This is the question I raised on my personal blog. Of course, every book needs a gimmick to sell. But in the case of bloggers who get book deals based on their online content -- will existing readers of a niche blog spend the money to buy a book derived from that blog? If the book features some or all of the same content they can read online for free, what's the incentive for them to cough up cash for a print edition?
An interesting conversation is going on about this in the comments. Stop on by.
These days, the buzz word for blogs is "value" -- for the reader. What experience are you, the blogger, offering your readers? What compelling reason can you give to make someone subscribe to your feed, return to your site, or bookmark and share your content?
For niche bloggers, business bloggers, and non-fiction author-experts, the answer is easy -- they have specific subjects they cover from specific angles, for specific audiences. The content almost writes itself, and the audience is always hungry.
For personal bloggers, however, the concept of value is a little less clear. I'll get into that in a moment. But first...
A personal blogger can be described as anyone who blogs about personal matters or daily life. Usually these bloggers write whenever the spirit moves them. Posts vary widely in subject matter, but are unified by the blogger's voice. Fans return over time because they get to know the blogger and like seeing the world through his or her eyes.
Personal blogs vary in tone, topic and approach, so in some ways it's easier to say what a personal blog is not.
Most personal blogs do not have a readily identifiable gimmick (e.g. "anonymous blogging from Capitol Hill"), nor a specified time constraint ("a year in the life of a stripper"). They talk about anything, and they continue indefinitely.
If you're blogging to keep a chronicle of your life and you don't care about the number of site visits or RSS readers you have, then no, you don't need worry about value.
But in reality, most bloggers keep a public journal because they appreciate having a public.
And if you're blogging in support of your personal brand -- e.g., as a novelist or journalist -- the reason you should care about offering value is obvious. You are trying to sell something -- yourself. And nothing is more depressing than selling to an empty room.
Assuming you are a personal blogger who wants more readers, here are 5 ways to add value to your blog, drawing upon examples of personal blogs I subscribe to and read regularly.
This suggestion comes from Shawna Benson of Shouting into the Wind.
If you post about daily life and that alone isn't roping in the readers, give your blog a handle that's easier to grasp -- a thesis statement of sorts, but one that leaves room for personal wanderings and observations. The focus gives your blog an RSS Factor -- an info-driven reason for people to return. Your personal posts give your blog a Human Factor -- a glimpse at the personality behind the curtain.
Shouting into the Wind
Shawna's blog is about episodic television. She keeps track of network cancellations and renewals so that aspiring TV writers know what shows are safe to spec. But she also blogs about her personal life: her writing projects, her experiences with networking, and occasionally her passions, like American Idol or wine tasting.
Tim Ferriss's Blog
Tim's blog, which supports his non-fiction book, The 4-Hour Work Week, is about lifestyle design -- how to live better by leaving the office, working less, and outsourcing. But Tim also shares his personal preoccupations, repackaged in the form of productivity tips and hacks: wine tasting, speed dating, tango dancing, dieting. His blog is an example of one that adds value through both hybridization and style -- more on that next.
If you're familiar with CSS, you've heard of style. In CSS, if you style an HTML tag, its look is forever changed. If I style my post titles to be red, they will always be red.
The same principle applies to styling your personal blog. Your subject matter will vary -- that's the nature of a personal blog. But your presentation, your style, can remain consistent. In this way, you can establish brand through your technique instead of your topic.
Tim Ferriss's Blog
Again, Tim's blog is a great example. His posts vary widely in topic, but they're unified by a consistent approach. Whether he's talking about travel or weight loss, he shares what he's learned and focuses on how to "game the system" to get fast, reliable results.
Living the Romantic Comedy
Blogger Billy Mernit is an expert on romantic comedies. But he's hybridized his blog, giving himself permission to write about other subjects like dating and his prior career as a songwriter. But arguably, where he adds the most value for the reader is in his blogging style. His medium-to-long posts are consistently crafted like magazine essays. He uses photos to establish his theme and often ends his pieces raising more questions than he answers (a perfect way to encourage comments).
Warning: this option is not for everyone.
The technique is simple: say anything. Don't self-censor. Don't be afraid to use strong language or embarrass yourself. Make people wonder, "Did he really just say that?", or "What will she say next?"
