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Beautiful day outside, here in Paradise. Sun is shining, intermittent showers. March in San Francisco is like deep summer in western Ireland. Balmy and damp. I love it!
I’m all fired up. I’m jammin’ out to Murdock’s remix of Imogene Heap’s “Hide and Seek,” going loud (warning: dub step. Click through at your own risk). Good stuff. Things in general could be better (as usual), but overall, life is pretty damn good at the moment.
But I’m also a little bummed out. I read the other day a newer, but really high profile blogger is quitting blogging.
Quitting blogging…
Why?
It makes no sense to me.
She has an enormous amount of goodwill built around her brand, offers decent products, has excellent relationships with the top bloggers in the world.
Let me tell you something, all of you, and this is coming from David M. Doolin, PhD: blogging is overrated. There is no dispute in my mind to that claim. But there’s more, and this is the more important part:
“Quitting blogging” is highly overrated.
You put all that time into building a long term resource. You have tens or hundreds of thousands of words, maybe more, which you own. Your words, your property, an intellectual property asset! Why play hide and seek with your fans? What’s the sense of throwing this all away?
There is no sense, and here’s why: maintaining a blog costs almost nothing. Seriously, if you want to “quit blogging,” just mothball the damn thing, decommission your blog for a while. It’s easy:
- Backup up the whole site. You should be doing this regularly anyway. Make sure you backup your WordPress site files, and backup your WordPress database. You need both.
- Turn off commenting and user registrations. Keep the riffraff out. No need to moderate comments or worry about spam when you don’t accept comments.
- Pay your hosting and domain fees once per year. Comes out to what, 33 1/2 cents per day? Cheap protection for your investment.
That’s it.
Now, you have an long term asset out there on the interwebs aging away in the search engine indexes. This is a good thing.
If you ever get a wild hair to do any more “blogging” (whatever that means), well, just log and snap out an article. You don’t need to promote it, you don’t need to tweet it, you don’t need to race around the circuit commenting strategically here and there to build lucrative, mutually benefical Win!/Win! relationships. It’s simply not necessary.
You will find, as more and more people “quit blogging,” your long term play looks better and better.
I can prove it too.
There Is No Box
I’ve run a blog called “There Is No Box” since sometime in 2006. I rarely promote it these days, and haven’t actively promoted the site since mid-2009. For a while I was posting daily, and my traffic and page rank (PR3 at one point) reflected my activity. Since I was also posting daily here on Website In A Weekend, I was busy. Very busy. Too busy.
So I stopped posting daily.
Guess what? The world didn’t come to an end. Yes, traffic dropped off… now, with ZERO effort on my part, I’m only getting a bit less than a 100 hits per day on the site.
100 hits per day on a site for which I post – at most – monthly.
How effen cool is that?
In my book, that’s really cool.
If you really must quit blogging…
Look, if you really feel you have to quit, it’s easy: just stop. You don’t have to announce anything you may regret later. You don’t have to tear down your blog. You don’t really have to do anything at all. That’s the point of quitting, right? To stop doing?
If you secretly think you might come back to it later, or if the very notion of trashing months or years of effort and goodwill* bothers you as it does me, just take a full backup of your site, then walk away from it. That gives you something to restore later.
If you’re in a place where you feel you need to put this blogging stuff down for a bit, and need to talk to someone, leave a comment. The Website In A Weekend community puts up with all kinds of my shenanigans (like, being absent from here weeks at a time), but I’m confident I can rally a fair number of folk to help you work through walking away.
But, please, don’t just throw your work away. Really, don’t.
*I’m using “goodwill” here in it’s technical sense: unquantifiable value of your brand. Think “Coca Cola.”



