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The Uninspiring, Unencouraging and Unmotivating Guide to Unblogging

(Reading time: 4 – 6 minutes)

Blogging really sucks. It’s hard work. Inspiration is fickle as fate, and motivation blows with the wind. Why would anyone set their shoulder to such a task? You fire your old boss, then find your new boss (you) isn’t much better. And there’s all these rules and shi^H^Htuff about how blogging is supposed to be.

Where’s the fun in that?

Hey, how do you like that headline? Rockin’, right? Gonna get me some real search engine lovin’ on that one, oh yeah!

Pfffft.

Since I’m dedicating this article to all of you who are in your “I loathe/hate/despise blogging” phase, I thought I’d channel me some Kelly Diel’s headline advice and poke a sharp stick into Blogistan‘s collective eye for how things oughter be.

But I’d hate to disappoint anyone, so I’m going to trot out the tired old trope: There’s good news and bad news. Which, as we all know, really means “You’re not going to like what I have to say, but my compulsion to say it outweighs my consideration for your feelings.”

Let’s be about it.

Good news!

  • You are not unique, everyone hates blogging sometimes.
  • Even when you hate it, when it’s your job, you can jobify it. More later.

Bad news!

  • You are not unique, everyone hates blogging sometimes.
  • Even when you hate it, when it’s your job, you can jobify it. More later.

Helloooo, my Special Snowflake!

I love snowflakes. Every one different, unique, all in the same way. It’s the human condition frozen into an eighth-inch of wonder.

Julian Colton - Snowflakes

Julian Colton - Snowflakes

It’s amazing. In some respects (like, to dogs), we all look the same. Two arms, two legs, two eyes, etc. Bilateral symmetry rocks.

But the the odds of two people who are not twins having identical DNA are like a million billion trillion to one. That’s pretty low odds.

Even more important: however you’re feeling right now, someone else has felt it in the past. Likely, someone else is feeling it right now. I know this is true because if you can describe your emotion in words, someone had to feel enough the same way to invent a word for that feeling. QED.

If you’re at the stage of blogging where it all just seems soo dreary, you’re in good company. It happens to everyone, whether they write about it or not.

And just like everyone else, you can 1. choose to quit in disgust, or 2. choose to just get on with it (possibly in disgust, that’s cool).

Get with the program. Jobify your blog. Unblog it.

So.

It’s a nice day out there, and you just don’t feel like working on your blog. But money doesn’t grow on trees.

It’s not nice outside? It’s really crappy out there and you just want to stay in bed? Money doesn’t grow on trees!

On days like these, blogging is part of your job. Deal with it. Like a job. Here’s a few jobification tips:

Get the maintenance work done. You should have a checklist for “unblogging,” boring, bloggy chores like these:

  1. Clean up spam.
  2. Moderate and respond to comments.
  3. Make sure plugins and themes are up to date.
  4. Make sure everything is backed up.
  5. Check your server logs or redirection logs for 404 errors, redirect as needed, or drop posts you don’t want indexed.
  6. I’m sure you can think of many more. What’s your least favorite blog chore? Tell us in the comments (then go do it).

Get a load of this stuff done, right now, then call it a day. Everyone who matters will be here when you get back, promise.

By the way, I wrote a little whitepaper on daily blog chores, and I show how to handle all these chores (and more) in Blog Maintenance Challenge. But this isn’t a sales letter; if you want in to BMC, email me or leave a comment, I’ll send you a link and set it up.

Remember: you don’t have to feel like doing something to get it done.

You just have to get it done.

(And tell us about your least favorite blog chore in the comments!)

Stop Crying and Do It!

(Reading time: 3 – 5 minutes)

Every once in a while, someone distinctly different shows up. Someone like James Richmond, who writes under the moniker The Infopreneur. James is a relative newcomer to the blogging scene, but is already cutting a bright arc. He has more energy than a room full of people! And as it turns out, he’s actually been a little camera shy in the past, something I can relate to (story for a different day). But he’s started doing video. Here’s a little bit of Jame’s story, a guest post he sent over a while back.


Stop Crying and Do It!

-by James Richmond, “The InfoPreneur”

Have you ever come across websites that have just given up? Not been updated for weeks? I help everyone I can and will never put someone down for trying, but sometimes tough love is the best love. I have a young family and work a 60 hour full-time job, yet I still have time to chase my dream. If you are lacking motivation and a bit of direction, sometimes all you need is someone to say ‘Stop crying and do it!’

Animals

When was the last time you saw a lion feeling sorry for its self? When do animals ever feel sorry for themselves? Human beings are programmed just like animals, but it’s our soft existence that makes us have those doubting feelings. These days we complain if our iPhone isn’t working or our internet provider is slow which means a web page takes just over a second to load, get real!

Cavemen (although I didn’t know any) didn’t have the option of wallowing in self-pity, they hunted and provided for their young, get out of your cave and hunt!

Excuses

Do you have a dream? You should, everyone should have goals and ambitions. But why do so many fail to achieve them? Why do we look at someone who rows their way across the Pacific Ocean or climbs Mount Everest and think, that person is amazing? It’s because you are making excuses, why you can’t do it. You don’t have the time or you have too many commitments.

I have done a lot in my young life: ultra-marathons, climb mountains, served all over the world, I’m a dad and an InfoPreneur, but I’m still pushing forward and grabbing everything I can. Think about what you have done in the past 5 years. Just think for a second, could you have done more? I have the same commitments everyone else has, but I know, first hand, how short life is. Your life is over in a light switch so get out there and make it your own.

Pathetic

I’m no expert or web guru. I’ve got an IQ of 94 and struggle to read and write. Do I let that stop me producing over a dozen posts a week to my site? No, of course I don’t. When I was a kid I was homeless and the people who called themselves my ‘parents’ weren’t good people, did I let it define me? No, I made it drive me.

Whatever your excuse is for not achieving the things you want for yourself and your family, I can tell you now it’s pathetic. That’s not meant to aggravate you, it’s meant as a real wake up pill. Look at Haiti right now, 150,000 dead. They would give anything to be in your position, get out there and do it.

As I said I’m no expert and to some this post maybe a bit of a hard pill to swallow. If it is, just think about what I’m saying. Yeah I grew up in a bad way, surrounded by drugs, alcohol and abuse, but so what. My upbringing was a walk in the park compared to some, so get on with it and start producing those dreams!


James Richmond is the The Infopreneur, dedicated to helping you succeed online and elsewhere. Visit James at The Infopreneur dot Net.