I’m taking a week off from blogging for some R&R away from the keyboard. While I’m gone, please enjoy this WordCount post that didn’t get as much attention as it deserved the first time around. I’ll be back with fresh material on Monday, Aug. 15.
Sometime last week I published the 500th post of this blog.
It might not be apparent to you, but those 500 blog posts changed my life.
Three years ago I was a stay at home mom.
I’d put a career as a staff reporter then freelance journalist on hold seven years before to have a baby. That made three kids, a husband, dog, assorted lizards and goldfish, a big house and an even bigger yard. It was too much to handle all that and work without constantly being stressed out.
Over the years that followed, I dabbled with part-time work: a semester teaching at journalism school here, writing a couple stories for a daily newspaper there, filing a couple features for a friend who’d taken over as the editor of a trade magazine in between.
I finally came back to writing full time in fall 2007 when our oldest went to college and our youngest went to first grade.
Writing was the easiest part of my freelance business to slip back into.
It was everything else that had changed since I’d been away that was hard to figure out. I’d quit during the dot-com bust and had no clue what Web 2.0 was about. One day a friend casually mentioned LinkedIn and I needed her to explain it to me – me, who’d spent years as a tech industry writer and columnist.
To get myself up to speed, I started a blog. I signed up with Blogger first but quickly switched to WordPress because, honestly, the free version of WordPress had prettier themes, and more of them.
At first I had no specific subject in mind, and barely managed to figure out the software. Most of my initial posts were marginal, though a few have held up surprisingly well.
I got the hang of it soon enough. Over the two and a half years that followed, blogging literally transformed my writing business. How?
- By teaching myself about the mechanics of blogging, I was able to nab assignments to write about blogging and social media for publications likeInc.com.
- By teaching myself to blog, I made myself more marketable by showing perspective clients that in addition to writing straight news, features and columns, I was proficient in another writing format, no small thing as more publications maintain contributor-written blogs.
- By using the blog to showcase my resume, bio and clips, I landed the biggest freelance gig of my career to date, a long-term contract fromFederated Media to edit GetTheInsideEdge.com, a custom publication on corporate finance for mid-size companies that American Expresslaunched in April. Afterward, I learned that even before they called me, the people who hired me had thoroughly vetted my blog and LinkedIn profile.
- By showing I understood the medium and could post week in and week out, I was invited to be a paid contributing blogger at SecondAct.com, an online magazine for people over 40 published from Entrepreneur Media, publisher of Entrepreneur. In addition to blogging here, you can read my posts on workplace issues, careers and retirement on SecondAct’s Prime Time blog twice a week.
- By using my blog to track what’s happening in the digital media industry I’ve been invited to speak at journalism conferences and industry groups.
- By inviting other writers with blogs to join me in a personal challenge to blog every day for a month, I started the WordCount Blogathon, an annual event that’s created a writers’ community and become one ofhighlights of my year.
- By holding myself to a twice-weekly or more blogging schedule and strict editorial standards, I qualified to join a blog advertising network,BlogHer, and this year for the first time am earning advertising income solely from this blog.
I don’t point this out to brag, though I am proud of what I’ve accomplished, especially at a time in our industry when many freelancers question their ability to continue doing business in the manner to which they’re accustomed.
The main reason I’m sharing is this – if I can do it, you can too.
All it takes is commitment, confidence – and a blog.
Tammy says
Hello Michelle,
Congratulations on 500 posts!
As a new blogger, your WordCount posts have been the thing that has kept me going on days when no one has commented on a post and I didn’t feel like writing. As a blogger, your wisdom and information has made getting into blogging less daunting, saved me time and empowered me. As a writer, you’ve challenged me to go through another pass of a post I’m truly sick of working on before publishing.
Although I do not know you, I feel as if I do. Do take care of yourself on your holiday. I know I for one will be waiting for the next installment.
Michelle V. Rafter says
Wow, thanks so much. I’m glad you’ve gained so much from the blog. Let me know if there are subjects you’d like to see me cover, I am to please!
Michelle
Julie says
I guess I missed this blog the first time around, but it’s like looking in a mirror…well, minus the multiple kids and the lizards….and it’s ironic how timely this post is for me. I haven’t had the success “yet” that you did and quite honestly I’ve been wondering if blogging was just an exercise in “spinning my wheels.” I kept asking myself, “Is this the best use of my free time?” But after reading your post, I’m re-energized to stay the course. Your blogathon is what motivated me to “jump back in” and both the blogathon and your blog has been instrumental in my learning about blogging, twitter, Google groups, etc. Now here I am today and your blog has again provided me with the motivation to continue on. Thank you!
Michelle V. Rafter says
Thanks Julie, you were a huge part of this year’s blogathon, and I’m so happy it’s helping you recharge. Keep up the good work!
Michelle
Carrie Schmeck says
All I can say is: Thanks for sharing that. A word fitly spoken at just the right moment.
Michelle V. Rafter says
You’re welcome. Be sure to let me know if there are other subjects you’d like to learn more about.
Michelle
TheUrbanMum says
Hi Michelle
How thrilled I am I have found your site. Wonderful blog topics, like a kid in a candy store I do not know where to start!
Although this post was a good one to begin with as I am fairly new to blogging, still finding my “voice” and the discipline to fit in around family life.
Thank you – I look forward to following you.
Regards x
Michelle V. Rafter says
Welcome, and thanks for checking out WordCount. Sign up to get blog posts via email or subscribe to the feed through your blog reader. Be sure to check out my Greatest Hits page for 101 of my best posts of all time. Please let me know what other subjects you’d be interested in reading about.
Michelle
Barbra, Bio Writer says
This is a great illustration of the opportunities that blogging can open up. I’ve shared this post on Twitter and plan to mention it in my next subscriber newsletter.