google-site-verification: googlebf3a87612b2bb36a.html How to Start a Blog

How to Start a Blog

How to Start a Blog(and Make Money) in 6 Steps: Easy Beginner’s Guide



Follow these steps to learn how to start a blog and make money today

Starting a blog is not complicated at all, but you need is some guidance, which helps you to start a blog in 2023.

But Before starting the full process of making a profitable blog,

Maybe some of you are thinking, about why you should start a blog in 2023?

I always prefer to say that 2023 is the golden arena for starting a blog and growing it,

Because blogging is becoming tough day by day and if you started today,

so you have more opportunities/chances, than others who will start later than you.

There are many benefits if you start your blog .

1. Express Yourself – Blogging is the platform that allows you to express yourself by writing content for your audience. 

2. You can help others and gain fans – You can help the readers by writing the content on your blog, and by this, they will become your true fans which always there for your support.

3. Make Money Online – Yes, You can make money from your blog by doing Affiliate Marketing and Running Ads.

I think you got an idea about why you started & how blogging will help you

1. Your Blog name and Niche

Your blog’s name is what readers will see first (like yourblog.com), so it should ideally represent either the general topics you’ll be writing about—or it could be your own name, that of your business, a clever combination of words, or otherwise.

Your blog’s niche is the general topic area that you’ll be focusing your content around. Examples include blog topics like travel, food, fashion, lifestyle, technology, and otherwise. Incorporating a word or two that clearly signals what your content is about, within the name of your blog (like - intellegentinvester.com)—will be very helpful for your future blog readers.

2.Good Domain for Your Blog

The second step in starting a blog, is actually getting your blog online. That’s what a web hosting company will do for you. In this step, you’ll be selecting the blogging platform and web hosting plan you’ll use to get your blog online.

This is for you If you haven’t selected the domain name till now –

When I started my blogging career, I don’t know how to choose a premium or brand domain for my blog,

and that’s why I wasted 10+ domains because I don’t like it also they don’t look brand.

I think you don’t make a mistake like me?

If Yes! Here are four tips that help you to find your dream domain –  

1. Keep it Short & Simple –

(Jon Morrow changed their domain name from BoostBlogTraffic to SmartBlogger, and their blog is getting millions of traffic because now his domain looks simple).

2. Use Keywords –

You can use the main keyword in your domain, which helps you in SEO.

3. Don’t Use Numbers –

You can’t use numbers in your domain because it’s not easy to remember the numbers

4. Always Use TLD Extension –

I recommend you to use domain extensions like .com because it’s globally and beneficial for long-term blogging.

If you are still not able to figure out the domain for your blog,

Choose your web hosting plan

First, you’ll select a hosting plan (inputting your blog name comes next). Personally, I recommend choosing the Choice Plus plan because it comes with Domain Privacy, which will protect your personal information (your full name, email address, phone number and home address) from being published anywhere online

Choosing your plan will look like this right here. Just click the green “Select” button on your plan of choice:

HOSTING DISCOUNT LIMITED OFFER

Pick your blog’s domain name

Next, you’ll get to the page where it’s time to choose your blog’s domain.Once you get to this step in the checkout process, just type in the name of the domain name that you’d like your blog to have(my is intellegentinvester.com)

If your domain name of choice isn’t available, you can either try another option that comes to mind—or (what I recommend) select the option to choose your domain name later after getting the rest of your account squared away and taking a little more time to think the name through. Plus, later on down in this guide, I expand some more on how to choose the right name for your blog if you’re not decided yet.

Here’s where you can click to choose your domain later (it’s a popup that will appear if you hover on this page for long enough or move your mouse up toward the top of the page):

After either choosing your domain name or opting to select it later, you’ll be taken to the final step in the sign up process—creating your account.

Now you’ll input your billing information, check the box that you agree to Bluehost’s Terms of Service and then hit the green “Submit” button.

You’ve officially completed the first major step in starting a blog.

 3. Choose a Good Hosting For Your Blog

Domain  Name –  The domain name is the name of the website which readers types in the browser.

Web Hosting – Web hosting is a place where all your files of your blog are stored and show your blog lives when someone tries to access that.

Hosting is like the hard disk of the computer, which stored all your data (images, posts, pages, and many more) and kept your data secured.

There are tons of web hosting that you can use to start your blogging carrier.

But I don’t recommend them to you because they are worthless.

So instead of giving you a ton of hosting lists.

I

Select the right hosting plan package

This is where you’ll choose an account plan based on the price you want to lock in and how far in advance you’ll pay for your blog’s hosting.

hosting

Note that deletzero only offers options for you to pay 1, 2, 3 or4 gb upfront. They don’t offer a monthly payment option (because most hosting companies that do offer monthly payments tend to charge a bit more). Even still, with whichever plan you choose, the price works out to be a great deal for starting your own blog and getting it online today.

