enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

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I frequently get questions about how I organize my blog post ideas and generate new content. I've hemmed and hawed over how to answer them because, although it's not a big trade secret, it's somewhat awkward to share. This is absolutely going to remove the mystery of how a post pops up every weekday at 5am.

I don't think I can say this enough – this is blog is a big part of my job. I have different expectations (on myself) and standards (for myself) than I would if this was just a place where I wrote for a hobby.

Six and a half years ago I started writing for fun. I had a voice, but I didn't yet have my footing for who I was or what I wanted from this space. The archives are quite random, but I keep them because I appreciate the record. I like many of them and I LOVE a few of them. I am thankful that back then I was practicing my writing and getting thoughts down. For no reason really. There was no grade. There was hardly an audience. I wrote because I loved it.

Today, I still write because I love it. I love it so much. I love talking the empty text box and filling it with words & photos. It's a honor to have this site and I work so hard on it.

But over the years, as blogging has become an aspect of my job (mostly as a vehicle to share other ventures), it's important to me to have a new post up every weekday. To make this more cohesive, and less of a jumbled, forced mess… I plan out the month on a large Stendig calendar that hangs on the wall by my computer.

Calendar

I write all my post ideas on post-its and move them around throughout the month. I don't stick exactly to the calendar. New ideas pop up and have to be shared so things are always moving around. This is why the post-its work so well.

Because you can't read the big calendar in the photo, I've created a generic, sample month to show you in more detail how I break it all down.

Samplepostcalendar

Towards the end of each month, I start thinking about the next month. Some of the squares fill themselves in (that's the black handwriting). Sundays are covered with Project Life updates. Saturdays, I usually don't run a post. Fridays, I plan on "around here" posts as sort of catch-alls. In those posts, I share photos, links, and text about the past week & future weekend. If something else comes up (like a project I can't wait to share) I'll cut the "around here" post.

I do photo walk posts every other Monday. I can easily count on having four pizza posts a month, but those don't fall on a certain day and will often get pushed to the next month if something else (read : A Good Idea) comes along. This summer, I have been sharing garden updates towards the end of each month, so I schedule one of those in. I like to do one product focused "I LOVE _____" post each month to share fun stuff.

In this sample month, after I fill in the topics I can count on, I am left with nine days that need Original Ideas.

Where do I get those? From a few areas :

  1. Reader questions. Recently, I have been able to count on a question that can spark a blog post about once a month.
  2. 27 materials project. To stay on track and finish by my birthday, I have to create and share 2-3 projects each month. I sometimes have these planned ahead of time, but often I'll decide the project is lame or attempt it and have it fail. I have learned that the best projects are the ones I don't think about for too long so I don't do much advance scheduling for these.
  3. Various updates. Book reports, green skincare, goals… I could always do an update.
  4. Sharing stuff we actually do. Like vacations, hikes, weddings, the Chemex, dinners…whatever. These posts are 100x more fun to write when I take tons of rad photos – like Palm Springs.
  5. Personal* posts. Posts like the "currently" ones are always fun to share. Whenever something big is happening in our lives (moves, deployments, homecomings, etc.), I always have oodles to say. (I starred "personal" because truly everything here is personal. Even the craft projects & recipes because they are things I make to hang in our house or eat at our table.)
  6. Random strokes of inspiration. Last week, while driving to pick up Paul from work, I thought up a post idea that as I started to flush out, became a week-long feature. I'm excited to share it starting Monday.

And that's "it." It's about half science, half art. I have given up completely on guessing what's going to get a lot of comments or tweeted about or pinned or whatever. It's a horrible game that makes me feel like a dog chasing its tail. So instead, I just do what I like and share what I love. My blog absolutely goes through seasons where I am incredibly personal or incredibly crafty. After six years, I understand and respect the waves, and don't force either when it's not flowing.

I guess you could say that by placing an expectation on myself to post everyday I am "forcing" it. But I don't really look at it that way. Sure, some days I am not motivated to write. But that's totally normal. It would only become a concern if I went a few days or a week with no motivation. Because this is my job (not a hobby), I would have to take a hard look at what I am doing with this space and re-evaluate. My recommendation if you've lost interest in your blog (and you genuinely want to get back into it), is to do a complete re-shift. Take what you normally do on your blog and turn it upside down. Spend a month posting only photos. Spend a month taking a break and re-reading what you wrote in the beginning. Spend a month writing about objects in your house. Spend a month writing about childhood memories. Whatever – the point is to try something completely different. Don't keep posting on the same topics and expect to love writing again.

