Do You Make These 10 Mistakes When You Blog?

Assuming you want to increase your blog traffic, there are certain mistakes you must avoid to be successful. If you commit these mistakes, your traffic will never gain momentum. Worse, it may plateau or begin to decrease.

Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com/VisualField, Image #1285627

How do I know? After writing more than 1,000 posts and receiving more than 60,000 comments, I have made most of the mistakes you can make—numerous times. As a result, I have begun to see certain patterns emerge. These are my top ten traffic-killers.

  • Mistake #1: You don’t post enough. Hobby bloggers may go weeks between posts. But frequency is what separates the men from the boys. You cannot build solid traffic without frequent posts. I have seen time and time again (via Google Analytics) that there is a direct correlation between frequency and traffic. The more I post—within reason—the greater my traffic.
  • Mistake #2: You post too much. Yes, this is possible, too. I don’t need to hear from anyone more than once a day—unless it is a group blog or a news site. You would do better to focus on writing one really great post a day rather than several mediocre ones. The trick is to find your frequency sweet spot. For me, it is four to five posts a week.
  • Mistake #3: Your post is too long. Seth Godin is the master of the short, pithy post. His are usually in the 200–400 word range. I shoot for less than 500 words. But I often post 750 words and sometimes more. You can get away with this if your posts are “scannable”—that is, you make use of subheads, lists, and other devices that keep people moving through your content. If a post starts getting too long, consider breaking it up into several posts.
  • Mistake #4: You don’t invite engagement. When I talk about “engagement,” I am referring to a combination of page views, reader comments, and social media mentions. Postrank.com is a great tool for measuring this kind of engagement. The posts that generate the most engagement for me are those that are controversial, transparent (especially about failure), and open-ended. This is why I try to end every post with a question.
  • Mistake #5: You don’t participate in the conversation. When bloggers don’t participate in conversation by commenting on their own posts and responding to their readers, it is like hosting a party at your home, making a brief appearance, and then disappearing. In any other context, this behavior would be perceived as rude or odd. The same is true in blogging. People want to have a conversation—with YOU.
  • Mistake #6: You don’t make your content accessible. Since I am in the publishing business, I often get asked if I think people are reading less. The simple answer is “No.” In fact, I think they are reading more than ever. But they are reading differently. Readers have shorter attention spans. They are scanning content, looking for items that interest them. When you use subheads, lists of bullets or numbers, it draws readers in by making your content accessible. Shorter paragraphs also help.
  • Mistake #7: You don’t create catchy headlines. According to Brian Clark, who runs the must-read site, CopyBlogger, “on average, 8 out of 10 people will read headline copy, but only 2 out of 10 will read the rest.” This means your headlines are the most important thing you write. Fortunately, Brian has an entire series of posts called “How to Write Magnetic Headlines.” I suggest you read every post.
  • Mistake #8: Your first paragraph is weak. This is critical. Assuming that you have written a great headline, people will next read your first paragraph. You must use this paragraph to pull them into the rest of your blog post. Start with a story, a promise, or a startling fact. The idea is to grab their attention and hang onto it. Many bloggers spend too much time trying to setup the post or provide context. Just get to the point.
  • Mistake #9: Your post is off-brand. I have often been guilty of this one. If you are a hobby blogger, you can get away with the occasional post that strays from your primary message or brand. But if you are trying to build traffic, you need to find an editorial focus and stick to it. A tighter focus leads to higher traffic. This is why I have tried to narrow my own focus to three areas: leadership, social media, and publishing. If I want to write on something else (e.g., fitness), I do so through one of these three lenses.
  • Mistake #10: Your post is about YOU. Unless you are a mega-celebrity, readers don’t care about you. Not really. They care about themselves. They want to know what’s in it for THEM. Your personal stories can be a doorway to that, but in the end, the best posts are about your readers’ needs, fears, problems, or concerns. Always ask, “What’s the take-away for my reader?”