S

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Choose the best free WordPress theme for your new blog (3 options)

When you’re still new to starting a blog, I don’t usually recommend buying a paid WordPress theme right away. Once you have some traffic and can justify the investment, then it’s smart to choose a premium theme with more features and options. For right now though, a complex blog theme will be a distraction from your most important priority of bringing readers to your new blog.

WordPress comes with a ton of free blogging themes to choose from, so start with one of the options you like in Appearance > Themes > Add New Theme > Popular without spending much time on this for now. You can always come back and change it later.

I recommend choosing Kadence WP, Elementor for WordPress or Astra (all of which are 100% free blog themes—they’re lightning fast and also have the ability to upgrade to their premium theme versions at affordable price points later on).

how to start bloging in wordpress

I like these three fast WordPress themes most because they’re crisp, clean, simple and will get you set up without needing to invest in a paid blog theme as you’re just starting your blog. Later, you can evaluate more of the other WordPress themes out there or upgrade these ones to their premium themes for more features.

What if I want to choose a different WordPress theme (or switch later)?

Why blog design is so important when starting a blog

Even if you don’t really care about design yourself, your readers will shift their behavior dramatically based on the features of your blog layout. In fact, during a 2012 study from Google and the University of Basel, researchers found that users judge a website’s aesthetic beauty and perceived functionality in 1/20th — 1/50th of a second. Plus, thanks to a little psychological bias called the Halo Effect, people will extend that judgement to all aspects of your blog.

Good blog design builds trust. It tells people that you care enough about your blog to make it look nice. This doesn’t mean you need crazy animations or tons of fonts and colors. In fact, the best designs are simple, clear and easy to read.

Once you’ve settled on the right theme for your WordPress blog, it’s time to dive into the world of WordPress plugins, to help unlock even more customizations of your blog design & functionality. This is the necessary prep work in order to give your blog a chance of developing into a real business over time.

9 essential WordPress plugins you should install on your blog today

WordPress plugins play a crucial role in how your blog will function, and getting the most essential plugins dialed in as quickly as possible is a major step that’s designed to serve both your audience and perform well for search engines.

What is a WordPress plugin and why are they important?

The only problem with WordPress plugins, is that there are literally thousands of different plugins and blogging tools to choose from out there. To help you cut through all the noise though… these are the must-have WordPress plugins to install when you start blogging today:

  1. Yoast SEO: The more people that can find your content, the better your blog will do. The Yoast SEO plugin for WordPress helps you to optimize your blog post titles, descriptions, content length and other elements across your entire blog so that you can be found easier by search engines. This is by far the most established, best SEO plugin on the market, and worth installing on your blog first.
  2. WPForms: You’ll want your readers to be able to get in touch with you easily, which I highly recommend—as it’ll encourage other bloggers who want to collaborate with you an easy opportunity to reach out. WPForms is an easy-to-use plugin that allow you to drag & drop contact forms onto any page of your blog.
  3. Site Kit by Google (Analytics Dashboard for WordPress): This is a 100% free plugin made by Google that allows you to see all of your relevant Google Analytics, Google Search Console, Google AdSense and Google PageSpeed optimization data directly inside your WordPress dashboard. Connect the plugin to your Google Analytics & Search Console accounts (you can sign up for a free Google Analytics account right here) to find out who’s coming to your site, how long they’re sticking around, and what your most popular blog posts are.
  4. UpdraftPlus: Again, sometimes things will go wrong on your blog (and it won’t always be totally in your control). It’s always smart to have a backup plugin that’ll save all your hard work on a regular basis, and this free one stands high above the rest.
  5. WP Rocket: Faster websites rank higher on Google and give your readers a better experience. WP Rocket is a plugin that caches your blog pages, reduces your file sizes, and does much more to ensure that your blog loads faster for everyone.
  6. Bunny CDN: Speaking of speed, Bunny.net makes a fantastic WordPress plugin-based CDN that’ll make images and other static elements of your blog load at lightning speed, earning this plugin top marks to consider as a complement to also using WP Rocket.
  7. Insert Headers and Footers: Sometimes to edit your blog theme, you’ll have to add code snippets to your header or footer (it’s not as scary as it sounds). However, doing it in the code of your theme can cause issues. This plugin lets you add small snippets of code easily to select locations around your blog.
  8. Lightweight Accordion: If you like the way I create the collapsible (accordion-style) content boxes here throughout this guide and in the FAQ section near the bottom of this post, then I recommend installing the free plugin I use to make those content widgets come to life: Lightweight Accordion. In just a few clicks with this plugin, you can quickly add collapsible FAQ box functionality to your WordPress blog.
  9. MightyShare: Automatically generate social share images in WordPress for free. Rather than having whichever boring social share image your blog uses by default, this free plugin automatically generates beautiful social images using multiple templates, fonts, color choices and robust customization. It includes support for all post types, multiple templates and new templates added monthly.

