You think of ideas in
a vacuum.
When you start blogging, ideas will come to you at random times
-- in the shower, on a run, while on the phone with your mom. While the ideas
may come at random moments, the ideas themselves should never be random. Just
because it's a good idea in general doesn't mean it's a good idea for your
company.
Solution: Your blog posts should all serve larger company
goals.
The reason you're blogging is to grow your business, so all
of your blog post ideas should help serve those growth goals. They should have
natural tie-ins to issues in your industry and address specific questions and
concerns your prospects have.
Need help figuring out what those goals are and how to
address them? Chat with your manager about the larger company goals, and then
schedule a meeting with someone on the sales team to hear what questions they
get asked most often. After both meetings, you should know which goals you need
to achieve and have some ideas on how to achieve them.
You don't use data as
evidence.
Let's say I'm writing a blog post about why businesses
should consider using Instagram for marketing. When I'm making that argument,
which is more convincing?
"It seems like more people are using Instagram
nowadays."
"Instagram’s user base is growing far faster than
social network usage in general in the U.S. Instagram will grow 15.1% this
year, compared to just 3.1% growth for the social network sector as a
whole."
The second, of course. Arguments and claims are much more
compelling when rooted in data and research. As marketers, we don’t just have
to convince people to be on our side about an issue -- we need to convince them
to take action. Data-driven content catches people's attention in a way that
fluffy arguments do not.
Solution: Use data and research to back up the claims you
make in your posts.
In any good story, you’ll offer a main argument, establish
proof, and then end with a takeaway for the audience. You can use data in blog
posts to introduce your main argument and show why it's relevant to your
readers, or as proof of it throughout the body of the post.
Some great places to find compelling data include:
HubSpot Research
Pew Research Center
MarketingSherpa
HubSpot's State of Inbound report
Mistake 7: Your content borders on plagiarism.
Plagiarism didn't work in school, and it certainly doesn't
work on your company's blog. But for some reason, many beginner bloggers think
they can get away with the old copy-and-paste technique.
You can't. Editors and readers can usually tell when something's
been copied from somewhere else. Your voice suddenly doesn't sound like you, or
maybe there are a few words in there that are incorrectly used. It just sounds
... off.
Plus, if you get caught stealing other people's content, you
could get your site penalized by Google -- which could be a big blow to your
company blog's organic growth.
Solution: Learn how to cite others.
Instead, take a few minutes to understand how to cite other
people's content in your blog posts. It's not super complicated, but it's an
essential thing to learn when you're first starting out.
You think people care
about you as a writer.
It sounds harsh, but it's the truth: When people first start
out blogging, they think that their audience will be inherently interested in
their stories and their interests ... but that's not the case. It's no knock
against them as a person -- it's just that when you're new, no one is
interested in you and your experiences. People care way more about what you can
teach them.
Solution: Show your personality; don't tell it.
Even though people don't really care that it's you that's
writing the post, you can infuse parts of your personality in your writing to
make them feel more comfortable with you. How you do that is entirely up to
you. Some people like to crack jokes, some like to make pop culture references,
and others have a way with vivid descriptions.
Your writing's too
stiff.
Writing a blog post is much different than writing a term
paper. But when bloggers first start out, they usually only have experience
with the latter. The problem? The style of writing from a term paper is not the
style of writing people enjoy reading.
Let's be honest: Most of the people who see your post aren't
going to read the whole thing. If you want to keep them interested, you have to
compel them to keep reading by writing in a style that's effortless to read.
Solution: Write like you talk.
It's okay to be more conversational in your writing -- in
fact, we encourage it. The more approachable your writing is, the more people
will enjoy reading it. People want to feel like they're doing business with
real people, not robots.
So loosen up your writing. Throw in contractions. Get rid of
the jargon. Make a pun or two. That's how real people talk -- and that's what
real people like to read.
HubSpot's Director of Content Corey Wainwright is particularly
good at this. Here's an example from the introduction of one of her posts:
To infuse personality into your own writing, try looking for
ways to relate to your readers on the topic you're writing about -- then write
in the first person as if you're hanging out with them and chatting about it.