There are other mistakes, too; I doubt this list is exhaustive. But I think I have covered the major ones. If you can avoid these, you will be well on your way to increasing your traffic and growing your audience.

Question: What other traffic-killers have you witnessed as a blogger? You can leave a comment by clicking here.
Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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  • http://www.bilerico.com Bil Browning

    One thing I've seen played out over and over (and is going to happen here with your site and me) is folks don't get the logical carryover with #10. In this example, I think "Good blog post. What else is on his site?"

    And then I see your Twitter feed which is all "I’m praying for those who will be preaching God’s Word today" followed by 3 Twitter names. And it's all ten of your Twitter updates.

    So what this tells me is you're not original, you're a religious fanatic, and you don't follow your own advice – all three negatives. One of the two fastest ways to lose Twitter followers is to talk about politics or religion if your usual focus is elsewhere. You've carried this over onto your blog now with your Twitter update feed.

    Combine that with the religious ads in the upper right and you've got some REALLY bit problems with being off-topic. If I want religion, I'll go to a religious site. The Bible doesn't mention blogging.

    You've left four major bad impressions. So instead of adding you to my RSS feed or following you on Twitter, I'll leave and think, "Wow, if he wasn't a religious nut, I'd read him regularly. But I don't want his religious views to seep into his blog, so I'll skip it. Besides, this post was good but it's probably all the same thing with a few things changed."

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Thanks for your input. I can see how I left that impression. I started the pray4pastors hashtag and went a little crazy!

      My stuff is all written from a Christian perspective, though it's rarely explicit. Regardless, I’m definitely not for everyone.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/patriciazell patriciazell

      Mr. Browning, while you are not at a religious site, you are at the site of the CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishers which is a Christian publishing house. Of course, someone reading this blog would expect the Christian world view to be intertwined in the posts. And, since Thomas Nelson is a prosperous business, a reader would also expect some sort of advertising pointing to the success of the company. And, a writer can be on fire for God's kingdom without being a fanatic.

      By the way, the pray4pastors hashtag just shows the enthusiasm of a real person with real concern for the message of Christ being proclaimed throughout the world.

  • http://janet-kennedy.blogspot.com Janet Kennedy

    I have been reading blogs for months and writing for 1 day so I am not any kind of authority but I find repetitive posting to be boring (that's the #1 sin, correct?). If you have said it once, it does not bear endless repeating unless you have something new to add.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      I don't think I would make that #1. Frankly, I don't see it much. But then again, maybe it's because I don't subscribe to those kinds of blogs.

  • http://www.fmsseo.com Karl

    An excellent round-up of practical tips that, when applied, will have a big impact.

    Regards,

    Karl

  • http://twitter.com/SteffanAntonas @SteffanAntonas

    Michael,

    #10 is almost surely the most pervasive mistake on the web. Of course, you figure out whether they've violated the rule in the first paragraph (see #8 ;-)).

    The insight that longer posts need to be scannable is key. I would even say that the stats you've sited (2/10 read the full article) is high. If you can take Brian Clark's advice, write a good headline and then use that same advice to craft good subheadings that break the post up and allow people to scan…THAT'S the winning formula for getting people to share long posts.

    Good article. You can thank @clayhebert for sending me here.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Clay is awesome! Thanks for visiting.

  • http://www.minibizbuzz.com Bethe Andrus

    Great post. Tip #1 is especially important. Nothing's sadder than a stale site.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      There are certainly a lot of those on the Web. People start with good intentions but it takes discipline to keep it going.

  • http://www.christopher-parsons.com Christopher Parsons

    I think that much of the length concerns come from whether or not your blog is traditionally dominated by long posts. In my own case, I don't deal with small ideas – 95% of posts are meant to be longer, academically driven, thought and data pieces. If you're trying to establish 'deep content', then over time (i.e. several years) having 'long content' can be incredibly helpful.

