Many beginner bloggers set vague intentions like “I want more traffic” or “I’ll post more this month.” While those ambitions are great, they rarely lead to tangible progress. Growth in blogging comes from clarity, consistency, and purposeful goal-setting.
We faced this challenge early in the development of http://electronmagazine.com. Despite creating quality content, we weren’t seeing consistent growth. That’s when we decided to approach blogging like a business by setting realistic, structured monthly goals. In just a few months, we saw measurable improvements in traffic, SEO rankings, and reader engagement.
Here’s how you can apply this same strategy to your blog and create monthly goals that truly move the needle.
Step 1: Audit Your Current Performance
Before you set any goals, you need to understand where your blog currently stands.
Key areas to audit:
- Monthly traffic (Google Analytics)
- Average session duration and bounce rate
- Blog post frequency
- Email list growth
- Social media engagement
- Top-performing and underperforming posts
Action Tip: Use a dashboard like Google Data Studio to compile these metrics in one place. This allows for easier month-to-month tracking.
Step 2: Choose a Focus Area Each Month
Rather than trying to improve everything at once, pick one area of focus each month.
Examples of monthly focuses:
- Increase blog traffic by 15%
- Grow email subscribers by 200
- Publish 8 new blog posts
- Update 10 old articles for SEO
- Reach 5,000 impressions on Pinterest
This strategy helped us avoid burnout while keeping our blog’s growth momentum steady.
Step 3: Break Goals Into Weekly Milestones
Monthly goals can seem overwhelming. Breaking them into weekly chunks makes them actionable.
Example:
- Monthly Goal: Publish 8 blog posts
- Weekly Milestones: Write 2 posts/week, schedule content, optimize SEO, and promote on social media
Why this works:
- Creates accountability
- Makes it easier to track small wins
- Keeps you from procrastinating
Step 4: Use SMART Goals Framework
Avoid vague goals like “write more.” Instead, use the SMART goal formula:
- Specific – Clearly state what you want to achieve
- Measurable – Attach a number to it
- Achievable – Be realistic with your bandwidth
- Relevant – Align it with your blog’s purpose
- Time-bound – Give it a deadline
Example: “Grow email list by 150 subscribers in July through a free lead magnet and sidebar form.”
Step 5: Create a Monthly Blogging Dashboard
We built a simple Google Sheet that tracks:
- Monthly goals
- Weekly progress
- Notes or blockers
- Metrics from Google Analytics or Search Console
Bonus Tip: Set reminders at the beginning and end of each week to update this dashboard. This habit helps you stay aware of your goals and progress.
Step 6: Reflect and Adjust at the End of the Month
At the end of each month, analyze what worked and what didn’t.
Questions to ask yourself:
- Did I achieve my goals?
- What strategies worked best?
- What challenges got in the way?
- How can I improve next month?
Reflection helped us identify patterns. For example, we realized publishing three high-quality posts per week was more effective than daily lower-effort posts. That insight changed our entire publishing strategy.
Step 7: Use Visual Reminders to Stay Motivated
Having your goals visible keeps them top of mind.
Tools you can use:
- Sticky notes on your monitor
- Google Calendar reminders
- Notion dashboards
- Trello boards with goal cards
We used a simple whiteboard in our workspace listing each month’s focus goal. Crossing off each milestone created a sense of achievement that kept motivation high.
Step 8: Celebrate Small Wins
Blogging is a long-term game. Recognizing progress even minor helps maintain momentum.
Examples of small wins worth celebrating:
- Getting your first 100 email subscribers
- A blog post ranking on page 2 of Google
- Finishing all your content for the month
- Receiving a meaningful comment or share
Positive reinforcement makes blogging feel more rewarding and less like a chore.
Final Thoughts
Goal-setting doesn’t just help with planning; it brings purpose to every blog post, social share, and SEO tweak. When we began setting structured monthly goals on our blog, the change was noticeable. We weren’t just busy, we were productive.