How to install a WordPress plugin (quickly) on your new blog

The fastest way to install a WordPress plugin is to find it within the plugin directory once you’re logged into your blog. To do that, follow these simple steps:

1. Navigate to Plugins > Add New:

bloging

2. Search for the WordPress Plugin You Want to Install:

In this example, I’ve searched for the Yoast SEO WordPress plugin (which is an essential search engine optimization plugin you’ll want). If it weren’t already installed on my blog, you’d see the big “Install Now” button where it currently says “Active” here:

Find and Install a WordPress Plugin

3. Click Install Now on Your Plugin of Choice:

Once you’re ready to install the plugin you’ve searched for (or browsed the top charts to see what’s popular) on your WordPress site, click the “Install Now” button and it’ll be added to your blog. The last step will be clicking “Activate” on the plugin once it’s successfully installed.

Basic WordPress blogging platform settings to become familiar with now

There are many different reasons to start a blog and just as many unique blogging goals you may have in mind. Regardless, it pays to have a basic understanding of the broader aspects of how WordPress functions, so that you can control the visual appearance of your blog.

Let’s dig into a few of the bigger picture settings that you can find in your WordPress dashboard.

How to optimize your WordPress permalink settings (click to expand)

Clean up your default site URL

How to clean up your default site URL (click to expand)

Set your blog homepage (customized page or latest blog posts)

How to set your blog's homepage (click to expand)

How to set up a menu on your WordPress blog (click to expand)

Alright, we’ve covered the basic foundations of getting your blog’s WordPress settings dialed in. Now, let’s dig into creating a few of the main pages on your blog.

Create the main pages of your blog: about, contact, hire (on the WordPress blogging platform)

From the moment you start a blog, you’ll want to showcase some basic information about yourself. Who you are. Why people should listen to you. How they can get in touch with you if they have questions or want to work with you.

These pages are all pretty standard, but they’re also a great way to have some fun and let your readers get to know you. In fact, I use my own About page to not only introduce who I am and tell my story, but also to explain my value proposition (for potential clients looking to hire me as a freelance content marketer) and show recent achievements.

Here are step-by-step instructions for how to write an About Me page that does this on your blog, too:

How to write an About page for your blog

You might not think much about it, but your About page can quickly become one of the most popular pages on your blog.

How to write your blog's about page (click to expand)

Use your About page to show the value you’re creating for your readers—and work hard to earn that attention.


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4. Write your first blog post

Write your first blog post

You don’t read a blog because it looks nice or because they publish frequently. (Although those both help).

You read a blog because you care about what it says. Creating high quality content is what will bring you readers and help you to eventually make money blogging.

Before you get too far down the road of creating a blog business plan, laying out your content roadmap and writing your first blog post—you need to answer one simple question… Why?

  • Why do you care for the topic you’re blogging about?
  • Why should other people listen to what you’re saying?
  • Why is this a blogging topic you can add real value to?

To answer these questions, I like to think of a blog like any other business and re-emphasize the importance of picking a clear niche.

What is a blog niche?

Does my blog need to have a niche right away?

Now, if you’re unsure, or if no niche comes to mind right away, that’s OK. We can coax it out with a few questions.

Ask these questions to determine a smart niche to start a blog in:
  • What’s an interest or dream from your childhood that you find exciting?
  • What’s the absolute best part of your day?
  • Do you have any hobbies or hobbies that you want to learn?
  • What is a deeply held value of yours?
  • What’s one achievement that you’re incredibly proud of?

Right away, you should have an idea or two for a clear niche you could start blogging about. It’s ok if your niche grows, evolves and changes over time.

How to know if there’s a business opportunity for your blog niche (to eventually make money blogging)

If you want to make money from your blog, you’ll also want to do a bit of research to see if there is a market demand for your niche. What this means is: Are people actively searching for what you’re writing about? And can you add value and help them in a way that makes you money?

In order to create a business from your blog, you need to solve a real problem for people. To do this, I use a simple spreadsheet I call the Niche Market Demand Checker (you can get a free copy of it in my course right here), which will help make sure you create content that your target audience will find useful.

Take the blog niche that you’re thinking about and come up with 5–10 keyword phrases or blog topics within that niche that you would write about. So, if we wanted to start a blog about playing guitar you might choose keywords like “best guitar books,” “how to play guitar,” “beginner guitar chords,” “what guitar should I buy,” and so on.

Keep in mind too, that some of the new AI writing tools on the market these days can provide a lot of help in the ideation, research & writing process for your new blog.

Now, let’s do a little keyword reserch. Enter one of those keywords from above into your Google search. If there are tens of millions (or more) results, that’s a pretty strong indicator that people care about this specific topic. But to be extra sure, I use my very own free keyword research tool to check the Monthly Search Volume (how many people are searching for this term each month).

