful to all these bloggers who are doing that.

This series is designed to give you, as a someone who's potentially starting out in your blogging journey, or someone who's about to start out in your journey, some inspiration but also those practical tips and some encouragement to get through those early days, to push through those days where you might feel things are a little bit unfocused, or you might feel things aren't really reaching their potential.

This series is a part of our launch of a brand new Start a Blog course which is launching in the second week of January. You can learn more about that over at problogger.com/startablog. If you give us your email address there, we will let you know when that course goes live.

Today's show notes with links to that Start a Blog course and a full transcript of the show today as well as links to our blogger of the day. You can find those show notes over at problogger.com/podcast/224.

Today's blogger is Robert Farrington. I met Robert recently over at the FinCon conference and he is the blogger behind thecollegeinvestor.com. As it might sound, it's a finance blog, someone who is focused particularly on those people in their young adult years, student loans, those type of things, but trying to help those younger people never get through some of the decisions they need to make. I'm gonna let Robert tell his story and then I will come back at the end to share a few of my thoughts on the story that he shares and some of the tips that he gives. Well-worth a listen, I'll chat to you at the end of his story.

Robert: Hi there! My name is Robert Farrington and I am the founder of The College Investor and it's at thecollegeinvestor.com. It is a blog all about personal finance for young adults. We talk about getting out of student loan debt, starting to invest, and building wealth for the future. I started this blog because I am passionate about investing. I was that guy in the back of my college class, on the internet, watching stocks, and really just wanted to share my insights about investing.

This was all the way back in September of 2009. I've been doing this for about eight years now. It's pretty crazy to think about because, when I started, it was completely a personal blog. I really just shared my thoughts and my opinions, and you know what happened as a result? Nothing. Nothing happened. I probably had five visitors a day, everyday, for the first six months that I started this blog. But, you know what? I really enjoyed writing. I really enjoyed sharing my thoughts. I really enjoyed the technology of it. I find it interesting how you can put things together and build a WordPress site and all that type of stuff. Honestly, that's how I started. It's crazy to think about because, when I started, really, I just wanted to educate people.

My goal, my dream was just share my knowledge. But you know, my friends were telling me, they were like, "Robert, that's great knowledge. I love the idea of investing but I have all this debt, and I have all this other stuff going on in my personal and financial life that I really just can't do that right now." I started to realize that while sharing my thoughts are great, it was really important to also help my readers with their questions, and their comments, and their concerns.. While I have my own opinions about things and I can inject that, if I am not helping others answer their question, I can't ever get them where I want them to be.

That's really what I started to transform my blog and it took about a year or two. Around the same time, about the two-year mark, is also when I started connecting with other bloggers. Honestly, when I started, I was in my silo. I didn't really talk to anyone else. I didn't really comment on other blogs. I didn't really reach out to anyone and just hi. I just did my own thing. That was really disadvantageous to me. It really held me back. When I started connecting with others, and I started learning, and I started seeing what other people were doing, and getting some tips and getting some tricks, and getting some help from others. And then, I also started changing my messaging to help my readers more, to share my thoughts, but do it in a way that takes my readers and guides them and holds their hand through it. That's what I really started to see some traction on my site.

Honestly, my site started going from no readers a month, to a couple hundred readers a month, to a couple hundred readers a day. It started getting some revenues well. I made zero money my first two years. Finally, in about year three, I think I was making about $30,000 a year. Getting it up there to $2000 or $3000 a month which was great money considering that I really was just writing stuff on the internet.

If I had to go back in time, what would I say to avoid, and what should you have to do? Well, you have to network with others. You have to connect with your community. Whatever your niche is, connect with them, and at the same time, you need to always remember your readers and you need to take your readers on a journey with story and with education, lead them down the path.  

Finally, you have to have the best content out there. Because especially in a space like personal finance, there's only about six or seven topics you can write about. You can write about budgeting, investing, getting out of debt, credit cards, whatever. It's the same stuff over, and over, and over again. What makes things unique and what makes thing different is the stories that you can tell and the path that you could take people on, and making sure that you have the best content possible out there.

I've been doing this and focusing on this now for eight years. But my last two years, I really haven't created a lot of new content. What I have been doing is going back and picking out my gems in my archives and updating them, making them the best. Creating that story around them and resharing them. I can tell you now that after doing this for eight years, we get almost a million visitors a month on the website, we're making really good money. It's gonna be a high six-figure to seven-figure blog.

