Mine is a sci-fi story about an alien civilization based on how cells work in biology.
Mine is a personal blog about life as a Zimbabwean woman.
ContentCraftsman1 said:
Mine is a personal blog about life as a Zimbabwean woman.
That sounds interesting! What’s your take on personal finance, if you don’t mind me asking?
ContentCraftsman1 said:
Mine is a personal blog about life as a Zimbabwean woman.
That sounds interesting! What’s your take on personal finance, if you don’t mind me asking?
We really need more personal finance blogs in Africa. Check out clips from a show called ‘I BLEW IT’ on Mzansi Magic’s YouTube channel. It really shows how little financial literacy people have.
@ContentCraftsman1
In Kenya, the personal finance niche is packed. Tons of blogs and YouTube channels are already doing it. The competition is wild.
Abby said:
@ContentCraftsman1
In Kenya, the personal finance niche is packed. Tons of blogs and YouTube channels are already doing it. The competition is wild.
Maybe I should move there, learn from the competition, then bring it back home.
ContentCraftsman1 said:
Mine is a personal blog about life as a Zimbabwean woman.
Keep doing your thing!
ContentCraftsman1 said:
Mine is a personal blog about life as a Zimbabwean woman.
Keep doing your thing!
Thank you!
I actually have five blogs:
- My experience studying art in Italy
- A blog where I documented running every street in my city (over 1,000 miles, 194 posts!)
- My motorcycle camping blog (over 40,000 miles in 4 years)
- A baking blog where I make bread inspired by local craft beers
- An old travel blog from my search for the best IPA in the Pacific Northwest
@PostPundit
Why did you decide to separate them instead of putting them all in one place? Are any of them monetized? That’s a lot to manage!
Lenox said:
@PostPundit
Why did you decide to separate them instead of putting them all in one place? Are any of them monetized? That’s a lot to manage!
I don’t monetize my hobbies. Okay, maybe my art since I’ve sold some, but that’s not why I make it. The topics are really different, so I keep them separate. Some blogs go dormant too. My Italy blog was just for that one trip, mainly so my university could use it for recruiting, and parents could follow our adventure. (I turned 70 right after that trip, by the way!) The running blog ended once I finished the project. The motorcycle one is ongoing since I’m still riding.
Lenox said:
@PostPundit
Why did you decide to separate them instead of putting them all in one place? Are any of them monetized? That’s a lot to manage!
Honestly, I love keeping busy. I’ve been retired for 12 years, but I feel like I do more now than when I was working. Maybe I should start a blog about that.
I write about pop culture—comics, music, sports, movies, and more.
Mine is about personal finance and urban planning, mainly focused on my city.
My friend and I just finished high school, and we’ve been reflecting a lot. Some things we realized go beyond school—like how having lots of extracurriculars was kind of a flex because it meant you didn’t have to work or take care of siblings. We figured other people might find these thoughts interesting, so we started a blog to share them.
I write about honesty in digital marketing. I expose shady influencer practices and help brands figure out who they should actually work with.
It’s super niche, so traffic is low, but I’m tired of content creators lying to their audiences and making money off it. Hopefully, this will help companies be more careful.
I share fun facts.
I run two blogs—one about Liverpool FC and another with gaming guides for mobile war games like Evony and Lords Mobile.
I have a Danish food blog.
I write about folklore and fairy tales in tabletop RPGs, inspired by how Dungeons & Dragons was played in the ‘70s and ‘80s.