Author Archive for Dock

Casey Jones, you better… watch your feed

The modern world giveth, and the modern world taketh away. We clearly live in an era where the ubiquity of computers brings new experiences to a greater and broader base of people all over the world. Unfortunately, not all of these experiences are good ones. A disturbing new trend involves hacking feeds, and appending a thoroughly un-subtle collection of less-than-savory links to someone’s feed. Perhaps the most unpleasant aspect of this is that unless the blogger in question is looking at his or her feed output, this can go entirely unnoticed.   

So, yes - go ahead and look at your feed’s output. Now. 

If you spot the problem, my advice would be to start de-activating any plug-ins or add ons one at a time, and see if that changes the feed. (You’ll want to save any changes you make, and then refresh the page with which you’re viewing the feed each time. Yes, it is somewhat annoying - but so is getting hacked!) 

If that doesn’t rectify the situation, you’ll almost certainly want to talk to your blog platform’s support folks. If you’re an intrepid sole proprietor, responsible for all aspects of your blog and web hosting, well… you may have your work cut out for you. 

Did I mention that it’s always a good idea to make regular back-ups? If your blog gets so deeply hacked that you have to start fresh, you’ll be very glad you have backups. You’ll be equally sorry if you do not. 

While I’m talking about feeds, I would like to mention Feedvalidator, and specifically its use alongside Blogburst. When looking at your feed, there are a few methods by which you can have a gander at it. You can generally open it in a new browser window (and I think all browsers now will format it for you such that it doesn’t look like XML, but is readable) or you can use an RSS aggregator such as Google Reader. 

For general purposes (like seeing if the feed is broadcasting at all) either method is fine, but for discovering whether your feed is Blogburst-compatible or not, those methods are lacking a bit.   Browsers may or may not show you the full feed (Firefox seems to enjoy truncating the articles in its own way) and RSS readers are specifically built to digest the widest variety of feeds - feeds that can vary wildly in quality.

Google Reader in particular is incredibly forgiving and omnivorous in that regard - good for reading feeds of questionable quality, but very bad for diagnosing problems, as it masks problems - by design.  Blogburst syndicates feeds out to major publishing sites - so we really cannot afford to take in feeds that may not be well formed.

Blogburst is therefore rather unforgiving as RSS syndicators go; this is to prevent a feed of questionable structure from, say, taking down a major web site by displaying a malformed feed. (Believe me when I say that this scenario is very “exciting” in a bad, bad way.) 

Feedvalidator is a tool that’s just as strict as Blogburst is. If it passes muster at Feedvalidator, it is almost certain to work in Blogburst. It is very easy to use - pop your feed URL in the single text box, hit one button, and there you have it.  My favorite thing about Feedvalidator is that not only will it show you any problems that it finds, but it also will (via links, line by line!) give you suggestions as to how to fix the problems. 

Feedvalidator really is one-stop shopping for feeds, and I rely on it rather heavily. If your feed ever becomes problematic, I highly recommend Feedvalidator - it is very likely to show you the way to fix it. Give it a shot! I know you want to…  

Blog Restoration and Maintenance

How did I let this happen?

The Mustang sat in a sorry state. Years of neglect hung heavy on the once-glorious sheetmetal; once eluded through great care, rust was now peeking through paint in the usual places. Dry rotted tires had long since ceased to hold air, door and hood hinges popped and moaned with any movement (as I winced with mechanical sympathy) and worst of all, I could detect that small mammals of the North Carolina piedmont had made several small homes within the confines of what was once my pride and joy. The only rent paid was empty seed husks and a variety of nesting materials.

This was my task - to bring this Mustang back from the brink. And your task, as a blogger, is to prevent your blog from falling into disrepair - much as I failed to do with the car. I can assure you that the old saw is unfortunately, and quite expensively, true - an ounce of prevention is very much worth a pound of cure.

