Pingback: New Beginnings: Celebrating One
Year of Travel Blogging The Adventures of AdventuRoj!
2014 was my first full
year of travel blogging and I covered quite a bit of ground.
Yesterday Liz wrote a nice piece about our first
year of travel blogging.
Now we've just reached our first
year of travel blogging and we've made it into the second stage which is exciting but frustrating.
There have been so many ups and downs during my first
year of travel blogging.
The Liebster Award is actually designed for new bloggers, I read somewhere that it is for people with less than 200 followers and awarded to people within their first
year of travel blogging.
All of the above and more in less that
a year of travel blogging!
So, now you have a little insight into what my first
year of travel blogging was like, now let's talk about the future?
So amen to 7
years of travel blogging.
Congrats on your 7
years of travel blogging!
I thought it was a good time for a reflective post then as I share 10 Lessons Learned From 7
Years of Travel Blogging.
After three
years of travel blogging and running our own social media channels we're both free and open to working for others in helping them with their own blogs, brands, or social media profiles.
Without a doubt, CoSchedule is one of the few tools I've encountered in my 3
years of travel blogging that have TRULY been a game changer.
Kirstie recently posted... 7 Things I've Learned from 7
Years of Travel Blogging
Here are some of the accomplishments I have earned in my 11
years of travel blogging:
After quite a few
years of travel blogging I met up with a couple of other travel bloggers for the first time just last year — and it was such a thrill!
But now we can share what we have learned over the past 9
years of travel blogging so you too can start a blog.
Not exact matches
Aaron Gowell, CEO
of SilverRail Technology, which is helping to build an online
travel platform for high - speed trains in Europe, decided to start
blogging in July
of this
year.
Of course there are other reasons for my sporadic blogging this year: a surprise new baby coming which completely disoriented us, a new book to finish writing (and I will share all about that in January), travelling and speaking all over North America, stewarding the message of Jesus Feminist throughout her first year of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
Of course there are other reasons for my sporadic
blogging this
year: a surprise new baby coming which completely disoriented us, a new book to finish writing (and I will share all about that in January),
travelling and speaking all over North America, stewarding the message
of Jesus Feminist throughout her first year of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
of Jesus Feminist throughout her first
year of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
of life, creating the Jesus Feminist collection with Imagine Goods, a trip to Haiti, new opportunities as a writer, three tinies at home with their own lives and drama and growth and change, remodelling parts
of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?
of our home, marriage, church, friends, life, work, laundry (oh, can we talk laundry?!)
It's been 5
years of food
blogging, recipe sharing and
traveling around finding great vegan eats!
for this reason I saw it as my duty as a ling term traveler to get into this business
of travel blogging... ive been going jist under a
year but I'm doing the fighting from within and it's only now as I'm seeing more and more blogs jist how awful and say off the mark the majority
of them are.
My husband and I have been
traveling and
blogging for 10
years, but have taken a hiatus the past
year or two due to some
of the very topics you touch on.
-LSB-...] Over the last couple
of years, the
travel blogging climate has morphed into something totally different.
I'm more than happy to share every detail about my
travels — I've gotten used to this after four
years of blogging and constant social media — but during my downtime at home, I usually keep pretty quiet.
I thought
travel blogging would make me happy, but after three
years of it consuming my life, I've noticed it becoming a chore.
Considering our plans
of working in another country next
year, chances are high that there'll be more solo
travels in store for me, and if I want to continue
blogging, I need to claim responsibility on this as well.
But my trip to Mumbai was three
years before I started
travel blogging and while I have over 200 pictures
of this amazing place on my camera, I don't have enough facts retained in my brain to write usefully about what I learned there — and it makes me sad every time one
of the pics flashes up on my screensaver.
After a
year of blogging, we got our invite to be panel speakers to talk about Travel Blogging during the World Tourism Forum in Istanbul
blogging, we got our invite to be panel speakers to talk about
Travel Blogging during the World Tourism Forum in Istanbul
Blogging during the World Tourism Forum in Istanbul, Turkey
Over the
years on my primary
travel blog, foXnoMad, I've written more than a few posts on the topic
of travel blogging.
