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Journalism Tips: Overcoming The Holiday Slowdown (AKA Stop Worrying About Traffic)

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Christmas and Chanukah just days away at this point, and as a music news writer you have no doubt noticed a major drop in the number of press releases and pitches hitting your inbox. Many PR firms, as well as many record labels, take off the last few weeks of the year, if not longer. It is a long-standing corporate tradition that is both a gift and a curse to blog owners, and so far this year seems no different. On the one hand, you have less emails to keep up with and far more time to relax. That said, the lack of breaking news almost always means a dip in traffic, which is the kind of thing that keeps most serious editors awake at night.

Though this certainly won’t prevent you from worrying about the longterm impact from the drop in traffic try reminding yourself when things get slow that these dips impact virtually everyone in music journalism. Culturally speaking, there is very little emphasis placed on entertainment news and the tour plans of emerging musicians around this time. We as Americans are conditioned to view the time immediately before Christmas, as well as the days leading into the new year, as something intended for family gatherings, get togethers with old friends, and generally strengthening the bonds within their individual communities. People are not reading your review the new album from Before Their Eyes because they do not care, but rather because they have been trained through years of advertising, lessons from parents, and countless other avenues to focus more attention on themselves and their immediate surroundings. You are likely the exact same way, even if you don’t notice it. The only difference between you and them is that you understand what it is like to rely on the number of unique clicks given to any one site or page in order to make it through the day without hating yourself.

I wish I could say that the holiday dip gets easier to handle with each passing year, but sometimes I believe the opposite may be true. When you first start out, the importance of day to day traffic is not as big as, say, how you perform over an entire month. You are happy that anyone is reading your work at all, or at least you should be, so dips come and go without much thought given to the reason for their occurrence. As you begin to build your professional profile however, the frustration you feel towards negative changes in traffic only continues to build. It is at that point that traffic becomes a true addiction for most bloggers, outpacing alcohol and prescription pills in the rate at which they can make or break a person’s day. You begin relying on numbers to justify your work rather than the feeling of accomplishment writing about music well typically provides. When that happens, and it hits almost everyone who finds the smallest bit of success, it is hard to not feel like the world is telling you they no longer care. You feel as if you are a hobby, or maybe even something less, and that the vast majority of internet users would be perfectly fine living life whether or not your site ever existed.

Of course, this is all big and lofty stuff that holds little real weight, but in the mind of a creative person trying to use their voice to share their vision or perspective of the world around them it can feel like a 10-ton boulder weighing on their shoulders all day long. The dip inn traffic sets off an internal struggle between the belief one is doing what they were put on this planet to do and the horrifying notion they may have chased a fruitless hobby to the point of no return. This is admittedly a selfish thought, but that is the way the mind works for many writers. They feel every change in traffic directly correlates to something that was first birthed in the deepest canals of their brain. Every success is because of them, but so is every failure, and allowing themselves to believe that is true can often worsen an already fragile sense of self worth. Writers typically believe they are good, even if they won’t admit it to others, but it is a lot easier to believe with data. When data says differently, that initial blind faith is hard to maintain.

My battles with the holiday traffic dip have been epic since day one. Like many young writers, I believed the easiest way to create more traffic was to have more posts. More content would equate to more unique readers, at least in my inexperienced mind, so I would spend long hours writing about artists – many of whom I did not even care for – who had for new or even recent updates that we had previously not run. I was a news madman, but for all my effort the results were typically about the same. A day with twenty articles and a day with forty articles would only be separated by about 500 uniques, which made the value of those extra twenty posts incredibly small. Ever worse, I knew how much time with family and those I love had been sacrificed in order for them to be created. I was losing on all fronts and feeling even worse about myself than I had just knowing the dip existed.

Two years ago, things started to change, but certainly not as fast as I might have hoped. Instead of driving myself insane by sacrificing large amounts of time for content that very few people would enjoy, regardless of that content’s quality, I decided to use the holiday slowdown as an opportunity to plan the year ahead. Admittedly I did not plan as well as I might have liked, but for the first time in over half a decade of blogging I had found an outlet for my frustrations that allowed me to constructively combat my own demons, as well as the drop in uniques, all while focusing on the one hobby/job/passion/interest I have carried the last decade of my life. It was not perfect by any means, but it was more productive and beneficial than any of my previous late December breakdowns, and I am hoping to improve upon those efforts in the weeks ahead while I set to planning what this blog will do in the new year.

