Today I'm going to tell you the tale of how someone makes a living as a blogger in the year 2022. Which is very different than how one made a living from blogging in the golden era of 2010 which is when I started my blog and "Dooced" was an answer on Jeopardy.
I'm gonna let you know right now this is more than a 2 minute read.
If you were around here then, in the golden days of blogging (10 years ago) you recognize this as the original header for my website. Each frame was a different category. You could click on Kitchen for kitchen tips or recipes, Outdoor for any outdoor projects, and so on.
Everything Else was apparently where you were going to get the idea that people like to point it out when a jaguar is about to collide with a Volkswagon Beetle.
I had to get rid of the header a couple of website redesigns ago. And that, my blog reading friends, was the first change that I didn't want to make but had to make - because of Google.
More on that asshead later.
But first, to understand how a blog makes money I think it's a good idea for you to just see how we got to where we are today. Which is a place where content creators are trying to find a symbiotic relationship between making long time readers happy as well as Google.
Why? Because those are the 2 main places any website makes money from: regular readers and Google.
Table of Contents
The Quick History of Blogging
1993
Teenager Justin Hall - Created a personal online diary for sharing links and information about his personal life. It's disputable but according to the big bad Internet, he's been recognized as "the founding father of personal blogging". He was given that distinction in 2004 by New York Times Magazine.
Now: Justin's last blog entry was in 2021 and his blog looks pretty much like it did in the beginning. He's now the CTO (Chief Technical Officer) at bud.com, an online site that sells and finds cannabis and cannabis products near you.
Justin registered (bought) the domain name bud.com in 1994. He was one of those forward thinkers we all wish we were. He probably also bought Apple stock when he was 7 years old.
1997
Weblog became a word. Referring to keeping a log on the web - usually a list of links that the creator of the weblog liked. The word weblog became shortened to "blog" in 1999.
2002
Invasion of the mommy bloggers. This is the year that Heather "Dooce" Armstrong, got fired for blogging about her work life online. The verb Dooced (meaning to get fired for something you said online) was the result.
An explosion of I got baby poop in my mouth stories infiltrate the web. Mommy blogs start offering more authentic, real life advice and moments from parenting than any book ever had.
Now: Dooce divorced, battled serious depression, attempted suicide, was involuntarily institutionalized for mental health issues. She attributed her severe depression to a history of it that was exacerbated by the magnitude of hate she was subject to for sharing her personal life online.
Heather Armstrong's blog Dooce received almost 9 million views every month when she was at her most popular. Just before her death it received a few thousand views a month.
Heather "Dooce" Armstrong died by suicide on May 10th, 2023.
2003
Google introduces "Adsense". A way for bloggers to make money by running Google ads on their sites. The ads are terrible and you only make money if someone clicks on the ad. You would make about 10 cents per click. (now clicking doesn't matter - as long as someone sees the ad you get paid)
Remember this ad?
Or this one?
2005
YouTube launches - as a video dating website. Soon after they transition to what you know it as today; a place for women to learn that they need to commit 14 hours a day to applying contouring.
2006
Twitter launches as a new form of "micro-blogging", 140 characters at a time.
2010
Instagram launches (the same year as The Art of Doing Stuff.)
2012
Ad networks start becoming a better way for blogs to make money. The networks (that have much better ads than Google) find and place advertising on websites in exchange for sometimes as much as half of the revenue.
Readers are alarmed and backlash happens when bloggers place ads and try to make a profit off of their 7 day work weeks.
2016/2017
Tik Tok launches and is almost instantly popular. In 2020 it EXPLODES in popularity.
Now
Back in 2010 there weren't a lot of rules, regulations or competition for bloggers. We were winging it, posting about everything and anything in various random ways.
And we did it every single day.
Popular bloggers started to suffer from burnout and mental health issues from the pressure of pumping out such a relentless amount of content with fewer readers because Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube were frankly, created to be more addictive.
Remember Young House Love? They had 5 million views a month, tv appearances, books on the NYT bestsellers list then they crashed and burned, calling it quits (kind of) in 2014. Lifestyle blog followers were STUNNED.