A fresh coat of paint

One of the more obvious ways to make your blog look factory fresh is with a new color scheme - and unlike the old Mustang, it won’t cost you a thing. I’m sure that you’ve visited web sites or blogs that looked dated - or worse, were actually painful to look at. Take a moment to assess your blog’s color scheme critically, and ask yourself if you’re happy with it. Make sure that it has enough contrast between text and background to assure easy reading. I prefer tight palettes (for instance, a color scheme that has only one or two colors and their variants to work with - like dark brown text on a light tan background) and that also avoids chromatic extremes. You actually can have too much contrast, in my opinion, so go for mid-darks and mid-lights. The very worst thing you can do is juxtapose a high-saturation red against a high-saturation blue. It shimmers horribly! Avoid.

Fortunately, most blog software makes it incredibly easy to swap between themes and palettes, or create your own - or rely on the creativity of others and grab widely-available additional themes. It is worth experimenting with - you’ll probably find something that you really like, and I’m sure your readers will like it too.

The radio doesn’t work

Something I see far too often is a feed that stops broadcasting. This can happen for a few different reasons, but sometimes the feed just flat-out breaks. Don’t take it for granted that your feed is working correctly - check it every so often by opening your feed URL in a browser window, and check that it matches your blog’s actual entries - particularly the most recent. Probably the most common cause of feed breakage is using MS Word to create your entries, and copy-pasting them in. MS Word has special characters that are widely known to break a feed. Simply put - don’t do that! Find a less “feature-rich” editor to write your entries in. You’ll be glad you did.

Too many gaudy aftermarket parts

As I accumulate gray hair on my chin, my enthusuasm for aftermarket add-ons of dubious quality and taste has, fortunately, diminished. The Mustang looks best as it did when it left San Jose in 1965, with just a smattering of vintage hop-up parts for a bit of spice and speed. The underbody lighting kits, radical suspension adjustments and bass-drunk subwoofers, I will leave for the current generation of “tuner” youth to explore. More often than not, these bolt-ons are a waste of money as they tend to diminish the overall function of the vehicle.

With so many plug-ins, add-ons, and other flashy bits to add to one’s blog, it is tempting to throw caution to the wind and build your blog to the hilt with “added functionality.” However, caution is required. Nothing is worse than having a bunch of add-ons on your blog - and then, having one of them break your blog or feed. It greatly complicates diagnosis, and more often than not, your friendly tech support agent will tell you to strip them all off in order to properly assess the situation. (I know, because I used to be one of those support folks.) My recommendation is to avoid the temptation to go hog wild, and only use a minimum of plug-ins and widgets. Easier said than done, I realize, but your blog will be far more trouble-free for doing this, and you’ll have far fewer updates to chase.

You are updating your blog software and plug-ins… aren’t you? I sure hope so, otherwise…

Someone broke in and trashed everything

Fortunately no person has ever broken into the old Mustang (aside from minor damage from the rodentia) - however, I can’t say the same for my hated Celebrity. The Celebrity was the automotive enthusiast’s equivalent of a lonely, gray exile - boring from all angles, dreadful from behind the wheel, and unreliable too - just to pour salt into the wound. I figured the rest of the world viewed the car with the same sense of pitiful worthlessness that I did… imagine my surprise when I returned home one day (after a walk back from the university campus) to discover that someone had broken in and scattered my belongings all over the yard. The thieves took nothing of value - except my peace of mind.

Unfortunately, in this day and age, there are far more ways to break into your blog than there were ways into my old beater car. Luck isn’t enough. Belief that your blog isn’t worth breaking into isn’t enough. Security requires vigilance and a bit of work - but it beats discovering that your blog has been exploited, and (in the worst case) it beats regretfully deleting your blog and starting over, if the corruption of your blog is too extreme.

Fortunately, by updating your blogging software and plug-ins regularly, you substantially increase the chances of successfully fending off an attack with relatively little work on your part. There are also some decisions you can make regarding the ways in which you handle links, comments, and other things that can also make a difference - and your blog’s platform almost certainly has some sound advice on its support pages or FAQ regarding best practices and things to avoid. It might sound like a hassle but it beats having to pull your blog back from the brink, using back-ups.

