Sentences with phrase «think about having a blog»

An editorial calendar is probably the best tool to make sure you write content often and consistently, so don't even think about having a blog without an editorial calendar!
At the time I didn't have a blog, nor was I really even thinking about having a blog then but I did take a lot of photos for fun for Instagram and thought I'd do a little recap for you before I get things all decorated for the 2016 Christmas season.

Not exact matches

You wrote the following in a blog post: «When I joined First Round, I gave a lot of thought to the type of VC I want to be, and I decided to be one that wouldn't hedge talking about mistakes and lessons hard won.»
However, because everyone on the planet is now a blogger (which sounds to me like a word that would better describe a bloated jogger), I thought it might be helpful to share a few tips about how to write the worst possible blog you can.
HBR Blog Network's Peter Bregman suggests a way of thinking about the problem that a therapist would love — perhaps you hate this person so intensely because he or she reminds you of your own flaws.
When you create content, you want to think about the problems your ideal clients have and solve them with blog posts, articles, infographics, free reports, webinars, teleseminars, podcasts, etc..
If you have a friend, co-worker, neighbor, parent, sibling or cousin who is thinking about Pure Barre, and is not sure if they can join in — share this blog with them!
So, I thought it would make sense to tell more about them on this blog.
:) I've started a blog in french about 1 month ago, if you can take a look and tell me what you think!
Any more thoughts to share on this feel free to blog about them as I follow your blog and would love more fodder for my work
I have some thoughts up on the Private Blog about where I think agriculture is headed in the next few years over at Patreon.
I have some thoughts about the medium - term market effects and potential moves by... Continue reading Private Blog: China's Serious Tariffs on Serious Earth
While I think it is wonderful that so many people are excited to write and blog about about personal finance, personally I would be cautious about religiously following the advice of a college freshman who just finished reading Rich Dad Poor Dad and now believes himself to be a personal finance expert and wants to make a buck blogging about it.
That was the beginning of the blog boom and I thought — just for fun — I would start a blog about my adventures in Paris.
Have you ever thought about starting a blog for your marketplace?
Katie Sweet, writing for IBM's THINK Marketing blog, shares some insight that proves how important understanding your customers is to your marketing campaign's success, including this statistic: 63 % of consumers say they would think more positively about a brand if it gave them content that was more valuable, interesting, or releTHINK Marketing blog, shares some insight that proves how important understanding your customers is to your marketing campaign's success, including this statistic: 63 % of consumers say they would think more positively about a brand if it gave them content that was more valuable, interesting, or relethink more positively about a brand if it gave them content that was more valuable, interesting, or relevant.
I quite often treat this blog like a diary, so sometimes I'll stray away from talking about my personal finance and share my current thoughts, I'll be excited to go back and read some old post when the years go by, and it will help me reflect on the overall journey that has been experienced, because as great as the end goal of early retirement is, I would imagine the character developed through such a process has more then just monetary value.
At the time, Mike and Keith were thinking about investing in digital media startups and, in an effort to get up to speed in the marketplace, Mike had started a blog to review various startups.
I've already started thinking about end - of - year blog post ideas (want to get a jump on it before everyone else) and this is a great way to begin that trend.
I can't think of a better result than these two finishing in first place together, because I've been reading both blogs since the moment I started to read about SEO.
I was going to blog about Breaking Bad and Flannery O'Connor, but that would take too long and I have a few more thoughts about Ted Cruz.
I so agree with your blog entry for today, in fact it's something I've thought a lot about over the last few days.
Sarah, I think maybe you have not read many posts on my blog, and have jumped to conclusions about how I view church and church - going Christians.
And yet over the course of writing my blog, I have found that vast numbers of people struggle with fear, guilt, shame, and all sorts of terrible thoughts about God and others, and as I have learned more, I find that many of these feelings come from a faulty view of God.
Most people like to see their content accessed widely and so can learn some great tips (as well as read some good content) from these blogs, but «most popular» doesn't always mean «best» I'd say that for any blogger a key to judging your own success is to think about the purpose and intended audience of you blog — if you have a niche audience in a specific location you may not get a huge following but if you set out to acheive something worthwhile through your blog and you achieve it then that counts as success.
I have a million thoughts about this blog, it prompted many thoughts on simple truths God I haven't reflected on in awhile but seriously needed to revisit.
I find it nice having open - minded and intellectual Christians contribute to the blog, because it gives me (an atheist) something to think about.
Also, since we rarely talk about parenting on this forum, I thought I'd ask if you have any favorite so - called «Mommy Blogs
I thought of that this morning when I sat down at the computer to blog about the past week or two because I don't have any manifestos or soapbox rants right now, I don't have any thing worth «sharing» with your Facebook friends or pinning on Pinterest, it's a little story of our family's days the past while here.
At about 2 a.m. this morning, after I'd exhausted poor Emily Dickinson in search of a smart - sounding poetic reference, I thought, who better to ask than the folks who read my blog.
