Tagged: blogging

Changes to my Posting Schedule

I’ve been thinking long and hard about my schedule for The Mad Reviewer and I’ve decided to change things up a bit.  So now my typical week will look like this:

Monday: An interview, article or a review (I’m going to aim for more interviews and articles)

Tuesday: Review

Wednesday: Review

Thursday: Review

Friday: A book blast for a blog tour or a review

Saturday: A discussion!

Sunday: Open threads for promotion, site announcements, a bonus discussion or other random posts

My regular readers will notice a couple of changes:

1.  I’m going to be aiming for writing more articles and/or doing more interviews with authors on Mondays.  I like writing articles and doing interviews but I don’t always have time to do them for my preferred Monday deadline.  However, I’m going to make time from now on to do these things.  Failing that, on Monday it will be a review of a book I want to highlight for the author.

2.  On Fridays my traffic is usually insanely slow (people have lives on Fridays?).  Believe it or not I’m actually signed up for several book tour sites and I would actually like to participate more as a tour host.  So that’s why I’m going to be confining all posts for book tours (except tour-related reviews) to Fridays.

3.  Yep, discussions will now be a regular Saturday feature.  You guys seem to love them and I love reading your responses, so this is going to be a regular thing.

So now I have a couple of questions for you guys related to my posting schedule:

1.  Would you like me to do a post on Sunday that talks about what you can expect for the week?  (It would sort of be like The Sunday Post meme.)

2.  Are there any features you don’t like?  Are there ones you do like but don’t see here?  I’m very open to suggestions.

Reader Request Week #1: Finding Time to Read and Review

Megan S. of Life’s Unfiltered Ramblings submitted this question for my first reader request week:

Hey Carrie, my question to you is how you are able to not only read and review as many books as you do, but how you obtain all your books and ebooks. Do you have a partnership with someone? Do you get free copies from the authors? Also, how do you find the time? Do you have another job that may get in the way?

I have a full-time job and find it hard to accomplish all that I want with my blog, and seeing yours so successful has had me reevaluate my time and break down everything to reach my goals. Thanks for the inspiration and support you’ve provided me in the past.

There are a lot of pretty good questions in here so I’ll do my best to address them all in two parts.

Part #1: Finding books.

Well, the answer is dependent on when you’re talking about in the history of my blog.  Prior to starting a book reviewing blog I actually had quite a fair collection of books, which made up something around 200 of my first reviews.  But what happened when those were exhausted?  Well obviously I continued buying books but I also tapped other sources for books: authors and publishers.

Authors and publishers are a great source of free books and all you have to do in return is provide an honest review.  When I had my review requests open I got several free books this way, but after I closed my requests I joined NetGalley.  NetGalley is an online book catalog that’s perfect for bloggers like me to have a somewhat sustainable book habit because all you do for a free book is give it an honest review (if you’re approved).  I also request specific titles from authors and publishers (mainly authors) through email.  To someone not in the book blogging community you’d be surprised at how willing people are to give things away for free at the promise of an honest review.

Basically most of my books now come from either NetGalley or publishers/authors that I request books from personally.

Part #2: Finding Time.

(Just so we’re clear: I don’t work full time in the winter because our little tourist town decreases in population by at least 50%.  Working in a lumber yard/hardware store/building company does have its downsides.  But since we’re talking about blogging while holding a full time job I’ll talk about how I manage things for the other half of the year.)

The question I encounter frequently on the blogosphere is how do bloggers find time to blog?  Well, the answer is simple: The 168 Principle.

The 168 Principle was taught to me by a very wise man and it basically goes like this: there are 168 hours in a week.  Ideally you spend about 56 of those sleeping, leaving you with 112 hours.  In the peak season I work about 48 hours a week (6 days a week, 8 hours a day).  That’s a fair bit but that still leaves me with 64 hours to do whatever I want.  You can get a lot done in 64 hours a week, believe me.

Not all of those spare 64 hours are devoted to reading or blogging but the main idea behind this principle is that if you want to find time for something, you can.  If you want to blog, blog.  If you want to read, read.  It’s all a matter of scheduling.  Almost everyone can find a spare hour every day to set aside for themselves if they really try.  For example, if you’re a writer there are plenty of writers that find they have no time to themselves during normal hours so they write late at night or get up extra early to write.  The same thing goes for bloggers.  If I know my week is going to be tight scheduling-wise, then I just stay up a little later and read.

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If this post raises a new question or you have another topic you’d like to see me cover for the 2014 Reader Request Week, head on over to this post and comment!

My question for you guys is: How do you manage your time?  Are some times of the year busier for you than others?  If you’re a book blogger, where do you get the majority of your books from?

