In Triple the number of blog posts you write and the follow-up to it, I gave some examples of how to triple the number of posts you write. This is the third post in that series, where I will tell you why I even think this is a good idea.
Again, I will turn to Art and Fear [affiliate link], because another lesson I learned from it is that the point of making art is because of the effect it has on the maker. Writing is how you become a writer, so doing it more will make you better, faster.
I prefer that reason to something like: the Google algorithm prefers it, or it’s easier to share on social media, or your AdSense revenue will go up if readers need to click around. There are no ads on this site, so I don’t care about CPM prices or page views. I would love for my SEO to be better or for more people to share my work, but the best way to do that is to just make a lot of good work.
I have no idea which posts will do better than others. I have written before that the highest traffic page from search is my UML Cheatsheet. The second highest had been my explanation of the tech that The Wizard of Oz used to make his ghostly head. Those two posts are over 10 years old. Lately, my review of the Supernote Manta has climbed to the top of that list. I would never have predicted that these would draw the most search traffic.
In Blog Posts, Randomness, and Optionality, I wrote that every post is a lottery ticket to some future benefit. I can’t predict what will happen to each one, but I know that having a lot is good.