You, of course, are regularly making back-ups… right?

Show and shine

If you take a little time every now and then to keep your blog’s software updated, make tweaks here and there, and keep the add-ons down to a reasonable level, you’ll have a blog that you’ll continue to enjoy (since it is much less likely to fall apart unexpectedly) and your readers will appreciate your rock-solid and consistent uptime. Maybe you can’t drive it to the Dairy Queen for the local show-and-shine, as I did with the Mustang this evening, but you will have pride of ownership just the same. You’ll almost certainly have spent far less money than I did, too.

NBA bloggers - bring it (to BlogBurst)

I know that you’re out there. You have every cable channel dedicated to sports. You follow every nuance of the players on and off the court. The sound of a ball popping through a net is deeply satisfying. And you probably wear retro jerseys to better restaurants. Best of all - you write about it constantly.

You’re an NBA blogger, aren’t you?

Now is the prime time for NBA bloggers to show us their stuff. Believe me when I say that we have some seriously interesting publishing partners who genuinely want basketball content - now is your chance! If you have an NBA blog, or know someone who does, please consider submitting it to Blogburst. I assure you, we’ll work to get you the widest exposure possible!

Fascinated with Finance - for good reason

Finance blogging is not boring.

You might not be interested in the economy, but I can assure you that the economy is interested in you. Finance and economy-relatied topics are, often as not, the story behind the story. Interested in Apple and all of its products? I can assure you that you’ll find something interesting about their story in the broader markets. Love your Google searches and applications? How about the high-quality food at Whole Foods? The blood-red excitement of Ducati motorcycles? These are all very interesting market stories, and the stories of the stocks behind these names (AAPL, GOOG, WFMI, DMH respectively) are equally interesting - in some cases more so. Do a quick news search for any of these names and you’ll see what I mean.

However, there is a much more pertinent reason to start to get your head around the markets. It involves your retirement - or your potential lack thereof. General sentiment among political figures (across both sides of the aisle) suggests that Social Security will likely not be around for the internet generation - at least as we know it. We will instead, in all likelihood, have to provide for our own retirement (or at the very least, supplement it ourselves) as best we can. As a general rule, even if your idea of investing is a generous donation to the Bank of Sealy or the Bank of Serta once in a while, you still have the corrosive efffect of inflation to deal with. That stash of cash will decrease in purchasing power over time - often in a much more serious way than you can conceive of. It wouldn’t hurt to put your money to work for you in some kind of market vehicle that you understand, if only to be able to fight the effects of inflation.

To do that, however, it behooves you to understand what you’re doing and there is no shortage of internet sites and blogs that can help you do just that.

Shifting gears here for a moment - let’s say you’re a finance blogger. I know that the above notes are not news to you, and that you might find them to be so basic as to be almost irrelevant. You’d rather talk about Forex trades or Iron Condors or cup-and-handles. However, I want you to think for just a bit about how you can serve a broader audience - the millions of people who genuinely need your guidance in figuring out market basics. If you could, spend some time talking about the basics of such topics as inflation. Talk about how money origination is really debt origination. Talk about the corrosive effects of inflation on purchasing power. Talk about the different types of price indexes (producer, consumer) and what’s included - and what’s not. Talk about the things that you think every person should know about the markets that surround and affect them.

I think your audiences will grow for it, and I know they’ll benefit from it.

Tips and tweaks for a better blog

Hi everybody-

 

I know that as a blogger, you’re busy searching out the best information you can, in order to bring your readers (and our publishers) the most authoritative information possible. However, I would like to ask that you check on a few things that will make life easier for the Blogburst editors, and perhaps yield benefits for your readers.  

 

Archive!

 

It surprises me how many blogs I see that don’t have visible archives available from the front page. I have a specific need to find archives quickly - but I have no doubt that your blog’s readership would also appreciate the ability to get to all your previous posts in an easy way. Speaking simply as a reader, if there’s a blog I really like, I’ll read the entire blog beginning with its first post, and proceed in chronological order. Visible archives make this possible. 

