Growing Your Audience- Some Basics

Brogan and Penn My friend and former coworker, Mike Desjardins asked me about how people go about growing a blogging audience. It’s a great question. I run into tons of people who have wonderful blogs that deserve much more attention than they receive. So what gives? What can one do to grow your audience? If you want to grow your audience, you need to know who they are, give them easy to consume chunks of content, promote your work effectively, and be persistent.

Let’s Start With Audience

First and foremost, who are you writing this blog for? If the answer is “myself” and you have more than one RSS subscriber, congratulations. You’ve done it. If the answer is, “Anyone into _____,” like “anyone into tech,” and you have more than 10 subscribers congratulations. Be clear about the audience. If I’m going to bother giving you some of my time, I want something back.

Let’s take Mitch Joel’s Six Pixels of Separation. This is a top shelf blog, with clearly written content, that speaks to people looking to better understand the future of digital influence. Brillant work, considerately written, and created in such a way that I come away thinking about how this impacts me. Perfect. Spot on.

Other great examples of a focused blog that targets its audience well:

Technically, I could give you links all night, but the point is this. Look at how the content is focused on a specific audience. Look a few posts forward and back. Except for a few exceptions, you can tell exactly who the audience is.

When my audience dips, it’s because I lose my focus. But there’s more to it than that.

Your Content Needs to Be Well Chunked

First off, journalists know this, but I’ll tell you: start with the best stuff right up at the top. Don’t do it as a build-up. Second, make it such that people can read it in chunks. Look up at this. I’ve got headings that break up the post. I’ve got bullets that break up the post. I’ve led with a graphic. I could pull out a graphic or a pull quote to keep it looking better.

Break things up so that human eyes can read them easier. Dense posts and super long posts are a turn-off. Oh, and that’s another thing. Brevity. It rules. Pass it on.

Promote Your Blog Effectively

First, make sure there’s a very prominently displayed link for folks to subscribe to your RSS feed for your blog. The bigger and more attention-drawing, the better. Second, add an email subscription option to your blog. I prefer using FeedBurner to manage all that.

Second, be sure your blog’s URL is loaded into pretty much every social network where you belong. Add it to MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Plaxo, Flickr, and wherever else you can bring awareness. Make sure you submit it to directories like Dmoz.org, and Yahoo and Google. Get that URL out there where people can find it. I’ve had lots of interesting moments where someone has found my blog via Facebook or LinkedIn.

Third, add it to your email signature and your business cards. If your company doesn’t give you business cards, go to Overnight Prints or Vista Print or Moo and buy some. Thirty or so bucks and they help people find you (and your blog!).

In services like Twitter, promote your blog posts from time to time. Not EVERY post, but ones where you feel you’ve done well. I never use automatic post-to-twitter links. They just don’t seem to net decent conversations. Instead, try using a conversational tone. For instance, when I’m done this post, I will send to Twitter something like this: “I shared my thoughts on growing your audience. What are YOUR ideas?” and then the link to this post. You don’t have to follow, but you’ll know exactly why I asked for your attention.

One quick note: it’s not always about your blog. Don’t be that guy.

Be Persistent

I could also say “be consistent,” but in this case, I want you to persist in not only putting out your content, but also making it better. EVERYONE can make their stuff better. I could do to focus on my takeaways. You might need to pare down the word count. There’s always room to do better work.

Further, do lots to try new things. Stretch out the medium. Think of new ways to ask the same old questions. Decide on challenging approaches to blogging in ways that powerfully reveal the information your audience seeks from you. Persist in such matters, never accepting that your work is flawless, but instead analyzing your responses and uptake or downturn in traffic, and giving more effort accordingly.

And Now, the Bonus Round

Other ways that I’ve built traffic to my blog include the basics: comment on great blogs. Write and submit guest posts to top blogs in your similar space (but be careful of HOW you guest post). Add occasional links to your blog posts in places like Flickr. Consider contests. Participate in other people’s events. Find groups of bloggers you like and see if you fit their circles of friends. Write series so that people want to participate and come back for more. Make your URL memorable.

And beyond all that? Be as human as humanly possible, only do that in the most interesting senses of the idea. Make sense?

What else did I miss? The part where I ask you questions so that you help add YOUR personality and ideas to the conversation?

Photo Credit, Chel Pixie shooting for Financial Aid Podcast

ChrisBrogan.com runs on the Genesis Framework

Genesis Theme Framework

The Genesis Framework empowers you to quickly and easily build incredible websites with WordPress. Whether you're a novice or advanced developer, Genesis provides you with the secure and search-engine-optimized foundation that takes WordPress to places you never thought it could go.

With automatic theme updates and world-class support included, Genesis is the smart choice for your WordPress website or blog.

