How To Write Evergreen Content And Why You Should

How To Write Evergreen Blog Posts

Why should you write evergreen content? Because it can stay relevant for years.

If you are an author, you already know that your blog is vital to your chances of success. But writing blog posts every day and trying to be topical is a lot of hard work and very time-consuming.

If you write blog posts about what is news today, they will be of little or no value tomorrow. And let’s face it; a writer’s life is not always full of exciting day-to-day developments that you can use to entice blog readers on a daily basis.

The best way an author can blog is to write evergreen content by adopting a high-quality post approach.

What is evergreen content?

Think about evergreen trees that stay green and fresh all year round.

When you create content, some topics, such as fashion trends or news, can fade in a very short time.

A post on social media such as Twitter or Facebook has a visible life of only a few minutes.

On top of that, it is not readily searchable.

Once you post it, it’s lost in less than 15 minutes.

If you write a 600-word blog post about a current news topic, it will only have currency for a few days.

But then it will be of little interest after that.

Sure, Bing and Google might index it, but who searches for old news?

Evergreen articles, however, are about topics or subjects that remain relevant and will always be fresh for new blog visitors.

Sometimes it takes longer to write an evergreen blog post, but the effort is well worthwhile.

 

Evergreen content examples

An excellent example of a long-term evergreen blog post topic is a recipe.

It is highly evergreen, compared to the news of the death of a famous chef, which is news, but it is not evergreen by any means.

A recipe gives you an even better clue as to what ideas need to be about. It is the type of content that people will always want to reference or learn how to do.

Another classic evergreen approach is to write a quality how-to guide that answers a question that people will always ask.

For an author, content ideas could be questions such as when and how to use semi-colons.

Or, are single quotation marks better for ebooks than paperbacks? You could also explain how to design a book cover.

With a little keyword research, you can find topics that will be perfect for you to write evergreen content.

There will always be people looking for answers to these types of questions.

 

Should you date evergreen articles?

old date

Once you understand how to write different types of evergreen content for your blog, you will need to make some small changes to your blog design, especially what metadata you display.

A lot of bloggers hide all date stamps on blog posts and comments to help a post remain relevant.

Harsh Agrawal at Shoutmeloud wrote a case study about dates on blogs and the effect on search volume when removing or including them.

Blog readers prefer up-to-date, fresh content.

A date on your post showing that it is four years old could be a turn-off for readers.

Even though your content is still absolutely relevant to the reader, old dates in Google search can have negative consequences.

You could think about moving some of your best evergreen content from a post to a page.

Search engines might give web pages a little more weight than blog posts. In SEO terms, these are called your pillar posts.

 

Does anyone see your homepage and sidebars?

Although it’s only a suggestion, one other change you can make is to modify your homepage or landing page and sidebars.

Evergreen posts gain traffic from search engines and social media posts.

These all send readers directly to your blog post or page, so very few people will see your homepage.

However, your homepage probably includes a lot of your book promotion links.

You might need to move your promotion and advertising from your front page and sidebars and include them in your blog posts.

For mobile users, sidebars disappear to the far bottom well after your post.

If you consider that Internet traffic is now over 60% mobile, sidebars are becoming less relevant.

Think about how Google Ads are placed and use this type of ad space for your own promotion.

Perhaps a top banner or an ad box for one of your books within your text will get many more clicks than book links on your homepage or sidebars.

But before you make any radical changes to your site design, you should check Google Analytics.

Go to the Audience tab, then click Mobile and Overview.

You will see the percentage of traffic you get for desktop, mobile, and tablet.

If you have over 50% of mobile traffic, you might want to think about removing your sidebar.

But if the biggest percentage of your traffic is desktop, you can keep using it.

 

Promoting your evergreen content

With evergreen content, such as the recipe and punctuation examples, you can post them on social media over and over again to keep driving traffic to your site.

It’s a great content marketing strategy. No more scratching your head and hunting for social sharing ideas each day.

There’s no expiry date, so you can post it again in a week, in a month, or a year.

Yesterday, I had over 2,500 page views from Facebook alone for a 3-year-old piece of content.

That is what evergreen content in a specific niche can do for you.

If you can write 100 evergreen blog posts, you will have plenty of ammunition to keep firing at social media.

 

Keep your visitors reading

Once you attract a reader to your content, don’t let them escape too quickly.

When you write evergreen content, think about keeping a reader’s interest and attention.

You can add an internal link or two in your text to take the reader to a similar article on your blog to increase your page views per visit.

You should place one early in your content and one midway or towards the end.

Internal links within an article tend to work better than a group of related posts that follow an article.

Writing great evergreen blog posts takes a little longer than a typical “day in my life” post.

Most forms of evergreen content often involve doing your research.

But the time and effort are well worthwhile.

These posts will continue to be fresh and relevant to every new reader who visits your blog. And isn’t that the aim?

You want to build your author platform and attract new readers to your books.

If you are not an author, the tips in this article are still relevant to your business.

 

Related Reading: Dates On Evergreen Blog Posts – Why I Add Dates To My Articles

4 thoughts on “How To Write Evergreen Content And Why You Should”

  1. As far as removing your home page, I would internally link to it instead. People may or may not view it frequently, but as an author this is your conversion page, where you want people to go to buy your work and even be linked to your other work.

    Deleting it entirely takes away that landing page, and in my mind is a mistake.

    1. You can link to your homepage, Troy. But my reasoning for removing mine was because my Google Analytics data showed that less than 0.05% of my page views were for my home page. That’s why I changed my thinking. It’s a decision for each blogger to consider though.

  2. There seems to be a lot of encouragement to write blogs that are helpful or useful. How about humor? Humor posts would also fall into the evergreen category, provided the humor is not limited to only what is topical. Do you have any stats or feeling for how these blogs perform?

Comments are closed.

Scroll to Top