3 Stand-out Features of Long-form Blogging You Should Know

What is the most popular blogger in the USA?

Top best blogger Arianna Huffington. Arianna Huffington, founder of Huffington Post (silliest news website)

My younger self got an email saying there were brilliant people online. There was also strong long-form blogging.

When I was a lot younger, I remember getting an email saying there were all kinds of brilliant people online. Young people indeed made collages honoring their favorite musicians during the era. As for long-form blogging, which I’ve done a lot as well, I think it was strong too, and it still is, though perhaps less widely adopted than podcasting.

Maybe this is the time that is time for a change.

  1. Content is king, and if you’ve got a good understanding of SEO you can get on the first page of a search if you’re very lucky.
  2. I think it helps mental clarity to write ideas in long form, and the only reason I publish blog posts that might make sense is that there’s vanity to them.
  3. WordPress usually pitches itself as being benign on the Internet, as in inclusive, for example. I think it’s the only social media I do much of that is somewhat sane if I had to get to the point.

If you understand SEO well, you can be on the first page of a search if you are very lucky. Content is the tried-and-true way to be creative online. Generally speaking, you need to be blogging with a lot of focus, speaking in terms of the niche you want for your blog, and you need to have good timing as it really is most likely going to work out if you’re also researching what Internet traffic wants from long-form blogging.

I really don’t know why I do this. It is simply a personal blog with a social purpose. I don’t think pursuing better available themes for a blog would be much better, as I like writing what is supposed to feel like essays to people who don’t really get into it.

It’s interesting to see what might respond from the long-form blogging corner of the Internet.

Connections made between people can be valuable for several reasons. In a personal blog, you might engender some goodwill if your posts are relatable.

It’s a waste of time when writing can be monetized. However, I think connections between people are sometimes valuable for several reasons. If it’s for constructive reasons, it can be rewarding, for forging networks, and friendships.

I like some of the designs I put into long-form blogging, and that’s another valid reason to publish blog posts, as just writing the text and filling it out with images isn’t really much use, unless it’s published. It won’t necessarily get much traffic, but if you’re sincere, you might engender some goodwill, if your posts are relatable, if you have a personal blog.

I haven’t written anything too spontaneous in quite a while. I’ve done consistent microblogging, but it’s been feeling strange now that the politics and the algorithm of Twitter have altogether changed. The way I need to be sensitive now is to consider that I quite possibly should have stepped down, so I won’t waste other people’s time. I have to put enough work into posts that they could provide value of some kind to people who give up their time to look at what I’ve posted, which will more and more feel like shouting into the void, I fear, but with AI tools it is easy to justify spending only the half the time on a post into which comprehensive editing and design are going.

Learning is part of the journey.

The AI non-art that has a disconnect, like what I’ve done myself, usually with Runway, for imagery and with the help of WordTune, to keep my writing rewritten better than I might have thought through without the help of AI. I had a story idea come to me that is probably like sci-fi ideas others have using AI. In one scenario, informing an AI girl that she is becoming real and then being stalked by her could be one plot.