Breaking a Blogging Slump: 5 tips

Ranty Runt's Rants

I gave myself permission to take a break from blogging in July of this year – I had crazy work and study commitments and I was working in a country area, 4 hours away from my home. So it was okay, in my mind, to not blog until mid – late August. The break was not meant to include the months of September, October and November. That was a bona-fide blogging slump, accompanied by a reading slump. I made no blog posts and read a book a month, instead of a book a week.

I forgot I was a book blogger – and I knew it was bad when I deleted the WordPress app from my phone. I was still using twitter, and luckily I started reading again, which lead me back to the blog.

Here are 5 ways that can help you break a blogging slump, if you find your blogging a little lackluster.

  1. Read blogs – give yourself half an hour to scroll through your ‘reader’ feed, or check in at bloglovin’, if you have one. If you spend 30 minutes reading what is happening in other people’s lives, and checkout their book enthusiasm; you will probably see something that inspires you, or something that gives you some ideas of what to do next.
  2. Join a challenge or set a goal – I joined the #12forXmas challenge, in which I attempt to read 12 books in December. Joining a challenge, especially a reading challenge, is a great way to break a slump because it gives you two types of content – posts about the challenge itself (eg. sign ups, progress posts) and books to review on your blog!
  3. Read a book you won’t resist blogging about – Be it a new release from your favourite author, a book that the book blogging community is currently raving about or a classic that you think you will hate. Choose a book to read and review that you know you will have opinions about – and then blog about it!
  4. Commit to blogging for 15 minutes – I’m a big fan in telling myself that I can do anything for 15 minutes, so make it your goal to write a draft of a blog post in 15 minutes. Tell yourself that after 15 minutes you have permission to walk away. I find that once I start typing and thinking, I’m happy to continue until I have something publishable.
  5. Talk to someone in real life about your blog – Take a few minutes to bring up your blogging with a friend or family member, or even a complete stranger. The best way of ensuring new content is to then give the URL of your blog to that person, it will inspire you to put something new on the blog so that your friend (family, stranger) doesn’t look up your blog and think you are a weirdo for talking up a blog you haven’t updated for months.

Whatever you do – once you have your mojo back, take advantage and get back into the swing of things again, get writing, get interacting and enjoy the process! Blogging is fun, but just like reading, you can go through productive and quiet times, it’s just important to have a few ideas on how to get back into the swing of things again.

Do you have any sure-fire ways of breaking a slump? Do you find that you have blogging/reading slumps at certain times of the year? Is it a cycle? Do you just burn out? Run out of ideas?

Other installments in Ranty Runt’s Rants:

The worst time to love a reader
My personal war on romance
Breaking a blogging slump

7 comments

  1. I’ve quit 3 blogs in the last 4 years, and the thing that always brings me back is #3 on your list: finding a book you can’t help but talk to people about.

    My advice to anyone thinking of quitting: if you read a book you LOVE but still have no desire to blog about it, then you should probably quit. If you feel the need to blog whenever you love a book, keep your blog going, but temper people’s expectations about your new blog schedule.

    Great post 🙂

    1. Yes! I think the whole point of book blogging is sharing our love for books- if you no longer want to share, or you no longer love books, there is no harm in ‘quitting’. Devote your time to something you do love!

      Great point about schedules- I sometimes feel like I need to post 3x a week or every day to be a ‘blogger’ but honestly, my schedule is what suits me and I shouldn’t decide how my blog is going to run based on other peoples.
      Thanks for the thoughtful comments- and for adding your thoughts. Much appreciated!

  2. What I do to never run out of blogging ideas is to stay curious. If I ever think of something that I could possibly could wrote about, I write it down in a notebook. Then when I need ideas, I’ll read through the notebook.

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