  • http://moondustwriter.wordpress.com Leslie Moon

    learning so thanks for the 10 faut pas of blogging

  • http://www.kristiejackson.blogspot.com Kristie Jackson

    What a fantastic checklist! Thank you so much!

  • http://www.szamaya.com szabcsee

    Hello Michael,

    You have a nice blog here. Great post, I think my biggest challenge is point 9: sometimes going off-track with post topics. What is your opinion, how many topics a blog can cover?

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      I think the fewer the better. Think of the classic “elevator pitch.” If you were trying to explain what your blog is about on an elevator to a complete stranger, how would you do it?

  • http://churchfurnitureguy.com/ cfguy

    Thanks for the list. It’s helpful for we newer bloggers.

  • http://www.anamericanlion.com/ Norman Rogers

    That's one of the best lists that I have ever come across, in terms of identifying some really good things to remember about blogging.

    I have always worried about the frequency of posting–I feel guilty when I only put up four or five posts in a day. Perhaps I'm posting too often–I don't know. I try to stay topical and be interesting, and I have definitely noticed that Google is really beginning to click for me. For a while there, it was touch and go. Now that I've built a pretty big archive, I think I can slow down a bit and reap the rewards of keeping a solid pace.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Your blog looks great. If your audience has an appetite for that much, keep writing. There are definitely exceptions to the rules I have listed.

  • http://www.mushroomdigital.co.uk Mushroom Digiyal

    I think its important yo participate but at the same time the participation of the responses maybe off topic so it is sometimes best to stick to showing your appreciation :)

  • http://editorchris.wordpress.com Christina B

    Nice! Thankz!

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/forthesakeofJOY forthesakeofJOY

    One thing that turns me off almost immediately is horrible grammar, spelling or sentence structure. Not that I always get it right – but give I give the effort. ;)

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  • http://www.smalldeadanimals.com Kate

    After After 12,388 Posts And 433,091 Comments:

    Never say with an essay what can be said in a paragraph.
    Never say with a paragraph what can be said in a sentence.
    Never say with a sentence what can be said in a word.
    And never say with a word what can be said with an *.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Amen to this!

  • http://gary4arabella.multiply.com Arabella

    It's a very good tips! Thank you so much! May GOD bless you more great tips and inspiring and encouraging message!

    For me,What other traffic-killers have i witnessed as a blogger?
    Shalow or too shalow information!
    And i think blogger can be a great blogger,
    when they write a meaningful message!

  • http://www.stevefogg.typepad.com Steve Fogg

    If the aim is drive traffic then I think that we've lost the plot.

    Unless you are in it for the fame or the money traffic isn't the aim – good quality content that makes a difference and adds value to the reader is isn't it?

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      But if you write good quality content that adds value, don't you want to share that with as many people as possible? If not, why not just write a personal journal or send an email to a few friends. Blogging without an interest in traffic is like buying a sound system and saying your not interested in speaking to crowds. ;-)

    • http://www.smalldeadanimals.com Kate

      Traffic = readers.
      If readers don't matter, then keep a diary.

  • http://freenuts.com Young

    From now on, you are the most important person of my blog and I serves you. That's my understanding of the last one mistake.

  • http://www.beeamazing.com gabybali

    Woww…thanks to @problogger from twitter I stumbled upon this great tips , thank you thank you thank you for writing this.
    I’ll make sure I’ll noted these down.My biggest problem is often : Mistake #1 : I don’t post enough, for my mood to write comes occasionaly, depends on my mood…haha…

  • Darrell

    > I don’t need to hear from anyone more than once a day—unless it is a group blog or a news site. You would do better to focus on writing one really great post a day rather than several mediocre ones. The trick is to find your frequency sweet spot. For me, it is four to five posts a week.

    Ah. That would explain Glenn Reynolds’ lack of success, or Charles Johnson’s, or Andrew Bolt’s. If only they’d have come to you first, they’d have really busy blogs now.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      There are definitely exceptions!

