Written on March 22nd, 2005 at 04:03 am by Darren Rowse
Monkey Bar Blogging
I’d like to take a moment to make a enternetusers Public Service Announcement.
Its actually something that I’ve been considering doing for a while now because I’ve had two worrying incidents happen in the past week that have left me somewhat concerned.
The latest of these incidents happened two days ago when I received an excited email from a new enternetusers reader (I have his permission to share this with you without using his name) who was writing to tell me that he’d just ‘turned Professional’ as a blogger and quit his job to go full time with blogging.
His email was written in an excited tone and was full of grand visions of blogs that would make lots of money. Not only was he excited but his partner was also as they had been reading numerous stories of bloggers making their riches from the medium over the past week. They have two little kids and he was excited to be able to stay home with his family to write each day and be able to provide an income for his family.
The email left me with a sinking feeling in my guts as I considered the decision that this guy had made to quit his secure job to become a Professional blogger. You see he’d only started his first blog a week ago - the day he handed in his resignation.
enternetusers Public Service Announcement
It takes time to build a profitable blog. You do not just become a Professional Blogger anymore than you just become a Professional Golfer. It is not a decision you make, it is something you work towards over time.
I’d invite you to glance over tot he poll I’m currently running this week on how much money Bloggers are currently making from their blogs from Adsense. Look at the figures - not just the ones at the bottom, but all of them.
Over a third of those who have responded make less than $30 each Month - less than $1 per day. Around half of those who responded earn less than $100 per month - less than $3 per day. Those are numbers to consider before you launch into ProBlogging without a back up plan.
Monkey Bar Blogging
A wise man once gave me some good advice on business. He reminded me of when as a child I would play on the Monkey Bar Play Gym equipment. If you want to get across the monkey bars, from one end to the other, the safest way to do it is to grab hold of the first bar and swing to the next without letting go of the first until you have a firm grip of the second one. As you let go of the first you propel yourself to the third without letting go of the second until you have a strong grip of the next one.
The quickest way to fall off the monkey bar and break a bone (I broke my collar bone doing this) is to try and skip a bar, or to let go of the first one before you grip the next one.
Business (and Professional Blogging) is the same. There are times when you need to take risks in business - but there are also times when you have to be sensible and have some sort of a backup plan. Don’t try and skip steps without being sure you can survive on where you’re at.
My Blogging Journey
When I first started blogging I was working two jobs part time. I had no idea that blogging would become an income stream for me - it was purely a hobby.
Six or so months later when I started to earn an income from it I was tempted to quit my jobs and go full time but I decided to be careful - and I’m glad I did.
There came a time when I let go of one of those part time jobs - when it became realistic that I would be able to earn enough from my blogging to make up for the loss of that income - but I did keep hold of one of the jobs. Later on I was able to relinquish the second part time job and go full time with my blogging.
In actual fact I have recently taken on another part time job for six months while we get ourselves settled with a new mortgage - partly becuase the role is an exciting opportunity, but also partly to ensure a steady back up income for 6 months in our time of transition.
I’ve been blogging for 2.5 years now and only recently could afford to ‘go Pro’ (and still don’t). I work 6-10 hours 7 days per week (sometimes more) and am updating 18+ blogs daily. It is hard work. I love it and wouldn’t do anything else - but consider the cost before you launch in.
Yes you CAN make a lot of money from Blogging - read the stories that are going around on blogs of people making decent money from blogging - but also read about the hard work and time that it’s taken them and remember that for every success story you read there are plenty of others around who have tried and failed to make more than a few dollars from their blogs.
I’m not wanting to dampen the excitement and dreams of Pro Bloggers - in fact the whole point of this blog is to help them reach those dreams - but I think its the responsibility of those of us who are ‘talking up’ blogging to also keep giving reality checks. Otherwise we’re going to end up with a lot of Bloggers that look a little like this guy on the Monkey Bars - handing on for dear life!