Make your tone personal, approachable, and engaging, just like you would in a
face-to-face conversation.
Your topics are too
broad.
When people start blogging, they generally want to write on
really big topics like:
"How to Do Social Media Marketing"
"Business Best Practices"
"How to Make Money on the Internet"
Topics like these are far too broad. Because there are so
many details and nuances in these topics, it's really hard to do a good job
answering them. Plus, more specific topics tend to attract smaller, more
targeted audiences, which tend to be higher quality and more likely to convert
into leads and customers.
So, to get the most short-term and long-term benefits of
blogging, you'll need to get way more specific.
Solution: Create very specific working titles.
Nailing really specific topics is crucial to knocking your
first few posts out of the park. My colleague Corey wrote another fabulous post
on how to do that. Go read it now. Seriously. She'll tell you how to pick a
topic that works for business blogs, and walk you through the process of
narrowing it into a working title.
The working title isn't final -- it's just a concrete angle
you can use to keep your writing on track. Once you nail those two things, it's
much easier to write blog posts.
Your writing is a
brain dump.
Sometimes when I get a great idea I'm excited about, it's
really tempting to just sit down and let it flow out of me. But what I get is
usually a sub-par blog post.
Why? The stream-of-consciousness style of writing isn't
really a good style for blog posts. Most people are going to scan your blog
posts, not read them, so it needs to be organized really well for that to
happen.
Solution: Use a specific post type, create an outline, and
use headers.
The first thing you should do is choose what type of blog
post you're going to write. Is it a how-to post? A list-based post? A curated
collection post? A SlideShare presentation? For help on this, download our free
templates for creating five different types of blog posts. Once you have a
template down, it'll be easier to write your outline.
Writing an outline makes a big difference. If you put in the
time up front to organize your thoughts and create a logical flow in your post,
the rest becomes easy -- you're basically just filling in the blanks.
To write a blog post outline, first come up with a list of
the top takeaways you want your readers to get from your post. Then, break up
those takeaways into larger section headers. When you put in a section header
every few paragraphs, your blog post becomes easier and more enjoyable to read.
(And plus, header text with keywords is good for SEO.) When you finally get to
writing, all you'll have to do is fill in those sections.
You think you're done once the writing's done.
Most people make the mistake of not editing their writing.
It sounded so fluid in their head when they were writing that it must be great
to read ... right?
Nope -- it still needs editing. And maybe a lot of it.
Solution: Take 30 minutes to edit your piece.
Everyone needs to edit their writing -- even the most
experienced writers. Most times, our first drafts aren't all that great. So take the time you need to shape up your
post. Fix typos, run-on sentences, and accidental its/it's mistakes. Make sure
your story flows just as well as it did in your outline.
To help you remember all the little things to check before
publishing, check out our checklist for editing and proofreading a blog post.
You try to make every post perfect.
I hate to break it to you, but your blog post is never going
to be perfect. Ever.
There will always be more things you can do to make your posts
better. More images. Better phrasing. Wittier jokes. The best writers I know,
know when to stop obsessing and just hit "publish."
Solution: At a certain point, just ship the post.
There's a point at which there are diminishing returns for
getting closer to "perfect" -- and you're really never going to reach
"perfect" anyway. So while you don't want to publish a post filled
with factual inaccuracies and grammatical errors, it's not the end of the world
if a typo slips through. It most likely won't affect how many views and leads
it brings in.
Plus, if you (or your readers) find the mistake, all of you
have to do is update the post. No biggie. So give yourself a break once and a
while -- perfect is the enemy of done.
You don't blog
consistently.
By now, you've probably heard that the more often you blog,
the more traffic you'll get to your website -- and the more subscribers and
leads you'll generate from your posts. But as important as volume is, it's
actually more important that you're blogging consistently when you're just
getting started. If you publish five posts in one week and then only one or two
in the next few weeks, it'll be hard to form a consistent habit. And inconsistency
could really confuse your subscribers.