Become a StudioPress Affiliate

  • http://www.smartbusinessowners.com Merlyn Sanchez

    Found you on Twitter and I’m glad I stopped by. Attracting more readers has been a slow process for me. The way you formatted your article really caught my attention and made it clear that my longer articles aren’t “reader friendly”.

    Thanks for the great tips and I look forward to more!

  • http://ryscott.blogspot.com Ryan

    I just found your blog. I’m a new blogger, and your words are encouraging, especially those about constant improvement. And look at me! I’m commenting on great blogs. I mean, this is a great blog, right?

  • http://ryscott.blogspot.com Ryan

    I just found your blog. I’m a new blogger, and your words are encouraging, especially those about constant improvement. And look at me! I’m commenting on great blogs. I mean, this is a great blog, right?

  • Pingback: Morning Brief — Tuesday, June 10 « The Book Publicity Blog

  • http://www.mytropicalescape.com mark_hayward

    Nice post, Chris! It’s funny, when I first started to jot my ideas down online, I thought,…”I need to comment on other blogs, interact, etc…”

    However, once I realized that all I really wanted to do was have some place to download my thoughts about lifestyle design and entrepreneurship, interact with people who are pursuing goals and are motivated the rest sort of fell into place.

    I don’t have near the traffic that you have, but even getting a couple of people to react and comment on what you have written is still pretty good at the end of the day…

  • http://www.mytropicalescape.com mark_hayward

    Nice post, Chris! It’s funny, when I first started to jot my ideas down online, I thought,…”I need to comment on other blogs, interact, etc…”

    However, once I realized that all I really wanted to do was have some place to download my thoughts about lifestyle design and entrepreneurship, interact with people who are pursuing goals and are motivated the rest sort of fell into place.

    I don’t have near the traffic that you have, but even getting a couple of people to react and comment on what you have written is still pretty good at the end of the day…

  • http://dailyslackr.blogpost.com Luis Sandoval

    Excellent advice. My problem as a blogger has always been wordiness. I’m in the process of working on a novel, so I’m used to describing scenes and laying out the story, so blogging has been a new challenge for me.

    Many a times I find myself being long winded (case and point :) ), so I’m having to go back and hone my words.

    Some of the blogs you listed above I have already been following but you listed two new ones for me. Thanks.

    Question though, do you have a general limit in your mind on how long a post should be? What are your methods to reducing the amount you’ve written?

  • http://dailyslackr.blogpost.com Luis Sandoval

    Excellent advice. My problem as a blogger has always been wordiness. I’m in the process of working on a novel, so I’m used to describing scenes and laying out the story, so blogging has been a new challenge for me.

    Many a times I find myself being long winded (case and point :) ), so I’m having to go back and hone my words.

    Some of the blogs you listed above I have already been following but you listed two new ones for me. Thanks.

    Question though, do you have a general limit in your mind on how long a post should be? What are your methods to reducing the amount you’ve written?

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Hi Luis–

    Great questions. I don’t exactly have a word count in mind, nor do I ever check my word count, unless I suspect a post has accidentally become epic. If that happens, I look for ways to chop that into a few parts, because I believe (and this is ONLY my opinion, because there are millions of ways to do it) that blogs should be a little more of a brief reading experience than a long experience.

    How do I chop? I work in paragraph chunks. When I’m done writing, I go back and see if there’s any slack. Sometimes, I can kill entire sentences that just re-tell the old sentence.

    Best advice for a fiction guy like you? Read Shipping News once every six months whether or not you need it. : )

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Hi Luis–

    Great questions. I don’t exactly have a word count in mind, nor do I ever check my word count, unless I suspect a post has accidentally become epic. If that happens, I look for ways to chop that into a few parts, because I believe (and this is ONLY my opinion, because there are millions of ways to do it) that blogs should be a little more of a brief reading experience than a long experience.

    How do I chop? I work in paragraph chunks. When I’m done writing, I go back and see if there’s any slack. Sometimes, I can kill entire sentences that just re-tell the old sentence.

    Best advice for a fiction guy like you? Read Shipping News once every six months whether or not you need it. : )

  • http://dailyslackr.blogpost.com Luis Sandoval

    Chris,

    Thanks a lot for the recommendation, I just jumped on Amazon and ordered the book. I’m an avid reader, so any recs you have are always appreciated.

    Thanks for the response too. Blogs should be a brief rather than a novel. In order to assist with sticking to the point, do you recommend highlighting other sites or posts where a topic is discussed further? Also, can this fragment the material by making people jump to another page or site in order to digest that material in order to understand what you’re writing in your post?

    I think that is my downfall, the need to have to explain everything to the reader as opposed to directing them to other articles if they want more of the story.

  • http://dailyslackr.blogpost.com Luis Sandoval

    Chris,

    Thanks a lot for the recommendation, I just jumped on Amazon and ordered the book. I’m an avid reader, so any recs you have are always appreciated.