The opportunities in income continue to grow because we continue to focus on our readers, networking with others, and writing the best things out there on the topic that really could stand on its own. Hopefully that helps you get started with your blog.

Darren: Thanks so much, Robert, from thecollegeinvestor.com. Really appreciated you sharing your story today. I was really pleased when I saw Robert's audio come in because I had bumped into him several times at the FinCon conference. He was someone who was networking incredibly. He was actually one of those people I just kept bumping into. He seemed to be really well connected. He has actually lived out that tip that he gave in his story today.

I find it interesting today to hear the similarities in Erin's story from yesterday's story. Robert started out because he was excited to share on a particular topic. This is that common thread that I hear from many full time bloggers today. I think it's the case for a few reasons, people who start out just genuinely wanting to talk about a particular topic tend to do quite well, at least a lot of the full time bloggers do start that way. I think it's because when you start out passionate about your topic, genuinely excited about sharing what you know, it comes across in your writing. People can sense that in your writing. When you bring energy and enthusiasm and excitement to your topic, it's gonna shine through.

It will also shine through in the way that you go about promoting your blog, in the way that you network with other people. It's a very attractive thing. It's also gonna help you through the lean times. You heard Robert there talking about those first couple of years of what did he say there? Five visitors a day for the first six months? That's not much in terms of readers. That could be the period where you might, if you didn't have genuine enthusiasm for your topic, say, "This is too hard. I'm not gonna keep going." But if you bring enthusiasm to your topic, you genuinely just like to talk about it, then you're gonna be able to get through those times more easily.

I also love what he talked about focus and bringing more focus to his blog. His blogging in the early days was just his thoughts. It was all centered around what he was thinking. But, a shift to begin to think about his readers and to put them front and center, their questions, their problems. That simple shift and re-focusing less on his thoughts and more on his readers. Still able to bring his thoughts but from the perspective of what do his readers want to know, what do they need to know, what are their questions. Less about him, more about his readers, that was certainly a key thing there.

Then of course, as he talked about that he'd been operating in a silo, and the realization that he could learn a lot more about blogging, and he can grow his blog a lot faster if he began to network. Look at what others were doing and connect with others within his niche. Really, the sense I get is it was those two shifts from being an [00:12:21] blogger that was all about him and his thoughts to being more focused upon his readers and his niche seemed to really unlock things for him.

I was also fascinated there about what he said about the last two years writing less new content and picking out the gems and updating his archives. Whilst that may not be relevant to those of you who are starting a blog, because in the early days you really do need to build up your archives. If you've been blogging for a while, I think, this is a really important thing to do is to pay attention to those archives.

This is something that I've been hearing over the last year or so particularly at FinCom, conference that I mentioned earlier. I met a lot of bloggers who had really pulled back on the amount of new content that they've been writing. They really were re-optimizing the gems in their archives, the posts that were already ranking in Google actually taking them to the next level. Optimizing them, improving the content, making them more visually pleasing, adding further reading, making them deeper content, actually improving that content was paying off more than creating new content for them.

Again, that's something for those of you who've been blogging for a while now. You might have some archives. I think that's a brilliant tip and something that we've been doing a little bit more of over the last six months as well on both of my blogs. I hope you've got some value out of hearing Robert's story today. I think it's a great one.

Again, you can get a full transcript of Robert's story and find his blog over on today's show notes at problogger.com/podcast/224. Tomorrow, another story for you. We've done five or four so far this week. I do encourage you to go back and listen to the last four or three episodes if you haven't listened to those already. I've got one more coming for you tomorrow and then we're gonna have a week off because it will be Christmas. Hopefully, in those last five or so episodes, there'll be enough there for you to listen to. We'll come back on the 1st of January with five more in a row and a couple more before we launch our Start a Blog course.

Again, if you are interested in starting a blog, check out problogger.com/startablog. Let us know your email address and we'll let you know when that course goes live. Thanks for listening, chat with you tomorrow in episode 225.

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ProBlogger: 223: From 0 to Six-Figure Blogger in Two Years – A Recipe Blogger Tells Her Story

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ProBlogger: 223: From 0 to Six-Figure Blogger in Two Years – A Recipe Blogger Tells Her Story

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223: From 0 to Six-Figure Blogger in Two Years – A Recipe Blogger Tells Her Story

Posted: 20 Dec 2017 12:00 AM PST

From 0 to Six Figures in Two Years – A Recipe Blogger Shares Her Story

In today's episode we continue our series of blogger stories where I hand the podcast over to you listeners to tell your stories and tips about starting and growing your blogs.