Gear used for the business
of travel blogging would either be deductible as an expense (meaning that the entire cost would be taken in the
year the item was purchased) or depreciated (meaning that the cost would be spread across a few
years depending on what the IRS deems is the «useful life»
of that asset).
If you have been
blogging, writing or taking photos for less than 2
years or have less than 10,000 unique views per month to your website, I invite you to be a featured ATW (Aspiring
Travel Writer)
of the week.
My name is Anil Polat and I've been
travel blogging for over 3 years and some of my other blogs include foXnoMad, Tech Guide For Travel, and How To Travel With
travel blogging for over 3
years and some
of my other blogs include foXnoMad, Tech Guide For
Travel, and How To Travel With
Travel, and How To
Travel With
Travel With Pets.
One
of the youngest bloggers on the list, 21 -
year - old Sabina Trojanov is a fresh, funny, and much - needed voice in the
travel blogging world — I'm a big fan!
Blog Name & Start Date: ArnieandJoareontheGo.com &
Blogging 1
Year Bio: We are two boomers that love to share our
travel experiences hoping to inspire others to enjoy the thrill
of travel.
Our own Alexa ranking has recently been the lowest it has ever been in our four
years of blogging at Grantourismo and our PR recently dropped because we haven't been
blogging as much as we used to because we've been so busy doing our day jobs (
travel and food writers, and my husband's a photographer).
The Indian based duo have been
blogging for a little over two
years but
travelling together for over ten, so as you'd expect, they many great posts from all across the world where they not only share the story
of their
travels, but make sure they include super helpful tips and information along the way.
OurTravelPicks.com
travel experts» team is made up
of Juno Kim and Stephen Bugno, who have a combined experience
of more than 25
years of independent
travel and 15
years of travel writing and
blogging.
The title
of this post is «How to create a Successful
Travel Blog in your first
year of blogging.»
After
years of technical writing (aka consulting), I'm about to leap into
travel blogging and am sure it will be like freefalling....
A lot
of people start
travel blogging wondering «how» they will be able to compete with some
of the other top
travel blogs who are already established and have been plying their craft for
years.
I've been
travel blogging for almost a
year now and I'm sure I'll learn a lot
of new things thanks to your article — awesome!
Last
year, Jonathan and I decided to go sailing full - time and decided we're no longer
travel blogging to focus on the new chapter
of our life.
I've yet to pinpoint my brand, but that will come in time, and I have a more than just general idea already with about 4
years before I plan to take up the
travel blogging path on a permanent basis, and after a semi-early retirement from the military (can 34
years of service be interpreted as early — probably not?).
Travel Burnout, Health Issues and University Life After 6 years of full - time travel blogging, I officially had a case of what -LS
Travel Burnout, Health Issues and University Life After 6
years of full - time
travel blogging, I officially had a case of what -LS
travel blogging, I officially had a case
of what -LSB-...]
5
years, 5 times around the world, and 82 countries later, Robin has been writing,
blogging and TV hosting his way into the annals
of travel.
If there's one thing I learned from
blogging all these
years is the power
of networking, being part
of the larger
travel blogging community and making friends with so many others that are doing what you're doing.
We have been
blogging for close to a
year on our site where we focus on providing tips to others who want to fulfill their dreams
of travel, no matter what situation they are in.
All 7
of those
years of blogging, I've been actually
travelling, at least 5 - 6 new countries (and over 20 cities) per
year, with only a set home for 12 months
of that.
I followed this blog a few
years ago when I was starting out in the
travel blogging world, so you've been a source
of inspiration for me and my girlfriend.
I've been personally collecting
travel links on my site for the past 14 or so
years since I started that part
of my site and have amassed over 21,000 so far — but by far the most work I've put in on that is researching, visiting sites and then hand curating over 3,000 http://www.domainname.com, in English personal
travel blogs — all
of which were hand entered and approved — over the past 8
years since
travel blogging took off.