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 What Are You Trying to Say to Me?

Submitted by Liz Strauss on March 7, 2007 - 3:20am in

I'm blogging at a reasonable speed. The thoughts are coming down the blogging pike blissfully. I'm making point after point, like a basketball player. I'm in the zone. I should be in the Blogger 500 on Blogger TV.

Then I go and ruin all. I stop to read what I wrote. Blogger TV, yeah. The horror channel, maybe. I could play the character with a schizoform discorder and the severe ADD.

The problem is that the words I wrote so well and so quickly, for some reason they all don't belong in the same piece. What kind of mess have I made here? It looks like the Blogger 500 has had a horrible 3-blog-post wreck.

I have four sentences there that work perfectly well. Three sentences there that make a beautiful point with clarity. Those two sentences next are genuinely clever. Each set of thoughts just belongs on its own.

How did this happen? It happens quite often when I write without deciding first what I'm writing about.

It sounds simple, doesn't it? Know my point. Know my message. Know what I want to say, before I hit the keys.

It works for everybody that way. It's the same as "If you don't know where you're going, you won't get there."

When I trained writers, it was a usual thing. About once a month, a writer would come to my office, plop in a chair, and throw his or her hands in the air, saying, "I'm sorry I tried for days and I can't write this piece."

My answer would always be, "What do you want to say?"

Then we'd talk to find the point the writer wanted to make. The piece would be done within the next hour.

Ah, that's the point I want to make here.

It's easier to write, faster to blog, simpler to get a message across, if we take time before we start, to figure out that one thing we want to say.

Liz Strauss


 Blogging for a Purpose

Submitted by Brett Bumeter on February 22, 2007 - 9:29am in

I have been blogging full time almost for a year now. In the early days I made nothing from blogging and these days 60% of my income comes from blogging. I say this as the monetization of my blogging efforts enabled me to experience a bit of a writing break through. Putting money to my blogging efforts made my efforts feel valuable.

I always thought they were valuable, but with out money to show for my efforts, it didn't measure up in the real world.

I have read over and over again that people should blog about their passions or they will suffer from Blog fading. I do believe this is true almost. I often provide executive coaching consultations (paid and unpaid). I can talk about it with a passion, but the same thoughts don't flow through my fingers. As such, I had a blog fade on the subject despite my passion.

Similarly, I have a blog about the Distribution Business. I am not passionate about it, but I write about it weekly. Its a money earner. There is readily available news to write about it and I have expertise in the area. The money makes it possible to cover that one.

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