Lifestyle Blog Post Examples Example
Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 10:24 am
Lifestyle Blog Post Examples
Example 14. “Things I Love” Post: 10 Things I Love Sunday (A Beautiful Mess)
Screenshot of a blog post example from A Beautiful Mess (10 Things I Love Sunday)
Sharing a list of things you love can be an easy way to produce content for any kind of personal blog or lifestyle blog, from personal development blogs to interior design blogs. It helps you connect to your taiwan telephone number readers, lets you make product recommendations in a low-key way, and it’s also a type of post that doesn’t take much planning or research.
In this example, Emma Chapman shares 10 things she’s been enjoying during the previous week. It’s a casually-written post, in keeping with her usual blogging style: there aren’t subheadings, just a simple and short numbered list.
Tip: Emma finishes off this post with some links to other recent posts: a useful technique to use if you’re publishing a weekly roundup or weekly themed post like this one. Your reader will be deciding what to do next after reading your post—so make it easy for them to stick around on your blog by giving them some options!
Example 15. Question Post: What’s the Most Helpful Thing a Therapist Has Ever Told You? (Cup of Jo)
Screenshot of a blog post example from Cup of Jo (What’s the Most Helpful Thing a Therapist Has Ever Told You?)
This type of question post is the flip side of a “question from a reader” post. Instead of taking a reader’s question and answering it, you’re posing a question for your reader to answer. It’s a great fit for any bloggers who have an interactive and perhaps fairly informal blogging style, and works particularly well for lifestyle bloggers and personal bloggers.
In this example, Joanna Goddard is asking her readers to share the most helpful thing a therapist has ever told them. She introduces the topic by talking about the most helpful thing she heard from her therapist (“both things can be true”) and runs through some examples of this in her own life. Then, she opens up the post for readers to respond—and she has over 900 comments.
Tip: You could take this format even further by selecting some of the best reader responses to use in a future roundup post—make sure you credit people and link to their original comment (or their blog/website).
Example 14. “Things I Love” Post: 10 Things I Love Sunday (A Beautiful Mess)
Screenshot of a blog post example from A Beautiful Mess (10 Things I Love Sunday)
Sharing a list of things you love can be an easy way to produce content for any kind of personal blog or lifestyle blog, from personal development blogs to interior design blogs. It helps you connect to your taiwan telephone number readers, lets you make product recommendations in a low-key way, and it’s also a type of post that doesn’t take much planning or research.
In this example, Emma Chapman shares 10 things she’s been enjoying during the previous week. It’s a casually-written post, in keeping with her usual blogging style: there aren’t subheadings, just a simple and short numbered list.
Tip: Emma finishes off this post with some links to other recent posts: a useful technique to use if you’re publishing a weekly roundup or weekly themed post like this one. Your reader will be deciding what to do next after reading your post—so make it easy for them to stick around on your blog by giving them some options!
Example 15. Question Post: What’s the Most Helpful Thing a Therapist Has Ever Told You? (Cup of Jo)
Screenshot of a blog post example from Cup of Jo (What’s the Most Helpful Thing a Therapist Has Ever Told You?)
This type of question post is the flip side of a “question from a reader” post. Instead of taking a reader’s question and answering it, you’re posing a question for your reader to answer. It’s a great fit for any bloggers who have an interactive and perhaps fairly informal blogging style, and works particularly well for lifestyle bloggers and personal bloggers.
In this example, Joanna Goddard is asking her readers to share the most helpful thing a therapist has ever told them. She introduces the topic by talking about the most helpful thing she heard from her therapist (“both things can be true”) and runs through some examples of this in her own life. Then, she opens up the post for readers to respond—and she has over 900 comments.
Tip: You could take this format even further by selecting some of the best reader responses to use in a future roundup post—make sure you credit people and link to their original comment (or their blog/website).