Sometimes I panic a bit over the future. I have created something that is the opposite of self-sufficient. Yes, I start each month with a framework of posts, but I still have to write & edit, take photos & process and obviously DO the stuff that I plan on sharing each month. Without the aid of guest posters or contributors, this is all on me. It will be interesting to see how things change as our family grows in the next few years. (That's not a hint – we're going to get Paul deployed and home safely again before a Baby Cripe crash lands into our lives.) But when the panic starts to set in, I remind myself that everything and everyone evolves. This space is no exception.

So far, that (and a stack of post-it notes) help keep me (relatively) sane.

Whenever I write about blogging, I get questions on how I make money from all this. I make very little money from the actual blog through sidebar advertisers and affiliate programs. But it fuels all other aspects of my job (like workshops & product sales) plus it serves as a sort of resume and job application that has led to other opportunities. You can read more about my job here.

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50 responses to “reader question : blog content generation.”

  1. Beth @ dot in the city Avatar

    Great tips! I switched to a blog calendar a few months ago rather than just having a few drafts and it’s made a huge difference. I like to map it out like you showed and leave some room for other posts along the way :)P

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  2. atouchofdomesticity Avatar

    Thank you for the insight into your creative process Elise, it’s been really helpful! As my little ones get a bit less little, I’m hoping to have time to make my blog less a hobby, more part of a wider job. So your post has come at the perfect time. Writing is something I’m completely besotted with too, but you’ve helped to show how a little discipline and planning can make it a much more realistic, ‘do-able’ part of my life. It’s lovely when a dream can become part of your reality without killing the joy of it.

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  3. Julia Avatar

    love this post… thank you for sharing. i love how you are careful to plan and think through each post… but you never seem to get swallowed in the technicality of it all… you create the blog, the blog doesn’t create you… which is why it’s such a joy to read every single day. thank you!!

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  4. Emily S Avatar
    Emily S

    I really enjoyed this, Elise. I love how much planning and organization goes into your blog, and it’s obvious that it allows you to creatively flourish. Enjoy reading every morning; one of my first blog stops 🙂

    Like

  5. carrie wohlt Avatar

    Elisa, i really enjoy reading your blog. i have been reading your blog on and off for a month or two and now it is one of my daily reads. thank you for sharing how you develop your blog content, very helpful. as always your post are very inspiring and have help give me the push to start blogging again. i was wondering if i could list your blog as one of my favorite reads on my blog?

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  6. erin Avatar

    thanks for this post! i loved reading about how you come up with your ideas – they always seem so fresh and interesting 🙂 you are one of my first stops each day!

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  7. Skye Avatar

    I absolutely love how open you are in sharing your creative process. Thank you! Your blog is one of my favorites to read every day. As someone who has trouble with motivation and follow-through, I’m in awe of your ability to discipline yourself so well with your consistent posting schedule.

    Like

  8. ann ray Avatar

    I just discovered your blog today. Especially appreciate the great info in todays post. I am struggling to grow my blog. You have a new follower.

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  9. krugthethinker Avatar

    I love the wisdom of this post. I can’t tell you how much you have empowered me to just let the waves flow in my creative life. It is so freeing not to be constantly worried about it. And, if I have never told you, I absolutely love coming here and knowing that there is going to be a new bright and beautiful thing every day. Your blog is the very first one I check every morning. Thank you for sharing the monthly planning too. I blog Monday-Friday, but so far I only plan about a week at a time. I think I will play around a bit with monthly planning and see if it works for me. Thanks so much!

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  10. elise blaha Avatar

    of course! thank you. 🙂

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  11. Sarah Avatar

    I love the idea of the post it notes – ultimately flexible. Maybe I can get something like this sorted at my new house.
    Sarah
    http://acatlikecuriosity.blogspot.co.uk/

    Like

  12. Ashlee Avatar

    I really loved getting insight! I’m someone who’s really has been trying to become more of a planner and in the past year I’ve gone from random sporadic posting, to actually having a schedule of sorts.
    I use evernote and sometimes journals to keep track. I write out the day and put an arrow beside it, then I write in the post. I start with my features and then fill in the holes as I go, moving posts and jotting ideas as I go!
    I really enjoyed this! It was WONDERFUL. Thank you so much for sharing!

