The business of blogging

Winter Park Florida cemetery
Yesterday on the cool down walk after the Watermelon 5k.

 

Fancy graphic design can be an insidious place to hide.

Why?

Because it’s tempting to disguise boring with polish.

If the point of your website is a one-time visit, then maybe.

If the point is primarily content creation (daily, thought-provoking content), better to focus on real versus shiny.

Stories and relevance are far more important than bells and whistles.

(Photo: Does a fancy headstone make the person more important or easier to remember? i’m going with, “No.”)

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Ready, set, Disneyland sunrise

Disneyland balloons

 

Racing against the sun to finish five daily blogs in order to get a walk around the Happiest Place on Earth before the family awakes.

You know how it is. Tying to do a lot of things and yet balancing the need for personal care and activity with the needs of others.

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Ten ideas to unearth writer’s flood content

Disney University hallway
Disney University hallway. Yesterday.

 

Writer’s block? Here are ten ideas for content:

  1. What you learned yesterday.
  2. What you get to do today.
  3. What you hope for tomorrow.
  4. Obvious or invisible paradox.
  5. Common sense that isn’t common.
  6. Simple questions few can (but should be able to) answer instantaneously and convincingly.
  7. Excuses, regrets, opportunity, second chances, and permission.
  8. Art. Your art. Art the world needs.
  9. Impossible things.
  10. Love.

One day you will suffer from writer’s flood. Please don’t cast blame this way. You’re welcome.

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Why do you do it the “ugly way”?

Senior citizen daily pill taking
Every morning there are ten pills to take.

 

Why do you do it the “ugly way”?

The story here is the prelude for this post’s message.

Prior to iPhone 6, a combination of WordPress and smartphone limitations had the mobile responsiveness feature not fully developed.

A perfectly sized photo and caption on a laptop would be partially cut off on a smaller device. The blog post text would adapt to the much smaller screen, but not the photo and embedded caption.

The only way to read the caption was to remove it from the photo.

Easy fix.

But when technology fixed the original challenge, why didn’t the blogger return to the old (better) way?

Busy, blind, comfortable with a routine.

The teen called it out immediately.

Thank you.

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