 

Most blog platforms give you the ability to display archives in the sidebar - usually as a list, graduated monthly. I find those to be the most effective. There’s also the calendar-style ones, which I don’t find to be as handy - but anything beats paging through “previous post” links alone. Please consider activating your archive widget in your sidebar, if you haven’t already. 

 

Full Feeds

 

Much has been written on the philosophies and strategies behind partial feeds versus full feeds (here’s one small sample) but in Blogburst, we do need your full feeds. I have, in the past, seen major blog platforms flip everyone back to partial post output upon making platform-wide software upgrades. So, if you proceed with a software upgrade in your blog’s software (or your blog’s provider does it for you) I’d ask you to please check your settings and see if you still have a full feed output.

 

Be the main attraction

 

Think about your favorite blogs for just a second. Hold them in your mind. I’m willing to bet that these blogs that you’re holding in your mind right now are strong, and memorable, because of the strong voice of the blogger - the color and life that they breathe into the facts that they gathered for your perusal. I’m also willing to bet that they do not simply give you a link to someone else’s story, with a throwaway paragraph attached that simply describes what the story links to. 

 

I realize that it requires much more effort to create your own voice, but I would encourage you to try. I truly believe that the “authority blogging” path is the most rewarding way to go, and your readers will certainly appreciate it. Is it hard? Well, it does take more effort, and you might not be good at it right away. However, most things worth doing take effort - and as my voice teacher used to say, “You don’t get better at singing by not singing!” This goes for “authority blogging” too. 

 

Thanks!   

Wordpress has upgraded - have you?

Looks like Wordpress has upgraded their platform again - 2.3.3 is available. As this is a “point release” (2.3.2 to 2.3.3) then this release is meant to fix bugs, and security issues in particular.

 

Wordpress has this to say about it:

 

WordPress 2.3.3 is an urgent security release. If you have registration enabled a flaw was found in the XML-RPC implementation such that a specially crafted request would allow a user to edit posts of other users on that blog. In addition to fixing this security flaw, 2.3.3 fixes a few minor bugs.

You can find more information about the upgrade at the Wordpress download site for your convenience.

 

If you’re curious as to the benefits of upgrading (or the pitfalls of not upgrading) you can find that at the Blogger Resource Center.

A Monday thank-you to our bloggers

Let’s kick off the week with some praise.

“I joined BlogBurst about a year back. I had a personal email exchange with one of their founders who invited me to add my blogs on their network. Now this isn’t one of those online syndication services but instead a service that attempts to bridge the gap between mainstream media and the blogosphere. Both these mediums have often been labeled as being in direct conflict with each other although it never was true. I have always believed that the mainstream media and the blogosphere work symbiotically often filling the information gaps that each medium individually can never close.” - Patrix

All very good points from iPatrix, all of which I agree with wholeheartedly - and yes, our company is still small enough (and close-knit enough) that our founder and executives are deeply involved in the company, both internally and externally. Yep, you can talk to the top dog here, no problem.

Also a shout-out to Chuck Butcher III for his positive experience getting a leg up onto Reuters with his article. How cool is that? It’s very cool, and very do-able. If you’re politically active (as Chuck certainly is) Blogburst can provide a valuable leg-up to generate wider exposure, and that’s the name of the game.

We are of course grateful for the positive mentions, and also glad that we can provide a noteworthy service that people find useful and helpful. It’s all about bringing your blogs up front!

Say Anything — Managing Your Blog Vacations

Occasionally, there comes a time when you simply can’t write your blog. Sooner or later, the blog comes to an end, or goes a long hiatus. There are certainly any number of reasons you can’t get a post off (temporarily or permanently) and that’s certainly understandable.

It could be a family emergency, a machine failure, a long, well-deserved vacation, a lack of interest in the current topic, a dearth of information about your current topic, you switched domains, you simply can’t find the time - or you just plain don’t wanna do it anymore!

Any of the above reasons are fine, and don’t require a bit of justification. I’m sure there are plenty more I couldn’t come up with - point being, the reason doesn’t matter.