    Like

  13. Amanda May Avatar
    Amanda May

    I’m curious…
    Does Paul read your blog?

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  14. Tana Lopez Avatar

    Elise, you are so talented. I truly appreciate this post, I know it must take a lot of courage to share your wisdom and knowledge that you have worked so hard for. This is a wonderful post.

    Like

  15. kate Avatar

    I really love this peak into your blogging process and how you do your job. I almost made a comment yesterday on an instagram, “I think that basically this must be your hobby, you seem to love it so, wouldn’t you keep doing the same thing when you retired(?).” This post puts how it differs from a hobby and is your career/job into perspective and I really appreciate that.
    I admire you and the passion and creativity and “execution skills” you have for life and this space. So thank you for all of it here. I really hope comments like these make up for every disheartening email you ever receive, tenfold.

    Like

  16. mel Avatar

    Thanks for the post on this subject. You write a great blog and I love coming over to see what you’re up to.

    Like

  17. elise blaha Avatar

    before we lived together he did. while he was deployed he did. while he is home, he does not. why?

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  18. elise blaha Avatar

    they do. thank you.

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  19. elise blaha Avatar

    sorry, super awkward to ask why… I reread and see that you’re just curious. 🙂

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  20. Dee Avatar
    Dee

    Love this post. Thank you.

    Like

  21. sophie Avatar

    thank you very much for sharing a little bit of insight into how your brain/blog post work. i’m always looking for ways to get back into my blogging without driving myself insane in the process. your space is on my daily stop blog list, so i hope you keep on passing along your great energy and don’t let other people/comments get you down.

    Like

  22. Amanda May Avatar
    Amanda May

    Thanks for the reply! Like I said…I was just curious. lol
    I was just wondering if he would read it since he knows what you’re up to everyday anyway. It must be a cool alternate way for him to keep in touch with you while he’s away.
    I did appreciate this post (along with so many others!) It’s motivating to read organizational tips find out how you move everything into action. Keep it up 🙂

    Like

  23. Amanda May Avatar
    Amanda May

    Thanks for the reply! Like I said…I was just curious. lol
    I was just wondering if he would read it since he knows what you’re up to everyday anyway. It must be a cool alternate way for him to keep in touch with you while he’s away.
    I did appreciate this post (along with so many others!) It’s motivating to read organizational tips find out how you move everything into action. Keep it up 🙂

    Like

  24. elise blaha Avatar

    Yeah… He does not need to read it when he lives it, but it was nice while he was gone. 🙂

    Like

  25. katie Avatar

    i love reading your blog, and although i don’t comment very often i just have to say i think you are one of the most open/ transparent bloggers out there. not that i think you should share your trade secrets or super personal things, but it is really great to give us readers insight into your blogging process 🙂 and i definitely need to start following some of these tips to become more consistent!

    Like

  26. Linn @ The Home Project Avatar

    This was a fun post to read. When I plan my writing I have a similar thing going, but I love the idea of post it notes and how easy they are to change around. I try to get something up every weekday too, and it’s amazing how the flow changes so much over time. Sometimes I feel like there aren’t enough days in the week for me to publish everything I want to post, and then at other times it feels like there are way too many days in a week! It makes no sense, other than inspirational ups and downs I guess. I rather like the continuity of your theme posts, and you can’t go wrong with your Around Here pictures – I love the random down-to-earth feel they bring to the party!

    Like

  27. Liesbeth Avatar
    Liesbeth

    Like Katie, I read your blog a lot and have done on and off for several years (I think I found it through Kal’s blog). It has been so interesting to watch your blog grow into a business and in doing so become tighter and more focused. Personally I love that you psot so often, as your work/life is so different to mine that I really enjoy taking a peek into what you are up to. Whilst I don’t blog, I love the way you record your life and am very interested in doing my own project life. Thanks for the ongoing inspiration! And know that your genuine and authentic blogging voice will keep your followers throughout the different evolutions of your blog 🙂

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  28. bonitarose Avatar

    this is a great post and I loved reading about your process.. I hv something similar with my blog too.. I plan things.. and I like writing and sharing my one spontaneous life too… it’s all a balance.
    I love keeping my blog content fresh and colorful… photos are key…
    thks for sharing…
    great post Elise! xo hugs

    Like

  29. marta Avatar

    i love hearing about how you funnel your thoughts, manage your business and keep up a fantastic blog. you are still one of my favorites. i’ve let go of ‘managing’ my post ideas and this post has me thinking that i need to get better at it! thank you for your constant good ideas and inspiration. i love how you share stuff and never fear people ‘copying’ your art. good ideas are to be shared.