We kicked off the series three episodes back with a DIY blogger, and yesterday we featured two tech/Microsoft bloggers. Today I’m introducing you to Erin Chase, a friend of mine.

In 2008 she started a blog where she documented what she was having for dinner each night, hoping it would help people on a budget cook affordable meals for their family.

Erin’s simple idea has grown into a blog with MILLIONS of readers, and has become an extremely profitable business for her.

We're sharing these blogger’s stories in the hope of inspiring people to start some great new blogs in the year ahead. In the second week of January we're launching a free course on ProBlogger to help as many new bloggers as possible get started by equipping them with great foundations.

Links and Resources for From 0 to Six-Figure Blogger in Two Years – A Recipe Blogger Tells Her Story:

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Darren: My name is Darren Rowse and I'm the blogger behind problogger.com. A blog, a podcast, event,  job board, series of ebooks, and soon to be courses all designed to help you as a blogger to grow your blog. The archives of your blog, the traffic of your blog, the community of your blog and the income around your blog as well. You can learn more about ProBlogger and all that we do at problogger.com.

In today's episode, we're continuing our series of blogger stories where I'm handing the podcast over to you as the listener of this podcast, to tell your story, and to share some tips of starting and growing your blogs as the community of ProBlogger. We kicked off this little series three episodes ago now with a DIY blogger. Yesterday, we featured two tech Microsoft bloggers.

Today, to do something a little bit different, I wanna introduce you to a friend of mine, who, back in 2008, started a blog that would document what she was having for dinner every night in the hope that it will help others on a budget to cook affordable, healthy meals for their families as well. It's such a simple idea but one that this blogger has grown into a blog with millions of readers and six figure income. In fact, she hit that level in her second year of blogging. It's become an extremely profitable business.

We're sharing these blogger stories in the hope of inspiring some great new blogs to be started in the year ahead. In the second week of January 2018, we're launching a free course on ProBlogger with the goal of equipping as many new bloggers as possible to get started with great foundations for profitable blogs. If you wanna start a blog or a second blog, sign up to be notified of this free course. Now, we're starting in a few weeks' time now at problogger.com/startablog. You can find today's show notes with a link to that Start a Blog course, and a full transcript of today's story over at the show notes at problogger.com/podcast/223.

Today's blogger story is from Erin Chase from 5dollardinners.com. I've been hearing stories about Erin and the business that she's built for many years now. When this year I had the opportunity to meet her face-to-face, in person, for the first time and to start an event with her at the Success Incubator event that we ran earlier in the year, I leapt at that opportunity. Erin is a real go-getter who has built a remarkable business.

If you talk to her today, or if you go and look at 5dollardinners.com today, you will see something quite special. You see something that doesn't even look like a blog anymore. She's got millions of readers, lots of amazing content, she's been featured in lots of mainstream media and she's making a good income from her business as well. In fact, she's got numerous businesses today. What I love about it is that what she's gonna share today is how it all started. It started so simply – as a blog where she shared the dinner she was making each day and the cost of that.

She would not have known when that started where it was going to lead, it started so simply. Today, as I mentioned at the top of the show, it's now over six figures business, she hit that level after a year or so of blogging, second year. It's quite remarkable. It all started so simply and that's what I want to share today. I'm gonna introduce Erin and let her take over the podcast. I'll come back at the end just to make a few comments about some of the things that she said that I love and give you some further listening and reading as well.

Erin: Hey there! My name is Erin Chase and I am the founder of 5dollardinners.com where I share budget-friendly recipes with those who are looking to save money on groceries and make it easier to get dinner on the table. We share all of those tips, and tricks, and recipes at 5dollardinners.com. I started the website back in the Summer of 2008 when the gas prices started to jump up here in the US. My husband had a long commute to work at the time, and we were seeing our gas for our car double.

In order to not go into the red, I needed to cut back somewhere, so I decided to cut back on our grocery spending. I was not working at the time, took it upon myself to spend less of my husband's hard-earned money, and I couldn't keep my mouth shut about what I was learning, about grocery shopping, about the strategy behind grocery shopping, about how you can mix and match ingredients together to come up with these great budget-friendly meals with these ingredients that I've gotten on sale or even sometimes close to free or even free.