There’s a small problem though. You probably have a readership - and almost certainly have an RSS feed.

My suggestion is that if you know that your writing will become slow (or stop) then please - take the time to write a post (however short) that simply says something to that effect. It could be as simple as “Hi folks - sorry about the lack of posts - I don’t expect to be posting much in the near future” or as complex as you care to make it. You might explain the circumstances, or redirect people to your new shiny blog on a different topic (or subdomain) but in any case - say something. You don’t have to make any promises to write more, and you don’t need to make it up to anyone. Just say something.

Say anything.

This is far more helpful than you might think. It will certainly be of benefit to me, your readers will appreciate knowing what’s going on, and honestly you’ll probably feel a little bit better knowing that you took a sliver of time to keep everyone in the know - even if it’s one last time. Also, should you take blogging back up in the future, you may find that your act of courtesy ticks the wheel of internet karma to your advantage a bit, as you’ll be remembered more favorably by previous readers.

Thanks!

Beating the Tyranny of the Blank Page - Part 3

Wrapping up our 3 part series, I wanted to share with you the fun side of “generating inspiration.” I realize that, thus far, “fun” seems like an unlikely descriptor - so far I’ve recommended a course of action that requires a structure and a set of procedures (not necessarily great fun) in order to break through the paralysis of writer’s block, or a wholly uninspired state in general (also, not fun.) This will be fun, because I’ll show you how some of our greatest and well-known thinkers cut through their blocks, and in some cases came to rely on these methods.

Thomas Edison, Salvador Dali, Robert Louis Stevenson - the near-dreamers 225px-thomas_edison.jpg180px-salvador_dali_1939.jpg200px-robertlouisstevensonportrait.jpg

I realize right away the unlikely grouping being presented here - but two of these prolific and well-known creators shared a near-identical method for bringing forth inspired visions and solutions when needed. Effectively, their inadvertently shared method involved falling asleep while holding an object in hand which, upon their falling asleep, would make a loud noise, waking them with a start and also with a vision or solution at the forefront of their mind, which was hastily written down as completely as possible.Robert Anton Wilson and others called this the hypnopompic method -hallucinations upon waking that Edison and Dali both found useful, but certainly used for different ends.

Dali in particular gave us rather large hints as to his method when naming a painting Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bumblebee around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening, certainly. I am of the opinion that Edison’s state of mind was likely more of a theta state that allowed him to bring forward solutions to vexing problems, but certainly it’s related to Dali’s state of mind (by virtue of methodology).

It is also said that Robert Louis Stevenson came up with The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde in a dream state, after being awakened by his wife. The cool bit in all this is, there’s no reason you can’t use this method yourself. It appears to entail no risk (unless you drop something pointy and heavy on yourself!) and looks to be a very quick way to access a potent and fertile state of the human mind.

James Joyce, Albert Einstein - art as science, science as art

Sometimes, in order to move forward, you have to shake things up and take an unlikely approach.

Known for the masterworks Ulysses and Finnegan’s Wake (among others) we find that James Joyce is a literary artist who approached his art methodically, more along the lines of a scientific method than a wholly inspired artistic vision. I won’t attempt to add to the volumes already written about Joyce and his work, except to say that his methodology was highly structured, very rigorous, and deliberate - something that a first reading experience of Ulysses is unlikely to imply!

Albert Einstein, it can be said, seemed to take the opposite approach entirely. While certainly familiar with rote and methodology, and skilled as a physicist and mathematician, it was Einstein’s rejection of rote learning and willingness to engage in imaginative thought experiments which led him to many of his breakthroughs.

There’s a great deal of value in experimenting with your methods - a change in perspective is always healthy, and prevents a certain kind of tunnel vision from limiting your work unnecessarily.

Personal experience

I have been fortunate enough to be involved in a wide range of creative disciplines, but the one that I find the most challenging and rewarding is songwriting. This is not to say that I’m particularly great at it, nor does it come easy to me. But, I have been lucky enough to have epiphanies and breakthroughs that seemed to come from nowhere, in addition to plotting songs out through a more methodical approach. I am keenly aware of the feelings generated by mental blocks, and have struggled to employ some of these very techniques to get around them. They do work - you’ll just have to experiment and see what’s right for you.

