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How Much Does A Typical Blog Earn

There are lots of guides about how to make money blogging, but here's what makes this one different:

I've taken three different blogs to over $1 million per year. In fact, the blog you're reading right now has made a total of $6.7 million.

And in this post, I'm going to give you a step-by-step case study showing you exactly how I did it, starting from nothing, along with my step-by-step guide for beginners trying to get started.

Let's jump in.

7 Ways to Make Money Blogging (with Examples!)

  1. Online Courses and Workshops
  2. Books and Ebooks
  3. Affiliate Marketing
  4. Advertising
  5. Speaking Gigs
  6. Consulting/Coaching
  7. Selling Freelance Services

In a moment, I'm going to show you a general framework you can follow to start a profitable blog from scratch.

But first, let's jump into the specifics of how to make real money blogging, including real-world examples you can study and learn from.

Here are the top 7 awesome ways to make a good blogging income:

1. Online Courses and Workshops

Here at Smart Blogger, we make most of our income from online courses and workshops — over $1 million per year — but we are far from the only successful blog doing this. Most of the people making a lot of money from their blogs are doing it through online courses.

Ramit Sethi reportedly crossed $10 million dollars in annual revenue with his suite of premium courses:

Ramit Sethi - Premium Courses

And it's not only business or wealth-focused topics that are doing well. You can find successful blogs on just about any topic or niche monetizing with online courses. For instance, the popular interior designer Maria Killam has quite a few courses and workshops in her catalog:

Maria Killam - Courses and Workshops

Online courses and workshops can bring in one-time payments or, depending on your model, recurring income via subscriptions.

2. Books and Ebooks

Quite a few writers have parlayed their blogging success into a major publishing deal. Mark Manson, for instance, published a blog post called The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck in 2015. Millions of readers later, he got a book deal with Harper Collins and went on to sell over 3,000,000 copies in the US alone.

Mark Manson - The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck

Self-published books have also been successful. The most notable success story among bloggers is probably James Altucher's Choose Yourself, which is now sold over 500,000 copies:

James Altucher - Choose Yourself

3. Affiliate Marketing

If you'd like to create some passive income streams from your blog, one of the best choices is affiliate marketing — recommending the services, digital products, and physical products of other companies in exchange for a commission.

Here at Smart Blogger, we make more than $100,000 per year promoting affiliate products, most of that coming from casually recommending products we love like SiteGround (affiliate link) and Elementor (affiliate link).

But there are lots of other examples too. For instance, John Lee Dumas of EOFire made $710,835 in affiliate income last year. Digital Photography School has reportedly made over $500,000 in Amazon Associates commissions from promoting photography equipment:

Digital Photography School - Amazon Affiliates

With so many companies offering referral programs to help spread the word about their product or service, the number of different affiliate marketing opportunities is enormous.

Joining an affiliate network is one way to begin tapping into this revenue stream and to start earning extra income from your hard-earned organic traffic.

4. Advertising

Normally, we're not big fans of selling ads on your site as a monetization strategy. You need roughly a million visitors per year for the large ad networks to take you seriously, and affiliate marketing is almost always more profitable and just as passive.

That being said, some niches like recipes, fashion, and news are hard to monetize through many of the other methods mentioned here, and they get LOTS of page views. In that case, putting a few banner ads on your site can make sense as a supplementary income source.

For example, here's a screenshot of a 2016 income report from Share the Yummy:

Share the Yummy - Income Report

Normally, you make money by joining an ad network. Nearly anyone can join Google AdSense, for example, and you can later grow into more selective networks like Mediavine and AdThrive.

5. Speaking Gigs

If your blog takes off, and you start being recognized as an authority in your space, you might be surprised by how many invitations you get to speak at conferences. And it's amazingly profitable. I typically make a minimum of $10,000 per speech and it can go as high as $100,000 when you count product sales resulting from the speech.

Not bad for a 60-90 minute talk. 🙂

Ryan Deiss Testimonial

6. Consulting/Coaching

While this certainly isn't everyone's cup of tea, doing a bit of coaching or consulting is an online job that can earn you a surprisingly nice living, even when your audience is small. I rarely do consulting anymore, but the last time I did regularly, I charged $1,000 an hour with a six-month waiting list.

But I'm not the only one. Going back to Maria, again, she's been quite innovative in coming up with ways to do design consultations by photo and email, currently charging $1,275 per room:

Maria Killam - Consultations

You can make this work in almost any niche. You just need to know what you're doing and be confident in the value you are providing to clients.

7. Selling Freelance Services

The next step up from consulting is to actually do it for them.