  • James I Harris

    Great post. As an artist just getting started this will help me out. I can already see that a couple of things I was going to post need to be broken down into 3-4 blogs instead of one.

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  • http://intensedebate.com/people/jskogerboe jskogerboe

    Excellent post, Michael. Thanks for laying out all 10 of my mistakes with such clarity. :-) Good advice. Appreciate you.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      I’m glad to be of service. ;-)

  • http://fess2.blogspot.com Gman

    One mistake I see if some bloggers don't give their sources or HT to others for the content they "steal".

  • http://twitter.com/CarrieSarver @CarrieSarver

    Glad to see you followed your own #5

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

    This is one of my favorite aspects of blogging: the interaction with readers!

  • http://www.praytel.net/blog Kevin Shorter

    Another killer mistake is that your website is not user-friendly. I hate trying to read a blog and newsletter sign-ups pop up or there is too much going on around the content that it is hard to read.

    Thanks for the post.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Pop-ups are a sure way to keep me from coming back. I hate them. They are so intrusive. Interruption marketing at its worst!

  • http://www.tripwiremagazine.com Lars V

    Thanks for sharing your blogging wizdom, it's highly appreciated! I don't disagree directly with any of your 10 mistakes but I also think every niche have it's own rules. As a blogger you need to be aware of the trends and act upon them. To do this one needs to know other bloggers in the same niche and be aware is someone hits a hot hot topic (loads of comments, popular on digg, stumbleupon, delicious etc.). I think one of the most critical rules I believe spans across most blogging niches is the ability to inspire, lead and add new angles to hot topics. This is where blooging stops being 10 minutes of random typing and turns into a serious effort potentially requiring hours of work on each post.

  • http://adventuresingeocaching.blogspot.com John

    Not creating RSS feeds. All blogging platforms have RSS support built-in, but it boggles my mind when I visit a blog that has chosen to disable RSS. Your use of FeedBurner makes subscribing to feeds incredible easy, and I always appreciate that about your blog.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      That is amazing, isn’t it. I can’t fathom why someone would disable this feature.

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  • Greg England

    Not related to this post, but I received my copy of "Derailed" and could hardly put it down. Thank you for the book!! My daughter is half way through her MBA and is very interested in reading it.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

      Great! I’m glad you like it.

  • http://www.shrinkingthecamel.com Bradley J. Moore

    Michael, these are concise and practical tips. Thanks – I have been bloggin for over a year and am just now starting to "get" what a good blog is.

    Curious – have you ever posted on how the heck you make the time to keep up a kick-ass blog, run a powerful publishing house, and maintain all of the life-balance activities? I also work as a full-time executive and am attempting to run a blog, but find that it's takes a good 20-30 hours/week to actually make a go at it. You know, to write really good posts, reply to comments thoughtfully, get around to other blogs, learn all the technical stuff to keep your blog relevant. It's is a lot of work, on top of my real, paid job, and my family. I somehow get the feeling you have a staff of people doing this for you. Am I wrong? What about us little people?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

    Thanks for your kind words.

    Yes, I have written on priorities and life balance. You can search for that topic in my search bar. I have the benefit of being able to write fast. I spend about an hour a day on my blog, early in the morning or late in the evening. All my kids are grown, so that makes it easier, too.

    You have to consider the season of life you are in and how blogging fits into your overall goals.

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  • http://www.stillforming.com Christianne

    This is excellent. Thank you.

    I recently switched to a new website after hosting a personal blog for about three years. The personal blog was successful in many ways, but I found myself branching into new areas of thought and wanting to write more intentionally about those subjects.

    I've found it difficult to find my sweet spot yet, especially concerning length. I am a writer by nature and profession, and when it comes to personal writing (not paid freelance), I specialize in the personal essay.

    I hear you saying blogging isn't meant for the personal essay, so I'm like the memoirist earlier in the comment thread trying to strike a balance between who I am as a writer and who I am in this particular medium.

