Write and manage off-topic posts
Dec 8, 2023 22:48:06 GMT -7
Post by account_disabled on Dec 8, 2023 22:48:06 GMT -7
I have never loved multi-thematic blogs, those old-fashioned blogs in which the blogger talks about everything, his private life, religion, politics, travel, everything that comes into his head. I appreciate themed blogs, even if basically the others are the same: the theme is the blogger and his life. For me a blog is a source of information. The whole web represents it. Therefore I prefer to read and also create blogs on a single topic, or several topics that are linked to each other, like Blue Pen. However, it may happen that the blogger has to write off-topic articles.
How to manage them? How to fit these posts into the theme of the blog without disorienting readers and search engines? Evaluate off-topic content I believe that the first step to take is to analyze the off-topic posts to write. Are they really necessary? Why do I have this need to create off-topic content? Answering these questions will make you reflect on the real Phone Number Data usefulness of this content and how to write it. I posted off topic on Blue Pen. They were necessary. But they were created to fit within the topics I cover. Obviously I didn't talk about my holidays, nor about what I eat for lunch. I wrote about news and information closely related to blog management. Initially I created the Resources section, in which to channel all those posts that could not be archived in the other sections of the blog: a literary event, a meeting with a writer, one of my guest posts or one of my interviews.
Finally, a section of news regarding the blog and its news was necessary and so the Blog News section was born, in which I archive posts on the new series of articles that will be published, on the previews of the posts, on the addition or deletion of sections, on new ebooks published on the blog, new columns, etc. They are not themed posts, because they do not give direct information on writing, publishing, reading and other topics that I discuss in the blog, but they are still posts that indirectly talk about writing, publishing, reading, etc. User side : the reader will not be disconcerted, because he will still find information on the blog regarding the sections that follow. Search engine side : search engines will read keywords relevant to the blog's themes and therefore they won't be displaced either.
How to manage them? How to fit these posts into the theme of the blog without disorienting readers and search engines? Evaluate off-topic content I believe that the first step to take is to analyze the off-topic posts to write. Are they really necessary? Why do I have this need to create off-topic content? Answering these questions will make you reflect on the real Phone Number Data usefulness of this content and how to write it. I posted off topic on Blue Pen. They were necessary. But they were created to fit within the topics I cover. Obviously I didn't talk about my holidays, nor about what I eat for lunch. I wrote about news and information closely related to blog management. Initially I created the Resources section, in which to channel all those posts that could not be archived in the other sections of the blog: a literary event, a meeting with a writer, one of my guest posts or one of my interviews.
Finally, a section of news regarding the blog and its news was necessary and so the Blog News section was born, in which I archive posts on the new series of articles that will be published, on the previews of the posts, on the addition or deletion of sections, on new ebooks published on the blog, new columns, etc. They are not themed posts, because they do not give direct information on writing, publishing, reading and other topics that I discuss in the blog, but they are still posts that indirectly talk about writing, publishing, reading, etc. User side : the reader will not be disconcerted, because he will still find information on the blog regarding the sections that follow. Search engine side : search engines will read keywords relevant to the blog's themes and therefore they won't be displaced either.