When we started the month of December I had no plans to write this article, as we wrote a similar entry last year, but as I noticed students posting about final exams winding down and saw numerous friends begin complaining about traffic I had a change of heart. I saw myself in those were frustrated, and I wanted to reach out in hopes of easing their worried minds. Let me tell you right now that anyone thinking that the dip they see in traffic around this time is a direct result of something they did is wrong, and that perspective is coming from someone who has spent many holidays being hard on themselves for not producing stronger traffic during Christmas Break. You are worth more than you know, and so is the work you are doing to promote the art and artists you love. That is true whether or not your analytics surpasses your expectations, and it always will be as long as you do not allow yourself to get lost in data. You didn’t start writing to become obsessed with who is or is not reading you work, so don’t let it distract you now. Be the best writer you can possibly be and the rest will follow.

Believe me, young writers, when I tell you that the world has not forgotten about you. The audience you have built remains dedicated, your work remains consistent, and the support you have from the rest of the blogging community is as strong as it has ever been. Instead of letting the holiday slowdown throw you and your emotions for a loop, accept that traffic dips and focus your efforts on creating a more productive new year. Don’t waste time with stories no one will read or social media efforts that will find only minimal traction and look to the future. Build a content calendar, draft requests for 2016 album releases, apply to SXSW, and/or something else altogether. Whatever you do – stay positive. The world is not ending and your talent is not going unnoticed. People simply have other priorities right now, and in less than two weeks things will return more or less to normal. Just breathe.


James Shotwell is the Digital Marketing Coordinator for Haulix. He is also the Film Editor for Substream Magazine, host of the Inside Music podcast, and a ten-year music writing veteran. You should follow him on Twitter.

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Journalism Tips: Breaking Up With Analytics

Hello, everyone! Welcome to the one and only Journalism Tips column that will run this week. We have been working hard on diversifying our posting efforts, so beloved columns like this one are going to be running a little less frequently in immediate future, but hopefully in time you’ll understand why we made the changes we did.

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook

I spent the first five years of my writing career doing everything in my power to build the most read music blog in existence, and my way of gauging success almost always boiled down to the data gathered by Google Analytics. The number of unique visitors, page views, countries of origin, landing pages, bounce rates, and everything in between became the various scales by which I measured my wins and losses. Good days were only considered as such if we rose above a target traffic point, and bad days were anything that fell short. Feature content was only created if it played into what was trending in recent weeks, and if any attempts at originality-be it a potential recurring column or a random exclusive with a rising talent-failed to bring in a modest boost to traffic such ideas were never attempted again. After all, time is a previous commodity, and the efforts spent on creating that one piece of content could have drafted a dozen or more news posts that catered to a far larger and more diverse audience. Those posts wouldn’t necessarily have performed better, but at least they would be casting a greater net with which to hopefully reach out target market.

If we’re being completely honest, even at my peak I was about a hundred miles from reaching my original goal of building the greatest music site. My team and I never really deserved it, or at least not entirely, and it wasn’t until I was a few years out of college that I began to understand why. We weren’t creating content we were passionate about because we felt the things being said were not being expressed by anyone else, we were writing with the sole purpose of boosting our average monthly readership, and in doing so whoring ourselves out to whatever label, publicist, or artist needed promotion in the moment. We had very few original thoughts to share, yet we were churning out thirty to fifty posts any given day of the week. No one ever copy and pasted press releases in their entirety, but if you called the majority of our posting efforts a collection of press release summaries you would not be too far off base. 

To be fair, the place my team and I found ourselves in is not unlike the position many music blogs around the web are in at this very moment. The age of social media and the immediacy of sharing has lead to a huge upswing in the amount of content being created, but try as science might no one has been able to find a way to increase the length of any given day. Young writers and sites feel pressure to compete with the large amount of content being created by their peers because they believe not doing so will cause them to go unnoticed. They get into a mindset that believes more content means more opportunities to market, which in turn means a higher likelihood of clicks from new visitors and maybe, just maybe, those random clicks will become regular visitors as time goes on. Heck, they may even like your Facebook page, as if the number of Likes a site has in any ways coincides with the quality of their content.

Really though, who said anything about quality up to this point? People trapped in the analytics mindset are not concerned with quality as much as they are quantity, and that goes for content as much as it does the people who read it. They want more readers and more clicks, but they are not willing to build those numbers over time. Who has time? We live in the age of immediacy, and any digital effort worth its weight in coding knows you need to grow or you will shrivel and die on the third and fourth pages of Google search results. In order to keep digital irrelevance at bay, sites churn out post after post of regurgitated promotional phrasing in hopes some small fraction of a band’s fan base misses every other headline boasting similar media and clicks the link to their article instead. It’s a long shot, but that is why sites create so many different posts each day. They believe thirty attempts to reach thirty different groups of music fans are better and, for some reason, more rewarding than creating a genuine dialogue with one, three, or even five of these groups through original, thought-provoking writing.