Use My Free Keyword Research Tool

Try my free AI-Powered Keyword Tool to get dozens of research-backed ideas for keywords & topics to write about on your blog today.


Do this for each of your keywords and look at the results. If all of your top keywords have a Monthly Search Volume of 5,000 – 10,000, you’ve definitely got a potentially profitable niche. If you’re too much over that, into the high hundreds of thousands of Monthly Searches, you might want to get more specific with your niche rather than competing with much larger, established websites on more popular subjects. Your goal will eventually be to learn how to rank higher on Google than all these competitors.

Brainstorm smart blog post ideas (using keyword research)

Even once you’ve established the niche you’ll be blogging about, you have to do smart keyword research in order to generate the right blog post ideas that’ll actually bring you readers.

So, what about the actual posts you’re going to write? The good news is you can honestly write whatever you want! This is your blog after all, and one of the major benefits is that it’s your platform to speak and share. But, ideas don’t always come naturally.

This is where I believe a simple editorial calendar is so important. It’s just a basic document to fill out that’ll give you a roadmap to always knowing what you’re writing next. It frees you up to spend more time on the fun of actually putting posts together—not banging your head against the wall trying to come up with blog post ideas.

5 ways to come up with clever blog post ideas

Here’s a simple process I use for coming up with the specific blog posts I write for my own blog.

5 ways to come up with unique blog post ideas (click to expand)

If I’m still left needing more ideas, I’ll turn to a few more creative tactics…

  • Seeing what other bloggers in my niche covered (and what did well).
  • Taking a look at my most successful posts to see what readers like most.
  • Doing more quote roundup posts (like my posts about business advice and online business tools) that don’t require a ton of original thought and effort from my end.
  • Chatting with bloggers in my space and brainstorming fresh ideas.
  • Talking about specific blogging lessons I’ve recently learned (and my advice).
  • Reflecting on the blogging mistakes I’ve made and the tactics that work today.

By this point, I’ve usually got a fully stocked content calendar. Still need some more content inspiration? Here are 201+ winning blog post ideas.

Now you’re ready to write your first blog post

Once you’ve decided on the first blog post you want to write, you’ll navigate to the “Add New Post” section from your WordPress Dashboard.

Go to Posts > Add New which will look like this right here:

Next, you’ll be taken to a brand new article page that’ll look like this (a totally blank canvas 🙂):

Write a blog post headline that encourages readers to click through

One of the reasons you’re blogging is to attract readers, right? Well, it pays dividends to put some effort into learning how to write a headline that’ll entice readers and most importantly—deliver on the promise of what your article is actually helping readers to accomplish.

Luckily for you, I built a free blog title generator tool that’ll give you an unlimited number of blog title ideas for the topics you want to cover.

Try my free AI-Powered Blog Title Generator Tool to get dozens of SEO-friendly headline ideas to make your blog posts stand out today.


As a starting point to writing a strong title, learn by observing the headlines of other successful bloggers in your niche:

  • Do they often lead with numbers?
  • How many of their article headlines include parentheses?
  • Does it seem like a best practice to capitalize the first letter of every word?

Check out a few of the most recent headlines from my blog so you can get some inspiration on how you might want to structure your headlines (be sure to read my ultimate guide to writing blog headlines and my quick tips to killer blog titles).

If you’re still unsure about how to title a new post, then do a Google search for the target keyword phrase you’re going after and gather inspiration for the ways other titles are written—be sure not to directly copy other bloggers, but that’ll point you in the right direction.

Choose an SEO-friendly blog post URL

It’s extremely important that you customize the URL of your new post, if you hope for it to rank well in organic Google search results.

How to set an SEO-friendly URL for your blog posts (click to expand)

Craft a compelling introduction to your new blog post

You have one or two sentences to convince readers your new post is worth their time. Here’s a sample blog post introduction I just wrote in less than two minutes for our hiking example:

As you’re learning to write a blog post that keeps readers engaged, here are a few do’s and don’ts for crafting a strong introduction (and my free blog post templates you can follow along with and use in your own content creation process).

The do's and don'ts of writing a blog post introduction (click to expand)

The easiest strategy for writing a compelling introduction is to answer the who, what, where, when and why as soon as possible. This may sound counterintuitive, but another trick is to start with your conclusion first. In the age of short attention spans, people have grown tired of wasting time on clickbait blog posts that go nowhere.

The quicker you can establish relevance to your reader, give them a strong reason to believe they’ll find what they’re looking for in your blog post, the more likely they’ll be to dig into your piece and share with others.

Optimize the design and layout of your blog post

Ultimately, what looks “good” is subjective and up to you, based on what you think your (future) readers will resonate with most. But one of the most important lessons I’ve learned through starting a blog of my own, is that design matters a lot.