26 Responses to “Monkey Bar Blogging”
Considering blogging as a full time job: read this first
March 22nd, 2005 3:34 am
[…] d850ad4044bd1″>
Considering blogging as a full time job: read this first
Darren at enternetusers has provided an in depth look at blogging as a profession […]
Considering blogging as a full time job: read this first
March 22nd, 2005 3:34 am
[…] d850ad4044bd1″>
Considering blogging as a full time job: read this first
Darren at enternetusers has provided an in depth look at blogging as a profession […]
Jim
March 22nd, 2005 5:14 am
This is a good reality check post. Walk before you run and definitely don’t quit the day job unless your blog is generating serious cash. I hope things work out for him.
Screen Rant
March 22nd, 2005 5:31 am
I agree. People have visions of making money online with hardly any time or effort. It takes a lot of both.
Vic
Mark Boudreau
March 22nd, 2005 5:48 am
Not only is quitting your day job a bit crazy before you have actually blogged for awhile but you have to actually see if that’s what you like to do day in, day out. I love writing The Rock and Roll Report but there are times when I just don’t feel up to writing, Adsense clicks and Sitemeter stats be damned. I just have to take a break. For some bloggers, this break can often extend to a permanent one once they realize that perhaps writing everyday is not the thing for them. Blog daily for six months while still working your day job and then see how you feel about the whole thing. From there on in you can make a more reasonable and let’s face it responsible decision.
I would love to blog full-time but reality has a way of sometimes biting you in the a$$. It is a dream I hope to achieve but not the reason I got into blogging in the first place and something that I think all bloggers should keep in mind. Do it for the love and not for the cash and hopefully, with a lot of hard work, the two will meet.
Jon
March 22nd, 2005 7:05 am
I believe you when you say that you can make a difference by putting down a lot of work in blogging, but you have to come up with some sensible stuff to write in the post. I would have serious problems filling 18 posts a day with something meaningful without sounding like a madman.
Buzz Marketing with Blogs
March 22nd, 2005 7:18 am
A Word of Warning Among the Hoopla
Darren Rowse of enternetusers takes a moment today to bring people excited about blogging's potential back to earth: My enternetusers Public Service Announcement It takes time to build a profitable blog. You do not just become a Professional Blogger any…
Glen
March 22nd, 2005 8:04 am
I have also been seeing the ads for people looking for full time bloggers. I have been running my two blogs for 4 months now and if I didn’t have another income I would be in a world of hurt. Considering my target audience it will be a minute before I see a sizeable enough profit to call my self a pro at what I do.
Duncan
March 22nd, 2005 12:40 pm
The best advice I’ve read in a long time, we all dream of going pro, but particularly with kids you need to be careful, it’s why I still consider blogging my part time job/ or extremely fun and rewarding hobby and still continue to work f/t: firstly the mortgage doesn’t pay itself and putting the family at risk with no guarantees of riches is lunacy, but none the less I know we all respect the fact that you’ve managed to do Darren what many of us would like to (and no, Im not suggesting you were a lunatic :-) )
Darren
March 22nd, 2005 12:47 pm
hehe - its been suggested many times Duncan. I suspect there is some lunacy in my approach - however I’m lucky enough to be married to a pretty switched on kinda woman who gives me a good dose of reality check every now and again.
I guess its a kind of ‘controlled lunacy’
The Blog Herald: more blog news more often
March 22nd, 2005 2:34 pm
Considering blogging as a full time job: read this first
Darren at enternetusers has provided an in depth look at blogging as a profession and has provided the best anecdote for anybody who might catch blogging fever in the same way many may have caught MLM fever in the 1980’s or email riches fever in the 90′…
Bene Diction Blogs On
March 23rd, 2005 4:18 am
Blogging for a living
Darren Rowse of LivingRoom who has several blogs including Pro-blogger has some cautionary and realistic advice for people who want to blog for a living. When I first started blogging I was working two jobs part time. I had no idea that blogging would …
qbnzodge
April 7th, 2005 8:06 pm
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When is it time to ‘Go Pro’ as a Blogger?: Blog Tips - enternetusers
August 19th, 2005 9:42 am
[…] I’ve written about this before at Monkey Bar Blogging (a public service announcement that I wrote for bloggers a few months back) - it’s a post that I’d highly recommend anyone considering ‘Going Pro’ has a read of and that I’m going to add to the 31 Days to Building a Better Blog series because I think its so important. […]
Ella
October 6th, 2005 2:45 pm
Now I won’t go and quit college!