The Best and Worst of February 2014

February just flew by in a cold haze for me.  Temperatures here in Saskatchewan have been even colder than usual, which hasn’t made walking to work any more pleasant.  Hopefully spring will come soon.

On the plus side, however, my stats were quite respectable in this shortened month.  I received a total of 5,688 views, which includes 3,593 unique views.  In addition to that, I’ve also welcomed 33 new followers.  It’s just a little more than half of the followers I welcomed in January but I’m still quite happy with my statistics, especially because of the severe lack of book reviews I’ve published this month.

So which posts were the most popular?

1.  Why Girls Hate Game of Thrones—A Rebuttal

2.  The Hunger Games and Ancient Rome

3.  How to Read 100 Pages in an Hour

4.  An Apology to Self-Published Writers

5.  WordPress, Stop the Arbitrary Suspensions

These are all articles this time around but as usual, none of them are surprising.  The only new one on my best 5 list is my rant to WordPress about their arbitrary suspension policy.  I was honestly touched by the concern many of my readers showed at my suspension and I’m glad there was no loss of followers and no significant decrease in statistics in the long-term.  Still, it was a pretty disturbing experience considering how much faith I’ve always put into this blogging platform.

Enough of my whining.  What were the five worst posts?

1.  The Mad Reviewer Reading Challenge Has Begun

2.  My Interview with Katie Hamstead

3.  The Best and Worst of September

4.  The Reckoning by Kelley Armstrong

5.  My Interview with Michelle A. Hansen

Oddly enough, this time around 2 of my worst posts were interviews.  My interviews have never been popular for whatever reason but I don’t recall them being on my worst list before.  Other than that, I’m really not all that surprised.  Two of the articles were at least a year old and the book review is definitely one of my older, not as well-written ones.  Looking back at some of the reviews I wrote in my first year I have to cringe.  They were pretty rough.

So how was your February?  Read anything interesting?

 

Discussion: Why do you blog?

Basically, this discussion is for my fellow bloggers who read this site.  ‘Why do you blog?’ is actually a question I get quite a bit in real life when I mention that I blog.  Most people wonder what the point is, what benefit I get out of writing for free.

The truth is I blog because a) I like sharing what I have to say with a like-minded audience and b) I like the benefits of being a book blogger with a fairly decent following (714 at the time of writing).  In regards to my first point, being in an extremely rural community with very few bookish people gets lonely.  That’s partly why I took to blogging: to connect with like-minded people, share recommendations and discuss books we have in common.  As for the second point, there are certain benefits to having a following over 500, mainly in regards to how many ARCs I get accepted for.  I haven’t had much time to actually request print ARCs from many publishers but pretty much all the ones I’ve requested I’ve been accepted for recently.  Basically, blogging fuels my reading habit.

What I want to know now is this: If you’re a blogger, why do you blog?  If you’re not a blogger do you think you would ever consider starting up your own blog?  Why?

The Best and Worst of January 2014

January was a record-breaking month for me.  Not only did I welcome 64 new followers (about two per day) my total views for one month record was shattered.  My previous record was 6,927 views in September 2012.  Now January 2014 is the record to beat with 8,228 views, including 5,133 unique views.  It may be a while before I break my record again but I’m very happy that my traffic has been consistently high this month.  So which articles brought people to my blog?

1.  Why Girls Hate Game of Thrones—A Rebuttal

2.  An Apology to Self-Published Writers

3.  The Hunger Games and Ancient Rome

4.  The Mad Reviewer Reading and Reviewing Challenge 2014 Sign Up

5.  How to Read 100 Pages in an Hour

We have a new article on the top 5!  Thanks to more than a little bit of help with Twitter promotion from Mark Lee of The Masquerade Crew my article ‘An Apology to Self-Published Writers’ went from getting two views in the entire month of December to climbing to the #2 slot this month with 834 views.  That, my friends, is the power of promotion.  Even with help it couldn’t beat out my Game of Thrones article but I was very pleased with the results of the Twitter promotion.  It also helped that people like you, my readers, spread the word about my reading challenge so I got 45 people to sign up this year.  That’s double the number that signed up last year.

So which articles were my worst this month?

1.  Discussion: Posting Schedules

2.  Switched by Amanda Hocking

3.  Cleopatra Confesses by Carolyn Meyer

4.  A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray

5.  Your Shameless Blogging Self-Promotion Thread

I’m not really too worried or annoyed at any of these appearing on my list of least popular articles.  They’re either outdated articles like the self-promotion thread and the discussion or they’re older books that aren’t really popular much anymore.  It’s not the end of the world because none of these have appeared on the bottom 5 list before and likely won’t for a while yet.

In January I had record-breaking stats, read some great new books and re-read several of my old favourites.  All in all, it was a pretty good month.  How was your January?