Matthew Lang avatar

Matthew Lang

Family guy and web developer

Is blogging dead?

I've been asking that question myself for the last few weeks. I've been searching for a way to kickstart my own blogging habits again. I often wondered if it was worth the hassle.

I did a quick search for any other people asking the same question. I found a couple of posts that had two great reasons for why people blog.

Kati Stage's response on Medium is reminder that we're not all on Facebook. Despite the popularity of Facebook, there are still people searching for content outside of Facebook.

I see blogging as a way to get more reach. Still today, there are plenty of people who don’t have Facebook. Hard to believe, I know. However, I was one of them just 3 years ago. April 2013 I created my very first Facebook account at the age of 32.

Is Blogging Dead? Isn’t social media enough? by Kati Stage

Next is the response of Michelle Lyndon-Dykes posting on her site The Barefaced Chic:

We all started blogging for our own, specific reasons. Whether it be to make a living, for fun or simply because we have an absolute need to write. So write we do, and the written word never dies.

Blogging is Dead, Long Live Blogging by Michelle Lyndon-Dykes

These two posts were a nice reminder of why I blog and it is mostly for two reasons.

I want to write.

I want to write and I want to write more often. Writing code is one thing, but being able to string a series of words into readable sentences is difficult. Saying that I do enjoy it. And enjoying it is half the battle.

I want to reach.

Working on my own means that I don't have appraisals or a team manager monitoring my performance. It's through these rituals that others advance their career.

If I want to advance my career I have to attract new clients. I know this blog isn't tailored to web development but I do try to write about topics around my career. What I'm working on, how I'm doing it and what the results are. It's not all gold and I struggle as much as the next person with it, but I still try to write about it all the same.

You see to reach new clients I have to bring them in with something. That's what I hope to do with my writing.

So to answer the original question, blogging isn't dead. It's still a force to be reckoned with. And I hope it stays that way for a long time.

Instapaper acquired by Pinterest

I'm on the fence about this.

Products and companies get acquired all the time. The concern that many have is that Instapaper will eventually be pulled as a product. Not a crazy theory considering that many tech acquisations do this.

I'll keep using Instapaper until that day but there's room now for a similar product that will continue to run on it's own. Any takers?

The notes app Vesper has closed down. I wasn't a user of Vesper but I did give it a try just over a year ago.

I'm never happy to see a product close down that the people behind it have invested in and love using, but there's a lesson here that many people ignore.

You need revenue.

John Gruber's analysis of what went wrong is simple and a lesson for anyone thinking that pricing a product is just a matter of slapping a price on it.

What went wrong was very simple. We never made enough money. Why we didn’t make enough money, what we should have done differently to make more money — those are complex questions (which I’ll tackle below). But what actually sunk Vesper was not complicated. Even as a relatively popular app at a relatively high price (for iOS), revenue was never high enough.

Vesper, Adieu by John Gruber

Sad to see Vesper go, but hat tip to John for providing such a detailed breakdown of what went wrong and what the Vesper team should have done to generate revenue for the app. This is required reading for anyone getting in the apps game with an idea of their own.

The oldest trick in the book?

Or is it just common sense?

During his 15 minutes with each executive, Lee explained his simple method for achieving peak productivity:

  1. At the end of each workday, write down the six most important things you need to accomplish tomorrow. Do not write down more than six tasks.
  2. Prioritize those six items in order of their true importance.
  3. When you arrive tomorrow, concentrate only on the first task. Work until the first task is finished before moving on to the second task.
  4. Approach the rest of your list in the same fashion. At the end of the day, move any unfinished items to a new list of six tasks for the following day.
  5. Repeat this process every working day.

The strategy sounded simple, but Schwab and his executive team at Bethlehem Steel gave it a try. After three months, Schwab was so delighted with the progress his company had made that he called Lee into his office and wrote him a check for $25,000.

This 100-Year-Old To-Do List Hack Still Works Like A Charm by Fast Company