They came back a couple of years later but on their own terms, only posting when they felt like it and not succumbing to the pressure they used to feel about posting every day about every little thing in their life.
Or how about Design*Sponge? In 2019 Grace Bonney, the founder of Design*Sponge quit as well looking for something more personally fulfilling for herself.
I mention these things to point out that blogging as a career is not just a matter of tapping for 30 seconds on your laptop then smiling dreamily out the window like all Hallmark movies would lead you to believe.
Blogging is an enormous amount of ever changing technical and creative work with the added bonus of getting worldwide love. And hate.
In the olden days I used to be able to write a blog post in a day or two. Some days I could even pump out two posts a day because posting a video of me suffering from very dramatic hiccups could actually be a well received blog post then.
But now? It just takes a lot longer to create a blog post. It can easily take 4 days to write, format, optimize, research and photograph a single blog post in the hopes that Google pulls it into its increasingly suffocating bosom.
Even republishing older posts can take 2 days or more by the time you do all the work that needs to be done.
And in terms of keeping a regular reader's attention, it's hard to compete with the short bursts of entertainment and dopamine that social media sites give with mindless scrolling.
According to research, at the rate the world's population is consuming social media now, someone born today can expect to lose approximately 10 years of their life to scrolling. That's a guess based on data, but it seems on track to be right.
Ten years. Poof.
O.K. 700 or so words into this post and now you have a tiny bit of background and a healthy fear of Instagram and TikTok. So - blogging. That's what we're here for, right?
I'm going to answer the most common questions I get about blogging with explanations of the how and why.
How Do Bloggers Make Money
Through advertising. Bloggers use those dreaded ad networks. The ad network finds and places ads on your site in exchange for 25% of the revenue.
The Amount of Money You Make
As a blogger the amount of money you make depends on 1) how many people are coming to your website, 2) how long they stay on your page and 3) how many pages they visit on your site.
The more people that visit your site, the longer they stay, and the more pages they look at the more money you make.
How do you get visitors to your blog
Google. For the most part, this is how blogs are found. A person searches about something in Google, clicks on a blog post to read the information and then hopefully they like what they found so much they become a subscriber and regular reader.
They then share your posts with friends and family and so on.
This is how you build an audience and increase your earnings.
Pinterest used to be as big a traffic provider as Google, but that's slowed down a lot in the past few years.
How Google Works
Google ranks websites and posts based on Google's own internal algorithm. The posts then get placed in order of best to worst (which is what you see in their search engine).
Google is constantly changing their algorithm and their search results. They make little tweaks daily and big tweaks (called core updates) a couple of times a year. These tweaks affect how posts are ranked.
So one day a post could be in the #2 spot on the first page of Google and the next day it could be #37.
NO ONE knows exactly what Google wants or what rules to follow to rank high in their search results. Their algorithm is the most closely guarded secret on the Internet.
So we guess. Entire businesses are devoted to guessing what Google wants. These are called Search Engine Optimization (SEO) experts. These experts don't have insider information. What they do have is an insatiable desire to try to figure out what Google wants through experiments, statistics and observation. Many bloggers hire SEO experts to help their site perform well in Google search results.
Every blogger's goal is to be on page 1 of Google. Why?
90% of people never click past page 1 of Google.
As the saying goes, the best place to hide a dead body is on the second page of Google.
So every time Google changes - blogs have to change, trying to keep up with and figure out what they're looking for. This because Google is usually the largest source of traffic and therefore the largest source of income for anyone who publishes anything on the Internet.
Remember when I said I had to change the original header of my site? It's because Google started to show a preference for websites with smaller headers. (A header is the section at the top of each page with the site's logo and menu.)
Why Do You Republish Old Posts?
THIS is the question I get the most. Why are you republishing old posts? Why are you being so lazy and ruining my life with your laziness being lazy, you lazybones?
Once I tell you why bloggers update and republish old posts it's going to make a lot more sense to you I think.
- We all keep learning. You're probably a lot more knowledgeable about certain things than you were 10 years ago. I have learned a LOT over the years about all this stuff I do and I keep learning. Cooking tricks, or gardening techniques.