    Last night I wrote a post with your checklist in mind. I kept the paragraphs and post on the short side, I broke things up with a quote box, and I engaged with a question focused on the reader at the end. I'm going to try more of this in the coming weeks and see what the results will be.

  • http://www.successfulfreelancewriter.com Kathryn Lang

    Consistency – that's the one that I struggle with the most and it shows in my numbers. The more consistent I am with my writing then the more consistent the rise in visitors.

  • http://www.gritandglory.com alece

    hmmm… you had me until mistake #10. but i guess that's a mistake i'm willing to make. i do share about myself quite a bit on my blog — my own journey, my own mistakes, my own brokenness. and while i always write through a filter of how it applies or relates to my readers, my posts will always have that element of personal in it.

    i think i'm okay with that.

    • http://shaebaxter.wordpress.com Shae Baxter

      I am a little guilty of this too but I don't write to brag or gloat about myself. My life isn't that interesting let me tell you. For me it's about sharing personal experiences that people can hopefully relate to.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

    I am not opposed to personal stories. I use them all the time. I am just suggesting that they need to relate back to the reader to have value.

    Thanks for taking time to comment.

  • http://shaebaxter.wordpress.com Shae Baxter

    Great article. I am new to the blogging world and there is much to learn. For me, it is a really good way for me to hone my writing skills. But these are really useful tips and I can see where I could be starting to make some of the mistakes. I am guilty of not posting enough at this stage but hopefuly now I will get on track and build traffic to my site. Thanks for a practical article.

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  • http://onesimusonline.blogspot.com/ William Black

    Thanks, Michael,
    I just started a blog and I think I’ve already made all of your mistakes! I am (and my future readers will be) grateful for the advice. And by the way, as an outsider on the way,I have benefited greatly from your podcast.

  • http://sweeliee.blogspot.com deepthi

    thank you michael…that was very informative. now i know where to improve and how to make my blog better.
    I will make sure to avoid such mistakes.

  • http://www.superawesomedating.com David

    yep i agree, consistency and quality trumps frequency and speed.

    on superawesomedating.com i do a 900-1300 word post every other day. consistently.

    Google loves long post by the way, and steve pavlina seems to be doing quite well writing massive 5000 word posts.so i disagree that posts can be too long. good stuff regardlss, and good link bait :)

  • http://www.comingstobrazil.com Andrew

    Put me down as one who has, at different times, made all ten of those errors. I'm so ashamed.

    At least now I have an opportunity to blog about personal failure!

  • Lynn B.

    Mistake #11: You write blog posts telling other people how to blog.

    You have a blog? Then it's YOUR blog. Blog however you please. There's freedom in this medium, people!

    In 2010, I resolve not to read a single blog post wherein somebody presumes to tell other people how to blog.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/michaelhyatt Michael Hyatt

    So you're posting a comment on my blog telling me what I shouldn't be blogging on? Love it!

  • http://mattdabbs.wordpress.com Matt Dabbs

    You even ended with a question!

    #11 Comment on high-profile sites like this one and link back to yourself.

    Check.

  • Lynn B.

    Mr. Hyatt, please pardon my abruptness. I came upon your post already weary over a sense that people increasingly feel resigned to conform to slick, prefabricated corporate molds rather than truly exercising their unique personalities and gifts. It has seemed trendy this year for professional bloggers to attempt to make other bloggers conform to their tight parameters. I am on your turf, as you pointed out, but if I may amiably offer a contrary viewpoint, your rules strike me as legalistic and unnecessarily restrictive for a free, creative medium. And I wonder about the fruitfulness of this sort of post when I observe readers referring to their "failures" and to feeling ashamed for not following your rules heretofore. I do not wish to tell you what to blog about. To the contrary, as I said before, it's your blog; go about it however you please. I will continue to check my feed reader for those amazing bloggers who pause only occasionally to write lengthy posts that are deep and worthwhile, and I will hope they never start following everyone else's rules. Godspeed.

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