12 Most Common Mistakes New Bloggers Make

12 common blogging mistakes

Blogging’s a great way to grow awareness of you and/or your brand and, with bloggers now getting book deals and media contracts, it can also be a lucrative one.

Unfortunately, many bloggers shoot themselves in the foot by making some basic errors that holds their blog back from its true potential.

Knowing how to avoid these mistakes can mean the difference between just another blog online, and one that stands out as the kind people take notice of.

1. Owning your own domain

Having your own domain – as in, blogname.com – certainly isn’t a must-have for all bloggers. But if you want to be taken seriously, having a professional domain makes that much more likely. The great news is you can even buy a premium domain and use it on free blog services like WordPress.com and Blogger.com.

2. Owning your online property

For anyone serious about blogging, a self-hosted option is the only way to go. Not only does it give you more options for styling and customization, it shows you’re in this for the long haul, which can be an attractive proposition for brands looking to sponsor blogs.

3. Optimizing your blog’s permalinks

Usually, a new blog’s permalinks are set to blogname.com/?p=123. Pretty ugly, eh? It’s not very search engine friendly either. As soon as you set your blog up, change your permalink settings so they just show the post or page name after the main URL. So something like blogname.com/posttitle or blogname.com/pagetitle.

4. Forgetting to change your favicon

When you have a browser tab open, there’s a little icon on it that shows which site you’re on (Gmail has a red envelope, for example). This helps your site stand out when multiple tabs are open. Use a favicon generator like favicon.cc to make your own.

5. Having a generic logo

While you don’t need to go all out and custom design your complete blog as soon as you start, at the very least get your own personalized logo. This is one of the first things new visitors see and can say a lot about your blog.

6. Not using a web-friendly font

A lot of bloggers want their blog to stand out, so go for a font that looks cool. Unfortunately, on the web, it might be painful to read. Stick to a sans-serif font for all your main body content, and try not to use too many different fonts on one page or post.

7. Not submitting your blog to the search engines

While a blog is incredibly search engine friendly as it is, because you’re offering fresh, new content, they need to know you exist. You can speed this up by submitting your blog to search engines when live. Google makes it really easy to submit your blog.

8. Not learning SEO

Many bloggers will tell you content is king. It’s a good point – but if content is king, SEO is blogging’s queen. If you want people to find your blog, understand how SEO works – there are many free resources as well as paid options.

9. Not taking the time to format posts

Web pages that have nothing but lines of continuous text are horrible to read. Make your blog jump from the page by using short sentences, bullet points, headlines and great images. Even long posts can seem shorter with great formatting.

10. Not offering more than one subscription method

Many bloggers offer just an RSS subscription feed for their blogs. But email subscription is hugely popular for those that prefer it, while services like Odiogo offer another great option for the visibly impaired. Make sure you offer more than one option.

11. Not offering social sharing options

For many bloggers, social networks like Twitter, Facebook and Google+ are big drivers of traffic. Make sure you offer the most popular social networks as sharing options on all your posts, and make them prominent.

12. Wanting to be someone else

Perhaps the biggest mistake new bloggers make is to want to be someone else. But the other bloggers you want to be like already have that audience – so be you, be cool with making mistakes, and grow your style naturally.

These are 12 of the most common mistakes I see new bloggers make. While they may not all be crucial to where you want to go with your blog, they will play a big part in how soon you get there (if at all).

Blogging is fun. It can also be hugely rewarding. By making sure you don’t make these 12 most common new blog mistakes, it’ll be more fun and rewarding for you too.

A version of this post originally appeared on 12 Most.

image: chrisinplymouth


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About Danny Brown

Danny Brown is an award-winning marketer and blogger. His blog is recognized as the #1 marketing blog in the world by HubSpot. Danny is also the author of The Parables of Business and the upcoming book Influence Marketing: How to Create, Manage and Measure Brand Influencers in Social Media Marketing.

  • TrafficColeman

    Its great to see people getting their own site because it so important to grow your business with something your own.

    “Black Seo Guy “Signing Off”

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  • http://dannybrown.me/ DannyBrown

    @TrafficColeman Agreed, mate – it’s one of the reasons I’m always wary of businesses (or people) that say they’re going to use Facebook as their business platform, or Google+ as their new blogging platform.

    While they might have a large userbase, they can also take down anything you post without any notice. Far better to have your own piece of the web and work from there.

  • CassiusBlueCo

    Great post, regarding 1-3 it is better to implement these things at the beginning rather than wait until your blog is wildly popular and then try to migrate over to a new platform and domain name. I will remember my first blog and the pain that later came with moving it over.

  • http://dannybrown.me/ DannyBrown

    @CassiusBlueCo Wise advice, Brandi. There are some good plug-ins on WordPress to redirect old URL’s and Permalinks, but these aren’t always seamless, and it can remove any social shares you had on the old Permalinks as well.

    Cheers! :)

  • http://www.theTsaritsasez.com/ theTsaritsa

    Great tips. I think the last note about “wanting to be someone else” is so important. No one wants to read a watered-down version of an already popular blog. Be true to yourself and readers will follow!

    http://www.theTsaritsasez.com/

  • http://dannybrown.me/ DannyBrown

    @theTsaritsa Especially if the person you’re trying to emulate turns out to not be as good as people thought he/she was… ;-)

  • http://www.findallanswers.com/ janesheeba

    Having a generic logo is what I’m recently seeing a lot. Mostly people keep the “Genesis” theme’s default “G” or any other default logo. It may sound like a simple thing, but it makes a lot of difference, especially in this over-crowded blogosphere.

  • CassiusBlueCo

    Another common mistake is going affiliate crazy, having ads for everything under the sun moving and flashing on the page. A few strategically placed ads can generate revenue, having every ad known to man is just clutter.

  • NoahG_Tidbits

    Great tips :-) It’s important to be yourself and develop your own blog personality. It allows readers to get to know you and your unique style, which sets you apart from others. What do you think?

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