When bloggers update old posts a lot of times it's because they have better information now. Or better photos, maybe a video, and nicer structure on the post that makes information easier to find and understand. - Websites are getting new readers all the time. As a long time reader you may have already read about how to can tomatoes, but someone who just joined recently hasn't. And when it's canning season I want to make sure they know how to can tomatoes too. We're also all prone to forgetting. You say I'M GOING TO DO THAT NEXT YEAR. And then you forget. So republishing seasonal posts helps with that.
- Google. If your post used to be in the #1 spot on Google but is now in the #5 spot, republishing a post with newer information or formatting can get it back to the top of the mountain.
How Come All Blogs Look The Same Now?
You can blame and/or thank Google for that as well. Google decided people just wanted information. They didn't want long back stories or entertainment. Just the facts.
So blog posts that show the facts right away, rank more highly in Google.
Google also noticed people were more likely to click on blogs and stay there when they had short paragraphs, clear & easy to read fonts and noticeable topic titles.
I agree. It's much easier to read that type of website than one that's all small type with huge paragraphs and no formatting in between to make the page more interesting.
Like these little bars below for instance. They instantly let you know I'm about to say something super insightful.
EVERYBODY KEEP IN MIND THAT ANYTHING TO DO WITH GOOGLE IS A GUESS. NOBODY KNOWSSSSSSSS. We are all just throwing spaghetti against a wall.
As far as keeping to the facts, especially at the beginning of a post, the reasoning behind it is pretty solid really. If you're standing in the grocery store with your phone looking up a recipe for chili con carne for dinner that night you don't want to have to sift through a bunch of confusing words and paragraphs and stories about farting. You just want the recipe.
Blogs should make that important information easy to find.
That's why blogs now all look similar. They're all trying to please Google. Because without Google's support, you're out of business unless you have hundreds of thousands (or millions) of subscribers.
And also, sometimes Google actually knows a thing or two.
Last week the Google rules changed again. There was another algorithm update. They all have names and this one was called "The Helpful Content" update.
With this latest algorithm Google is trying to weed out content that's been generated by robot writers (there is too such a thing) and content that isn't being written about by an expert.
The majority of what I find ranking high on the Internet is content that was written by someone who has never in their lives experienced what it is they're writing about.
So this is the update I've been hoping for. I've said for years not to garden according to what big websites recommend. Find actual gardeners on the web that are teaching you through experience.
These posts are often nowhere near Google's page 1.
Google's latest update was supposed to pay attention to and reward when a writer was writing about something they have personally experienced.
That should benefit a site like The Art of Doing Stuff where EVERY piece of content is based on personal experience. But it might not. Because it's Google.
The Future of Blogging
Don't ask me. I have no IDEA.
I'm still calling it blogging. The updated term is content creator.
I, and most other bloggers at heart, feel like they're tangled within an epic 1992 NHL mullet.
Google is the business in the front and regular readers are the party in the back. Google is the bore, regular readers are the fun.
I'm not sure what the solution is or even if there needs to be one. We (the original bloggers) do our best to write posts that are good for both the big G and fans.
I do miss being able spend more time on the fun writing and I'm trying to figure out a way that I can do it.
I have to say I'm stunned that you made it this far. This isn't any long preamble to me saying that I'm quitting blogging. I just know how many people wonder about this.
The world of blogging that I work in.
This post by the way? This will never rank on page 1 of Google for anything.🙄😆 Remember when I mentioned at the veryyyyyy top of this post 2 days ago that this was not a 2 minute read?
Google is now experimenting with adding "Quick Read" beside posts that are ... well ... quick reads. I would guess that's because they've evaluated that people like very short content. Easy bites to digest.
Like an Instagram post, Tik Tok, or Tweet.
As a DIY teacher, I can tell you, you cannot teach someone how to cure their own yeast infection with a frozen yogurt tampon in 140 characters or less.
I can't believe you're still here.
thx. hope you enjoyed it!
Kat - the other 1
"best place to hide a dead body is on the second page of Google."