Typically, you'll make more money freelancing than with anything else, but it's also the most draining and time-intensive. That being said, I've seen bloggers make six-figure incomes with no more than a few thousand readers on their blog, essentially using their blog as a lead mechanism to get clients.

It's so profitable, even if successful bloggers continue to do it. For example, Elna Cain continues to sell her freelance writing services:

Elna Cain - Freelance writing services

If you're a freelance writer, designer, photographer, programmer, or other service provider where your skills can be sold digitally instead of you having to be there in person, you might want to consider this income stream from day one. All you really need to get started is a contact form for clients to reach out to you.

Okay, now for the fun part. Let me show you the framework I used to become an honest-to-goodness millionaire…

If you're a new blogger starting from scratch with no traffic or influential friends, it's easy to wonder…

Is it reasonable for you to believe you can make money blogging?

For that matter, how do blogs even make money? Ads? Sponsored content? Sell products? Good luck? Or something else?

Well, let's take a look at exactly how I did it at Smart Blogger. Here's my complete step-by-step process for how to make money blogging:

1. Choose the Right Blogging Niche (a Profitable One)

Let's start with a little brutal truth, shall we?

  • Passion does not equal profit.
  • Neither does expertise.
  • Hard work doesn't guarantee anything either.

For example:

You can be the world's foremost expert on square-shaped tomatoes, wake up every morning with a burning passion to educate the public on their vast superiority to normal-shaped tomatoes, and work until your fingers bleed and your eyes fall out of your head, following all the right tactics for turning your new blog into a popular one, and…

You'll never have a chance in hell at making any amount of money.

Here's why:

  1. Nobody but you gives a damn about square tomatoes
  2. Even if they did care, they wouldn't spend any money

In other words, you need a large audience who buys things. Without that, nothing else matters. It's a prerequisite for everything else.

In the case of Smart Blogger, I noticed early on that bloggers buy lots of different things:

what bloggers buy

In fact, there are companies with $10 million+ per year of revenue in most of those categories. It's also a growing space with millions of people:

Blogger Statistics - 2014-2020

The only problem?

Loads of competition. Whether it be my previous employers Brian Clark or Neil Patel, my good friends over at Problogger, or the gazillion other "blogging about blogging" peeps infesting the social media space, everyone was intent on snagging a piece of the pie. They also had a several-year head start on me.

So, how did I compete? The honest answer:

2. Improve Your Content Skills

How to Make Money Blogging: The $6.7 Million Case Study

Embed This Infographic On Your Site

You've probably heard that "Content is king," and it's true… to an extent. A more accurate statement would be…

The Best Content Is King

If that's hard to understand, think about it this way:

Lots of bloggers sit down and think, "What will I write today?" They jot down some thoughts, doing their best to be helpful, original, and entertaining. If they're disciplined, they might even stick with it for a few months.

But it almost never works. Here are a few reasons why:

  • What you want to say isn't what other people want to read
  • You weren't using a proven content framework
  • It's not the best post ever published on the topic

Granted, it's not your fault. Until today, chances are no one ever told you about any of those requirements. You thought, to become a successful blogger, you just had to write interesting stuff and publish it.

No, grasshopper. No.

The truth is, having good ideas and powerful words isn't enough. You have to create the best content ever published on blog topics lots of people are interested in learning more about. And that brings us to the three levels of content creation:

  1. You know what blog content is popular in your niche, and you write exclusively about those topics
  2. You've mastered frameworks proven to make your content more popular (list post, how to post, etc.)
  3. Your content delivers more value to the reader than any other post published on that topic

You're probably thinking, "Geez. That sounds hard." And you're right, it is.

I personally spent about three years honing my skills by writing for other sites before I started my own blog. It doesn't have to take that long — I'm just a perfectionist, so I wanted to learn from the best people in my space.

How to Quit Your Job - Problogger

It worked, though. Nowadays, my posts get millions and millions of visitors, not because I know some special "secret," but because I'm really good at what I do.

Blogging is really no different than anything else. The more of a badass you are, the easier it is for you to make money online.

So you want to know how to make money blogging?

Become an awesome writer.

Then the next step is to…

3. Choose a Traffic Source (Google Search or Facebook)

When you're a newbie, getting traffic is confusing.

Should you focus on optimizing your keywords? Growing your Facebook page? Leaving comments on blogs? Answering questions on Quora? Being active in Facebook groups? Creating videos for your YouTube channel? Starting a popular podcast?

And so on.

There are a gazillion traffic tactics out there. Everybody says theirs is the best.

