Month: April 2020

  • Should You Blog About COVID-19?

    Blog About COVID-19
    blogging about covid-19

    Well, there’s no getting around it. COVID-19 has flipped our world upside down. And some are saying there’s no going back. So how does this affect your content marketing strategy? Should you blog about COVID-19 or just ignore it and give your readers a sense of normalcy?

    For the most part, my suggestion to you is to talk about it as long as you’re responsible with the information you share. There is so much misinformation spreading about COVID-19 that you should definitely not add yourself to that mix!

    That said, this is the perfect opportunity to bring hope to someone. After all, the coronavirus has impacted practically every single person in the United States. (And if you live outside the U.S., chances are, it’s impacted every person in your country, too!)

    Granted, there are some bloggers who probably shouldn’t blog about it because it’s simply not helpful to their readers in any way.

    People who shouldn’t blog or podcast about COVID-19 include people whose followers are seeking an escape from the bad news of everyday life. Their readers follow them to be entertained or to learn more about a feel-good hobby.

    But even that doesn’t mean all entertainers or hobby instructors should shy away from talking about COVID-19. The best way for you to know if you should stay quiet about the virus is to simply ask your audience.

    If you’re still not sure which camp you should be in, email me at jennyrosespaudo@gmail.com or send me a Facebook message. I’d love to help you figure this out!

    After all, it’s more than likely that you shouldn’t shy away from this ugly topic.

    Blog About COVID-19

    Why You Really Should Blog About COVID-19

    I’m of the opinion that those who shouldn’t blog about COVID-19 are the exception, not the rule. 

    Why?

    Because the virus has changed the way many of us live our daily lives. Our habits have changed. Many of us are starting to work from home full-time. Some are learning how to homeschool their public-schooled kids. Others are trying to figure out how to do things digitally that they’ve done in-person for decades. Raise your hand if you had to figure out Zoom in the last month.

    It’s a weird time to be alive. And if one thing is certain, it’s that we’re all learning new things and trying to figure stuff out.

    That’s why now, more than ever, your followers need to hear from you that everything is going to be OK. 

    If you’re a homeschool influencer, your followers need to know it’s going to be OK—they can protect their families, keep them healthy and still get their homeschool duties done. 

    In fact, now is a great time for homeschool influencers to expand their market and reach out to parents of public-schooled kids who desperately need advice for how to teach their children at home.

    If you’re a nutritionist or fitness expert, your followers need to know it’s going to be OK—they can still eat healthy and work out faithfully even during quarantine. Look, those extra quarantine pounds are REAL, friend.

    If you’re in ministry, your followers need to know it’s going to be OK—God is still with them. And He’s still the same yesterday, today and forever. He will get them through this crisis.

    If you’re a financial expert, your followers REALLY need to know it’s going to be OK! With everyone freaking out about recession, now is the time to reinforce basic financial wisdom and remind people they don’t have to panic if they manage their money wisely.

    It’s Time to Get Innovative

    A crisis isn’t a time to shy back in fear. A crisis is a perfect opportunity to get creative.

    Don’t think of it as taking advantage of the horrible situation. If that’s your motive, stop and get that right first.

    What I’m talking about is an honest desire to help people with their newfound needs.

    Look around you and think about it. How have people’s lives changed since the coronavirus hit? How have those changes created new needs, new concerns and new challenges?

    Speak to those pain points. If you have a solution to their problem, offer it and don’t hold back.

    I have to tip my hat to a lot of churches around the U.S. who have gotten creative in the midst of quarantines and stay-at-home orders. 

    Many churches have either live streamed their services (some for the first time!) or are even doing drive-in services. A drive-in service is pretty much what it sounds like. Congregants park in the church parking lot and listen while the pastor preaches, often from the church roof or a scissor lift. Sometimes they’ll honk their horns in place of a hearty “Amen!”

    That’s a great example of getting creative to solve a problem and meet a need.

    Now it’s your turn. 

    What need are you seeing that you can offer a creative solution to? That’s your next blog topic! And maybe your next product.

    Need some help coming up with ideas for how to help your followers during the COVID-19 crisis? Connect with me and let’s talk about it!

