If you sit every morning in front of the monitor with the best attitude to be productive and create great content for your blog, but after fifteen minutes you are wasting your time reviewing your social networks and watching videos of cats, this article is for you.
Creating a successful blog requires perseverance and discipline.
But don't worry, there is still hope.
In this article you will find 4 steps to become a productive blogger:
The majority of aspiring bloggers have similar problems: they remain without motivation in the middle of the task.
These entrepreneurs have every intention of moving their business forward, but they feel fatigued and even discouraged.
It is normal. If you have a full-time job, it's completely logical that you don't have the courage to continue working when you get home.
You may prefer to watch a movie than sit down to write or promote your blog.
Even so, it is necessary to devote a little time a day to your project. The secret is to facilitate the work.
Even if you think you are in control of every step of your life, many actions that you do during the day are automatic.
They depend on the environment around you, and are an answer to it.
Companies know this fact, and use their power for good and evil.
If you have purchased from Amazon, you will know that the company saves information about what you do on its website. When you return, the page shows items related to your previous purchase: accessories, cases, similar, etc. This makes it easy for you to make your next purchase.
Just as Amazon creates the environment to make buying easier for you, you want to create one that borders you to work.
It is sensible to create an environment where you separate the TV, the cell phone and everything that can distract you.
Your workplace should have what you need to work: your computer, a chair, a desk and good lighting. Having a work team, apart from the leisure PC is a great idea, if it fits within your possibilities.
Actually, to blog you just need a word processor and access to the web, everything else is potential distracting.
You can use apps to stay focused. Try, for example: StayFocused , an extension for the Chrome browser that allows you to block the web pages you choose for a certain time. So you avoid going down the green roads.
It is also good to have the least amount of tabs and programs open while you work. That will prevent some clink of notification that may distract you. Applications like FocusWriter keep you focused on writing, are very useful and increase your productivity.
So, if you now feel discouraged and also unproductive, set up your workplace.
Try this: How much time did you spend the last time you checked your networks and watched YouTube videos? It's true, we all like it, but they are annihilators of your productivity. Putting limitations will help increase it. You are human and temptation is incredibly strong.
According to a study by the Pennsylvania State University, it is easier to get distracted from 12:00 to 16:00. And even, there is a distracting dream at 2pm.
Evan Williams is the founder of Twitter, Blogger and Medium. His strategy was to concentrate on work only in the morning, and then, the rest of the day off.
According to his testimony, it felt weird to leave work mid-day, but the next morning the energy and concentration were better in all aspects.
Some are rather of the night type. Nothing more and nothing less than President Obama, confessed that he used to read some presidential paperwork at midnight or later.
If you don't know what your best time is, then listen to the opinion of your family environment. They know what sector you belong to.
You can also answer this test to know what time you are the most productive blogger:
At what time of the day do you feel more energetic?
When you feel more tired or sleepy
What is your natural time to wake up?
Take advantage of the moments of energy to work and use the heaviest moments to do easy tasks.
Try this: Although some recommend working in the morning to increase productivity, it may not be your thing. Find the moment when you are most productive and create a schedule. Put a fixed time where you are in your moment of maximum creativity.
You should not feel guilty for starting later, quite the opposite, if you choose your best time to work, then you are doing well.
If you make a list, you are very likely to comply. But, it may stress you more than you should and end up being less productive.
The biggest problem with lists is when there is no priority in the compliance sequence.
For example, let's look at a list of things I have to do:
Write blog post
Have meeting with perspective
Talk with family and friends
Verify Email
Exercise
Research article ideas
Share other publications on social networks
Vacuum and clean
Watch television
Ugh, that's a lot of ground to cover in one day.
In a list of "things to do", our goal is to get rid of pending tasks as soon as possible. The fastest way is to make tasks easier first, such as checking email, sending messages on Twitter and watching TV.
Except that by doing this you would never get to important tasks. You would feel half mentally exhausted and your time would run out.
Instead, it is suggested to classify tasks in order of importance. A useful tool for doing so is the Eisenhower Matrix.