Good to know... good to know...
Now how one accomplishes that....
;)
Shelly White
Hey Karen! I'm not a blogger and have no aspirations to be one, but I read every word because:
* I've always been curious about how blogs/bloggers make money
* I like to learn new things and you are always up to something. Chances are I will never build a pizza oven, a chicken coop, stuff yogurt up my hoo hoo, or have a fish pedicure but if I do it's because you taught me how.
* I enjoy your writing style.
* It's guaranteed that I will be at least smiling when I'm done reading if not all out laughing myself silly. I've learned the hard way not to drink coffee while reading your anecdotes.
Keep doing what you're doing and I'll keep reading. Maybe I'll even click on an ad or two if that helps you out...
Shel
Karen
Hi Shelly, Thanks! :) There's no need to randomly click on ads though. Just coming to my site and reading my posts is enough. Tjhanks again. ~ karen!
Chloy
Love your Content and sense of humor, your blog is a huge inspiration to me! I love that you write about what ever you want and succeed at it. I am stuck in the fun 8 to 10 hour work days of a regular job, ick! I am 44 on Tuesday and just now figuring out what I mostly love, my dog's and growing stuff and sometimes my husband and kids lol. Anyway at the very beginning of starting my gardening blog (Sticking to a stupid Niche like they tell us to) But would love to get even half the success you have with it.
Thanks for putting it all out there.
Karen
Thanks! And good for you. Here is my advice, don't try to emulate the voice of anyone else, speak as though you're writing a text to a friend or family member. And only write about what you actually know. Good luck! ~ karen
Chloy
I really appreciate the quick reply and great advice. I will take it to heart and my own experiences are really the only way I can write, it would be incredibly horribly boring, time consuming and not cool to use others content or make crap up. I will reference other blog's here and there that have given me great advice or helped me on my many failings but only with permission and due credit given. I just hope everyone or at least most people get my weirdness and keep reading!
Laurie
This was a fantastic post. Loved the history and the memory lane of all the blogs I used to read as soon as they published something new to my RSS reader. Dooce, YHL (tyh), I still have an email from Grace somewhere saying she didn’t think her little blog would have the reach to do something I’d asked about back in the day :’D.
Can’t believe it was only in the last 12 years since I found a “real” blogger near-ish my then home in the Niagara Valley who did a backyard makeover with modern fence and outdoor glass globes and dollar store fire centerpieces!
Here’s to the next dozen XOXO
Lip is looking superbly distinguished btw!
Karen
Thanks Laurie! Another dozen you say?😂 O.K. I'll do my best. ~ karen!
Jes
Karen. You're a badass. I knew it the moment I stumbled onto my first post from you (damnit, probably via google). Don't let the stupidity get you down!
Karen
Oh it's not! I just keep working. :) ~ karen!
Marilyn
Dear Karen, I always read your whole posts and thank you for the good times . I laugh a lot with you. Sorry to hear of all the google hassles. I don’t really do social media as you mentioned but love this blog. Keep on keepin’ on. F*** those other short attention span believers. It’s not true. Good content will be read regardless of the length. Also my green zinnias have reseeded but they’re not coming up true to last year’s color. Just FYI. I appreciate you, the way you think and your blog!
Karen
Hi Marilyn. Thanks! Those zinnia seeds seemed off to me to begin with. One I grew wasn't even green! But you're very lucky they reseeded. I've never had a zinnia reseed. :) ~ karen!
Marilyn
Wow, I get reseeded zinnias every year in Southern AZ!
Larisa
Very interesting read. I started a blog in March and it is hard work, and I even have a partner. I doubt we’ll ever make any money because google hates us, despite our best efforts to please it. Oh well!
Paul
If you have a WordPress site get the plugin RankMath. Go through all the tutorials and learn to use the plugin. Google doesn't hate you - it just doesn't know you're around - yet.
Larisa
Appreciate the tip, Paul!
JamieK
Still here! What a great read.
Karen
Thanks Jamie! And in about a month it's possible allllll that information will have changed again, lol. ~ karen!