What no one really says about Google Analytics, or any platform that measures site traffic for that matter, is that none of the technology associated with tracking web performance can gauge the happiness of the content creators. These tools can only give you data, and unless you are a robot that is not enough information to gauge the successfulness of any endeavor. You have to be happy with yourself first, as well as the work you are creating. If anyone tells you they got into music to be the best ever and they don’t need any sense of personal satisfaction to be content as long as the goal of being most popular is achieved they’re lying to both you and themselves. Success without personal satisfaction is a soul-draining experience that will leave you depressed and alone. No one wants to work with someone who is afraid to be themselves, especially if that person has never been confident enough in their beliefs to share them with the world. That’s the entire reason people start music blogs – to share their views and opinions with the world. To begin such a project for any other reason would just be foolish.

Before I decided to stop concerning myself with the numbers being reported through analytics tools and focus on the content I was creating I was fairly certain I would have to walk away from music forever before I turned 30. Years of generating hundreds of posts every month and seeing minimal growth, if any, had drained every bit of desire I had to continue pursuing writing. In truth, I had lost sight of the reason I got started in the first place. I had replaced my desire to be unique with my desire to be popular, and in doing so lost the fire for writing that initially lead me to launch my own site. I had become more concerned with how others viewed me, as well as how many of them gave me their time, than whether or not I was comfortable in my own skin. I didn’t care about being me or saying what I wanted to say, just that people wanted to read the words I wrote. 

Looking back now I know that running a site the way I did was a disservice to myself and my team, not to mention the people reading our work, and in the big scheme of things those efforts wasted a lot of time that could have been spent asking tough questions and taking worthwhile chances. I’m trying to make up for it now, but no amount of future writing can make up for the time and digital space wasted with articles that never really needed to exist in the first place, and knowing I’m responsible for such a large amount of largely useless content really bums me out. I made a promise to myself to create less disposable writing in 2015, and so far I like to think I’m staying true to my word. The number of posts we run on my site has dropped, as has our traffic, but the sense of pride felt by our entire team for the work being done is better than it has been in years. We wake each day excited for the work ahead, and we communicate regularly with one another to help develop and refine original ideas. When the day ends, no one clicks over to Analytics. We check in once a week to see how things performed, but otherwise we focus on supporting one another and believing in the content we are pushing out. We don’t run anything that feels like it wouldn’t be worth clicking tomorrow, and as a result we’ve seen a nice boom in engagement from readers. Turns out, if you give people something worth discussing, they often hang around and have a discussion. Who would have thought?

Everyone is going to have their ideas on what makes a music site thrive, but take it from me when I say obsessing over analytics will only lead you to ruin. The only way you are ever going to succeed in this business, let alone be able to live with yourself as a professional in entertainment, is if you learn to be comfortable being you. I hate to sound like your parents or a guidance counselor who cares a bit too much, but you and your opinions are what makes you that unique butterfly we all tell ourselves we are, even though we know most people are fairly similar. Expressing the thoughts and opinions that make you unique is the only way to gain a true following, and until you are able to recognize that you’ll be swinging in the dark hoping to stumble on click-worthy headlines. I’ve been there, and I wouldn’t wish that position on anyone with a serious passion for writing.

Be you, and be comfortable with expressing who you are. Everything else will follow in time.

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Journalism Tips: Overcoming The Holiday Slowdown Without Going Insane

Hello, everyone! I know many of you have the good fortune of not needing to attend school or show up to work this week, but that is not the case for everyone. The Haulix team, for instance, plans to work straight through the new year. We will take time off for Santa Claus, of course, but otherwise we will be working our days away. That may sound harsh to some, but truth be told it really doesn’t feel like work when you love what you’re doing. 

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

We are currently only a few short days away from the arrival of Christmas, and as a music news writer you have no doubt noticed a major drop in the number of press releases being hitting your inbox. Many PR firms, as well as many record labels, take the last week of the year off, if not longer. It is a long-standing corporate tradition that is both a gift and a curse to blog owners. On the one hand, you have less emails to keep up with and far more time to relax. That said, the lack of breaking news almost always means a dip in traffic for site owners.

While you are fighting the urge to scream about your drop in traffic, try reminding yourself that these dips impact virtually everyone in music journalism. Culturally speaking, there is very little emphasis placed on entertainment news and the tour plans of emerging musicians around this time. Americans are conditioned to view the time immediately before Christmas through the beginning of the new year as something intended for family gatherings, get togethers with old friends, and generally strengthening the bonds within their individual communities. People are not reading your review the new album from of D’Angelo because they do not care, but rather because they have been trained through years of advertising, lessons from parents, and countless other avenues to focus more attention on themselves and their immediate surroundings. You are likely the exact same way. The only difference is that you understand what it is like to rely on the number of unique clicks given to any one site or page in order to make it through the day without hating yourself.

