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Writing It Down: The Importance of Forecasting your Blog’s Performance



According to Business Dictionary, forecasting is:
A planning tool that helps management in its attempts to cope with the uncertainty of the future, relying mainly on data from the past and present and analysis of trends.
Sound like too much work for a simple little blog? Well, what if I told you it could help increase your blog’s traffic and sales? Yeah, I thought so. Now you’re interested.

Forecasting Helps You Get Closer To Your Blogging Goal

If you’re using your blog to make money then you probably have long-term and short-term blogging goals. Maybe you want to get to the point where you’re making $100,000 a year with your blog, and you’ve broken that down into more manageable short-term goals, say you want to be making $1,000 a month six months from now.

Now, let’s say you work on your blog for four months and you keep track of all your stats, and you see that at the end of four months you’ve only made $100 in sales, and that was made within the past month. Looking at your stats you can see that you’re moving closer to your goal, but here’s the thing…
If your performance versus your goal is all you look at, you’re not looking at the whole picture. Right now it looks pretty positive – you still have two more months to hit that $1000 mark and you’re moving in the right direction.

But, if you use forecasting to predict your results two months from now, you might see that hitting your goal is highly unlikely – unless you make some changes in your marketing plan.
For example, if you had 1,000 unique visitors to your blog last month and you made 10 sales totaling $100, that means your blog has a 1% conversion rate. At that rate, if you want to make $1,000 you’re going to need to increase your traffic to 10,000 unique visitors.

Looking at your blog’s traffic growth for the previous four months, you might see that the first month you had 100 visitors, the second month was 300, the third month was 500, and the fourth month was 1,000. Looking ahead to the future, or forecasting for the next two months, it might be reasonable to expect 2,000 visitors for the fifth month and 4,000 for the sixth, but unless you make some changes you probably won’t hit the necessary 10,000 unique visitors. You’ll end up missing your goal.

It’s not all bad news, though. Now that you’ve used forecasting to estimate your blog’s future performance, you can see what you need to do to achieve your goal. Now, instead of just blogging blind, you can actually create a plan. In this case, you could use any number of techniques to increase traffic and you could work on tweaking your content to increase your conversion rate.
Forecasting can be used for every aspect of your blogging business. You can forecast your traffic for the next month or year, forecast the number of RSS subscriptions you’ll get, or the number of times your content will be shared or Tweeted.

Forecasting has to be based on real statistics for it to be effective, and if your past performance hasn’t been what you expected then forecasting can seem kind of depressing. But here’s the thing…
By forecasting realistically for the future, you can see where you need to make adjustments so the next month, or six months, or year, will turn out better than projected.

Keywords

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9 Words Every Successful Blogger Needs to Know

 

 

1. Purpose

You make money with your blog or because of your blog, but your blog itself does not make money. Therefore, it’s important to define the purpose of your blog, or the reason you’re blogging, and always keep that purpose in sight. For example, you may be blogging to draw attention to your consulting business, or you may be blogging to promote an affiliate product. Everything you do with your blog should be with your purpose in mind.

2. Relevant

Establishing relevancy is a tough concept for many bloggers. They think relevancy simply means “same niche.” But relevant content is content that matters to your reader. It’s not enough to just give your readers information, you need to tell them why that information matters to them. If, at the end of your post, your reader can ask, “So what? Why does this information matter?” then you haven’t made your content relevant.

3. Consistent

Blogging consistently doesn’t just mean you publish a post at the same time five days a week. It also means you publish posts of consistent quality. Publishing 10 or 15 posts a week is great, but not if only one is a high-quality post and the rest are just bait for the search engines.

4. Useful

Useful content ties in with relevant content in that it’s meaningful for your readers. Useful content goes a step further, though. While some of your content will be idea- or concept-based, content that gives your reader something to think about, useful content is information they can act on to make a change in their life. How-To posts and case studies are good examples of useful content.

5. Engaging

Comments are one indication that your readers are engaged with your blog, but they’re certainly not the only indication. Engaging content is content the compels the reader to share it and discuss it on other blogs and in social networks, and it also compels the reader to take action. So don’t focus all your attention on generating comments, focus on creating engaging content and the comments will come.

6. Communication

Communicating means exchanging information, which generally means there’s more than one person doing the talking. The best way to build a community is to make everyone feel like they’re part of the conversation. Invite your readers to share ideas and opinions and when they do, make sure you join in to help keep the conversation moving forward.

7. Patience

It takes time to build a successful blog, a lot more time than they tell you in those cheesy guides. Be patient. Millions of blogs have been abandoned just before they would have turned the corner to success.

8. Tenacity

Any business requires tenacity, even blogging. The idea that you can blog when you feel like it is fine – if you’re only blogging for fun. But once you decide this is going to be your business you have to give it everything you’ve got, every day of the week. You have to grab onto opportunities and hang on, like a dog with a bone.

9. Respect

Always be respectful of your readers. Avoid using offensive language and be professional – you never know who’s going to land on your blog. Don’t insult your readers’ intelligence by using a lot of hype or pretending to be an expert when you’re really not. Remember, respect isn’t something you’re born with, it has to be earned, and the best way to earn it is to respect your readers.

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