The principle behind this tool is that we must separate tasks that are important from those that are urgent. So what is the difference?
Urgent tasks are those that must be treated immediately. We react to a situation and we must solve a problem immediately.
Important tasks, on the other hand, are crucial to a long-term objective. They may or may not need to be handled immediately, but if we want to improve in one area, we must focus on what is important.
Try this: During the last week of each month, take some time to look forward and plan your schedule for next month. Start with your big projects or goals and schedule time to work on those first.
Leave smaller tasks that don't require much concentration or advance planning to fill in the little moments you have free. Your priorities are the tasks that drive you to move forward.
Read our guide on the 10 things you should not do when you start a blog
In a study based on a group of violinists, researchers noted that the best performers did their practice in the morning.
Time was distributed in sessions of maximum 90 minutes, with a break between each.
This way of rendering was also found in other athletes and different disciplines, such as chess or letters.
The best way to work, or rather, the most productive, is in short sessions with breaks and not "running."
Most people looking to boost their results start working harder because it is the most visible form of productivity.
We assume that the solution is simply to spend more hours, and that is true, up to a point. However, this approach has some problems.
First, you have only two or four hours of high level energy per day. Those two or four hours per day translate to between ten and twenty hours per week.
Beyond that, you cross a threshold. You still have the energy to complete administrative tasks, but you cannot do high-level creative work.
Second, moving forward to try to do more can actually make you negatively productive. For example, if you are a writer, you may write much more but never quality content.
When you work hard, you try to reward yourself and fight fatigue by drinking coffee, eating junk food and waking up late. The body, then, puts itself in a state of fighting or escaping, so our mind loses the ability to reason properly.
If you have been working for a long time and start to deconcentrate yourself, consider taking a break. Taking a walk or taking a nap will help you be cooler and get more alert in your activities.
Try this: Divide your word count into sessions. 3000 words are approximately 3 high school essays or six pages of writing. You can write a lot by dividing your writing count into parts.
You can use a technique similar to the Pomodoro technique called Sprints. It comes from Chris Fox's e-book called 5,000 words per hour: write faster, write smarter.
To write more words per hour, you must have sessions or sprints focused exclusively on writing. For 20 minutes, you release everything and write. Turn off your WiFi, clean your desktop and simply type. Editing is not allowed, you can only write.
For each sprint, one goal could be to write 500 words. So, in six sessions or three hours, you will have finished a blog post.
To achieve the proposed goals, you must know when you have energy levels at their best level.
The good thing is that now you know that you don't have to enslave yourself to comply, but take advantage of the best moments to perform better.
Take, as far as possible, a time away from your workplace. Work for established periods. For example, you can put a work limit on homework and then watch some TV or call a friend.
It is not about complying at all costs with the list of tasks to be done. Rather than prioritizing those that will make you meet your goals in the short term. If you are already energized, you see your business grow and now you have more free hours, then you are on the road to productivity.
Too many bloggers make the mistake of performing various tasks when creating blog posts. They plan, write and edit articles simultaneously with the idea that they are saving time. But it is a myth.
By multitasking, you are actually wasting more time.
In a study gathered by Stanford University, university students who were 'high-performance multitasking' were more easily distracted and performed worse than those who were not.
To really save time, you must plan, research, write and edit in separate stages. Especially the editing phase.
Many bloggers make the mistake of editing while writing. He is a great productivity killer.
It slows down your writing process by trying to correct words instead of finishing your main points.
Here is a usual writing process, which you can use as a guide:
Write a sketch
Complete the scheme.
Write a terrible first draft.
Expand the draft with quotes and case studies.
Edit the draft
Edit again
As you can see, being a productive blogger is not an impossible task. You simply need some order, discipline, records, a working method and a reliable schedule.
Creating a successful blog requires perseverance and discipline.
But don't worry, there is still hope.
In this article you will find 4 steps to become a productive blogger:
1. Create a work environment where you feel comfortable
![]() |
Steps to become a productive blogger |
The majority of aspiring bloggers have similar problems: they remain without motivation in the middle of the task.