5 rules to structuring the perfect blog post layout (click to expand)

These five time-tested design principles will be immensely helpful in constructing an appealing blog layout (that’s easy for readers to digest).

Hit publish on your first blog post

Once you’ve written your first blog post (and ideally get it to the 1,000+ word range) you’re almost ready to publish!

Take a few minutes to double check on the Yoast SEO suggestions and ensure your blog post is SEO-friendly, which will give you the best chance of ranking well in organic search.

After your SEO settings are dialed in, choose which “Category” this new post will fall under and tick that box. Then, you’re ready to hit publish!

And boom! It’s that easy if you allow it to be 🎉

Free blog photo resources

One of the easiest ways to add some visual flair to your blog posts is with beautiful images and designs. Thankfully in recent years, there are now a number of high quality content sites that offer incredible photography that’s completely free to use for your blog—my favorite is Unsplash:

Unsplash (for free blog images and stock photos)

Unsplash is the best online resource for completely free, user-uploaded photos for your blog. Every photo that makes it onto Unsplash is curated by their team to make sure it’s high quality content. Under the Unsplash license, you don’t even have to attribute the photographer (however, they recommend you do), which makes Unsplash the easiest option for free blog photography.

Other great free blog photo resources worth mentioning

  • Wikimedia Commons: 21+ million photos and images from throughout history that are now in the public domain and free to use.
  • Life of Pix: Awesome free-to-use (open-source) photos donated by an advertising agency in Montreal, Canada.

Bonus: Creating a blog content strategy

I’ve been lucky enough to work for some fantastic companies and get paid to learn about the importance of having both a comprehensive blog strategy and content marketing strategy for your blog. I’ve successfully applied those same lessons to my own blog—making many tweaks and additions along the way. And if you’re having trouble with your content planning efforts, grab my free blog planner bundle and check out my other bundle of free blogging resources to turn things up a notch today.

What is a blog content strategy?

Here’s how to create a basic blog content strategy today:

  1. Define your blog goals: What’s your purpose for starting a blog? What do you want to achieve with your blog content? Your blog goals might change as you grow your blog, but it’s still important to know it early on.
  2. Get to know your blog readers (and where they hang out): Your readers will determine whether or not your blog becomes successful. To write for them, you need to really understand them—which is why it helps if you’re also writing for yourself. It’s useful to some research around the audience you’re writing for. Think about the demographics and psychographics of your target audience. Demographics are the quantitative traits of your readers (age, gender, location, job title) and psychographics are the more unmeasurable traits like values, interests, attitudes and belief systems. Once you’ve written down these qualities, you can start to come up with an audience persona—a fictionalized version of your ideal reader.
  3. Decide on your blog’s main content pillars: When it comes to deciding what you’re going to write about, it’s good to have a few guiding categories that you’ll refer back to. I like to call these content pillars, as they’re the foundation that holds up the rest of your blog. For example, if you’re starting a blog about personal finance, your pillars might be: personal finance tips, interviews with experts, industry news, paying off debt or otherwise. Each of these pillars can have hundreds of blog posts written under them. They also all work together to show that you’re a thought leader in your niche.
  4. Map out the content you’re going to create soon after starting your blog: Shortly after launching your blog, it’s worth taking a little time to plan out your content pipeline for the coming weeks (possibly months). You never know when your first blog post might go viral. In that case, you’ll want to have at least a game plan to quickly engage the new readers you get. Even just one or two blog posts under each of your major content pillars is enough to start with, ideally in the form of evergreen content that’ll stand the test of time.

We’ve now come a long way in this guide. You’ve gone from learning the technicalities, all the way through to publishing your first post.

It’s time to talk about what happens after you’ve published your first blog post… promoting your content, driving traffic and eventually making money from your blog.


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5. Promote your blog and get readers

Now that we’re heading into 2023, we can look back and see that my blog brought in 4.4 million+ readers last year alone. We’re going to use my experience in going from starting a blog—to quickly driving millions of readers to my content. What do you do once you’ve hit publish on your first blog posts? It’s time to learn how to promote your blog content.

This is the reason I’m hired as a consultant by companies like LinkedIn, Zendesk, Adobe, Close, Intuit and more—to write content for their blogs, teach them how to promote their content and bring in new readers.

Here are a few of the best ways to start sharing your blog posts and getting them in front of new readers. And if you want even more strategies, here’s my guide to learning how to drive traffic to your website where we dig even deeper into the tactics I’ve used to grow my blog to millions of yearly readers.

Using social media to promote your blog

The obvious first place to turn when you want to find readers is social media. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest, LinkedIn, Reddit, Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok are some of the biggest networks today. Whichever platform best suits your niche and audience interests, is the right one for you. And that’s an important note. There’s no point in trying to promote your blog posts on every social media platform.