    Like

  30. Donna Avatar

    Elise – thanks for sharing your process for blogging. Right now my blog is just a hobby but I would like it to be more eventually and I appreciate reading about how you plan your posts.

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  31. J3SS1C4 Avatar

    Thank you for responding to this question that so many of us have! This was such a great post! I try to plan my blog posts, but I tend not to stick to it too well, but I love this idea of postit notes on a calendar to keep organised… This give a lot more flexibility as they can be moved around as needed. I usually list my ideas, but then I end up changing my mind and cross things out, and discard the list when it’s too messy! I love your insight into how you generate ideas as well. Some days I struggle for ideas, so it makes sense to have some ongoing regular ideas.
    One question… Will you be rerunning your blog course or doing it self paced? I’d love to do this!

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  32. Diana Avatar

    I just wanted to let you know that I found this very inspirational and full of ideas for me to better organize for my own blog. I love your blog and have found it so lovely to read each day. Hope all is well.
    🙂

    Like

  33. Renee Avatar
    Renee

    I found this an interesting post. I’ve read your blog from when you were in college. I liked what you shared here and while I don’t blog I think this structure could work for some of the other patterns of life. Thanks

    Like

  34. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    Love this post, love this blog! When I first started blogging I did it because I loved writing. Then I got cut up in the buzz of following stats, comments, etc and stopped enjoying it. I’ve been missing writing and want to start back up again, love the idea of turning it on it’s head!
    Outside of that, I’m loving your writing and love your ‘voice’. So much sunshine, but not in a fake, forced way. Very genuine. So thanks for that, its good perspective!

    Like

  35. elise blaha Avatar

    Thank you! I hope to rerun it this fall. 🙂

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  36. missorelia (france) Avatar

    I love your blog, you have always nice post.. I never put comments because my english isn’t great but I will try.. I read and understand english but it’s so hard to write or speak 🙂

    Like

  37. Lynnette Avatar

    Great post Elise! As a fellow post-it lover, your calendar makes me happy. 🙂
    I did have a follow-up question (or questionS I guess, haha) and that’s this: once you have your monthly plan in place, what’s your process for making sure the posts/projects are finished on time?
    I know you mentioned grouping like tasks in another post, so do you have certain days each week set aside for writing vs creative projects? What about when a project or post doesn’t work out like you planned – are you working far enough ahead that you have to adapt or do you just have enough going on at once that there’s always something you can easily substitute? Do you try to balance easier posts vs more time consuming posts when you plan out your month? And how do you keep track of so many ongoing projects (27 materials, Project Life, 40 Pizzas, etc, etc)?
    I ask because you seem to do an awesome job of all this so I’m curious (or perhaps a wee bit nosy, haha) about how it all works. : )

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  38. Roben-Marie Avatar

    This is very timely for me. I have been feeling like a dog chasing its tail and not sure in what direction I want to go with my blog. Trying not to stress over it too much and thanks so much for your wonderful suggestions!

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  39. elise blaha Avatar

    thank you. good questions! I do not have a great strategy to share for how I complete everything each month. I just am in the habit I guess. I work pretty quickly usually, so when something is taking forever, I know it is probably not a good fit for me right now and I try not to force it. You are right, I do group tasks, but I do not have certain days set where I work on one or the other. I do work every day. Saturdays, Sundays, no matter – whenever I can squeeze in an hour, I work. I do have a natural balance set up … pizza posts and project life posts are pretty simple brain power wise, but they sometimes take time to edit images and link, etc. The reader question posts take a lot more creative work to write. I am usually a few days ahead, depending on the week. For example, last Sunday, I wrote the PL post that ran Sunday, uploaded and wrote Mondays photo walk post and edited Tuesdays Reader Question post. I had the pizza post (from today, Wednesday) written from the week before. I made some final edits to tomorrows post. Tomorrow (Thursday) I will write Fridays around here post. I have been working all week on the posts that will run next week. 🙂 I know it sounds complicated.. but in my head it all makes sense. 🙂

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  40. Ali Avatar

    love this post Elise. I always find it interesting to see how other people work and prioritise their time. I find it really intriguing that you personal life and your professional life are so intertwined – and how you run your blog reflects that.
    As a person who works a 8-5 job and goes home and tries to fit in my projects/down time/boyfriend time/friend time etc and blog – I find it incredibly hard to keep on top of everything (even though I’m a “list” person). 😉
    I love your tip about turning your blog on it’s head if you’re getting stuck! I did this at the start of the year when I moved as I knew my a lot of my post topics would change, and it would be a good change for my blog too. I’ve recently just shifted around my post categories, recategorised, and came up with ideas – now it’s time to execute them!