Jen
I've been blogging since 2006. For-freaking-ever. I'm never going to make money doing it and that's okay; I did have a couple posts make it to the first couple big G spots (uh...that sounded better in my head...). It taught me how much I love to write and led to other opportunities I never would have had. I started off as a mommy blogger (dear god that term makes me gag) and it's evolved from there. It's a hobby I love and I hope eventually long-form blogging returns because I miss the community of bloggers from the good ol' days.
Mary
Thanks Karen. Still here! Love your style I still appreciate the quiet, contemplative form of reading blogs and find most videos distracting and annoying. Would love updates on Betty, and what ever happened to your neighbor David?
Mary
Having blogged for 10 years myself, I was interested to see what you’d say. The good news for me is that I have declined offers to monetize my blog, so I can do what I want. Thanks for this entertaining post.
Jenny W
Still here, still learning new stuff, so thank your time :)
Vivian Lee
I always enjoy your posts and thanks for this very interesting one! I am also a blogger, but fortunately I don't care about making money at it. It's just something I do for fun, and frankly, it's a good place to be. If I had to worry about what Google thinks of my site it would be WAY too much for me. I once had a post go "viral" or as close to it as I'm ever likely to get and it was frankly scary. People wrote mean things!!! Anyway, I admire what you do, and I especially admire your energy. Great work and keep going!
Sue
Still here after all these years! Because you're not only informative, but you're also funny and laughing is what gets me through life! Keep it up..
Linnea
Myyyyy goodness, I appreciate that you wrote and shared this with us. I've been following TAODS since 2010, and this is such a fascinating (and frustrating) peek into what the last 12 years have been like for bloggers. I deeply miss the vibrant blogging scene of the early '10s, with its huge volume of DIYs that were high quality, even if the photos weren't necessarily. Thank you for continuing to fight the good fight, and create and share SUCH wonderful stuff with us, despite having to capitulate to the whims of google and social media. It's absolutely invaluable <3
Jody
Thank you! Thank you for your content. Thank you for your humour. Thank you for sticking with it.
Heidi
Thank you Karen. On the edge of the cliff ready to jump and post my first you tube vlog. Like scrolling time is wasted predicting where anything is going to go or the next new way to facilitate creativity. Altho I do not agree with Nikes manufacturing ethics, their advertisement .” just do it “ remains a popular response in my vocabulary.
“Keep rocking it !” is another one I like to share to others and to you for a very useful popular blog.
Love Heidi 👋🏼🦋💛
Catherine
Great post! I especially like the "reruns" because I'm a newish reader.
Thanks for sharing your talent for educating and entertaining us. You are a shining star in the Google universe.
Jo
Thank you;) I’m still with ya
Lynn Workman
Hi Karen,
Thanks so much for what you do! I realized I have never actually written a comment here, but I read you faithfully. I'm one of the old-timers who remembers early blogging (or weblogging) and it was so exciting to engage with like-minded souls on the Internet. Younger people cannot appreciate, I think, how it revolutionized communication: so immediate and so NOT trying to sell you something. It has changed a lot. But, there are still great bloggers, like you, out there and I truly appreciate all the work you put in. There is no one with as much great content AND a laugh-out-loud style as you!
Terry Sampson
Hiya Karen, I don't know much about blogging but I do read your blog each time because I know that with you in it, the world is a better place,
Not blowing smoke, just the truth,
Trish
Thanks. I read the entire post. Thanks for the information. Know I see you, I appreciate you and I look forward to your updates and posts that I receive via email. When you read my comment at 2, 3, 4 A.M. I hope it brings a smile to you. 🤗. Keep following your passion. I'm closing, I'm paying my mortgage off by December, 2023 & when I think of that goal I remember when you shared your experience. We'll never meet, most likely, but you've influenced and encouraged me and thus, you're part of my story. With this comment on your post, I'm now, happily, a very small part of your story. 😁
Jean
I did read the whole thing. You are fun and I look forward to your blog. Oh, and tomorrow a.m., I’m gonna get some fresh picked corn, boil it for nine minutes and freeze it! Let us know how yours is in January!