Wai Pyo
October 20th, 2005 5:45 am
Me too! Ella
I’ll have to finish college first
Making Your Adsense Earnings Grow - Exponential Blogging: Blog Tips at enternetusers
December 3rd, 2005 11:08 pm
[…] I’ve had a number of emails from readers in the last few days who are disillusioned with their earnings with Adsense. I can perhaps take some of the blame for their mood having posted my reality check post last week and by publishing the poll that we have running that highlights that the majority of bloggers using Adsense are only making a dollar (or three) per day. […]
Portalia
January 3rd, surf zone.2:15 pm
I know this one very well. As much as I like to tell everyone that starting in surf zone.I’ll be a blogger and that I’m going to throw away my alarm clock, I do still have a consulting income for which I am in control of the tap.
As the blog revenues rise, assuming they ever do, then I can close off the tap by not giving my time to other efforts.
Currently, based on some non-blog properties that I’m starting to take an interest in, I’m raking in the big bucks indeed, totalling less than $30 per month. However, with a bit of work prior to going “full time” I have been raising the average income rate, so hopefully it is only a matter of time.
Another enternetusers Public Service Announcement: Blog Tips at enternetusers
January 28th, surf zone.12:49 am
[…] Monkey Bar Blogging […]
18 Lessons I’ve Learnt about Blogging: enternetusers Blog Tips
April 15th, surf zone.11:46 pm
[…] I’ve written on numerous occasions about the e-mails I regularly get from people telling me that they are quitting their job to become a full time blogger without much thought to how they’ll pay their bills in the year or three that it might take to build up their blogging to pay a reasonable wage. […]
Nicholas
December 31st, surf zone.11:11 am
Excellent advice…. You always need advance planning as with any endeavor. Your life shouldn’t be a game of chance, but of sound strategy and planning. Success is always the goal, but the journey is often overlooked.
God Bless.
Ash Haque
February 20th, 2007 6:07 pm
Great article guy
Top 20 hot post for "Pro" blogger « Blog Tin Học - Latest IT News, Tips…
May 29th, 2007 10:48 pm
[…] Monkey Bar Blogging - A post about not racing into ProBlogging full time without making sure you’ve got something to keep you going first (I send people to this post every week) […]
Considering Blogging as a Full Time Job? Read This First.
July 1st, 2007 10:31 am
[…] this point, I’d like to bring you to one of the post made by Darren. The Monkey Bar Blogging post where he shared his transistion from part-time to full-time blogger, also provide you some […]
Simon Pask
July 4th, 2007 9:23 am
I have to say that in the wealth of valuable information that you give on this site, that this is among the most sensible and topical thing here. I am in the stages of setting up 6-10 blogs on topics that I will refine (Blogs are born and Blogs die it’s all fluid) and I would like it to be a hobby that pays some compensation for my time invested. Like any blogger I dream of being in the position of being paid a full time wage to wax typographical.
That is something that I believe comes with concentrating on excellent content and ad placement as a serious HOBBY. Do something you love for the enjoyment and treat the money as a bonus. If you are doing the right thing the money will come. If it covers buying a bottle of wine to drink while you type your next article you should be happy. If it covers your Mortgage and pays your bills down the road that’s great too. As stated here it is a long hard road ahead. But travel down the road taking in the wonder of it all instead of charging down the highway with only the destination in mind.
You ever travelled somewhere that was going to take hours and found that it seemed like minutes because you found enjoyment on the way?
Ever have to drive 15 minutes and it seemed like hours because you only had the destination in mind?
Same thing here. Stop and smell the flowers. You have to make the journey you may as well enjoy it.
Thanks again Darren.
Bar Advice
September 3rd, 2007 10:02 pm
I must agree that the line you state…..
It takes time to build a profitable blog. You do not just become a Professional Blogger anymore than you just become a Professional Golfer. It is not a decision you make, it is something you work towards over time.
This is so true. I just think that people still must add their own thoughts to whatever
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