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Tag Archives: White Trees Series 2 No. 3
Deadline Pressure

White Trees, Series 2, No. 3
Time to share a little bit about my blog writing process. I’m writing this blog post late on a Sunday night, after a full day of unrelated demands on my time earlier today and before another full day of unrelated demands on my time tomorrow, because it’s the only time I have to write and I’m under the pressure of making my blog posting deadline.
Blog posting deadline? Well, okay, there’s no real deadline, just a self-imposed one. No one is cracking a whip for me to get this blog post done, and the world certainly isn’t going to fall apart if this entry isn’t posted this evening. All things equal, I probably would just as soon shut down the computer and call it a night. So why am I doing this to myself?
I’m doing this because I want to write a quality blog, and to me, part of writing a quality blog is to keep it updated regularly. In my own experience, nothing is disappointing in quite the same way as discovering a blog that has content you really like, only to find out the author only updates it once every six months or so. I think that when you create a blog, you make an implicit promise to your readership to keep it updated. That’s kind of what blogging implies – if you’re not going to update your content, you may as well just make static web pages.
So, when I created this blog, I did it with the promise to myself that I would regularly keep the content updated. The question naturally becomes, what’s the right interval at which to provide regular updates, particularly in the context of a blog about photography?
On the one hand, I think it is possible to overdo it. So-called “picture-a-day” blogs fall into this category for me. It’s great that some photographers can post a new image every day, but invariably this volume of posts creates two problems for me as a viewer. First, I find it’s rare that the photographer can maintain a high level of quality at this pace. With only a few exceptions (see, for example, Gary Nylander, whose near-daily posting of very high quality images is quite impressive!), quality almost always suffers when the volume of output is high, in my opinion. Second, even for photographers whose work I really like, I tend to get viewer burn-out after a while. If I see too much too frequently, it tends to diminish the impact of any individual daily image.
Accordingly, it would seem that some degree of restraint in churning out blog posts is appropriate, but where to draw the line? Again, with reference to my own blog-reading habits, if posts are too infrequent, I lose interest and just tend to stop following the blog after awhile. Personally, I even feel a little betrayed by the blog’s author, who after all made an implicit promise to me, the reader, to provide content for the blog he or she created that caught my interest. It’s almost like authors who don’t update their blogs are being inconsiderate to their readers!
(Now, before I get flamed by irate blog authors, I do recognize that most bloggers blog on their own personal time, out of pure passion for their subject, and therefore that they have no true obligation, in any real sense, to keep their blogs updated on any schedule but their own. I mean it sincerely when I say that I am not criticizing anyone who writes a blog, I’m just sharing my own thinking as it informs my own writing of my blog.)
Returning to the subject at hand, when it comes to balancing too much versus too little, I’ve settled on posting about once a week or so. A week is a nice even interval of time, and comes around enough to keep things interesting, without happening so often as to create overload. When I say a week or so, I do keep things flexible for myself. Throughout most of 2013, for example, I think I kept pretty close to the weekly schedule, but here in early 2014, I’ve had to back it off to about every two weeks or so due to some unforseen personal circumstances.
Still, I do my best to keep this blog on schedule, even if the schedule is entirely of my own making. That’s why I’m here, typing away late on a Sunday evening.
Posted in Uncategorized
Also tagged blog, deadline pressure, Gary Nylander, Misha Gregory Macaw, www.mishagregorymacaw.com
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