I’ll leave you with a quote from my beloved art teacher, Robert G. Rankin - “there are no mistakes; only creative delays!” This was meant to encourage people to jump in and make something, just to get he process rolling. Ol’ Bob knew that the tyranny of the blank page needed to be overcome - and I hope that somewhere in this 3 part series you found something useful that will allow you to break through in your own way.

Beating the Tyranny of the Blank Page - Part 2

In my last post, I promised to provide some measure of methodology to help a blogger create good posts whenever necessary, whether inspired or not. But before I do that, I want to take a half-step back and emphasize that these ideas are not intended to help generate empty, vapid posts just to fill up a page (although you certainly could). It’s not about being a “hack,” it’s about creating a methodology that points your nose in the right direction when you need to write, but can’t muster the traction to do so. It’s hard to be prolific if you demand 100% inspiration of yourself, all the time. Even such visionaries as Thomas Edison and Salvador Dali had methodologies for generating new ideas - and though they have certainly been called many things over the years, I don’t think “hack” would be a fair assessment.

I’d mentioned the tyranny of the blank page - basically the overwhelming feeling you can get when standing on the brink of a task; an existential nausea of a sort, the paralyzing darkness staring back at you. It’s the the inertia of the eternal, and it has serious mass. But, you really can sidestep it if you have a method.

Certainly less famous than Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s “God is in the details” quote, would be Professor Wayne Taylor’s “constraints give you freedom” quote - one that I found puzzling and quite counterintuitive as a 19-year-old design undergrad. It sounds like scary doublethink, perhaps some kind of creeping fascism, at first blush. This really isn’t the case - Wayne was right as far as design goes, and I’ll show you why.

The most prolific songwriter I know said “when I set a goal for myself of writing 300 songs in a year, there were days when I just had nothing. But I’d write a song anyway. It could be a song about frogs - about anything at all. I’d just be sure I wrote a song. I didn’t expect all the songs to be good, that wasn’t the point.” So if you’d like, you can simply sidestep the problem in this way - the “better done than good” approach. I think we can shoot for quality here too - but we’ll need a methodology to get us there.
Narrow your topic, create a ruleset

Realize that the first step to constraining yourself lies within your topic focus. Yes, you can write about anything. But should you? In my experience, things come easier when you know what your focus is - which can in some cases be refined by determining what your focus is not. If your blog has a chosen topic focus, you’ve already accomplished this critical step, whether you realize it or not. In design terms, you’re “defining the design problem” - as a blogger, you’re laying out the boundaries on your mental map - a topical topographic, perhaps. “I write about politics” or “I write about motorcycles” will work, as will “I don’t write about Bretton Woods monetary policy” or “Modern supersport bikes are for the birds” when you’re trying to ratchet down tightly on your focus area.

Chess has a set of rules - you play on an 8 x 8 checkerboard, and all possible movement is predefined - but the outcomes are not. The classic arcade game “Asteroids” had a very simple ruleset and a defined screen area, yet allowed for infinite movement (if you go off the screen, you reappear on the other side) in a finite space. You can create a ruleset for your topic focus, yet retain a rich set of possibilities, in the same way. Think about your favorite blogs. What is their ruleset? What would their defining characteristics be? You can define them easily by what they focus on, and rather wholly by what they do not focus on.

Now ask yourself, “what is my ruleset?” And get to writing it down.

Research your topic area

Now that we’ve defined the territory (or “tightened the palette” for you art folks) it’s time to go deep. Do some research on your chosen topic area. Yes, I know, that sounds like work. And… it is. But it is also fun, and will literally drop ideas off at your mental doorstep. This will also help your blog become more authoritative, a characteristic fast becoming critical for larger success in the blogosphere.

