-
Website
http://www.davidrisley.com/ -
Original page
http://www.davidrisley.com/2009/06/30/full-time-blogger-thoughts/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Shazzalive
16 comments · 3 points
-
ChuckRosseel
28 comments · 1 points
-
Leslie, The Freebie Guy
19 comments · 4 points
-
mikecrimmins
40 comments · 5 points
-
Mike CJ
70 comments · 23 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
69 Services & Resources For ProBloggers
18 hours ago · 9 comments
-
Is Twitter Becoming An Echo Chamber of Marketers?
2 days ago · 19 comments
-
4 Bloggers Doing It Right
5 days ago · 32 comments
-
What My 2-Year-Old Can Teach Us About Life
1 day ago · 7 comments
-
Is It Just Me? [Social Media Gripes]
1 week ago · 37 comments
-
69 Services & Resources For ProBloggers
Many will find the sound of this very attractive, but should realize that this is a firm commitment to working hard and long hours for many months while you are building your brand.
In the end however, the rewards realized with positioning yourself to work a few hours daily and to create projects of your choosing will make the initial uphill climb well worth it.
Many bloggers will come and go, particularly those who think this will be fast and easy, but in the end the blogosphere will be loaded with quality professionals.
Based on my experience up to this point I'm sure I'd enjoy doing it full time. My full time is 20 hours a week though :-)
For me blogging over at TonyTeegarden.com has become a fun place to let go and blog about what I want and still monetize it. Niche blogging can be fun however I believe it requires a lot more focus and effort.
I'm known for breaking the rules and blogging about what the hell I want when I want goes against the grain of blogging 101 but I still enjoy it and my readers do too.
Short answer? Would I go full time? Sure, as long as my blog developed me freedom and I wasn't a prisoner of it. Leverage and true freedom is based on systems. I believe a blog can do that if set up properly.
Great question. And for most people it really is the "dream." Problem is, once it goes from being a passion to source of income and a proper business, it also looses some of it's luster.
Not to mention, making money, real money, as in replace your current income, blog on the beach type money doesn't happen all that often.
I have talked to so called A-listers that confirm not making enough from their blogs to pay the bandwidth bill. So, while blogging for a living is a fantastic fantasy, reality says otherwise.
You of course, are an exception, but you don't only blog to make a living either if I am not mistaken, right?
The question is, at what point would I be comfortable enough with the income so that I'd be ok with dropping the security and benefits of a full time day job? My day job supplies a good number of benefits - health insurance, 401k/etc that i would have to provide for myself. I think I'd probably want to be making close to six figures before I made the leap.
David, what is your experience with that being self employed, as far as providing your own insurance, paying your estimated taxes, etc?
Why? The financial freedom is a compelling thought and something that inspires me to keep going. And I can't deny that it feels good to put my experiences and expertise out there, with hopes that it will help others.
p.s. thanks for making the SFB Blueprint available as audio!
But if you mean, "Would you replace your single job income with single blog or blogs only income, and fore go pursuing your other ideas?" Then no.
Writing my blog has been fun, and I am looking forward to it earning enogh money that I can replace my income and have more time to pursue my other ideas. But if I were forced to chose between my blog and all of the other ideas and projects that I have and want to start. The blogging would have to lose out. Thankfully, blogging makes no such demand, (unlike my current w-2 employeer), and so it will never need to be abandoned.
I also feel that I am a talented writer, and my reason for feeling this way is because I feel very comfortable comparing my writing with other more experienced writers. Unfortunately, I do not see myself accomplishing this goal any time soon because I have a well paying I.T. job and will require an equivalent yearly salary at a minimum before I can dedicate 100% of my time to blogging.
I never give up though. Wish me luck!!!
Also there may be a danger of developing complacency over time if blogging were one's sole occupation and income-stream, which would be noticed by the readers and result in a loss of traffic. I'm not saying this would definitely happen; but it may be a possibility.
After a little contemplation, that's a no. My passion is online research. Blogging is a side product of that, grown out of my attempt to help independent musicians learn to manage and promote themselves, what I learn about cleaning products and uses and research programs and applications. So to me my blog(s) are tools used to accomplish other goals than an income stream. Yes, I'd love it if they made money, of course. However, I'd use the extra free time after being able to stop cleaning apartments for a living to expand and accelerate my research education/career.
The freedom is fantastic. It's nice not having to set the alarm. It's nice being able to travel to see extended family when we (the wife and I) feel like it rather then having to work it out with work.
I also get to spend more quality time with our 15 month old daughter.
It took from May 2006 to March 2009 for me to be in a position to make that jump but it was well worth the wait.
To answer your question - I would rather go full-time with some niche sites or a big project or two. For me blogging doesn't quite push all the buttons, I'd rather dominate a particular niche :-) ....well, try to anyway!
Alex
Instead I am planning a lot of four- and five-figure website.
Then you can spread the risk.
So yes, I want the full time income and "be my own boss" upside, but I don't think it is the end goal to just trade one time investment for another. The object is to free up "work time" and convert it to "play time".
krissy knox
follow me on twitter:
http://twitter.com/iamkrissy
Jason