My Blogging Story

My Story…

There was no master plan, no branding kit, and certainly no monetization strategy.

So, how do you make money from a blog?

#1. Essential oils & natural farm care

I never planned to sell oils, but readers kept asking what I used on cracked hands or mastitis-prone udders. Partnering with a transparent brand that third-party tests every batch lets me recommend products with a clear conscience. Education-heavy sales account for half my blog revenue because they deliver solutions, not just stuff.

#2. Digital products

E-books such as Barn-Boot Budgeting and courses like Sheep 101 in Seven Days transform scattered blog posts into organized road maps. People pay for speed and structure. The launch weeks are chaotic-think kidding season on caffeine…but royalties roll in long after the cart closes.

#3. Affiliate programs

If I rave about the broad fork that finally conquered our clay subsoil, I link to it. Should a reader buy, a small commission covers hosting fees. I stick to gear we personally abuse on the farm, plus curated bundles from fellow homesteaders.

#4. Ads

Display networks aren’t glamorous, yet the trickle offsets email software, camera upgrades, and plenty of chicken feed. I run minimal, speed-optimized ads so pages still load faster than a calf can escape an open gate.

How Do You Find the Time?

My Top 3 Tips for You

#1. Invest in the right tools

Skimping on a solid theme and reliable hosting cost me months of growth. Speed matters-for readers and for Google. Compress images, use a clean design, and learn basic photo editing so every hero shot pops.

#2. Be consistent

Algorithms love routine, and readers crave reliability. Whether it’s weekly fencing tutorials or monthly pantry audits, set a cadence you can actually maintain. Consistency extends to engagement: reply to comments, send newsletters even when open rates slump, and show up in your community groups.

#3. Don’t quit

You will experience ghost-town days when no one comments, pins, or purchases. Revisit your why. Mine is empowering families to produce one more item at home this year than they did last year. When metrics dip, that mission stays rock-solid. Remember: 30% of bloggers start earning within six months, but another 28% don’t reach full-time income until two years in. Tiny, repeated actions compound into large outcomes.

Putting it all together

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