These entrepreneurs have every intention of moving their business forward, but they feel fatigued and even discouraged.
It is normal. If you have a full-time job, it's completely logical that you don't have the courage to continue working when you get home.
You may prefer to watch a movie than sit down to write or promote your blog.
Even so, it is necessary to devote a little time a day to your project. The secret is to facilitate the work.
Even if you think you are in control of every step of your life, many actions that you do during the day are automatic.
They depend on the environment around you, and are an answer to it.
Companies know this fact, and use their power for good and evil.
If you have purchased from Amazon, you will know that the company saves information about what you do on its website. When you return, the page shows items related to your previous purchase: accessories, cases, similar, etc. This makes it easy for you to make your next purchase.
Just as Amazon creates the environment to make buying easier for you, you want to create one that borders you to work.
It is sensible to create an environment where you separate the TV, the cell phone and everything that can distract you.
Your workplace should have what you need to work: your computer, a chair, a desk and good lighting. Having a work team, apart from the leisure PC is a great idea, if it fits within your possibilities.
Actually, to blog you just need a word processor and access to the web, everything else is potential distracting.
You can use apps to stay focused. Try, for example: StayFocused , an extension for the Chrome browser that allows you to block the web pages you choose for a certain time. So you avoid going down the green roads.
It is also good to have the least amount of tabs and programs open while you work. That will prevent some clink of notification that may distract you. Applications like FocusWriter keep you focused on writing, are very useful and increase your productivity.
So, if you now feel discouraged and also unproductive, set up your workplace.
Try this: How much time did you spend the last time you checked your networks and watched YouTube videos? It's true, we all like it, but they are annihilators of your productivity. Putting limitations will help increase it. You are human and temptation is incredibly strong.
2. Are you day or night?
Now is the time to reconsider the time you work.According to a study by the Pennsylvania State University, it is easier to get distracted from 12:00 to 16:00. And even, there is a distracting dream at 2pm.
Evan Williams is the founder of Twitter, Blogger and Medium. His strategy was to concentrate on work only in the morning, and then, the rest of the day off.
According to his testimony, it felt weird to leave work mid-day, but the next morning the energy and concentration were better in all aspects.
![]() | |
|
Some are rather of the night type. Nothing more and nothing less than President Obama, confessed that he used to read some presidential paperwork at midnight or later.
If you don't know what your best time is, then listen to the opinion of your family environment. They know what sector you belong to.
You can also answer this test to know what time you are the most productive blogger:
At what time of the day do you feel more energetic?
When you feel more tired or sleepy
What is your natural time to wake up?
Take advantage of the moments of energy to work and use the heaviest moments to do easy tasks.
Try this: Although some recommend working in the morning to increase productivity, it may not be your thing. Find the moment when you are most productive and create a schedule. Put a fixed time where you are in your moment of maximum creativity.
You should not feel guilty for starting later, quite the opposite, if you choose your best time to work, then you are doing well.
3. Schedule your routine daily and weekly and do not stress
Almost everyone likes to have a to-do list. You receive a moral reward when you manage to complete all the proposed activities and you feel productive and useful.If you make a list, you are very likely to comply. But, it may stress you more than you should and end up being less productive.
The biggest problem with lists is when there is no priority in the compliance sequence.
For example, let's look at a list of things I have to do:
![]() |
Steps to become a productive blogger |
Write blog post
Have meeting with perspective
Talk with family and friends
Verify Email
Exercise
Research article ideas
Share other publications on social networks
Vacuum and clean
Watch television
Ugh, that's a lot of ground to cover in one day.
In a list of "things to do", our goal is to get rid of pending tasks as soon as possible. The fastest way is to make tasks easier first, such as checking email, sending messages on Twitter and watching TV.
Except that by doing this you would never get to important tasks. You would feel half mentally exhausted and your time would run out.
Instead, it is suggested to classify tasks in order of importance. A useful tool for doing so is the Eisenhower Matrix.