To enter, leave a comment indicating about how long you've been reading the blog and, (if you can think of one), a link or reference to your favorite post.
As I run, I think about what other tips I've read in running books and on blogs.
What's hard, is trying to push through this and find a way to dialogue which is what I think NP is getting at... and what I have been learning a lot about lately, partly thanks to this blog: — RRB -.
ok i've decided — after soul searching and observing my and other's reactions to these religious blog news on CNN learning more about religion from this alone and about the mideast than from anywhere else in my USA educated life i need to be more tolerant of others having religious based governments THAT is what is confusing me — that religion are governments are not seperated that is hard for much of USA population to understand perhaps it is for me i think you would have to actually live in a society like the mideast to truly understand it i mean — actually be part of the society the religious part is truly offputting — since most in USA seperate church and state like — church is for faith and imagination and celebration and family and community involvement and state is for protection and education and health and infrastructure, etc., for all it is hard to be serious about religion — when the serious side of society is state it is hard to see religion being the serious side of enforcement — and the state enforcing the faith based side of society egad — doesn't god get lost in all that?
I often get responses from people who lean toward Option 1 as well, but in my experience, most of these people are having thoughts and ideas about Option 2, and it scares them, so they fight against it by leaving comments on blogs like mine.
i am undergoing such a change in the way i think about God and religion and reading some of your articles has been very refreshing — right now i am part of a very fundamental church and i need to get out - i am tired of the judgement and looking at people as «saved» and «unsaved» (we recently had a church event where if you brought an «unsaved» friend they got to rollerskate for free - i wanted to vomit)- i just want to follow Jesus - do nt know where to go but i do want to stay part of a church (for the sake of my children)- i saw somewhere on your blog that you too are in the hudson valley — are there any churches you can recommend that fall in line with your way of thinking?
If you are truthful with yourself and want to settle this «thing» about God... read Romans and then I would suggest the Gospel of John... I can truthfully say (and I once thought as you and many others who post on these «religious» blogs)... I am so believing in this Jesus dude that I really can not imagine living my life without Him.
The flood it's the most obvious example of what I am about to say.I may have v wore to you on another blog about this but I feel the need to say this again just In case Ivan thinking of someone else I asked and told about this.
But as I read through the material and listened to the instruction about how to set up a top - ranked blog and write posts that engage with readers, I kept thinking to myself, «I wish I had known this ten years ago when I started this blog.
Anyway, I think I have written some posts later on in my blog about what you say, that the prophets worked «secular» jobs (and the priests as well) to provide for their families.
And... I can think of many reasons why certain group of people might not be here, (a ssuming for the moment that your question is accurate), How about... why would «gays» want to be on a belief blog where there are Christians who constantly claim they are an abomination and going to burn in hell, and they are not worthy of God's love, unless they «change their sinning ways.»
I agree with him that if you have a blog, you might want to think about installing the Alexa extension to your browser.
I thought about the variety of faith backgrounds represented on this blog — Catholics, Lutherans, Baptists, Presbyterians, conservative evangelicals, agnostics, Mennonites, Methodists, Pentecostals, doubters, skeptics, fundamentalists, disenfranchised fundamentalists, religious scholars, and religious misfits — and all I could think to say was, «My blog attracts people who are in transition... or who have recently transitioned... from one way of approaching their faith to another.»
I've been thinking about that the last couple of days after getting sucked into one of the debates on this blog recently.
ok, ok, ok, i get it both sides think they are telling the truth there are no lyers here on this blogs only misinform people talking about two separate subjects yet thinking they are talking about the same thing the existence of god... one side believe the other doesn't what's wrong with that... sooner or later they'll changed their minds and one side will believe and the other won't so the arguement will forever be the same about two separate aguement on the same blog... but its definitely entertaining to read the comebacks... keep up the good work you all... its just as fun to read what the believer have to say as to what the nonebeliever have to say... after all it keeps all getting to know eachother better on what we believe right???
I think before I was on this blog I probably believe close to the same way, but I have tried to learn more about my own beliefs, plus about science and evolution, although science isnt really one of my best subjects.
I was writing blogs, reading blogs, commenting on blogs, commenting on comments, joining groups, creating groups, posting bulletins, reading bulletins, taking top ten quizzes that told the world what I thought about my favorite CDs, movies and what character I would be if I was living in the world of Buffy the Vampire Slayer!
He began to tell me all about the great day he'd had and for a moment, I caught myself thinking, «this would make such a great blog,» before suddenly catching myself.
The chapter on the Trinity profoundly changed the way I think about self - sacrifice and interdependence, particularly as a woman, so I knew the moment I finished the book I had to have the author on the blog.
In light of our conversation about Anne Frank yesterday, I thought I'd re-post this rather lengthy piece from 2008 (back when I thought people liked to read 1,000 - word blog posts) that details some of the biblical support for a more inclusive view of salvation.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z