Instead, it's the companies that make a commitment to
regularly publishing quality content to their blogs that tend to reap the
biggest rewards in terms of website traffic and leads -- and those results continue
to pay out over time.
To help establish consistency, you'll need a more concrete
planning strategy.
Solution: Use an editorial calendar.
Use it to get into the habit of planning your blog post
topics ahead of time, publishing consistently, and even scheduling posts in
advance if you're finding yourself having a particularly productive week.
Here at HubSpot, we typically use good ol' Google Calendar
as our blog editorial calendar, which you can learn how to set up step-by-step
here. Or, you can click here to download our free editorial calendar templates
for Excel, Google Sheets, and Google Calendar, along with instructions on how
to set them up.
You concentrate your analytics on immediate traffic.
Both beginner bloggers and advanced bloggers are guilty of
this blogging mistake. If you concentrate your analysis on immediate traffic
(traffic from email subscribers, RSS feeds, and social shares), then it's going
to be hard to prove the enduring value of your blog. After all, the half-life
for those sources is very brief -- usually a day or two.
When marketers who are just starting their business blogs
see that their blog posts aren't generating any new traffic after a few days,
many of them get frustrated. They think their blog is failing, and they end up
abandoning it prematurely.
Solution: Focus on the cumulative potential of organic
traffic.
Instead of focusing on the sudden decay of short-term
traffic, focus instead on the cumulative potential of organic traffic. Over
time, given enough time, the traffic from day three and beyond of a single blog
post will eclipse that big spike on days one and two thanks to being found on
search engine results pages through organic search. You just have to give it a
while.
To help drive this long-term traffic, make sure you're
writing blog posts that have durable relevance on a consistent basis. These
posts are called "evergreen" blog posts: They're relevant year after
year with little or no upkeep, valuable, and high quality.
Over time, as you write more evergreen content and build
search authority, those posts will end up being responsible for a large
percentage of your blog traffic. It all starts with a slight shift in
perspective from daily traffic to cumulative traffic so you can reframe the way
you view your blog and its ROI entirely.
You aren't growing
subscribers.
Once you start blogging, it's easy to forget that blogging
isn't just about getting new visitors to your blog. One of the biggest benefits
of blogging is that it helps you steadily grow an email list of subscribers you
can share your new content with. Each time you publish a new blog post, your
subscribers will give you that initial surge of traffic -- which, in turn, will
propel those posts' long-term success.
The key to getting significant business results (traffic,
leads, and eventually customers) all starts with growing subscribers.
Download our free introductory guide to A/B testing
here.
<http://offers.hubspot.com/an-introduction-to-ab-testing>
Solution: Add a subscription CTA to your blog, and set up an
email send.
First, use your email marketing tool to set up a welcome
email for new subscribers, as well as a regular email that pulls in your most
recent blog posts. (HubSpot customers: You can use HubSpot's email tool to
easily set up these regular email sends, as well as set up a welcome email for
new subscribers.)
Next, add subscription CTAs to your blog (and elsewhere,
like the footer of your website) to make it easy for people to opt in. These
CTAs should be simple, one-field email opt-in forms near the top of your blog,
above the fold. As for where to put these CTAs, we typically place our blog
CTAs at the bottom of our blog posts or add a slide-in, which you can learn how
to do using a free tool called Leadin here.
You can also create a dedicated landing page for subscribers
that you can direct people to via other channels such as social media, other
pages on your website, PPC, or email. (For a list of more simple ways to
attract subscribers, read this blog post; for more advanced ideas, read this
one.)
Don't worry if you read through this list and are now
thinking to yourself, Well this is awkward ... I've made literally every single
one of these mistakes. Remember: I used the word "common" to describe
these mistakes for a reason. The more you blog, the better you'll get at it -- and
you'll reap the benefits in terms of traffic and leads in the process.
We hope you'll use this list of mistakes as fuel for the
fire to step up your blogging game. After all, the benefits of keeping up a
healthy business blog will be well worth the time and effort.