Here is a selection of blogs that took the limelight this week:
willemkossen
sweet-oven-lovin.com
cyclingart
insomniacmummy.com
scrapsofmygeeklife.com
My pick for the week-end:
Here is a selection of blogs that took the limelight this week:
willemkossen
sweet-oven-lovin.com
cyclingart
insomniacmummy.com
scrapsofmygeeklife.com
My pick for the week-end:
Chris Rowbury known as the singingman on Fuelmyblog has agreed to write for fuel. Read more from Chris on his blog “From the front of the choir”.
It’s often hard to come up with ideas for your next blog post, especially if you been doing it for some time. When you first start, you write about what you know and hope that somebody out there will be interested.


As time goes by you get more and more readers, people begin to leave comments, you might have a star rating for each post, your analytics package tells you which are your most popular posts and some of your readers even begin to suggest ideas for posts.
Now it becomes a little trickier to decide on blog topics. Is it enough to continue to write about what you know, essentially pleasing yourself, or should you begin to take into account what your readers want? And if you do that, how best to go about it?
Not that I have all the answers since I’m in the same position myself! I have given it a bit of thought though.
Some of my posts get a 5-star rating. That makes me very happy! But often the rating comes from just two or three people. Not a very good reflection of my overall readership!
Some people leave comments on my posts. Not as often as I’d like, but often enough for me to believe (rashly?) that someone is actually reading the thing! But I notice that it’s often the same four or five people who comment. Again, not a very good reflection of my overall readership.
Then very, very occasionally (even though I ask people often), someone might offer a suggestion for a post. But is that just something that will interest them, a single reader, or will it be of wider interest?
What if I just go ploughing on and writing what I want to write? After all, that’s what I started out doing and it seems to have attracted some readers. Never enough, of course, but there are some people out there who seem to like what I’m writing.
But I’m not the same person as I was when I started and maybe I’m writing differently or on different topics. Perhaps I’ve lost loads of readers because I’m not delivering what they want. Even though I look at my stats and RSS subscriber figures, my readership is too small to notice any significant trends. Maybe I should take more notice of the readers and adapt my style and content.
Hang on a minute!! Now I remember why I first started writing. Not only did I want to share my thoughts, but the discipline of writing every week helps me to formulate what I really think about a subject. More importantly I wanted to start a dialogue and debate with other people. What do they think about these subjects? Have they come across the same issues? Do they have different or better solutions and ideas?
So I’m going to stick to my first principles. I will gladly take note of my most popular posts and possibly write something along the same lines at some point. I will take on board any suggestions or comments that my readers make. But the bottom line is, that I need to be true to myself and the intentions of my blog. If I don’t write what I am interested in and passionate about, then there’s not much point in writing, and the posts won’t be much good any way.
So don’t ignore your readers, but stay true to yourself. Unless, of course, your only reason for writing is to make money, in which case you need to please your readers/ customers and give them exactly what they want!
I’d be really interested to hear from you Fuellers out there. How much attention do you pay to your readers when deciding what to write about? How do you decide which topics will be of interest? Do you find yourself pandering to your readers and losing sight of what started you blogging in the first place?
Week three of The Friday Five – This week the topic is TV.
What is it?
Simply answer the five questions below, either copy and answer on your blog linking back to here (leave the link in the comments) or just answer in the comments.
Usual disclaimer – all questions are random rubbish.
1. What is the first TV program you remember watching?
2. Is there a show on TV that you simply have to watch and even record it if not in?
3. Who was your first TV star crush (def: crush = infatuation)?
4. Dallas or Dynasty?
5. Do you watch adverts/commercials on TV or flick channels to skip them?
That’s a wrap for this week folks, I am particularily interested in answers to Q1!
(I just looked up my first memories of a TV show on youtube – scared me a tad!)
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