But here's the data:

referral traffic sources by topic
Source: Business Insider

Pretty much all the traffic for written content comes from either Google or Facebook. The rest of traffic sources combined don't even come close to competing with those two Goliaths.

So, how do you get them to send you a bunch of traffic?

One option is you can pay for it. They like that.

But chances are, you're reading about how to make money blogging because you don't want to pay for traffic. You want it for free, right?

Well, imagine this:

There's an arena where all the bloggers in your space go to compete for traffic. The number of other challengers you defeat determines the amount of traffic you receive.

In other words, getting traffic is a sport.

  • There are winners, and there are losers
  • To be good, you have to train
  • You need to study your opponents

There are actually two sports, and I'd bet you've heard of both of them: search engine optimization (SEO) and going viral on Facebook. Both take years (yes, I said years) of study to master, but you can start getting pretty decent traffic after just a few months of study and practice.

Which one should you focus on?

Well, here are two questions to guide you:

  • Is your topic something your friends and family regularly talk about on Facebook? Examples: pets, parenting, self-improvement, and health. If so, focus on playing the viral traffic sport.
  • Is your topic something people actively search for information about on Google? Examples: product reviews, specific questions they would ask an expert, how-to information. If so, focus on SEO.

For most topics, you can do both, but one or the other will be dominant. In that case, focus on whichever one is dominant.

In the blogging space, for example, stuff about writing and grammar occasionally goes viral on Facebook, because we love criticizing our relatives about their terrible English. On the other hand, you rarely talk with your family about blogging platforms, WordPress plugins, affiliate marketing, digital marketing, keyword research, or any other blogging topics.

You will, however, search for them on Google. Just as you would guess then, the blogging niche is heavily dominated by search. Here's a breakdown of Smart Blogger's traffic by source:

Smart Blogger's Traffic Breakdown by Source

The truth is, we pretty much ignore Facebook. The volume of traffic available there comes nowhere close to the volume of traffic available from search engines. So, we focus on Google.

I also spend WAY more time keeping up to date on SEO stuff than I do on social stuff. I'm a geek about it. Throw me in a room full of Google engineers, and I'd probably know more than half of them.

Not to imply I'm the best, though. I'm also competing against people like Darren Rowse, Amy Lynn Andrews, and Neil Patel. They're pretty freaking good too.

In time, I think I can be better, but who knows? That's why sports are fun. You never know who is going to win.

If you're good though, you'll always be in the "playoffs," for your space, and you'll get lots of traffic. Maybe not the most, but still plenty.

And then you can focus on how to…

4. Grow Your Email List with Pop Ups

Grow Your Email List with Pop-Ups

Chances are, you see pop ups as an annoyance.

They get in the way when you're trying to read. They ask you to hand over sensitive information like your name, email address, and phone number. Sometimes you have to deal with multiple pop ups on the same site, and it makes you feel hassled and uncared for.

And all that sucks. In my opinion, you have every right to be annoyed.

But here's the thing…

That's where the money comes from. The best predictor of the revenue for a money making blog is the size of their email list. Here's a breakdown of our revenue at Smart Blogger comparing revenue dollars from email to other sources.

The rule of thumb is you can expect to make $1 per subscriber per month. So, if you have 10,000 email subscribers, you should be able to make about $10,000 per month.

So obviously, growing your email list is a top priority. You might, however, feel conflicted about using pop ups. What are you supposed to do?

Here's a different way of looking at it:

If a visitor comes to your site and doesn't give you their email address, the chances of them returning are nearly zero. You'll never have another opportunity to help them.

If you believe your content is the best, and you believe you can help them over time, I believe you owe it to them to be as pushy as possible about staying in contact. In other words, not using a pop up is unethical. A little annoyance is a small price to pay for change.

And remember, that doesn't mean you have to be extremely pushy or spammy. You can absolutely use pop ups in authentic ways.

But you absolutely must use them. Assuming you want to make money, anyway.

5. Begin Monetizing with Affiliate Programs

Begin Monetizing with Affiliate Offers

So, you're operating in a profitable niche, and you have traffic and an email list. What next?

Lots of new bloggers jump into creating a course or book or community of some sort, but that's a mistake, in my opinion. Before you start selling things, you need concrete evidence those things are what people want to buy. Otherwise, you're risking wasting months or even years of your life trying to push a product no one wants.

The simplest way to obtain that evidence:

Affiliate programs.

By seeing what your audience buys from other people, you can get a much better sense of what they might want to buy from you. If you promote an affiliate product and it converts well, you should think about creating a similar product. If it doesn't convert well, you should probably move on.

