#BlogEveryDay – Bloggin’ ain’t easy

Bloggin’ ain’t easy.

And Rome wasn’t built in a day. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try. Back when I was in college and did this as a hobby, I was consolidating information and acting as a liaison for different organizations, allowing everyone to gather their information in one location.  I also had a lot more free time as a college student.  Now, I’m generating original content, or trying to create original content and I gotta say, this isn’t easy.

When you read blogs about how to be a blogger, they always say the same thing, “just write”.  Write about what tickles your whistle that day, form your theme over time and when you’ve reached a common topic, nail it down and master it.  When you learn something new, talk about it.  To that point I would like to say that teaching someone something you just learned is the best way to retain the information, it’s why when I’m learning a new board game, I play myself a few times, then play one other person, then expand to the full monty.  Usually, the other person is someone who is also skillful in learning new board games, really.  Learning how to learn to play board games is a real thing, it’s why I was able to and still am able to pick up magic the gathering tricks so quickly, memorizing draft strategies (I sucked last night because I wasn’t expecting dragon’s maze), and learning to poker face.

Contests are a great way to build a userbase.  Moreso, these days people offer up rewards for “stretch goals”, a concept that ran rampant on kickstarter.com.  Recently, one group that I follow on twitter and facebook said they were close to 10,000 Likes and everyone was up in arms when they weren’t giving out a prize, people need to calm down.  I hate to use the word entitlements, but cool your jets, just because you ‘liked’ something on facebook doesn’t mean you get a prize.

So to all these points I’ll give you what you came for, an itemized list of successful tips from someone else:

  1. Be consistent, don’t be afraid to write about “nothing” because writing on a normal schedule is the first step of blogging.  You won’t be able to get better if you have nothing to compare against.
  2. Offer your readers something, it doesn’t have to be physical, but sharing your expertise or even going so far as to become an expert so that you can share your experience is massive.
  3. Don’t forget your readers, if they comment on your blogs, answer their questions, even if it’s only for the first hour or day.  Being involved is a huge step towards building a community.
  4. Look good, which is a lot easier said than done.  If you were to go to Martha Stewart’s website, then go to reddit, you’re going to see a huge difference in design. Take chance, but still remember that disabled people use the web and keep them in mind: http://www.w3.org/standards/webdesign/accessibility.
  5. Reach out, do an interview with someone related to your blog, someone your readers and you care about.  Do you have a favorite Indie artist and always wondered how they got their start? Shoot them an email, the worst that could happen is that the email gets deleted.
  6. Don’t stop, challenge yourself, #BlogEveryDay if you have to.

#BlogEveryDay – Running on profits

Business is funny.  The initial investment always hurts.  The good news is that once you start making profits, you can run a business off of profits.  Back when I started selling warhammer bits on ebay, I went about $100 in the hole before I started slowly climbing out.  Eventually, I broke even and starting running off of my profits.  When I hit $0, I had about $70 worth of inventory laying around. I still have quite a bit that I’m going to start selling off, but all-in-all it took me about 2 months to break even.

That’s when I branched off and my friends convinced me to play magic the gathering.  And that’s worked out well for me because I’m able to turn a profit on that, too.  I wrote about luck last week and I’m still seeing plenty of that same luck these days.  Just a few days ago I pulled a Cavern of Souls, a rare land that’s only going to go up in value once Ravnica rotates out.  Same with my Ral Zareks, those didn’t sell at $23/ea., but prices are rebounding around $19/ea. and that’s not bad.

I recently purchased about $80 worth of removal spells for $55, auctions that ended either at 3AM or some other terrible time that not many people are around.  And I’m going to turn around and sell 3 of those cards to turn back those $55, returning myself to $0 on those, despite having 6 cards that are worth a lot of money (relatively speaking).

This is a lot of fun, buying and selling and yeah, it has it’s risks, but if you take every precaution you can, and make every effort to please the customer, you’re going to end up better than you started, and I’m okay with that.

#BlogEveryDay – Luck

I don’t know if people can be cursed, but I have strong evidence to support the following claim: bad luck exists.  My one friend never rolls a d20 well, he also can’t roll d6s with consistency.  Another friend can never get good Magic cards when he buys a box. My cousin? H can grab 20 dice and get 3 successes against ‘nids in 40k.

Random.org is quite possibly one of the best websites ever dreampt up. According to their schtick, they take a camera, point it at a dark space and analyze the static.  Static is random by nature.  Sure, we can probably guess at where static will appear, but to guess what form it will have would take more processing power than available to humans.

When I open a pack of MtG cards these days, I’m finding myself with better and better cards.  This is fine and dandy since I’m in sell mode, constantly trying to break even.  I fear there will come a day when I actually want to keep… I shouldn’t say that because I may keep these Ral Zareks I got in my booster box, Izzit seems like a fun guild to play.  I have 3 Pyrewilf Shamans that are tricky beasts, having something akin to flashback.  I also noticed, while sorting MtG cards that I have 2 Guttersnips, a neat little trick.

Either way, I must have rolled high Luck when I was born, and I love it.

#BlogEveryDuuuu-Duuu-Daaayyyyy: My brain hurts

I, uh, suffer from the occasional migraine.  Often they’re fairly debilitating, but many times, they go away fairly quickly.  Not this one. This one hit me at 9AM, before I was due to go to breakfast.  So we went out to brunch at Cheesecake Factory. Now, while I have my gripes about their Sunday Brunch not being served on days other than Sunday… tangent: despite there being no delimiter to the contrary, other than time constraints of which I met, the brunch should be served all weekend or the header should be adjusted to state Sunday Brunch is explicitly served on Sunday… I have to say that I very much enjoy their dishes. Cheesecake’s plates are often oversized and their waitstaff is usually superb.  I think over the course of my life I encountered 1 poor performer at this location.

I’m going to count this as a “review” of the Cheesecake Factory located at Menlo Park Mall in Edison, NJ; they get 4 out of 5 mountains of excellence, losing 1 mountain because I can never get a table on a Friday night (but hey, that’s where I live, stupid 500,000 people going out to dinner at the same time). Oh, and they have too much garlic in their scampy.

#BlogEveryDay – Famous People Never Learn

Steve Weatherford, I’m looking at you.  I’ll be completely honest, #WeatherfordWednesday is hilarious and I love when Steve is on Boomer & Carton, he’s truly a stand-up guy, interesting dude, and hell of a punter.  If he were to go into radio after his time with the NY Giants, I would go out of my way to listen to him, because that’s just how awesome he is.  Super Bowl Rings? Booyah, you helped make all those years when I suffered as NY Giants fan worth it.  Thank you for everything you do.

But famous people never learn. If you are going to try to make something a thing, make sure you register the website for that thing.  If you don’t, someone like me is going to take your thing and try to benefit from it.  Example A: WeatherfordWednesday.com, a website dedicated to showing who’s tweeting the hashtag #WeatherfordWednesday.  Now this might not seem like much, but if anyone else searches for this hashtag, they might stumble upon this url and be like, “Woah, this is awesome!” and that’s where I come in, monetizing your, in all honesty, pretty awesome thing. Nothing malicious, just trying to promote myself for a measly $20.