    Thanks for the response too. Blogs should be a brief rather than a novel. In order to assist with sticking to the point, do you recommend highlighting other sites or posts where a topic is discussed further? Also, can this fragment the material by making people jump to another page or site in order to digest that material in order to understand what you’re writing in your post?

    I think that is my downfall, the need to have to explain everything to the reader as opposed to directing them to other articles if they want more of the story.

  • http://www.iowaavenue.com LisaN

    Wow, great post. One item I might add is the use of blog directory or services like BlogBurst. Yesterday, my blog made it to Fox News, and was there most of the day and was still there today. It got several hundred reads and hits to my site. It’s exciting to see your writing hit main stream media…………..:)

  • http://www.iowaavenue.com LisaN

    Wow, great post. One item I might add is the use of blog directory or services like BlogBurst. Yesterday, my blog made it to Fox News, and was there most of the day and was still there today. It got several hundred reads and hits to my site. It’s exciting to see your writing hit main stream media…………..:)

  • http://thefuturebuzz.com Adam Singer

    Thanks for this post, Chris…

    I guess perseverance is what it takes, I’m at a bit over 100 readers and would love to be at a bit over 1,000. But my path has been consistently (if slowly) moving upward.

    Do you think there will be a tipping point (maybe a redesign or something) that would help me really get a flood of new readers? Or is it going to just be persistence?

  • http://thefuturebuzz.com Adam Singer

    Thanks for this post, Chris…

    I guess perseverance is what it takes, I’m at a bit over 100 readers and would love to be at a bit over 1,000. But my path has been consistently (if slowly) moving upward.

    Do you think there will be a tipping point (maybe a redesign or something) that would help me really get a flood of new readers? Or is it going to just be persistence?

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Adam – I had 50 readers for YEARS. I remember celebrating 100. And then 1000. Now, I celebrate every thousand.

    Heck if I had a few hundred more subscribers (tell your friends?) , I’d top 5K. : )

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Adam – I had 50 readers for YEARS. I remember celebrating 100. And then 1000. Now, I celebrate every thousand.

    Heck if I had a few hundred more subscribers (tell your friends?) , I’d top 5K. : )

  • Pingback: Psycuity - Informed People Decisions » Blog Archive » Blogging Builds Brands

  • http://www.cloudid.com david usher

    Great post Chris
    And the perfect example with Mitch and Six Pixels of Separation. He gave me the ‘red pill, blue pill talk’ that lead me into this crazy social media world:)

  • http://www.cloudid.com david usher

    Great post Chris
    And the perfect example with Mitch and Six Pixels of Separation. He gave me the ‘red pill, blue pill talk’ that lead me into this crazy social media world:)

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    David – excellent, and you know, I never discount the fact that I have a true Canadian rock god commenting on my site. Thanks for being you. I visited Montreal the other day and someone mentioned you on the radio (might have just missed hearing a tune). Cool that you’re part of the contribution, and such a great contributor in your own right.

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    David – excellent, and you know, I never discount the fact that I have a true Canadian rock god commenting on my site. Thanks for being you. I visited Montreal the other day and someone mentioned you on the radio (might have just missed hearing a tune). Cool that you’re part of the contribution, and such a great contributor in your own right.

  • http://www.culturesmithconsulting.com/news cherylsmith

    Great post Chris, again! Lots of good food for thought.

    Currently, my blog (new as of 4/08) is not the homepage of my website. My marketing materials list my homepage only. I use social networking sites to promote specific posts, but so far haven’t included separate links for the blog itself. I would welcome thoughts on that from you and your other blog readers.

  • http://www.culturesmithconsulting.com Cheryl Smith

    Great post Chris, again! Lots of good food for thought.

    Currently, my blog (new as of 4/08) is not the homepage of my website. My marketing materials list my homepage only. I use social networking sites to promote specific posts, but so far haven’t included separate links for the blog itself. I would welcome thoughts on that from you and your other blog readers.

  • http://cloudiD.com david usher

    next time you in montreal message me and we can grab mitch and go for lunch:)

  • http://cloudiD.com david usher

    next time you in montreal message me and we can grab mitch and go for lunch:)

  • http://www.propr.ca Joseph Thornley

    Break it up in chunks. Use headlines.

    Great practical advice Chris that I and many others too often forget.

  • http://www.propr.ca Joseph Thornley

    Break it up in chunks. Use headlines.

    Great practical advice Chris that I and many others too often forget.

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Hi Cheryl- The only problem I see with making your homepage up front and center is that it doesn’t change. People will view it once, assess whether they want to be your client, and then move on. A blog is a chance to invite repeat visitors.

    What does anyone else say?