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  • How to Blog When You Have No Time

    How to Blog When You Have No Time
    how to blog when you have no time

    I know plenty of people who know they should be blogging but just don’t have the time to do it.

    Their schedules are full of keeping their businesses running, taking care of their kids, and tending to the thousands of other things they’ve volunteered for. They just don’t have time to blog.

    I get that. 

    But also, respectfully, I disagree.

    I think if people were to let go of some of their blogging misconceptions, they would feel free to invest in this important content-marketing strategy.

    Hear me out.

    It’s true that blogging can become a full-time gig. Some people invest hours each day promoting their blogs on social media, engaging people on forums and pitching affiliates.

    But that’s not the only way to blog.

    So how can you blog when you have no time?

    My goal is that this article gives you some hope. If you want to start blogging but don’t know where to find the time for it, keep reading, my friend.

    How to Blog When You Have No Time

    Misconception #1: Promoting my blog and writing consistently take too long.

    No, they don’t.

    Promotion can be a black hole if you let it. So don’t let it.

    Learn the top one or two social media platforms your ideal clients use, and focus on those to promote your blogs.

    Don’t waste hours promoting your blog on forums or social media where no one will care. In the future, when you have more time to branch out, you can do that. But for right now, start with your core people.

    As for writing consistently, find a frequency that works for you. Right now, I’m working a full-time job in addition to maintaining this blog. So the frequency that works for me is once a week. 

    Find what’s right for you.

    Misconception #2: Writing one blog will take hours.

    It can, but it doesn’t have to. And it really shouldn’t.

    If your blog is a way to provide insight into your brand and show yourself to be an expert in your niche, then there are some simple ways to write blogs that don’t consume tons of time.

    First, write what you know.

    What are some of the main problems you see your customers facing? What advice would you give a client who was struggling with one of those problems? Write your blog as though you’re writing to that one person.

    Second, write out of your own experiences.

    Again, use examples from your own life to write your blogs. Tell your readers what has worked for you and what hasn’t. Tell stories about mistakes you’ve survived and lessons you’ve learned.

    Third, write like you’re having a conversation.

    Don’t make your blog stuffy. Often, writing takes us so long because we’re trying to sound smart. 

    You don’t have to fall for that time-waster. Write as though you’re talking to a friend. 

    An easy way to do this is to say what you want to communicate out loud. Then simply write out what you just said and clean up any grammatical yuckiness. (Yes, that’s the technical term.)

    Misconception #3: Editing my blog will take forever.

    If you’re a perfectionist, then, yes, it will take forever. 

    I know this because I’ve lived it. And still do sometimes.

    But blogs aren’t meant to be perfect. You’re not publishing your blog in a magazine or newspaper. So be willing for it to be less than perfect.

    This does NOT mean that it’s OK to let your blog look like a hot mess. But editing doesn’t have to take forever. Run the piece through a spell checker. Or ask a friend to look over it for you. Or look over it once or twice yourself. (Or hire someone to edit it for you, let’s be honest now.)

    But don’t require it to be perfect.

    Misconception #4: Making graphics for my blog will take forever.

    It certainly can if you don’t have the hang of it or if design isn’t your thing.

    It’s not mine, for sure.

    That’s why I purchased social media templates from Bluchic. (You can check them out here if you’d like.)

    I purchased the package when they were having a Black Friday sale. But there are tons of others out there.

    The templates may cost a little money, but they save you a ton of time.

    Another easy way to create social media graphics is on Canva.

    I introduced my mom to Canva a couple of months ago and she loves it! Some of the graphics she’s creating now are way better than mine, and I’m not even salty about it.

    Basically, Canva gives you templates you can edit and customize to make them unique for your purposes. They have templates for Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest and more. 

    Misconception #5: I don’t even know how to start.

    Here are a couple easy ways to introduce your blog:

    • Help the reader visualize the problem you’re trying to solve. Provide an example or a story.
    • Help the reader visualize the success they’re trying to achieve. Create a scenario in which the reader is the hero. Then tell them how to get there.
    • Start off with a controversial statement. Then explain why you think that way and how it will help your reader.

    Check out my full post on this topic here.