The principle behind this tool is that we must separate tasks that are important from those that are urgent. So what is the difference?
Urgent tasks are those that must be treated immediately. We react to a situation and we must solve a problem immediately.
Important tasks, on the other hand, are crucial to a long-term objective. They may or may not need to be handled immediately, but if we want to improve in one area, we must focus on what is important.
Try this: During the last week of each month, take some time to look forward and plan your schedule for next month. Start with your big projects or goals and schedule time to work on those first.
Leave smaller tasks that don't require much concentration or advance planning to fill in the little moments you have free. Your priorities are the tasks that drive you to move forward.
Read our guide on the 10 things you should not do when you start a blog
4. Listen to your internal clock
We all have an internal schedule. There are times of the day when we have energy, and there are also limits to the amount of hours we can work.In a study based on a group of violinists, researchers noted that the best performers did their practice in the morning.
Time was distributed in sessions of maximum 90 minutes, with a break between each.
This way of rendering was also found in other athletes and different disciplines, such as chess or letters.
The best way to work, or rather, the most productive, is in short sessions with breaks and not "running."
Most people looking to boost their results start working harder because it is the most visible form of productivity.
We assume that the solution is simply to spend more hours, and that is true, up to a point. However, this approach has some problems.
First, you have only two or four hours of high level energy per day. Those two or four hours per day translate to between ten and twenty hours per week.
Beyond that, you cross a threshold. You still have the energy to complete administrative tasks, but you cannot do high-level creative work.
Second, moving forward to try to do more can actually make you negatively productive. For example, if you are a writer, you may write much more but never quality content.
When you work hard, you try to reward yourself and fight fatigue by drinking coffee, eating junk food and waking up late. The body, then, puts itself in a state of fighting or escaping, so our mind loses the ability to reason properly.
If you have been working for a long time and start to deconcentrate yourself, consider taking a break. Taking a walk or taking a nap will help you be cooler and get more alert in your activities.
Try this: Divide your word count into sessions. 3000 words are approximately 3 high school essays or six pages of writing. You can write a lot by dividing your writing count into parts.
You can use a technique similar to the Pomodoro technique called Sprints. It comes from Chris Fox's e-book called 5,000 words per hour: write faster, write smarter.
To write more words per hour, you must have sessions or sprints focused exclusively on writing. For 20 minutes, you release everything and write. Turn off your WiFi, clean your desktop and simply type. Editing is not allowed, you can only write.
For each sprint, one goal could be to write 500 words. So, in six sessions or three hours, you will have finished a blog post.
Get energized!
To achieve the proposed goals, you must know when you have energy levels at their best level.The good thing is that now you know that you don't have to enslave yourself to comply, but take advantage of the best moments to perform better.
Take, as far as possible, a time away from your workplace. Work for established periods. For example, you can put a work limit on homework and then watch some TV or call a friend.
It is not about complying at all costs with the list of tasks to be done. Rather than prioritizing those that will make you meet your goals in the short term. If you are already energized, you see your business grow and now you have more free hours, then you are on the road to productivity.
Bonus: Plan, write and edit separately
![]() |
Steps to become a productive blogger |
By multitasking, you are actually wasting more time.
In a study gathered by Stanford University, university students who were 'high-performance multitasking' were more easily distracted and performed worse than those who were not.
To really save time, you must plan, research, write and edit in separate stages. Especially the editing phase.
Many bloggers make the mistake of editing while writing. He is a great productivity killer.
It slows down your writing process by trying to correct words instead of finishing your main points.
Here is a usual writing process, which you can use as a guide:
![]() |
Steps to become a productive blogger |
Write a sketch
Complete the scheme.
Write a terrible first draft.
Expand the draft with quotes and case studies.
Edit the draft
Edit again
As you can see, being a productive blogger is not an impossible task. You simply need some order, discipline, records, a working method and a reliable schedule.
4 steps to become a productive blogger
Reviewed by Search for Articles Free - Admin
on
January 10, 2020
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