RSS Is Quietly Making a Comeback (And Bloggers Should Care)
The protocol that everyone declared dead is experiencing a quiet resurgence. Turns out people actually do want to choose what they read.
16 articles
The protocol that everyone declared dead is experiencing a quiet resurgence. Turns out people actually do want to choose what they read.
In a world where AI can generate anything, the ability to think clearly and write well is becoming the rarest — and most valuable — professional skill.
Everyone launched a Substack in 2021. Five years later, the inboxes are full, the open rates are dropping, and the survivors are the ones who also have a blog.
A tweet lives for 49 minutes. A blog post lives for two years. If you're only posting on social media, you're building on sand.
You spent weeks building the perfect knowledge system. You've captured thousands of notes. So why haven't you published anything in months?
Researchers have been quietly proving what bloggers have felt for years: the act of writing reshapes how your brain processes and retains ideas.
You've changed your blog theme four times this year and published two posts. Let's talk about that.
Social media promised everyone a voice. It delivered everyone a feed. Now people are rediscovering that owning your own corner of the internet actually matters.
The no-code movement changed how we build apps. It's finally catching up to blogging, and the options are better than you'd expect.
You probably have Google Docs open right now. What if that tab was also your blog's CMS?
The bloggers winning right now aren't the ones with the fanciest setups. They're the ones who removed every obstacle between thinking and publishing.
Most blogs die within three months. Here's how to build one that lasts — by making it so easy you can't talk yourself out of it.
Forget keyword density, meta tag hacks, and SEO plugins with 47 settings. Here's what Google actually rewards now.
Getting clicks is easy. Getting people to read to the end and come back for more — that's the real game.
Social media rents you an audience. A blog lets you own one. Here's why that distinction matters more than ever.
You don't need a media team or a content budget. You need something to say and somewhere to say it.