  • http://chrisbrogan.com chrisbrogan

    Hi Cheryl- The only problem I see with making your homepage up front and center is that it doesn’t change. People will view it once, assess whether they want to be your client, and then move on. A blog is a chance to invite repeat visitors.

    What does anyone else say?

  • http://patriciasingleton.blogspot.com Patricia – Spiritual Journey O

    I visited your blog today because of your interview done by Stephen Hopson. Great interview. I will be back to read more. I appreciate the information in this article. I just celebrated my first anniversary as a blogger on June 1 and am still in the process of building my subscriber foundation. I recently passed the 150 mark. Consistently I am between 130-150 daily subscribers. It has been a slow, but constant upward climb. Mine is a small niche blog about my spiritual journey and recovery from incest so my story line doesn’t always a happy setting. I write to reach out to other survivors to give them hope and let them know that the world can be a safe and loving place.

    I read a few technical based blogs to learn how to stuff about computers and blogging. I have been a fan of Stephen’s for less than a year. Heck, 2 years ago I didn’t even know what a blog was. So to use an old commercial saying for myself, “You’ve come a long way babe.” Have a glorious day. I intend to.

  • http://patriciasingleton.blogspot.com Patricia – Spiritual Journey Of A Lightworker

    I visited your blog today because of your interview done by Stephen Hopson. Great interview. I will be back to read more. I appreciate the information in this article. I just celebrated my first anniversary as a blogger on June 1 and am still in the process of building my subscriber foundation. I recently passed the 150 mark. Consistently I am between 130-150 daily subscribers. It has been a slow, but constant upward climb. Mine is a small niche blog about my spiritual journey and recovery from incest so my story line doesn’t always a happy setting. I write to reach out to other survivors to give them hope and let them know that the world can be a safe and loving place.

    I read a few technical based blogs to learn how to stuff about computers and blogging. I have been a fan of Stephen’s for less than a year. Heck, 2 years ago I didn’t even know what a blog was. So to use an old commercial saying for myself, “You’ve come a long way babe.” Have a glorious day. I intend to.

  • Pingback: Sådan får din blog flere besøgende! « Start snakken!

  • http://www.groonk.net/blog groonk

    i knew i kept up with your posts and twitter for a good reason. :)

    thanks for the tips here. i’ll have to work on implementing them.

  • http://www.groonk.net/blog groonk

    i knew i kept up with your posts and twitter for a good reason. :)

    thanks for the tips here. i’ll have to work on implementing them.

  • http://morghus.com Morghus

    The first thing that needs to be caged for further use is motivation. How do you go about that? That’s always been a problem with me. Motivation comes after success, not before – and it’s a huge failing, I know, but a major problem nonetheless.

    So how do you get to the point where you focus on your points? =)

  • http://morghus.com Morghus

    The first thing that needs to be caged for further use is motivation. How do you go about that? That’s always been a problem with me. Motivation comes after success, not before – and it’s a huge failing, I know, but a major problem nonetheless.

    So how do you get to the point where you focus on your points? =)

  • Pingback: Bringing traffic to your blog with Tweetbait

  • http://tracksuitceo.com Tracksuit CEO

    Love your use of Twitter to promote your posts. It works while adding value to your blog and Twitter both.

  • http://tracksuitceo.com Tracksuit CEO

    Love your use of Twitter to promote your posts. It works while adding value to your blog and Twitter both.

  • Pingback: Tracksuit Daily Diigo Post 06/13/2008 « TrackSuit CEO (version 2.0)

  • http://blog.marbleheadllc.com Jay Ramirez

    Chris, another thought is to put something into the design aspect. Make it easy to find topics, subscribe, search, follow the comments, etc. If it’s easy to find the community, people will be more likely to be back.

  • http://blog.marbleheadllc.com Jay Ramirez

    Chris, another thought is to put something into the design aspect. Make it easy to find topics, subscribe, search, follow the comments, etc. If it’s easy to find the community, people will be more likely to be back.

  • Pingback: Social Media Strategy - Aligning Goals and Measurements | chrisbrogan.com

  • Pingback: Keep Your Self Motivated To Post On Your Blog

  • Pingback: Ten Secrets to Better Blogging | chrisbrogan.com

  • http://www.jodyreale.com Anonymous

    Chris, thanks for this. I’m from the school that says, “You can’t get it wrong.” In other words, as long as you’re doing the blogging, you’re learning and growing, and therefore working your way to whatever you call success. Where are you on the experimentation spectrum?

  • http://kylh.blogspot.com Jody Reale–Kill Your Lunch Hour

    Chris, thanks for this. I’m from the school that says, “You can’t get it wrong.” In other words, as long as you’re doing the blogging, you’re learning and growing, and therefore working your way to whatever you call success. Where are you on the experimentation spectrum?

  • Pingback: Creating Great Content Builds Community | Acan Media

GetSocial