Look for the social channels that give you the best return

How to choose which social networks to promote your blog on (click to expand)

Using YouTube to grow your blog audience (click to expand)

3 tools to help manage your social media promotion (click to expand)

The key insight here, is that you’ll need to experiment and see which networks will perform best for you.

Guest blogging on other relevant blogs and sites like Medium, Quora & Linkedin

One of the best things about starting a blog is that you’re joining a community of other bloggers that love to help each other out. Guest blogging on other relevant sites is the #1 best way to connect with an already established audience. Check out my ultimate guide to guest blogging for a full walkthrough, but we’ll cover the highlights here.

I’ve written literally hundreds of guest posts over the past decade, and it’s been the single best strategy for promoting my blog content.

How to land your first guest blog post (click to expand)

How to republish your content on other blogs (click to expand)

The key point to all of this, is that you want to look for places where your audience is—and be present there, whether that’s other blogs, communities, or social platforms.

Forums and message boards for bloggers

Often, just throwing your ideas out into the social media void isn’t very effective.

Instead, being a part of targeted forums and online communities can give you a way better return on your time—if you find the right ones. Browse through relevant groups on Facebook to see if there are any vibrant communities that’d be a good starting point.

How to find the right forums and message boards (click to expand)

Now, if your search doesn’t come up with any Facebook Groups with a decent number of members (5,000+), there are other options. Look for more general groups that relate to your niche on Facebook, LinkedIn, Reddit or standalone forum websites.

My favorite online groups for entrepreneurs (click to expand)

Remember, forums and message boards aren’t just places to dump links to your blog posts. You need to provide value before you ask for anything in return. So, I recommend you start building relationships and engaging with people there first.

Using an email newsletter to grow your blog audience

One of the best forms of blog promotion isn’t to other audiences, but to your own (over time). Building your own email list (or email newsletter) is the most powerful way to keep existing readers engaged with the work you’re doing—and one of the things you should set up immediately.

Start building your email list from day one with your blog—it can be surprisingly simple. Place a signup form within your posts and across key pages of your site. I use a tool I love, called ConvertKit, to manage the 150,000+ email subscribers I now have on my blog, but Mailchimp is the best free email marketing tool to get started with.

Not sure which email marketing tool to use when starting a blog?

Read through my detailed comparison of ConvertKit vs AWeber vs Mailchimp for my take on where you should start and when to upgrade to more robust email marketing tools.

I send my community an update whenever I post a new blog post, have a resource I want to share, or when new podcast episodes go live—and this now ensures my content will quickly be seen by thousands of people right off the bat. Email marketing and promoting content to my own email list has by far been the biggest driver of growth and revenue for my blog, and something I can’t suggest enough amongst all the blog marketing strategies you can invest in.

Other ways to promote your blog and get more traffic

Outside of promotion on social media, through guest posts, in forums and over email—here are a few other techniques I’ve personally used to grow my blog audience quickly.

4 more creative ways to promote your blog (click to expand)

Remember that the only thing standing in the way of growing your blog is you. It’ll take some ingenuity and the willingness to experiment, but it’s well worth the effort. Trust me, I’ve had to reinvent many times over the years and I’m still learning with my newest side blog, VeganWiki.

Almost every guide about how to start a blog stops long before this point. Now, I’m going to equip you with the tools (and strategies) to go from starting your new blog—to building a true business around it—based on my experience growing this blog to more than 500,000 monthly readers and $50,000/mo in revenue.

Let’s talk about how to (eventually) make money from your blog.

6. Make money from your blog

Last year alone, my blog generated $449,107 in revenue (ignore the $0 in expenses here, you can see those details in my blog income reports).

I share this not to brag, but so that you’ll understand I know what I’m talking about when it comes to starting a blog and making serious income with it. Moreover, I’ll be the first to tell you that these kinds of income figures aren’t typical with blogging—and that it’s taken me 6+ years to reach this point in my blog business.

There’s a reason why making money from your blog is at the end of this guide to starting a blog. Unless you have a huge audience somewhere already, you can’t expect to make money right away—monetization should not be your #1 focus at the moment, but rather something to work towards.

Plus, the way you monetize your blog will be different depending upon the type of blog you have. For example, a lifestyle blog will pursue different monetization strategies than a personal blog, mom blog, food blog or travel blog.

Even still, it’s good to have an idea of which ways you’d like to make money blogging as you go into this new adventure, especially if you prioritize passive income. Some of these monetization strategies will be easier than others to implement while your readership is still growing.

1. Freelancing (Selling Your Services)

If you want to begin earning from your blog as quickly as possible, then selling your services (by landing blogging jobs, freelance writing gigs or otherwise selling your expertise as a service) is the easiest option by far. In fact, up until very recently, I was still freelancing as a blog monetization channel for my own business:

All you really need in order to land a freelance client, is a strong enough pitch, which is where choosing to start a blog (first) will help significantly. You’ll want to build out your key pages (About, Contact, Hire Me) and showcase at least a couple examples of the type of work you’ve done that you’ll soon be pitching freelance clients on.

