Discover & Rate New Music Check out ChartVote. Promote the music you like.


Blogging Tip: Don’t post too much content in one day

There is such a thing as posting too much on your blog, just as there is such a thing as not posting enough. I usually have a problem with not posting enough because my attention is usually occupied with some crazy idea project of mine.

I’ve put together a not-so-comprehensive list of reasons not too post too much content in a day.

Reasons not to post too much:
- Readers can’t digest all the content
- Readers tend to overlook your posts more often
- Content usually starts to lose quality
- And the worse case: Readers will remove you from their RSS reader

I was an avid reader the gadget blogs Gizmodo and Engadget for a good few months, but I just got tired of keeping up with all the content. Each day they were posting at least 30-40 articles and I didn’t have the time to sift through them all to find the content I was actually interested in. So I removed them both from my RSS reader.

I hate to say this, but one of my favorite blogs, Mashable has been pumping out the posts lately too and I’ve noticed a decline in the quality of their content.

Screenshot of my Google Reader Stats
rss1.gif

Moral of the story? Stay in the middle. Don’t post too little or too much. Where do you ask is that middle point? For me personally, 1-5 high quality posts in a day is the range I like the most.


4 Comments

  1. matt on October 31st, 2007

    Your post made me think about how my RSS reader has almost become a burden… After a 3-day weekend it can be quite scary to log in and see all the posts I need/have/want to browse through…. Some quick info from the trends of my Google Reader…
    “From your 35 subscriptions, over the last 30 days you read 4,734 items, starred 14 items, shared 12 items, and emailed 0 items.” - Now thats scarry…

  2. Pete on November 1st, 2007

    I agree: at Mashable, we’re actually cutting down on volume now.

  3. Andy Brudtkuhl on November 6th, 2007

    I agree. I am about to unsubscribe to engadget. What’s annoying is all their different blogs post the same crap and cross link. And that many articles is way too many to sift through.

  4. Rory M on December 3rd, 2007

    I also find it interesting that Mashable has been focusing on developing their own social network. It’s well-done, yes, but what’s the POINT of it? I’m asking in all sincerity: I don’t get why it needs a network.

    My favorite Web 2.0 blog is ReadWriteWeb, personally. They don’t cover everything but what they DO cover they do well.

Leave a Reply

RSS Feed



Recommended Sites