The Qwertyrash Blogs

A bit of everything: blogging, technology, writing, musings, sport and humor

Blog help: Are you Productive or Active?

Following on from my piece the other day about over informing, which closed with the lines:

Reading is activity
Writing is productivity

Tonight I noticed myself reading blogs and pages that weren’t relevant to my main tasks for tonight. The information was useful to know - of course.

But years ago, I learned that there is a difference between productivity and activity. Productivity either makes you money, or directly has the potential too. Anything else is activity.

In BlogLand, productivity is writing posts and promoting your site. I’ll let you say putting ads on it, but that’s all. All else is activity.

Common activity includes: Reading other blogs, commenting on other blogs (ok it does leave a link so it does have a slight productive edge), tweaking your blog, and I’m sure you can think of many more.

I’ve seen blogs with very little advertising that are raking in the money. Because the simple fact is, it’s your writing that makes you money. And the more time you commit to writing, the higher quality your posts will be.

It’s really easy to spend so much time on activity, that you push the writing back until late at night when you’re too tired to do a decent job of it.

So today’s tip - and one I need to listen to too - is don’t waste writing time on activity.

productivityactivityblog tipswriting


Back to School

Tomorrow I’m back at school. Rather excited because in this semester we really start to get our hands dirty, doing Non-Fiction & Journalism; Scriptwriting; Short Fiction; and more Grammar.Hopefully I will be able to balance all my daily objectives.


Read article...

21 days to form a habit?

Some nong somewhere reckons it takes 21 days to form a habit. That is, if you do something for 21 days straight, it will become a habit.


Read article...

Blog help: Are you over informed?

In an interesting game of blog ping-pong, Richard at Shards of Consciousness posted an article inspired by one of mine and now I’m posting one inspired by that one of his. Confused? Richard says “I read once that 5 - 10 minutes of reading should be balanced by 30 - 60 minutes of thought about what you read.”


Read article...

« Previous Page