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  41. Jessica Avatar

    I absolutely LOVE this post. As a new blogger, I spent two or three months building content and since I started publishing it, I’ve gone through a lot of my pre-writen posts in a very short amount of time. I just got a planner and I have decided on posting every other day, unless inspiration hits. I do think that the balance between personal topics and what I generally post (crafts & recipes) will be interesting as I’m not sure how much personal stuff I want to share. Thanks so much for this little guidance – I’m definitely taking it to heart!

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  42. Lisa Goren Avatar

    Thanks for answering my question, Elise! You are so talented and organized!

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  43. Kara Avatar

    Thanks so much for this great tip. I often thought that my blog would be boring if I had regular “themed” posts scheduled for certain days of the week, but then I was left scrambling for random content every day. Now I find it much easier to have a few weekly features planned, and I think it gives reader’s a sense of cohesiveness throughout a blog. I LOVE your calendar. I’m going to have to find a good space for one.

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  44. Blog content Avatar

    thanks for this post elise. really love it. help me a lot this time since i’m having a hard time dealing with my blogs now.

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  45. Sentrell Avatar

    This is awesome! Thanks for this post.

    Like

  46. TracieClaiborne Avatar

    Elise – You have inspired me so much since I found your blog. I first heard of you on the Paperclipping Roundtable and instantly fell in love with your creative spirit. I appreciate so much your sharing what works for you. After 10 years of working in the scrapbook industry in some capacity (scrapbook store employee – instructor, etc.), I decided that 2012, I would make papercrafting my full-time job. My blog is a big part of being visible, however, I struggle to keep it updated with all the other tasks on my to-do list. My biggest obstacle to overcome with blogging, is having current pictures directly related to the posts I want to do and getting those pics from camera to computer in a timely fashion. Is picture-taking just a huge part of your life and do you download often? Does it seem like a chore to you? For example, I have several new projects I’d like to share on my blog but day after day goes by and I don’t make time to take pics while I have great daylight and then I don’t blog because I have no pics. So I haven’t blogged in one week! Horrible! And I was on a good roll for a while this year, blogging daily. I know you have written about it before, but I’d love to hear more about your work schedule – working from home. I’m teaching between 10-15 papercrafting classes a month right now and between making samples, marketing materials, prepping kits, etc. – I am struggling to find time for it all. So as I said, I would love to hear how you juggle and make time for all the things you decide to do, business-wise. Thanks again so much! You are such a doll. -Tracie Claiborne

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  47. elise blaha Avatar

    hey Tracie, thanks so much! I take photos everyday and upload to my computer about seven times a week. not always everyday, but sometimes twice a day. I really try to schedule everything right so I get a bunch of different things photographed at the same time, but sometimes that works better than others. Photos are really the main event, so they are a huge priority and get schedule into my days. I will absolutely think more about a post on my work-life balance. 🙂

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  48. TracieClaiborne Avatar

    Thanks for responding!

    Like

  49. gkgirl Avatar

    this is a fantastic idea…
    i love the idea of post it notes…
    tangible and yet not set in stone!
    fantastic.
    i found you via liz lamoreux by the way…
    🙂

    Like

  50. Madelyn Avatar

    Hi Elise!
    I found you through your podcast (I love blogs, but also loooveee listening to podcasts in the car, while cleaning, etc.) and I’m just now going back through some of your posts (I write about pizza all the time too!!). You have great advice. I especially love this: “So instead, I just do what I like and share what I love. My blog absolutely goes through seasons where I am incredibly personal or incredibly crafty. After six years, I understand and respect the waves, and don’t force either when it’s not flowing.” I’m in a super crafty phase right now, dreaming of starting a business, and your words are inspiring me. Thank you!
    Madelyn
    http://www.onebluebicycle.blogspot.com

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