I started showing about that on my family blog and my sister was like, "Yeah, no thanks. I just wanna see pictures of the kids." I decided to start a second blog, we had our family blog going which I do not keep up with anymore. I started 5dollardinners as the place to share basically what I was making for dinner that night, and how much I was spending, what I was spending at the grocery store, just tips for cooking, cooking tutorials, cutting hacks, just slicing green bell peppers, just all kinds of different things that I was learning and thought would be helpful for others to learn about as well.

It started it originally just as a place to share and it quickly became a business for us. I didn't even know that it could be a business when I first started but it quickly became one. I'm thrilled that it has. I've been on this adventure for the past nine plus years. I'm getting to help people, help inspire people, new ideas for dinner, and help them get out of the dinner rut, help them make getting dinner on the table easier whether it's meal plans or just start slow cooker recipes or instant pot recipes. It's just been a pleasure and an honor to do that.

Looking back to when I very first started the website and what I'm grateful that I started with, I'm grateful that I started with a consistent plan. When I very first started the blog, I would share what we have for dinner every single day, Monday thru Friday. Then on Sunday, I would share my meal plan for the coming week. It was a rough plan but I did it consistently. Whatever we would make for dinner, I would just snap a picture of it with whatever camera I had back then which wasn't a great one, and then I would just post what we had. I would post, sometimes, pictures of our shopping receipt which this is really how much this meat cost. I would put the price of what we had. But, I think having that sort of "this is what we're doing" recipe Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and then sort of a round up meal plan on Sundays. I would sometimes sneak in other articles or I would sneak in some tips in with the recipes and things like that. I am so grateful that I started with that habit of consistency and just having a plan around the content of what we're gonna be sharing.

Because when you're blogging, and you're blogging for business, or potentially blogging for business, you have to have a consistent plan not only for the content you're gonna share but then how you're gonna share, and how you're gonna get eyeballs onto that content, whether that's just eyeballs on your Facebook page, in growing your page, or driving traffic through Pinterest. However you're going to then get the word out about your content, you have to have a plan for that as well. Having a plan for your content and having a plan for essentially the market you're content marketing and the marketing of your content. I think, in hindsight, that is what I'm super grateful that I had going from when I very first started out.

Mistakes that we made in the beginning I think was not putting myself out there, personally. I've certainly involved our family over the years but I think putting ourselves more is always the "what do I wish I had done" answer. What do I wish I had done differently over the years, I think would be putting myself out there. Because people are wanting to connect with you and they're wanting to connect with your story, and they're wanting to connect with your experience and your expertise. You have to be able to put yourself out there in order to connect with people in that way.

We have been blessed and blown away by the things that have happened with because of the 5dollardinners.com website. We've have had millions and millions and millions and millions of visitors onto our website over the years, many millions. I don't think we're into the hundred millions yet but we might be close. Many, many millions over the years.

I've had the opportunity to appear on national television. Numerous times on national radio. Numerous times I've had the pleasure of getting to meet many of our readers in person. I've had some face-to-face time with them which going from, all across the board, I've had this incredible opportunities. I've been able to form great relationships with a number of different large food brands, and corporate headquarters, and their peer teams here in the US.

I've learned a ton about myself, about our family, and about how we operate with our family life and our business in our life, how that weaves all together. I think, looking back, one of the most important lessons I didn't realize until well into the journey was that being an entrepreneur, owning my own small business, in working on this online business space, it's really all about personal development.

Business development, yes, that happens. But it's the personal development that happens that drives the business development, and I think that's a real crucial part of this blogger journey, of this entrepreneurship journey, this online business journey, is that personal development that comes along with it.

My number one tip for new bloggers would be consistency, consistency, consistency. I mentioned that a minute ago with having the plan for your content. But if you're not consistent with your content, people aren't gonna come back to connect with you. They're not gonna come back to hear the next part of your story. They're not gonna come back to see what other recipe you might be sharing. Whatever the story in the content is that you have to share, whatever the lessons you have to share with people, they're not gonna come back if they're not consistent. They're not gonna enjoy your email and newsletter if you only email – they're not gonna stick around on your email and the newsletter if you only email once every 10 – 12 weeks. You've got to be consistent with your content and the marketing of your content. I think that's the number one thing that I would share with anybody starting on their blogger journey because I think that in the long run, that'll have the biggest impact not only on yourself, but on the people that you are reaching through your words and through your content online.

