Authority Blogger
Learn more about blog consulting services
Name:
Email:

Batch Blogging Tasks for Maximum Effeciency

594620_taking_a_break.jpgBatching is when you do many similar tasks in one concentrated session. It saves you tons of time and helps you keep your focus. David Allen of GTD fame and Timothy Ferriss of the 4-Hour Work Week are advocates of batching. I’ve been using it myself to great effectiveness to manage my schedule (I have a full time job and clients to help in addition to blogging here on Remarkablogger). Bunk Price over at Lifejotter (one of my favorite new blogs) recently wrote about batching, and that inspired me to write about batching for blogging activities.

Blogging activities to batch

Writing posts
Right now, this is the fourth post I’ve written today. It’s the weekend, and that’s when I write most of the posts for Remarkablogger. I future-publish them throughout the upcoming week. It only takes me about 2 - 4 hours a week this way. I also try to write a “spare” post every week so that I have a bank of drafts that all I have to do is publish if I get seriously pressed for time.

Reading feeds, starting drafts, and commenting
I see feed reading as a blogging activity, because commenting on other blogs is the following activity. Reading feeds provides me with quotes for my Overheard in the Blogosphere quote posts, as well as tons of ideas for other posts. You can’t batch inspiration and ideas are quickly forgotten, no matter how good they are. I write quick headlines and a couple words in a post draft to capture the idea for later.

If you really want to power through your feeds, I suggest using Google Reader. Set your display to only show you the headlines. Star the posts that seem interesting to you based on their headlines. Then hit the “Mark all as read” button. Be ruthless when you star a post. If there’s any doubt that you’ll really read it, leave it. It’s probably not important. Then, look at only the starred posts for inspiration or to leave comments on other blogs. I plow through well over a hundred feeds this way.

Commenting on other blogs is also something I do at this time, since this is the only time I’m going to be in my reader all day (this is how I prevent feed reading from turning into a distracting time sink). I spend 1 - 3 hours a day on this, which I don’t recommend if you aren’t a professional blogger, because it will not be as important for you.

You could argue this isn’t really batching if I’m doing 3 things, but because they all stem from consuming RSS feeds and spending concentrated time in the feed reader, it makes sense to me to group them together. Your mileage (or for those of you outside the US, kilometerage :D ) may vary.

What not to batch

You can’t and shouldn’t batch everything:

  • Batching post writing doesn’t work for those of you who run news blogs or need to post time-sensitive information.
  • You have to think carefully about whether or not you want to batch responding to comments on your blog. Leaving someone hanging for too long could be bad for your image and bad for business. If people don’t see their comments appearing in a reasonable amount of time, they will stop commenting and that will make your blog look dead.
  • If you employ comment moderation, what can happen if you batch approving them is that instead of a conversation, you get a bunch of similar first reactions.

Why Batching Works

Batching works for me because the time and effort costs involved in ramping up to speed on a task and then shifting back down to change focus on another, different task doesn’t have to be repeated. When I’m doing a batch of similar tasks, I only ramp up and shift down once. Working on many similar tasks means I get up to speed, establish a good rhythm, and achieve high levels of intense concentration. Another way to think of this is getting “in the zone.” When you are in the zone, you can do some of your best work.

My Batching isn’t Yours

I can only offer what works for me. Batching my blogging tasks in the way I’ve described above works for me, but it may not work for you. You might have a different combination of tasks that make sense and work for you. Experiment and try different batching combinations to find your perfect combo. You might have ADD and batching would never work for you (no, I’m not kidding). Batching also might make something you’re doing for fun feel too much like work. Find what works for you. Time and attention are our most precious resources. Use them wisely.

Online Business School

7 Comments

  1. Posted October 31, 2007 at 3:34 pm | Permalink

    Michael - YES! This is exactly what I am trying to set-up myself. I am in the process of writing posts in advance so I have some breather room. But it really is faster in the long run. Commenting is the same thing. I can find that I can spend hours trolling through my reader and only leave a couple of comments. Not the best use of time. I am going to devote 1 hour a day for serious hard core commenting and see how that works out. Will tweak as needed. - Ashley

  2. Posted October 31, 2007 at 9:35 pm | Permalink

    Michael - I got some great ideas here to increase my efficiency. I’m not a professional blogger but must admit sometimes it feels like it since blogging has become such a big part of real estate today. Thanks for a new game plan. - Cyndee Haydon

  3. Posted November 2, 2007 at 5:02 am | Permalink

    Wonderful post Martin. If anyone would know the ideals of batching blogging tasks, I would certainly think you the individual for the job.

  4. Posted November 2, 2007 at 6:51 am | Permalink

    I also have a post about how to do batch for wordpress blogging, but don’t tell I didn’t warn you, batching for blogging might actually hurt the your conversation with your visitors. Anyway, it’s really give me more piece of mind and concentration:)

  5. Michael Martine
    Posted November 2, 2007 at 7:40 am | Permalink

    Ken, thanks for that link — you can future-publish while you’re away, but you can’t respond to comments, unfortunately, as you noticed. Future-publishing is one component of my overall batching strategy. I noticed in your post it seemed you weren’t quite sure what the word meant. A batch is a group of similar items, such as a batch of ingredients or a batch of baked muffins. Batching as a verb means to group similar items together.

  6. Posted November 12, 2007 at 11:52 am | Permalink

    Thanks for shareing your batching ideas. I have to admit that I’ve not tried Google Reader (tried Bloglines first, then switched to Netvibes, which seemed to update more quickly). I think I’ll give it a whirl.

  7. Posted January 15, 2008 at 6:29 pm | Permalink

    Google Reader is where it is at.. I need to be more ruthless, then more dedicated.

Post a Comment

Comment Policy:
No personal attacks - play nice.
No keywords or site names in the name box - Use your real name. Branding/identification words are okay.

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*