If you don’t have those work samples yet… don’t let that hold you back. Create those sample articles, designs or other deliverables and host them on your own blog as if they were a project you got paid to produce.

If you have a skill that you can sell as a service, then you’re already prepared to go out and start pitching potential clients. That skill could be something like…

  • Writing (one of the top blogging skills you’ll want to command)
  • Design
  • Photography
  • Marketing (whether content marketing, digital marketing or otherwise)
  • Developing (check out these WordPress developer job sites)
  • Public relations
  • Social media management
  • Virtual assistance
  • Community-building
  • SEO or paid advertising campaigns
  • Business strategy or project management
  • The list goes on… because any skill can be monetized

Today, I still regularly book new freelance clients (like LinkedIn, Zendesk, Adobe) for $5,000/mo or more and I’m brought on to advise and execute on creating blog marketing campaigns for their organization.

If freelancing sounds like your cup of tea, you’ll want to grab my (free) collection of all my best resources, tools and templates for freelancers. That resource bundle is the culmination of more than 8 years of refining my freelance contract template, proposal template, cold email templates that convert new clients and more.

I also put together an in-depth guide to getting started with freelancing that you’ll want to read and another great foundational read about how to develop a pitching process that works for your type of business, is my freelancer’s guide to cold emailing. And if you want to try out some of the websites where freelance clients are already looking for talented help, here are my lists of both the best blogging job sites and the best freelance job sites.

2. Affiliate Programs

Every month, I earn a substantial amount of passive income from the affiliate programs that I’m a member of (sometimes in excess of $50,000+). For example, here’s a screenshot of my blog income from just one affiliate program (Bluehost) for the first 5 months of last year.

Since starting a blog here 10 years ago, affiliate income has gradually grown to become the largest revenue source for my business—and I’ve structured my blog to generate affiliate income because of how passive it is once you’ve done the (hard) work to find a sustainable traffic source for your content. I highly recommend thoughtfully pursuing affiliate marketing in your blogging niche.

How do affiliate programs work?

Most of the biggest brands have affiliate programs. Think companies like Amazon, all the way down to key players in specific niches like online education where brands like CreativeLive and Udemy have lucrative programs. Here’s a snapshot of my recent earnings from just a couple of other programs:

Once you build a small readership, you can go out and broker a more advantageous affiliate deal with companies that have relevant products you want to promote to your audience. For a LOT more on the subject of monetizing your blog with affiliate income, check out these guides:

  • 57+ Best Affiliate Programs for Bloggers (to Earn Affiliate Income)
  • 10 Ways Affiliate Marketing Can Completely Transform Your Blog
  • How I Earn an Extra $1,000 a Month with Amazon Affiliate Marketing

While all blog income sources will be subject to changes in the market at anytime, affiliate marketing has proven to be one of the most sustainable for nearly a decade of blog monetization here—and I’m constantly testing out new affiliate programs to keep growing my blog’s income.

3. Sponsored Blog Content

Unless you already have a decent sized audience on your blog (or social accounts), it’ll take some time to grow your readership to a point where sponsored content is a viable monetization option.

What is sponsored blog content?

How much traffic do you need in order to get blog sponsors?

The best way to do sponsored content without alienating your readers, is to weave it into your typical publishing style (like I’ve done with this sponsored post and this one too).

4. Online Courses

Once you have a skill (or experience) that others also want to learn, it’s relatively easy to package your best advice (like my blogging tips), strategies, tactics and tutorials into an online course where people can pay for access to accelerate their learning much quicker than they otherwise would going through the stumbling process of learning through trial and error.

Last year alone, I generated over $60,000 from the launch of my premium blogging course, Built to Blog, which takes students far beyond just starting a blog and into advanced strategies for getting readers & generating revenue from their blogs.

What’s great about an online course as a monetization path for your blog (or like I’ve done with selling blogging books too), is that you don’t need a huge audience in order to earn from online courses. The same goes if you choose to write an ebook and sell that digital product to your audience.

How to launch a profitable online course (click to expand)

5. Traditional Blog Advertisements (Ad Networks)

I used to have several small blog advertisements displayed across my content (from one of these top blog advertising networks) and in my blog sidebar that would earn me around $1,500 to $2,000 per month in incremental revenue, before I turned advertisements off in favor of optimizing for page speed & other sources of income.

I was a member of a small ad network called Carbon Ads for the first few years of my blogging journey, where they partner with bloggers and pair us up with ads from high-quality startups like Slack, Asana, Freshbooks, Monday, Upwork and other targeted brands that my audience is already familiar with.

How much can I earn from blog advertisements?

What are the best ad networks for bloggers to join?