    Bonus Tips

    Just because I think you’re swell, here are three more tips to help you save time on blogging:

    1. If you’re an author, use short excerpts from your book and simply tweak the intros and outros.

    2. If you’re a pastor or speaker, use excerpts from transcripts of your sermons or talks.

    3. If you already write for social media, take your most popular posts and expand them just a bit. A blog doesn’t have to be long.

    The truth is that, yes, writing a consistent blog is a time commitment. But it doesn’t have to be a big one. You can streamline the process and make it work for you.

    As always, I’m here cheering you on!

    Hey, see that line of social buttons on the left side of your screen? If you liked today’s blog, click one of those buttons and share this article. 🙂

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  • 5 Tactics to Make Your Blog Easy to Read

    Make Your Blog Easy to Read
    make your blog easy to read

    If you want your blog to attract new readers, maintain people’s attention until the end, and rank well on search engines … you need to make your blog easy to read.

    Maybe that’s hard for you. If so, you’re in good company, my friend.

    By the time I graduated college, I was pretty good at writing academic prose professors loved. I followed all the grammar rules, cited my sources meticulously, and explained my arguments and methods in excruciating detail.

    But when I got hired at a Christian magazine, I quickly realized online readers didn’t want to read my thesis—or anything that resembled it.

    They wanted to get to the good stuff. And they wanted it quickly.

    If you struggle with clunky writing, here are a few tips I’ve learned along the way. These have greatly helped me in learning how to write in a way that makes people want to keep reading.

    Make Your Blog Easy to Read

    1. Write your blog like you talk.

    “In conclusion, the writing method to which many of the most reputable online authors and content developers ascribe requires that one research how consumers of online publications verbalize their thoughts and emotions and subsequently write in a like manner.”

    Stop it. You don’t talk like that.

    Instead, try: “Many of the best bloggers write the way people talk.”

    Write your blog like you’re talking to a friend. Granted, your writing should be a little cleaner since we tend to get pretty lazy with our grammar when we’re speaking.

    But still. Make your blog easy to read by letting it feel like a genuine conversation.

    2. Use headings often.

    Headings (like the ones I’m using throughout this article) make the structure of your blog super easy to follow.

    People don’t have to expend as much energy trying to figure out where your article is going when you have huge signposts (headings) to guide them.

    They’re also helpful because people often skim an article before they actually read it word for word. If they like what they see in your headings, they are more likely to actually read your blog in its entirety.

    And lastly, headings break up the monotony of gray in your blog. They add much-needed white space, giving your readers a chance to process what they read.

    Here’s a great article about the importance of white space on your blog.

    3. Write in short sentences and short paragraphs.

    Speaking of white space, another way to get more of it is by keeping your sentences and paragraphs short. Sometimes that means your paragraphs are only one or two sentences long. Sometimes just a couple words.

    The horror.

    No, seriously. It was really hard for me to write short paragraphs at first because the grammar freak in me knew it broke the rules.

    But that’s OK. Do it anyway.

    4. Make it practical.

    One of the major reasons people read blogs or look up articles online is because they want a solution to their problem.

    Naturally, they’re looking for articles that can solve those problems with practical advice.

    An easy way to make your writing more practical is to write with the readers’ pain point in mind. Then offer your solution.

    Use examples while you’re teaching your solution. Help your readers visualize the step you’re telling them to take. Tell stories of people who did (or didn’t do) what you’re teaching.

    5. End with a call to action.

    You readers want to walk away from your blog with at least one thing they can do to improve their condition.

    Make that one thing super clear.

    You can also end with telling your reader to do something that will take them deeper into your brand. For instance, sometimes I end my blogs by asking readers to share the article. Or I direct them to my Facebook page and ask them to connect with me.

    Blogs are an excellent way to nurture your relationship with your readers. Use it!

    OK, now that you have five new steps to make your blogs easier to read, I want you to do something. 

    Go back to one of your blogs and check to make sure it follows the five steps I’ve outlined in this article. If it doesn’t, then revise it and read it out loud. 

    I guarantee it will be a great improvement. 

    Until next time!

    P.S. Here are a few other articles I’ve written that will help you craft a blog that people will love to read:

    Top 17 Grammar Errors Christian Writers Make

    How Long Should My Blog Post Be?

    3 Terrible Ways to Intro Your Blog

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