I wish I could say that the holiday dip gets easier to handle with each passing year, but sometimes I believe the opposite may be true. When you first start out, the importance of day to day traffic is not as big as, say, how you perform over an entire month. You are happy that anyone is reading your work at all, or at least you should be. The frustration comes after you have established a voice and developed a healthy, perhaps even somewhat reliable monthly traffic welcoming tens or even hundreds of thusands of uniques. It is at that point that traffic becomes a true addiction for most bloggers, outpacing alcohol and prescription pills in the rate at which they can make or break a person’s day. When that happens, and it hits almost everyone who finds the smallest bit of success, it is hard to not feel like the world is telling you they no longer care. You are a hobby, or maybe even something less, and the vast majority of people would be perfectly fine living life whether or not your site ever existed.

This is all big and lofty stuff that holds little real weight, but in the mind of a creative person trying to use their voice to share their vision or perspective of the world around them it can feel like a 10-ton boulder weighing on their shoulders all day long. The dip inn traffic sets off an internal struggle between the belief one is doing what they were put on this planet to do and the horrifying notion they may have chased a fruitless hobby to the point of no return. This is admittedly a selfish thought, but that is the way the mind of many writers works. They feel every change in traffic or the frequency of comments directly correlates to something that was first birthed in the deepest canals of their brain. Every success is because of them and every failure too, which can often add to their sometimes fragile sense of self worth. They believe they are good, but it is a lot easier to believe with data. When data says differently, that initial blind faith is hard to maintain.

My battles with the holiday traffic dip have been epic since day one. Like many young writers, I believed the easiest way to create more traffic was to have more posts. More content would equate to more unique readers, at least in my inexperienced mind, so I would spend long hours writing about artists – many of whom I did not even care for – who had for new or even recent updates that we had previously not run. I was a news madman, but for all my effort the results were typically about the same. A day with twenty articles and a day with forty articles would only be separated by about 500 uniques, which made the value of those extra twenty posts incredibly small. Ever worse, I knew how much time with family and those I love had been sacrificed in order for them to be created. I was losing on all fronts and feeling even worse about myself than I had just knowing the dip existed.

Last year, things started to change, but certainly not as fast as I might have hoped. Instead of driving myself insane by sacrificing large amounts of time for content that very few people would enjoy, regardless of that content’s quality, I decided to use the holiday slowdown as an opportunity to plan the year ahead. Admittedly I did not plan as well as I might have liked, but for the first time in over half a decade of blogging I had found an outlet for my frustrations that allowed me to constructively combat my own demons, as well as the drop in uniques, all while focusing on the one hobby/job/passion/interest I have carried the last decade of my life. It was not perfect by any means, but it was more productive and beneficial than any of my previous late December breakdowns, and I am hoping to improve upon those efforts in the weeks ahead while I set to planning what this blog will do in the new year.

When we started the month of December I had no plans to write this article, but as I noticed students post about final exams winding down and I noticed close friends leaving the city with their sights set on wherever it is they call home I watched my analytics slowly begin to trend downward. The initial rush of self doubt hit me like it always has, but for the first time in my memory I was able to recognize it for what it was and not what my pessimistic sensibilities wanted to believe. I could see that the industry was slowing down, not interest in my work, and that I had not misstepped in any way. Still, I could not fight the urge to entertain the notion that if I did something different this year that maybe traffic would be different as well. I brainstormed a number of ideas, and even went as far as pitching a couple listicles to various publications, but before anyone got back to me I backed out of every opportunity and wrote this instead. To do anything else would be to repeat the same cycle yet again, only this time under the foolish guise of not accepting what I knew to be true.

Believe me, young writers, when I tell you that the world has not forgotten about you. The audience you have built remains dedicated, your work remains consistent, and the support you have from the rest of the blogging community is as strong as it has ever been. Instead of letting the holiday slowdown throw you and your emotions for a loop, accept that traffic dips and focus your efforts on creating a more productive new year. Don’t waste time with stories no one will read or social media efforts that will find only minimal traction and look to the future. Build a content calendar, draft requests for 2015 album releases, apply to SXSW, and/or something else altogether. Whatever you do – stay positive. The world is not ending and your talent is not going unnoticed. People simply have other priorities right now, and in less than two weeks things will return more or less to normal. Just breathe.

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