Also, it’s a good idea to know what ideas currently exist in “your” space. Historically, rivals were well aware of each other’s work - Newton versus Leibniz over “the calculus,” The Beatles and the Beach Boys working on their respective 1967 master works, the teams of Werner Von Braun and Sergei Korolev racing each other to be the first to the Moon… you get the idea. You too can stand on the shoulders of giants - and with such tools as Wikis and search engines to use, the world is your oyster. What are others saying about your chosen topic? Do you agree? Do you disagree? Does it lead you to consider a different opinion, or approach? What do you like about what you’ve discovered? What do you dislike? Already, we’ve chased away the tyranny of the blank page and replaced it with a world of focused possibilities.

And should you decide to incorporate serious research into your posts, be sure to properly attribute the research. It goes a long way to making everyone happy.

Broaden your subtopics - ideation

Now that we’ve tightened the overall focus, and have educated ourselves on the chosen subject matter, what more can we do? Well, we can allow our topic to grow with variation and color. This brings a new depth and multiple levels of interest to your writing, and is an ideation process of a sort. Ideation is simply the point at which you generate ideas, hopefully taking note of them along the way. This is the “sky’s the limit” portion of the process, where you can create a broad variety of iterations of your main topic. Regardless of your chosen topic, there are almost certainly other disciplines that have touched on your subject. You can celebrate them as a means of ideation. I’m referring to, in no particular order:

Songs
Photographs
Tapestries
Paintings
Plays
Movies
Operas
Art Installations
Sculpture
Conceptual products and art
Games
Books
Other Blogs

… having to do with your subject matter. These can also be used as the basis for your research. I’m sure that there are other subtopics that I haven’t considered, so part of your method can be listing additional subtopics for your topic area, using the above list as a healthy starting point. Go crazy! This is where you can shoot for the moon. If it touches (or opposes, or complements) your topic area, it’s fair game. If you choose you can even narrow that list, for an even tighter focus, or to save some material for a future date. Bringing us to…

Pace yourself

You wouldn’t expect (nor want) a novel or a film to give you everything in the first 5 minutes. Artistically, that’s not particularly interesting anyway - my brother (the theater major) would say that it “condescends to the audience participant,” and ends up falling flat, for lack of fostering any kind of intrigue. You have, potentially, a lifetime to explore your topic. There’s no reason that you can’t explore it at an easy pace, allowing you and your readers to know the topic inside and out. This also gives you a lot of breathing room, alleviating the feeling that you have burned through “all there is to say” too quickly.

This will also help remove some of the mental burden of trying to cram 100 gallons of information into a 5 gallon post. You can break it out over several posts - in fact, it’ll be easier on the reader that way. This works unless your chosen subject requires immediacy, in which case you might not have the luxury of too much ideation - for instance, if you focus on breaking news of whatever type.

But, for the majority of bloggers, the end result happens when you take the results from your wild ideation spree from the previous step, pick a subtopic and approach you like, and write.Certainly, don’t forget to take an editing pass. And finally, congratulations - the page is blank no more! You broke through.
Generating your own methodology

Certainly, the above steps are neither all inclusive, nor meant to be any kind of authoritative, rigorous standard that separates wheat from chaff. But, it is a methodology, whereas before you may have had none - and using it can get you through rough patches, or even take your blog to the next level. Certainly you can create your own process if you’d like, or you can simply recognize and refine any process that you are already using, whether it is a deliberate conscious process, or one that you use unknowingly.

The California Superbike School regularly improves riders by simply making them aware of the decisions they make while riding - as a writer, what are the decisions that you make when you choose to write? I think there’s value in simply recognizing and enumerating any unconscious decisions made - this exposes them to your conscious mind, at which point you can actively choose to alter or abolish those decisions, or add new ones. This becomes a fairly enlightening self-exploration if taken seriously enough - and could easily provide material for blogging in its own right.

Though it be madness, there is method in it

For the final installment of this series, I’ll examine some of the wilder methodologies employed by some of history’s most well-known creators and makers. Hopefully you’ll find it entertaining, and potentially inspiring!

Continue Reading Part 3