Similar Posts

2 Comments

  1. Hey girl!

    Found your post after googling “Is travel vlogging a saturated space?”. It really feels like it though. A lot of people are content-fatigued (me included). Your post has been really encouraging, thank you for that!

    Can I find out more how you started the blog? Most information I got off the internet seems contradictory and requires money. For example, BlueHost is recommended by lots of bloggers but in recent times received a lot of hate. Would love to know what the alternatives are. Feeling stumped on all the technical aspects. I just want to start writing.

    I’m still 23, haven’t had a full time job yet but already feeling like a desk job is not for me. Been spending my office time reading articles about how a sedentary life can kill you… went out for a walk around my office area and enviously watched tourists ooh and aah over landscapes that’s already routine for me. Would love to hear how you took the leap. And if you’re financing your hobby through other means at the moment.

    Cheers,
    Phoebe

    1. I’m glad you found it encouraging!

      I actually started it as an art/portfolio blog almost a decade ago, before I decided to wipe the slate clean and pivot as a travel blog some time around 2022 on squarespace. But I hated how limited I was design-wise, unless I paid $$$ for better themes/layouts. I was also unhappy with my then webhosting so I decided to just do another overhaul. Now I’m using KnownHost and WordPress.

      I recommend checking out KnownHost and I believe they have a hosting package that comes with a wordpress.org (important distinction from wordpress.com). Otherwise you can check out NixiHost or Nexcess if you’re in the US. WordPress more of a learning curve if you don’t have a lot of experience, but there’s more room for you to grow into it long-term. Plus, there’s a large community behind it that can help you out!

      If you’re not yet ready to financially commit, then just start writing anyway on Word/Google docs/your phone’s note app. The practice doesn’t hurt, and when you’re ready to have an actual blog, you have a backlog of blog posts you can roll out at your own pace!

      I honestly just started writing on whatever I felt I had a lot to talk about before I even settled on a niche, just so I wouldn’t get stuck in the “planning” step. I started posting when I had about 4-6 posts ready to go. I wasn’t sure yet how frequently I could post, but I just wanted to put it out there. Once you figure out your niche (if you haven’t yet), you can always quietly archive or delete posts from your experiment-phase – or keep it for posterity & inspiration! I’m currently still financing it on my own, since I haven’t been able to dedicate as much time on it I would like. But I’m working on trying to make it more self-sustaining.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *