Should you Start a Blog This Year?

Updated 15 Dec, 2023 | Blog, Marketing

Thinking of starting a blog, but not sure whether it’s worth the time, effort, and expense? In this article, I lay out the pros and cons of starting a blog and the situations that make it a good or bad idea. Without knowing your specific situation, I can’t recommend a course of action, but by the time you’ve finished this article, you’ll have some effective tools that will help you make the decision given your own unique circumstances. Continue reading below or listen to the audio.

Why do people start blogging?

a fancy blog

Why do people start blogging?

Let’s get one thing straight. Are you keen to start a blog so you can share your personal journal with the world? Or do you want to start a blog purely for the joy of writing or to hone your writing skills? I’m guessing not, because if your answer was ‘yes’, you wouldn’t need to read this article and you’d have started a blog already.

So, there are only really two reasons to start a blog:

  • To make money
  • To help people (or animals, or the environment etc.), in a truly altruistic fashion

Here on the K. M. Wade blog I focus on helping small businesses, so I’m going to zero in on the reasons small businesses start blogs:

  • The blog will generate an income by itself (through affiliate links or ads)
  • The blog won’t directly generate income but it’ll form part of a strategy to increase sales and so will indirectly generate income
  • It’s part of the way the business ‘gives back’ to society

The latter is very uncommon. So, here I’m going to focus on the first two reasons.

Why do people start blogging if making money is their primary motivation?

 A blog being fed into a printer with money coming out the other end

There are four main reasons a small business might start a blog if increasing revenue is the main goal:

  • Sell more products
  • Sell more services
  • Make money through affiliate marketing
  • Make money serving ads

You might do one of these or a combination.

Blogging helps brands (including individuals) sell their own products and services by:

  • Increasing awareness of the brand
  • Attracting members of the target audience via SEO
  • Proving the business’s people are experts in the industry
  • Proving the brand can solve the target market’s problems
  • Funnelling members of the target market to sales copy
  • Helping customers make the most out of the products and services they buy, so they keep coming back for more

When a blog is used for affiliate marketing, blogs help in exactly the same way, except they funnel members of the target market through to sales copy for another brand’s products and/or services.

Blogs do essentially the same thing for brands that want to make money by serving ads, except that some of the sales copy is displayed in (or around) the blog post and in many cases, the brand is paid for impressions and/or clicks instead of sales.

Each option offers advantages and disadvantages.

  • If you’re selling your own products and services, you get all the profits from the blog but you’ll experience all the disadvantages of selling your own products and services (e.g. managing inventory for physical products, fixing bugs for digital products)
  • If you’re an affiliate marketer, another brand gets most of the profits, but you don’t have to come up with your own product or service and you avoid the disadvantages of selling your own products and services
  • If you’re hosting ads, your success is more dependent on the quality of another brand’s advertising, but it’s also not dependent on the effectiveness of the other brand’s product descriptions and landing pages etc.

What are the potential benefits of having a blog?

a person typing random letters and words

I’ve just outlined some broad ways a blog can help brands sell products and services. The benefits don’t stop there. For instance, a blog can:

A person sits at a table with tented fingers and is surrounded by symbols of authority, including a gavel, a certification with a tick to prove its authenticity, and a book, which the person wrote. All this shows the authority of the person.

Increase domain authority

A high-quality blog is a great way of boosting the authority of an entire website in the eyes of Google. If you’re trying to sell products or services, having a high domain authority will improve the search rankings of your sales copy meaning more potential buyers may be exposed to your sales pitch. If your sales pitch is good and your product/service is good, this will boost your sales.

Facilitate audience engagement

A blog is a great way to start a conversation with your target audience no matter what your overall goals are. It’s also a great way to get your target audience emotionally engaged with your brand. Without audience buy-in, you can’t make changes that will improve anything. And if the members of your audience aren’t engaged with your brand, they’re less likely to buy from you let alone become loyal customers.

A person looking at his phone is surrounded with all the evidence of how their customers are engaging with them. This includes likes, follows, comments, and more.
A person looking at a question mark and a plus sign, followed by an equals sign and a lightbulb. Above that, a brain floats, filled with cogs. This symbolises how the person is solving problems.

Solve problems

A blog is a superb vehicle through which you can solve the problems the members of your target market face. If you can solve the problems faced by members of your target market with free content, they’ll trust you more and believe you can solve other problems that they face with your paid solutions.

Demonstrate expertise

This is another trust-building aspect of blogs. When you demonstrate how knowledgeable you are about the issues relevant to your industry and to your target audience, blog visitors can’t help but trust that your paid solutions are worthwhile too.

A woman pointing to a graph, surrounded by several other pieces of evidence to support her expertise.
A person with a shopping trolley, surrounded by symbols that show how the business is converting more and more shoppers into buyers.

Drive conversions

Copy is what actually makes people open their wallets or take action. Blog posts will contain a little copy, such as a call-to-action, an SEO title, and a meta description. But other than that, blog posts aren’t supposed to be sales pitches. As such, they won’t directly make your target market do what you want it to. But strategic blog posts can funnel the right people through to appropriate landing pages and product descriptions at the right time.

Inspire loyalty

High-quality blog posts that truly solve problems for the target audience will be highly valued by that audience. If you consistently provide valuable content, readers, clients and customers will keep coming back to you to solve their problems instead of investigating your competitors. And if you produce content that helps your audience get the most out of their purchases, they’ll love your products and services all the more and will be even more inclined to return for future purchases.

Three people giving each other high fives, with five star reviews, social media likes, hearts, and badges surrounding them. These are happy people from a small business who've won lots of loyal customers that love their products and services.
Happy person typing on a laptop with several symbols scattered around, including a megaphone, star, thumbs up, heart, and share icon. All this symbolises a person talking positiviely about a brand on the internet.

Encourage advocacy

Happy, loyal readers are much more likely to tell their acquaintances all about how awesome you are when compared with first-time customers. So, a blog is a great tool for encouraging advocacy, which is excellent free advertising.

Are there other ways of achieving those goals? Absolutely. Are there better ways of achieving those benefits? Maybe, maybe not. It depends on a whole bunch of variables which I’m going to go through in the rest of this article.

First up, let’s look at how worthwhile it is to have a blog.

Are blogs worth it?

A Laptop with a long piece of paper (that’s covered in text and images) laid over it

Given people generally start blogs because they want to make money, is blogging worth it? The short answer is, it can be, but it depends.

When we ask, ‘is it worth it to start a blog?’, we’re actually asking two questions: ‘is blogging profitable?’ and ‘are the profits worth the required effort?’.

The first is the easier question to answer so I’ll start with that one.

Is blogging profitable today?

 smartphone with a wallet app and some coins.

Not so long ago, the top blog in the world was estimated to make $41.6 million per month as a result of its blog content. Currently, the world’s highest-earning blogs are bringing in $20k or more per month.

So clearly a blog can be very profitable indeed.

But it can also be a complete waste of time.

In 2015, Buzzsumo and Moz did a study of 100,000 random pieces of content and found that 50% had been shared no more than eight times. If we extrapolate that, almost no one is sharing half of the content on the internet.

Now obviously some content gets traffic even if it’s not shared on social media etc. but that’s far from the norm. What we can gather from this, is that there are a lot of blogs out there that no one reads and which don’t make any money at all.

This is corroborated by a ProBlogger survey which revealed that nearly 40% of bloggers earn less than $10 per month from their blogs. Another survey by blogging.org found more than 80% of bloggers don’t even make $100 in total.

Why do so many blogs fail to make money?

 laptop showing a blog with a finger that’s pushing traffic and money away from the computer

There are lots of reasons why a blog might fail. Chief among them is not putting in the time and effort required to produce and promote regular, quality content that meets the needs of the target market.

Sometimes brands just don’t understand the value of promoting their content. They just publish posts and hope people will read them. This just doesn’t work — you have to promote and distribute blog posts, using SEO at a minimum and ideally with social media, email, or other promotion tools as well, if you want them to get lots of traffic.

Often though, it’s because the content is terrible or just doesn’t provide value to the intended audience.

As just one example, many people pick a topic and write 500 words about it then assume they’re done. But often that’s not enough space to cover the topic in full — or the topic isn’t narrow enough for that number of words.

Does anyone still read blogs?

Man reading a blog post

I sometimes get asked whether the reason so many blogs fail is that people just don’t read blog posts anymore. But that’s simply not the case.

Yes, people do still read blogs.

If you need evidence of that, you need only look to the fact that you’re currently reading a blog post to help you answer your question about whether it’s worth it for you to start a blog this year. But if that’s not enough evidence, studies show more than 75% of internet users read blogs regularly.

So the question you should really be asking is, with so many blogs out there already (more than 500 million in fact), will people read yours if you start one?

The simple answer to that is, if you produce a valuable blog that solves real problems faced by your target audience and you tell that target market that you’ve produced that content and you optimise your content for search engines, then yes, people will read your blog.

But it takes a lot of effort to produce blog posts that meet all those criteria.

Even the average blog post takes four hours to write, and posts are taking a larger investment of time each year. But bloggers who spend six or more hours creating a single post are 56% more likely to get better results and realise the benefits of blogging.

And so we come back to our question about whether the potential profit from your blog will be worth the effort.

Is the potential profit of a blog worth the effort?

Coins growing on a plant

Ok, so we’ve established that blogging can be profitable. But we also know that doesn’t necessarily mean the profits are worth the effort.

Now in the case of the top 10 blogs, it’s pretty clear the substantial profits they’re making are worth the investment they’re inputting. But if your blog were to result in you earning an extra profit of just $10 a month, you probably wouldn’t continue to blog.

The problem is, of course, that you won’t know whether your blog will be profitable before you start it. You can make estimates by, for example, researching the profitability of existing blogs in the niche you want to explore. But you cannot know in advance whether you’ll achieve the same level of profitability.

Having said that, brands that prioritise blogging are far more likely to generate a positive return on their investment — 13 times more likely as a matter of fact. Indeed 80% of bloggers get results. However, only 30% of bloggers report strong results from their blogging efforts.

So, really, your best bet is to go into blogging with a clear plan and a detailed understanding of what you need to do to produce a successful blog that drives sales. And then constantly evaluate whether your efforts are producing a decent profit and investigate how you can improve your results.

Is blogging still relevant in the 20s?

 Person examining their smartphone with a magnifying glass with several members of their audience liking, loving, or questioning their content.

Lots of people wonder if blogging is still relevant today. And really it all comes down to whether people find value in blogs. Given so many people read blogs, you’d think that would be obvious, but there’s always the chance people are reading blog posts in the vain hope of finding what they need.

Back in 2012, research showed 61% of people in the US had made a purchase because of something they found on a blog. So clearly, blogging was highly relevant in 2012. But is it still relevant today?

Let’s look at some recent stats:

Is it a good idea to start a blog?

illustration of a woman at her office table writing something.

So now we come back to our original question. We know blogging can be profitable, with effort, and we know it can absolutely be worth that effort. But should you start a blog now?

To answer that question, answer each of these smaller questions:

  1. What methods would you use to make money from your blog? Do you want to sell your own products/services or make money through affiliate marketing or ads?If you want to use Google AdSense, blogging might not be your best option as one study showed only 18% of bloggers earning over USD50,000/year make money using this method. Affiliate marketing and selling one’s own products and services are the two most popular ways high-income bloggers use to generate income from their blogs.
  2. Do you have enough resources to invest in creating a blog? There are two ways to look at this:a. Do you have enough time to invest in blogging? If you can’t devote 4-6 hours to each post, blogging might not be the best way to go unless you’re willing to pay other people to write for you.b. Can you afford to invest financially in blog content? Nearly half of high-income bloggers spend a minimum of USD300 or more on written blog content. Nearly 20% spend USD500 or more on written content for their blogs. At the time of writing, that’s roughly AUD740, GBP380, EUR450 or INR35,560. Add to that the fact that 54% have someone edit their work, and including 10+ images in each article is likely to help you get much better results, and you can see the costs associated with blogging can quickly add up. And that’s not even taking into consideration the costs of producing video and audio, or the cost of hosting, website maintenance, and all that jazz. If you can’t afford this level of investment, you’ll need to have plenty of time to invest in creating content yourself.
  3. Can you repurpose blog content into other formats that will boost your return on investment? If you can also use your blog posts for other purposes, having a blog will be more likely to be worth your while. Examples of things you could repurpose blog posts as include brochures, email newsletters, podcasts, and videos.
  4. Do you enjoy writing blog posts? If you don’t, you should only start a blog if you’re able to commission blog posts.
  5. Do members of your target market consume blog content? This will take a bit of research, but the answer to this question is ‘make or break’. After all, if your target audience doesn’t read blog posts, you’re not going to be able to produce a profitable blog. Two obvious examples of target markets that wouldn’t benefit from a blog are elderly people who can’t use the internet (if they can’t use the internet, they’re never going to see your blog) and vision-impaired people (yes they could use a screen reader, but if your entire target audience is visually impaired, wouldn’t it be better to provide content in an audio format — perhaps as a podcast?).

If you said ‘no’ to most or all of the questions, then a blog probably isn’t right for you. On the other hand, if you answered ‘yes’ to most or all of these questions, then starting a blog could be a good choice for you.

In that case, I recommend you go through the other options open to you to determine whether starting a blog is your best option. It may be that a blog will fit your needs but that another asset is a better fit.

If a blog seems like your best option, go ahead and start one up and then evaluable its performance to see if it helps you achieve your goals. If you do start a blog, be aware that blogging is a long-term project and so you’ll need to trial it for at least a year if you want to quantitatively assess how useful your blog is.

When you’re ready to write your first blog post, here’s an overview of seven types of blog posts that drive sales to generate sustainable business growth.

Or if you’re keen to start a blog but not wanted to create the posts, check out our blog post packages for a complete done-for-you solution.