All in all, traditional CPC or CPM advertising doesn’t become very profitable (at least as a viable source of substantial blog income) until you’re driving more like 1 million+ monthly readers, so it’s not a great monetization channel to focus on in the short-term if you’re just hosting a few ads in your blog sidebar. But, when you’re starting a blog, it can be one of the easiest ways to make money from your traffic without much extra effort—just be sure to set the right expectations for now.

6. Podcast Sponsorships

Another great way to start monetizing your blog is by launching a (simple) podcast for your readers. You can use your traffic and early listener numbers to book sponsorships from brands that want to reach your type of readers & listeners. Here’s the growth trajectory of my podcast over it’s first year:

You can even combine podcast ad placement offers with sponsored blog posts on your site to really sweeten the deal. And I understand that launching a podcast while you’re still mastering blogging sounds like a diversion, but keep in mind that a podcast can be as simple as casual conversations with other bloggers in your industry.

How to make money with podcast sponsorships

For many more on the mechanics behind launching a podcast and monetizing it alongside your blog (including choosing the right podcast hosting), check out this episode of my show with Michael Sacca of Rocketship.fm, whose grown his podcast into a $10,000/mo source of side income while he still holds onto his day job in sales and digital marketing. It’s a true masterclass in starting a podcast that you don’t want to miss.

7. Physical Products (eCommerce) and Software Tools

Similar in concept to launching an online course to your blog audience, another great way to monetize your audience is by selling a physical product or software tool to the people in your community—especially if you’ll be starting an eCommerce store (with the right eCommerce website builders) to sell products that are related to what your readers need.

At the end of the day, this one all comes back down to solving the problems your blog readers have. If you need some added incentive, consider that 75% of online shoppers say they use social media as a part of their buying process.

What once used to be a much more labor intensive business, eCommerce has become a great way to monetize an audience of readers on your blog—especially with the proliferation of drop shipping and order fulfillment services.

On top of just selling to your own audience, you can leverage loyalty programs that incentivize customers to invite friends to purchase with offers like first-time customer discounts, free one-month trials, gifting programs and more. These channels create opportunities for amplifying your message and spreading your products through word-of-mouth marketing efforts that won’t cost you anywhere near that of similar advertising fees.

How to (simply) launch a product to your blog audience

Tune in to my interview with Hiten Shah, who went from teaching himself how to start a blog, to now using his personal blog as a way to connect with his audience and release profitable software tools as a result of the validation conversations he’s had with them.

8. Business Partnerships

Of all the ways to monetize your blog, this is the most amorphous. Who knows who you’ll meet as a result. What about future guests on your podcast? The possibilities here for stumbling into partnership opportunities are endless.

As a result of sticking with my own personal blog for over a decade now, I’ve been able to use it as a tool to meet some incredibly talented entrepreneurs. Here are a few examples of how my decision has turned into profitable partnerships:

  • I’ve collaborated with my friend Jory (a writer) that I met because of my blog, on growing a $20,000/mo content marketing & digital marketing agency together
  • I’ve launched new websites (like SmartWP and MightyShare) with my friend Andy who has a similar audience as my own
  • I’ve partnered with my girlfriend to help her grow her vegan food blog, Vegan Anj with eyes toward monetization soon
  • I’ve worked with a former podcast guest to help build a blogging software tool I’ve envisioned for years
  • I’ve entertained offers to sell a blog multiple times over the years and may one day pull the trigger

It’s true that there aren’t as many ways to authentically engineer the creation of these types of partnerships—aside from growing your brand and the reach of your blog—then being receptive to the creative people & ideas that come your way as they discover you.

On the flip side, if there’s someone in your space that you really want to collaborate and work with, strategize on a way you can add value to their business.


How to Start a Blog (and Make Money) in 2023: Final Takeaways for New Bloggers

Ultimately, growing a successful blog all boils down to being excited and engaged with your new blog. If you want people to read what you’re writing, you need to give them a reason to.

Write exciting content, connect with people in your niche and enthusiastically share what you’re working on.

The traffic, monetization and everything else will follow.

I wrote this guide because starting a blog has been one of the most empowering, life-changing decisions I’ve made in my life.

And I hope that by now you feel confident enough to go out there and start a blog of your own.

I’d love to have you in my free 7-day course that expands on the teachings of this guide. We also dive even further into topics like driving traffic, my personal writing process, monetizing your blog and more.


Want my Free Course: How to Start a Profitable Blog in 7 Days?

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Infographic: How to Start a Blog (for Profit) and Become a Blogger This Year

For those more visual learners, I also put together this infographic breaking down the process of starting a blog—and my personal experience generating both traffic and revenue from your blog. Enjoy!


Balvantsinh

"Hello, I'm Balvant, a seasoned sub-broker in the stock market. With a PGDCA qualification, I bring expertise and insight to the world of investments."

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