The blogosphere is full of success stories from no-holds-barred personal bloggers who turned their diaries into dollar signs. From Diablo Cody to Stephanie Klein, personal bloggers turned authors (and Oscar winners!) have a lot to crow about.
But there is a downside to being yourself unfiltered. Along with the good, you risk revealing the unattractive, irresponsible, and unkind parts of yourself. If you don't get a book deal, you may well get fired or lose some friends. But you will gain readers.
Dooce.com
The mother of all personal bloggers, Heather Armstrong has made a media empire out of being herself. Her highly personal, massively popular blog includes descriptions of her post-partum depression, love letters to her daughter, and lighthearted talk about poop. The appeal: she's funny, and she will say outrageous things in public.
Citizen of the Month
Humorist Neil Kramer's specialty is in the promotion of his persona -- a neurotic flirt, knee-deep in therapy and fond of writing posts about sex. Kramer has other fixations, too -- monetizing his blog; going to BlogHer to meet women; learning how to undo a bra in under 30 seconds. His posts vary in subject, but are almost always revealing about his personal hangups and ambitions.
So you're a true personal blogger -- you write about yourself and your life, with no particular plan or schedule. And maybe your life is kind of mundane. But that doesn't mean your blog has to be.
You can make your ho-hum life sound exciting -- just tell it like a story.
Find a thread or theme that can be teased out and told in increments. Give your life a story arc with cliffhangers, like a miniseries or a soap opera.
Buying your first home? Blog about the process, from the open house to the closing. Going on vacation? Blog your trip in 5 acts, like Hamlet.
Humans love stories; we're wired to look for them. Don't make your readers work too hard. Give them pieces of your life in a shape they can understand, with a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Man Bytes Hollywood
Screenwriter David Anaxagoras published a 6-part blog series about his experiences trying to option a novel to make into a screenplay. Readers followed along and became invested in his process. At the same time, they learned from David's experiences "how not to option a novel".
Living the Romantic Comedy
In Billy's 7-part My Romance in Amsterdam series, he describes a semi-fictional account of his spontaneous trip to Europe to meet a woman he met online. Each entry in the series corresponds with a standard turning point in a romantic comedy film.
This is no reflection on your likability, and I don't mean friends in real life. I mean blogger friends.
There are millions of blogs out there, on nearly as many subjects. You may be a personal blogger, but you're also a person, the most basic unit of a community.
Find that community, and join it.
Then search within that community for a content or style vacancy you can fill. Use the previous 4 items on this list as your guide.
For example, are you the only mommyblogger you know whose family is macrobiotic? Hybridize.
Are you a cinephile with a knack for rhyming? Use your style -- write your movie reviews as rap lyrics.
Maybe you're in tech support, and need a place to reveal your frustrations with the dumb questions you get asked every day at the office. (In that case, consider writing anonymously.)
Or perhaps you're a senior citizen whose dating life would make a great soap opera. Miniseries it!
Whatever you do, don't miss out on the opportunity to affiliate yourself with a larger group of bloggers. Networking with a community of like-minded people can give you instant traffic... and the opportunity to stand out by being different from the rest.
The blogosphere is a crowded place, getting more crowded by the day. The competition for readers is greater with every passing second. Adding value to your personal blog -- a focus, a style, a persona, and a story -- is the best way to give your writing a clear identity and your readers a reason to stick around.
Does your blog need a boost? Contact Kristen at 563 Media dot Com to learn how a blog consultation can help you focus your content and build your brand.
For those on the LibraryThing vs. GoodReads fence, Sean at Deeplinking gives some good reasons to lean toward the former. LibraryThing Local sounds particularly intriguing.
Though I began this site with the intent of covering social media as it relates to authors, my end game was to eventually do something else with this space. The something else is more fun for me, as a writer/editor, than what I have been doing -- covering news and trends. So look for the something else to enter this space soon. The sidebar links & resources may move, but they'll still exist; and the author-and-book focus will shift a bit to encompass, well... everybody engaged in blogging. And maybe then some. But authors will still be an important part of the mix.
Thanks for your patience...
Recent Comments