Colin Powell’s Rules for Bloggers

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In Colin Powell’s autobiography “My American Journey” he lists the 13 rules that he lives his life by.  Powell developed these rules during his 35 year military career, but I also think they apply perfectly to bloggers.  So here they are, Colin Powell’s Rules for Bloggers!

Rule #1 – It ain’t as bad as you think.  It will look better in the morning.

Have you ever sat up late at night in front of your computer, slaving over a blog post, crafting what you think will be the perfect traffic magnet, the post that will take your blog from obscurity into the Technorati Top 100.  You submit it to your favorite social media sites, and then watch as… nothing happens!  Your beautifully written blog post has been published for an hour and has seen only a trickle of visitors and a handful of Diggs.  You’ve failed!  You aren’t cut out for this blogging thing!  You go to bed in despair.

But then something good happens.  You wake up in the morning and check your statistics.  Your post got Dugg a few more times and then Stumbled, which took it from dozens of visitors to hundreds, your highest number of visitors in any one day to your new blog.  Its not the thousands you were dreaming of, but its a good step along the road to a successful blog.

Building a successful blog takes time, and if you live or die by the visitor count mere hours after publishing new blog posts you’re setting yourself up for an emotional rollercoaster.  Write your posts, go to bed, it will always look better in the morning.

Rule #2 – Get mad, then get over it.

When Darren Rowse found himself banned from Stumbleupon he was understandably angry about it.  He could have used his powerful soapbox to launch a vicious rant against Stumbleupon but instead he got over it and got on with finding ways to get unbanned.  Not only that but he got some great material out of it for his blog!

If something gets you mad don’t let anger guide your actions.  Get over it and start working towards the best possible outcome you can achieve. You may even learn something along the way that is worth blogging about.

Rule #3 – Avoid having your ego so close to your position that when your position falls, your ego goes with it.

Like him or hate him you can’t deny that John Chow is successful at making money online.  For nearly a year he has posted monthly earnings reports on his blog as proof that the methods he writes about work.  Earnings followed a consistent upward trend until June 2008 when he fell nearly $2500 short of the previous month’s earnings through his regular channels, but was saved by a $10000 “pay it forward” payment he received.

With a reputation built on demonstrating his ability to grow his earnings every month John had a choice to make – risk another shortfall the following month that might damage his credibility, or protect his reputation by ceasing his earnings reports.  He wisely chose the latter.

Rule #4 – It can be done!

Of course it can.  The only thing stopping you is yourself.

Rule #5 – Be careful what you choose. You may get it.

Social media is huge right now.  One of the attractive things about it is that the little guy with the right blog post can pull big traffic if they can just get up on the Digg front page.  When you’ve just started your blog and visitor numbers are low social media traffic can help get you some loyal readers.  There are lots of articles on how to write for Digg that make this almost easy.  If you get good at it you can hit the Digg front page every week.

But is the traffic of any valueDigg traffic is notoriously non-sticky.  If you’re writing Digg-able linkbait like “Top 10 x’s you can do with y” (hint: if its something about the Apple iPhone you’ll draw visitors like bees to honey) and at the same time not focusing any effort on writing good quality content then you’ll attract very few genuinely engaged visitors.  And like Seth says, whats the point of that, really?

Rule #6 – Don’t let adverse facts stand in the way of a good decision.

When I started Crane Factory the facts were clear – I’m entering a crowded sector of the blogosphere, writing about WordPress and blogging in general.  However launching this blog was still a good decision.  In blogging about these topics I’m learning more and more about WordPress, PHP, web development, SEO, writing, social media, marketing and promotion that I otherwise would not have learned.  All of these skills are important for the projects that are in development now.  Without them these projects would never even get off the ground let alone appear on the web in the near future.

Rule #7 – You can’t make someone else’s choices. You shouldn’t let someone else make yours.

Are you letting someone else make the choices when it comes to the advertising that appears on your blog?  I know I was, by using Google Adsense here on this site.  That is until I got sick of displaying ads with no relevance to this site whatsoever.  I decided to take more control over the advertising that appears on this site and removed Google Adsense code from my WordPress theme.

Rule #8 – Check small things.

Sometimes we get so caught up in the excitement of writing our blog posts, responding to comments, and participating in social media that we forget to check the small but important things, such as what your blog looks like in the latest version of Firefox, or how your blog posts appear in Google results.  When was the last time you checked some of these small things on your blog?

Rule #9 – Share credit.

The internet is a giant community, and no one blogs in isolation from everyone else.  Whether you’re giving your personal spin on a news article, sharing the solution to a problem, or using images in your blog posts, be sure to give credit where it is deserved and link back to the original articles, forum posts, and photographer’s that you drew information and inspiration from.

Rule #10 – Remain calm. Be kind.

If your blog has had visitors then chances are some of those visitors have left comments on your posts.  Some of these will be positive (woohoo!) and some will be negative (oh no!).  Negative comments are something that can really kick your emotions into top gear.  You might get angry, you might get upset, or you might get excited that someone has picked a fight and fire off a negative comment back at them.

A better approach is to simply remain calm.  Sometimes it is best to just ignore the negative comments.  If you’re going to respond then be kind.  Your blog will be tarnished more by your own negative comments than by those of an anonymous visitor.

Rule #11 – Have a vision. Be demanding.

Steve Jobs has both a huge cult following and a reputation as an egomaniac with an overly aggressive management style.  The aesthetic style and quality of Apple products is a testament to how driven he is to perfection.  If you could take just a fraction of Steve’s drive and apply it to your own vision then you too could find your vision becomes a reality, and find success along the way.

Rule #12 – Don’t take counsel of your fears or naysayers.

If there is one thing every good idea has come up against it is someone who thinks it is a bad idea.  Sometimes that someone is your own inner self, voicing your fears that your idea is just not good enough or its already been done as well as it can be done by someone else.  And other times it is your friends and family who tell you that you are wasting your time.

Universal Studios turned down George Lucas’s idea for Star Wars.  J.K. Rowling was rejected by 12 publishers.  Success often comes off the back of a lot of failure.  I have ten times more bad ideas than good ideas, but if I did not let each idea pan out and try to develop it to its full potential then none of my good ideas would ever see the light of day.

Rule #13 – Perpetual optimism is a force multiplier.

You may be just a single person or a small team but if your enthusiasm and optimism are greater than that of a bigger team then you can be more successful than them.  How else do you think the little guys who are passionate about their ideas end up taking over the world?

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

Jean Gogolin August 29, 2008 at 11:32 pm

Hi Paul,
I found you on the ProBlogger list — I entered too — and really liked this post. Good headline too. Take a look at mine if you have a minute.

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Rebecca August 30, 2008 at 6:02 am

I really liked this post. The rules are great for life in general but I like your examples of how they relate to blogging!

BTW, I Dugg your post.
(is that the appropriate past tense of Digg?)

Reply

Paul { August 30, 2008 at 7:05 am

@Jean – thanks for your comment. I’m working through *all* the posts on the PB list and have read yours, it is good.

@Rebecca – yes Dugg is correct :-) Appreciate your comment.

Reply

Rob Moshe August 30, 2008 at 7:51 am

Can’t say its a killer title, but I’m glad you posted. As a coach I always appreciate finding gems like this.

Saw you in problogger killer titles. you can check out mine if you wish.

How To Be A Prostitute Farmer?
http://www.robschaumer.com/blog/2008/02/20/how-to-be-a-prostitute-farmer/

Reply

Ava Semerau September 2, 2008 at 10:15 am

What an insightful and helpful list of rules. Thanks for sharing them!

Ava Semerau

A ProBlogger entry

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