In other words, affiliate program offers are a form of market research. As a bonus, you just so happen to get paid commissions on the products your customers buy in the process. So not only are you learning what your target audience wants to buy, but you're making money from your blog at the same time. Pretty sweet deal.

At Smart Blogger, I've tried lots of different offers. WordPress blog hosting, landing page tools, email marketing software, Amazon affiliate content links, WordPress themes, and half a dozen different types of high-quality courses. Since we sell courses, I pay the most attention to the results from those programs, and here are a couple of lessons:

  • End to end solutions sell best. Courses promising to take someone from knowing nothing to making money far outperformed the others. For instance, here's a screenshot showing us as the #1 affiliate for Danny Iny's Course Builder's Laboratory:

#1 affiliate Leaderboard

  • Tools with a clear connection to money making also sell better than the others. For instance, landing page builders. As proof, here's a screenshot of our earnings from promoting LeadPages:

LeadPages - Affiliate Commissions

By themselves, neither of those promotions really moved the needle on our revenue, but they did teach us useful lessons that went into creating Freedom Machine, which brings us to…

6. Develop a Unique Mechanism

Before you think about launching your own products or services, there's one essential point about human nature you need to understand:

Whenever anyone purchases anything, they expect to transition from where they are now (Point A) to where they want to be (Point B). For example…

  • When you buy pizza, you want to transition from being hungry and craving pizza (Point A) to tasting delicious pizza and feeling full (Point B).
  • When you hire a plumber, you want to transition from having a clogged, overflowing toilet (Point A) to having a normally functioning toilet (Point B).
  • When you buy a course on SEO, you want to transition from feeling bewildered and getting ignored by Google (Point A) to ranking for competitive terms and getting great blog traffic.

The success of a product ultimately depends on helping customers make those transitions. If the customer doesn't get to Point B, they typically view the experience as a failure.

So, here's the magic question:

What makes you better equipped to deliver that transition than your competitors?

The answer to that question is what content marketing expert Todd Brown calls your "unique mechanism." It's a little different from a "unique selling proposition," because it's not just something about you that's different. It's something about you or your method that makes you better able to help customers than anyone else.

For Freedom Machine, we have multiple unique mechanisms:

  1. Get published on Medium — a platform with more than 60 million active readers looking for great content
  2. Content frameworks developed behind the scenes at Smart Blogger to produce popular, valuable content
  3. A monetization methodology proven by our success with Smart Blogger

Combined, those unique mechanisms are EXTREMELY convincing at setting us up as the superior solution. Therefore, the product sells like hotcakes.

To be clear… it's not necessary to have 3 different unique mechanisms. Sometimes just one is all you need (i.e. fresh, hot pizza in 30 minutes or less). The core idea though is to make sure you are obviously far more capable than your competitors at delivering results.

Then all you have to do is…

7. Launch the Minimum Viable Funnel

Launch the Minimum Viable Funnel

Look around at successful entrepreneurs of any type, and you'll find a surprising trend:

They tend to sell their products before the product is created.

To most people, this sounds like insanity at best or a disturbing lack of ethics at worst. How could you possibly ask people to buy something that doesn't exist?

The answer:

It's the same principle as Kickstarter.

Kickstarter campaign

You create a fancy minimal sales funnel of some sort (in this case, just a simple sales page), tell people the product is coming soon, and then wait to see if enough people sign up to justify making the product. If they don't, you refund everyone's money and start over.

In other words, it's the final step in validating you have a viable product. The steps go like this:

  1. Identify demand by promoting affiliate products
  2. Find a unique mechanism that makes you clearly superior
  3. Test the demand for that unique mechanism with a quick and dirty launch before you create the product

In my case, the minimum viable funnel was a 90-minute webinar. The first time I did it, there was no product, no follow-up sequence, nothing. It was just a bare-bones test.

And it resulted in $126,000 in sales live on the webinar.

Seeing that $30,000 sales was my minimum for success, we went ahead and created the first version of the product live with students. About a year later, it's now approaching $1 million in sales.

That's also just one product. We have others, and we have still more in the research pipeline.

And guess what I would do if I had to start over again?

The exact same thing. It's not easy, it's not fast, it's not even that sexy, but it works.

Let's close with some questions and answers, shall we?

FAQ about How to Make Money Blogging

So, we've covered the basic process. Now let's step back for a moment and answer some of the questions I hear the most often:

Do bloggers make money?

I certainly do, but I don't think that's what you're asking. I think you're asking…

"Is it reasonable for me to learn how to make money blogging?"

The no BS answer:

It depends on how patient and persistent you are.

Starting a blog from scratch is just as difficult as starting a small business. For example, it requires the same time and effort as starting your own restaurant, software company, or accounting service. Yes, those businesses are wildly different, but the first few years are usually the same story: low income, lots of stress, big learning curve.

