Do Not Delete
There’s something beautiful about sitting down and writing a blog post. Not for likes. Not for the algorithm. But because you actually have something to say. Something you’ve learned. Something that could help someone else.
That’s how I’ve always approached blogging.
Over the years, I’ve come to realize just how much I enjoy writing long-form content. Unlike social media, where I always struggle to keep it short and snappy, long-form content gives me space. Space to think, to explain, to reflect. To share the lessons I’ve learned in building and running a passion-led business—and the ones I’ve learned the hard way.
Pair that with my love for sharing what’s worked (or totally failed) in my own journey, and blogging became my favorite way to show up online. The kind of marketing that feels like storytelling. The kind that lets me connect with the right people for all the right reasons.
But I get it—there’s a lot of noise out there these days.
“Is blogging dead?”
I’ve heard that question more times than I can count. And here’s the truth: it depends on how you define blogging.
If you’re thinking of blogging as writing a post, sharing a few photos, and hoping someone stumbles across it… yeah, that kind of blogging might be on its way out.
But if you’re creating blog content that speaks directly to your ideal client? That answers their questions? That shows them you get what they’re going through and have a solution that can help?
Then blogging is alive and thriving. I think it will continue that way for a long time.
The Power of Evergreen Content
What I love about blogging is that it keeps working long after you hit publish.
A post I wrote 10 years ago still brings in traffic today. A blog that answers a specific question can rank in search results for years. And if you’re someone who wants to build a brand that lasts, blogging is one of the smartest marketing tools you have.
Unlike social media posts that disappear in 24 hours or get buried in the scroll, blogs stick around. They become part of your business’s foundation. They’re searchable. They’re shareable. And they’re yours.
The Rise of AI (and Why Blogging Still Matters More Than Ever)
Here’s something I’ve been thinking about a lot lately:
With AI tools becoming more integrated into how people search for and discover information, your blog content matters more than ever.
Why?
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Let’s talk about Pinterest ads—the not-so-secret weapon I’ve used to quietly and consistently scale my business without relying on algorithms or going viral. I know paid ads can feel a little intimidating (or a lot), especially if you’ve never dipped your toes into that world before. I used to feel the same way. Ads felt like something reserved for “big” businesses with teams and fancy strategies… until I realized Pinterest was playing by completely different rules.
If you’re new to Pinterest ads—or maybe you’ve heard a whisper about them and want to see what the buzz is really about—this post is for you. I’m going to walk you through exactly how Pinterest ads work, why they’re different from social media ads, and how they could be the sustainable traffic-driving, sales-generating strategy you’ve been looking for.
Let’s dive in.
What Makes Pinterest Ads So Different?
Here’s the thing most people don’t realize: Pinterest isn’t a social media platform—it’s a search engine.
Let that sink in for a second.
While Instagram and Facebook are built for interaction and connection, Pinterest is built for discovery. People come to Pinterest not to scroll for entertainment, but to find things.
To plan. To dream. To search for inspiration or a solution.
And that mindset changes everything when it comes to advertising.
Think of it like this: Pinterest is where people go with intention.
They’re already searching for ideas—recipes, outfit inspiration, home design, content strategies, wedding decor, business tips… and yes, even the exact products and services you offer.
So when your ad shows up on Pinterest, it doesn’t interrupt someone’s day like an Instagram ad might. Instead, it joins the journey they’re already on. It becomes part of their vision board. And that’s powerful.
So… How Do Pinterest Ads Actually Work?
Let’s break it down in the simplest way possible.
When you run a Pinterest ad, you’re essentially paying for your pin (a visual post) to show up in front of people who are searching for content like yours. Here’s what that process looks like:
1. Create a Pin (Ad Image or Video)
This is the creative part! You’ll upload an image or video—ideally something that’s scroll-stopping, helpful, and aligned with your brand. You can add a short headline and a link to your website, product, service, or blog post.
2. Choose Your Audience (AKA Targeting)
Here’s where the magic happens. Pinterest allows you to target based on keywords—the search terms your dream customer is typing in. This is what sets it apart from most social platforms. You can also target people who have:
Interacted with your website
Engaged with your pins
Or fit certain interests, locations, or demographics
You’re putting your content exactly where people are looki
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For the last several years, I’ve had the incredible privilege of helping over 12,000 passionate business owners with their content—whether through one-on-one client work or through Wordsmith, the platform I built from the ground up to help entrepreneurs like you show up and share what they do in a way that actually connects.
And here’s the truth: you can learn a lot when you’ve been behind the curtain that many times.
Whether it’s writing a single Instagram post or mapping out a full-blown yearly strategy, you start to see patterns. You start to see what works and what doesn’t. You start to see the difference between content that fills space and content that moves people.
You also start to see where entrepreneurs get stuck—and friend, it’s usually not because they don’t care enough. It’s usually because they’re wearing too many hats and trying to juggle everything on their own.
So today, I want to share a few lessons I’ve learned from writing content for hundreds (okay, thousands) of businesses—big and small, scrappy and seasoned, across nearly every industry you can imagine.
And more importantly, I want to tell you how all of that wisdom has been poured into Wordsmith—so that you can finally create content like a pro, even if you’re doing it all yourself.
Lesson #1: Great Content Isn’t Just Pretty Words
You’d be surprised how many people think great content means perfect grammar, the right buzzwords, or some clever hook.
But the best-performing content I’ve ever written? It’s not the one that sounds the fanciest. It’s the one that sounds like you.
Real connection comes from storytelling. From owning your voice and speaking directly to the person you want to help.
When I’m writing content—whether it’s for one of my premium clients (those are my full-service, high-touch marketing strategy clients)—or whether I’m crafting content for Wordsmith, I’m not trying to write like a copywriting robot.
I’m writing like a real person who understands the brand, the voice, the mission, and the heart behind it.
Because that’s what converts. Not the flash, but the feeling.
Lesson #2: The Most Ignored Content Is Often the Most Important
Want to know what type of content gets skipped the most?
It’s not the reels or the captions or the carousels. It’s the emails. The blog posts. The long-form content that feels like “too much work.”
But that’s also the content that does the heavy lifting in the long run.
Blog posts bring in organic traffic. Newsletters build real relationships. Strategic content that lives beyond 24 hours? That’s the stuff that creates sustainability.
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