In summary, I would say, put yourself out there. Be consistent with your content. Work hard to get your content in front of as many people as you can who need to see your content, who want to see your content, who're excited about the new content that you have, that you'll bring out again in the future. Just keep at it, keep at it, keep at it, work at it, work at it, work at it. Set up routines, set up systems, set up processes to help make it easier for you. As it grows from a hobby to a business, a large business, a business with a team, just be consistent with all the things that you're working on, all of the great content that you're producing for those who are there to absorb, and consume it, and allow you to make that difference in their lives.

Darren: That was Erin Chase from 5 Dollar Dinners. Thanks so much, Erin, for sharing your story and those tips. I love that she started out just wanting to share what she was learning. It's similar to Sumit's story in yesterday's episode. Erin had a knowledge, she had this new exciting thing in her life, she was learning how to cook dinner and provide dinner for her family in a more affordable way, and that was something that she just wanted to share.

So many people tell me that they don't have any expertise or that they don't know what to write about. They've got nothing that's worth sharing but this is just a brilliant example, I think, that there are things in our lives that happen all the time that we get excited about. Maybe one of those things, those things that's giving you a bit of energy, one of those things that you can't help but talk to your friends about, that maybe some of them are going, "Ahh, I don't really wanna hear about that." Maybe that type of thing is actually something that other people do wanna hear about.

If there's something exciting in your life at the moment, maybe that could be that little thing that could be the beginning of something new, a new blog in some way. Who would have ever thought that simply saying, "This is what we're having for dinner. This is how much it costs," would have turned into what it has today.

I've heard that story so many times over people starting blogs just because they wanted to share something that they were learning. That's why I started ProBlogger. That's why I started Digital Photography School. There were places for me just to record what I was learning in the hope that other people will join in in those ways.

Love the tip there of starting with a consistent plan, the same plan each week. I don't know if you picked up, she said every week day, she shared the dinner she was having and how much they cost, the weekend was the round up post. This is a really simple format. Your format might be the same type of thing. You might do weekdays one type of post, on weekends another type of post, or you might mix it up even more.

Back in episode 12, I suggested a different kind of format. Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays might all be different types of posts. You might write a review one day, an opinion piece another day, a linked post another day. Back in episode 12, I give you kind of a sample format for what you might do in a week.

If you're struggling to find your groove with an editorial calendar as you're starting out, you might wanna listen to episode 12.

I also really resonated with that mistake that Erin talked about, not putting yourself into the blog early. Again, I've said this a number of times, in Vanessa, my wife's blog, she really resisted putting her face on it, putting her name on it, it's almost like an anonymous blog in the early days, but it really came alive when she posted a selfie one day and injected herself into it. People do want to have that personal connection with you. It does help to grow your blog.

There is probably a time and a place for anonymous blogging as well. We've had a podcast on that which I'll link in the show notes but certainly if you can inject your personality, yourself into it, really can bring things alive. If you go and have a look at Erin's site, now you will see she's everywhere. There's videos of her all over the place and all over the content she delivers today. She's sharing the recipe but it's on video and injecting her personality into it.

That lesson she shared about being an entrepreneur is really about personal development. If you wanna grow your development as a business, you need to develop yourself. It's such a great lesson there, reminded me a little bit of my own journey in terms of realizing that my physical health is connected to the health of my business. I've talked about that back in episode 38. But certainly, developing your skills in leadership, in communication,  all of these sort of personal development type skills do fall on and impact the growth of your business as well.

There's so much good stuff in there and of course, that theme that you will be hearing from a lot of the bloggers that we're featuring this week, consistency is just so important. Consistency, those little things that we do everyday that add up to the big things.

If you're starting a blog, and if you're thinking about starting a blog, I hope that there's been some goodness in there. If you are already a blogger, I am sure you've got some good stuff out of that as well. I really look forward to connecting with you tomorrow because tomorrow, I've got another blogger for you. Tomorrow's blogger is a finance blogger. We've gone through DIY, we've talked tech blogs, we've talked recipe blogs, and tomorrow, we're getting into finance blogs. There's something for everyone in this series. I do hope that you are enjoying.

Remember, if you are thinking about starting a blog, head over to problogger.com/startablog. If you want to grab the transcript from today and any of the links that we mentioned, you can head over to the show notes from today at problogger.com/podcast/223. Thanks for listening, chat with you tomorrow!

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The post 223: From 0 to Six-Figure Blogger in Two Years – A Recipe Blogger Tells Her Story appeared first on ProBlogger.

This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now

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