If you want a more concrete answer than that, we've found it takes even our smartest, most dedicated students 3-6 years to make enough money from blogging to quit their jobs. And that sounds like a long time, but so what? 3-6 years to be able to work from anywhere in the world, take a vacation whenever you want, and probably have passive income until the day you die?

Sounds like a pretty good deal to me.

How much money can you make from blogging?

The fact is, most bloggers make as much money as any other type of entrepreneur:

Nothing.

And it's not because there's no money in it. This blog makes more than $1 million per year, for God sakes, and it's nowhere close to the most profitable blog out there. Blogs like The Penny Hoarder, Moz, and Lifehacker power businesses worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

Penny Hoarder - Affiliate Marketing

So why aren't more bloggers rich?

The truth is, most people quit. They start a blog, write a post or two, realize it's hard work, and walk away.

But if you're patient and persistent?

You can make millions. I have. So have lots of other smart, dedicated entrepreneurs.

You just have to do the work. Consistently. For years.

Can you do that?

Then yeah, I think you can make six figures at least. Maybe more.

How do you make money blogging? (Or, How do bloggers make money?)

As I mentioned earlier, there 7 popular ways to make money blogging:

  1. Offering online courses and workshops
  2. Writing books and eBooks
  3. Affiliate marketing (recommending products and services in exchange for a commission)
  4. Blog ads
  5. Speaking at conferences
  6. Offering your expertise as a consultant or coach
  7. Selling freelance services such as writing, designing, and programming

Which is best for you will depend on your blog, your expertise, and your situation.

How do you start your own blog for free?

Lots of people say you can't. They tell you to buy a domain name, a web hosting account (Bluehost is one you see pushed a lot by influencers), and a premium WordPress theme.

But I think that's nonsense.

You can get started for free within five minutes on Medium. They also have over 60 million monthly readers, so you can get a lot of exposure there if you get featured.

Free Blogging on Medium

This great article walks you through that strategy, step-by-step.

Alternatively, you can write on WordPress.com, Linkedin, or any of the other platforms out there. It doesn't really matter. The point is, start writing and learning as soon as possible.

Once people start sharing your great, informative posts, and you begin to understand how everything works, then you can go through the trouble of setting up your own site, installing WordPress, and all that jazz. Until then though, it's just a headache you don't need.

What are the most popular blogging platforms?

WordPress is by far the most popular. No one else is even close.

But that doesn't mean it's the best for everyone. There are several blogging platforms you can try — and most of them are free.

As I mentioned earlier, I think Medium is a good place to start. You can also create your own blog with tools like Blogger, Squarespace, Wix, Joomla, and countless others.

What are the top blogs about how to make money blogging?

I'd like to think Smart Blogger is the best (and most comprehensive) site on the topic, but it's by no means the only one. Not all of these talk about how to make money blogging, but together, they give you a solid foundation:

  • Backlinko — Brian Dean doesn't talk much about how to make money blogging, but he's one of the top experts and educators in the world on SEO. What I love about his highly valuable content is how easy to understand it is, despite covering some incredibly complex topics. If you're a beginner blogger looking for DIY insights, prepare for a treat.
  • Digital Marketer: — In my opinion, my friends over at Digital Marketer are the best in the world at monetizing traffic. If you'd like to learn about marketing, list building, customer research, automation, or funnels, there's no better source.
  • Smart Passive Income — If you're interested in using your blog to build passive income, Pat Flynn is a master at showing you how to build a tiny little business that can support you and the lifestyle you want. Both his blog and podcast are excellent.

The Bottom Line about How to Make Money Blogging

Is it possible?

Absolutely, but only if you treat it like a blogging business.

Yes, you can start your blog as a side project. Yes, you can slowly grow it in the background. Yes, you can turn your blog into a source of passive, full-time income that eventually lets you quit your job, travel, spend a lot of time with your family, whatever you want to do.

But like anything worthwhile, it's hard work getting there.

You have to study. Practice. Master your craft. Put in a lot of work. Hustle.

If you love writing, I can't imagine a better business, though. Not only is blogging a great way to get your writing noticed, but it's a great way to connect with people around the world who need you, teach them what you know, and get paid pretty damn well in exchange.

There's never a day I regret dedicating myself to blogging. Never.

It's not just because of the money, either. It's because I also get to do what I love and help people at the same time.

What could be better than that?

How Much Does A Typical Blog Earn

Source: https://smartblogger.com/make-money-blogging/

Posted by: nelsonbluddre.blogspot.com

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