The Steps Covered In This Blogging Guide
It’s nowhere near as difficult as setting up a website from scratch
(there’s very little technical ability needed here). In fact, there’s no
coding required by you. Good news, huh?
How to Start a Blog in 5 Steps:
There’s five main steps you need to do in order to start a blog. If you follow this guide exactly, you’ll have your own blog set up in 30 minutes or less.- Choose a great blog platform
- Choose a web host for your blog
- How to Set up a blog on your own domain
- Design your new blog
- Useful resources for blogging
So, we made it. Phew. Better late than never! So, without further ado, let’s jump into step 1.
Step 1 – Choose your preferred blogging platform
Choosing where you want to build blog is pretty much the first thing
you have to do. I’m going to take a leap and assume you’ve heard of
WordPress, and this is the platform I advocate. It’s massive.
It’s by far one of the biggest blogging platforms in the world, with
countless plugins and add-ons and almost infinite ways to design and
layout your blog.
There are more than 82 million active users of WordPress = a lot, basically.
There are other alternatives however, and they are listed below:
- Blogger – Definitely the next best thing to WordPress.
- Tumblr – Half social network, half blog. Interesting, and very simple to use.
Even though WordPress is bigger (and probably better) than those two, here are my reasons why you should still go with WordPress:
- Super easy set-up and is free to use
- Tons of free themes and layouts (I’m not kidding, there’s gazillions).
- There’s a massive support forum in case you get stuck (you won’t, but it’s nice to have it there if you need it).
- Your blog will be insanely fast and it’ll also look Functionality and form – perfect!
- People can interact with you easily. Your content can be shared, commented on, and so on.
Here’s an article about different blogging platforms (including WordPress), give it a read:
How to Choose a Blogging Platform – (updated for 2018)
Now, Step 2 (see, we’re moving fast now!)
Step 2 – Self-hosting or a free alternative?
Whoa, slow down there! This is the biggest decision you’ll have to
make before we go any further. You need to decide whether to pay for
your blog or grab a free one.
WordPress, Tumblr and Blogger all offer free blogs for anyone.
Awesome, right? It’s perfect for those of us who aren’t super serious
about blogging. But it does have downsides:
1) You won’t be able to get your OWN domain name
On a free blog, your blog’s web address (your URL) will be butt-ugly.
Like, really ugly. In short, create a free blog with any other the
above free blog services and it’ll look like this:
- yourblog.wordpress.com
- yourblog.blogspot.com
- yourblog.tumblr.com
I know, ugly right?
2) Limits and more limits
There are some limits to free blogs. You can’t fully monetize it, and
you don’t have the possibility to upload all those videos and images
you want to show everyone – it’s all limited. Worse still, you won’t
even have access to the free themes offered by WordPress.
3) You DON’T OWN your blog
It might sound silly at first, but you don’t actually own your blog.
It’s hosted on someone else’s web property and they can delete it if
they want so. They have done so in the past, and keep doing it in the
future. Which means all your hard work on your blog, all those countless
hours of writing blog posts might be vanished within seconds. Sad…
On the other hand, with a self-hosted blog on your own domain name – you
are the REAL owner of your blog. You’ll be able to name your blog
whatever you want, for example “YourName.com” or “YourAwesomeBlog.com.
You can end it with .com, .co.uk, .net, .org, or virtually any other web
suffix. Add to that unlimited bandwidth for videos, images and content
plus the free themes and you have a winning combo.
So how much is hosting and a domain name? Not as much as you’re
thinking, fortunately. It usually works out to about $5 to $10 per
month, depending on your hosting provider which is less than a couple of
coffees.
If you still have questions, here’s some further information for you to look at:
- Should I Choose a Hosted or Non-hosted Blogging Platform?
Step 3 – Start a blog on your own domain (if you chose self-hosting and a custom domain)
I’m going to push ahead based on the premise you’ve chosen WordPress, and if you haven’t, you should. Seriously, it’s the best.
If you’re still a little confused by what a self-hosted blog is, allow me to explain and how you can go about setting one up for yourself.
You’ll need to come up with a domain name you like and also choose a hosting company that can host your blog.
- Domain: The domain is basically the URL of your website. Examples: google.com (Google.com is the domain), Facebook.com (Facebook.com is the domain). See? Simple!
- Hosting: Hosting is basically the company that puts your website up on the internet so everyone else can see it. Everything will be saved on there. Think of it as a computer hard-drive on the internet where your blog will be saved.
Personally, I use iPage
(for my blog domain and hosting), and I’ve got nothing but good things
to say about it. It’s probably one of the cheapest (less than $2.50 per
month) hosting providers out there. A domain name will cost around
$10-15 a year, but with iPage they throw that in for free :). Big smiles
for that! They’re the providers I use for all of my blogs, including the one you’re reading right now.
If for any reason you don’t want to go with iPage, feel free to
choose your own hosting company. Most, if not all of them, should have a
“one-click” WordPress install solution on their admin panel.
That button will automatically install WordPress on your blog. Did I say it was simple or what?
All you need to do is sign up with iPage
(or your chosen provider), choose your hosting plan and a domain name
and look for the one-click WordPress install button on the admin panel.
WordPress essentials aren’t often needed, but I’d recommend whois
privacy (that will keep all your personal details private) and
definitely automated backups (this’ll save your website just in case
anything fails or disappears, so you won’t lose any or very little of
your blog).
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