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Step 3: Pick Achievable Blogging Goals

Posted: Tue Dec 24, 2024 6:42 am
by zihadhosenjm80
Step 3: Pick Achievable Blogging Goals
A stands for achievable.

We all like the idea of shooting for the stars, but there has to be an element of reality when you’re choosing your blogging goals. You’re going to be the first person to feel like a failure when you’re unable to reach unattainable goals.

The hard, honest truth is that blogging takes real time and effort. The hard work you put in today may not reap real benefits until months, or years, down the line.

You don’t instantly rank #1 on a difficult Google search the first day you publish an article.

You’re probably not going to have a million followers on social media with your first, second, or twentieth post. You’re not going to make thousands of dollars from affiliate marketing after posting two or three blog posts.

Having a successful blog means consistently doing the hard work day after day, month after month, and year after year. It also means setting attainable blog goals.

You know one of your relevant blog goals is that you want more visitors to your blog right?

If you’re currently bringing in 1,000 visitors a month to your blog it’s highly unlikely you’ll be able to reach 500,000 visitors in a short period of time. If you currently have 50 email subscribers, you’re probably not going to have 10,000 subscribers by next month.

If you’re making $10 a day now, chances are you’re not going to become a millionaire anytime soon.

How to Know if Your Blog Goals are Achievable
How do you know if your blogging goals are achievable? This is a great question, and the argentina phone number material isn’t going to look the same for every blogger.

The first thing to do when setting SMART achievable goals is to take an inventory of where you are now. Using our list of blog goals from earlier in this guide, ask yourself a series of questions like:

How many visitors a month are you attracting?
What is your current annual income?
How many people are subscribed to your email list?
How many social media followers do you have now?
What number of backlinks does your blog currently have?
How often are you posting content?
How many pages/posts need an SEO update?
Another question to ask yourself is how far have you come since you started blogging.

Analyze the days, months, or years of data that you have about your blog.

What trends do you see? Are you seeing a steady rise in visitors, profit, and email subscribers? Were there times you were seeing more traffic than you are now? If yes, what was happening when you were more successful? Were you posting more? Promoting more?

Once you’ve compiled this data, imagine what can be possible for your blog.

If you currently average one blog post a month, are you capable of posting four times a month?
Do you realistically have the time, energy, and resources to post that often?