How to start a small business blog that doesn’t end up in that graveyard is mostly a planning problem, not a writing problem. The hard part isn’t producing content. It’s deciding what to produce and committing to a workflow that survives the first three months.
I write blog content for clients in addition to my own, and the patterns that work versus the ones that don’t are remarkably consistent. Here’s the actual playbook.
Why Most Small Business Blogs Fail
Three reasons, in order:
- No clear answer to “who is this for?” The blog reads like it was written for everyone. Generic posts about “5 Tips for Better Customer Service” go nowhere because nobody searches for that, and if they did, they wouldn’t pick your version over the millions of identical articles.
- No publishing rhythm. One post a month is fine if it’s actually one post a month for 18 straight months. Most blogs do four posts in eight weeks and then nothing. Search engines and readers both punish the irregular.
- No connection to actual business outcomes. The blog exists in a vacuum. There’s no internal linking, no clear path from a blog post to a service page, no measurable funnel. So when leadership reviews the time spent, they cut it.
Fix those three things and you have a blog that works. Skip them and you have a graveyard.
The Minimum Viable Blog Workflow
Forget the editorial calendar tools. The minimum viable workflow for a small business blog is:
- A list of 20 specific search queries your customers actually type. Not topics. Specific queries. “How much does a custom website cost in Kansas City” is a query. “Custom websites” is a topic.
- One person responsible for publishing each week. Same person. Every week. If two people are responsible, nobody is.
- A 90-minute writing block, calendared like a meeting. Not “I’ll write when I have time.” That time never comes.
- A draft-to-publish pipeline that takes under three days. Write Monday, edit Tuesday, publish Wednesday. The faster the cycle, the more posts ship.
- A measurement check every 90 days. Which posts ranked? Which converted? Which didn’t? Stop writing the kinds of posts that didn’t work.
That’s the entire system. Most teams overcomplicate this with three-tier approval workflows and editorial calendars in Notion that nobody updates. Simpler is genuinely better.
What to Write (And What to Skip)
The single biggest mistake new business blogs make is writing about themselves. “Why we started this company.” “Meet our team.” “Our values.” Nobody searches for these. They get zero traffic.
What to write instead:
- Specific how-to content for your customer. “How to choose a CRM for a 10-person team.” “How to read a website proposal.” “How to spot a scammy SEO pitch.”
- Comparisons and decision frameworks. “X vs Y for Z use case.” “When to hire an agency vs a freelancer.” Decision content ranks well and converts well.
- Customer-asked questions. Every time a prospect asks something during a sales call, that’s a blog post. The questions you keep answering by email become the highest-traffic posts on your site.
- Case studies with real specifics. Not “we helped a client grow.” “We migrated [Client Name] off Wix and reduced their bounce rate by 38% in six weeks.” Names and numbers, or skip it.
What to skip:
- “10 Tips for [Generic Topic]” listicles. Saturated, low-intent traffic.
- Industry trends commentary unless you have a unique data point. Otherwise you’re just rephrasing what TechCrunch already published.
- “Our company news” beyond a single about page. Save it for LinkedIn.
The same logic applies to almost any niche, including brand identity work and page builder versus custom code decision-making content. Specific beats generic, every time.
How Often to Publish
The honest answer: less often than you think, more consistently than you do.
Realistic target for a one-person small business blog:
- Year 1: One post per week, every week. 50 posts in 12 months.
- Year 2: One post every two weeks. By now your archive is doing work for you.
- Year 3 and beyond: Update existing posts more than write new ones. Refreshing a 2023 post that ranks page-three into a 2026 post that ranks page-one is higher-value than writing post #150.
If weekly is unrealistic given your other work, drop to every two weeks but never miss. Consistency beats volume. A blog that publishes every other Tuesday for two years will outrank a blog that publishes daily for two months and then stops.
Tools That Actually Help
You don’t need a content stack. The tools that genuinely matter for small business blogging:
- A simple CMS or static site generator. Whatever you’re already using is fine. Don’t switch platforms to “improve content marketing.” That’s procrastination.
- Google Search Console. Free. Shows you what people search to find you and which posts rank. Required.
- Google Analytics 4. Free. Tracks which posts convert to inquiries, which is the only metric that matters in the end.
- A keyword research tool. Google Keyword Planner is free if you have a Google Ads account, even with zero spend. Ubersuggest and Keywords Everywhere are cheap alternatives.
- A grammar checker. Whatever you prefer. Hemingway, Grammarly, the editor built into Google Docs. Pick one and stop second-guessing.
That’s the entire stack. Total cost: $0 to $30 per month. Anyone selling you a “content marketing platform” for $500 per month is selling decoration.
How to Start a Small Business Blog: A First-Month Plan
If you’re starting from zero, the first month looks like this:
Week 1: Make the list of 20 specific search queries. Cluster them into 5 themes. Pick the 5 you’ll write first.
Week 2: Write and publish post 1. Set up Search Console and Analytics if not already configured.
Week 3: Write and publish post 2. Add internal links from post 1 to post 2.
Week 4: Write and publish post 3. Add a “Recent posts” section to the homepage if there isn’t one.
After four weeks, you have three posts, working analytics, and an established rhythm. That’s farther than 90% of small business blogs ever get.
What This Means for Your Business
Starting a small business blog isn’t a creative exercise. It’s an operations problem. The companies whose blogs actually work treat them like inventory: predictable, scheduled, measurable. The companies whose blogs fail treat them like a side project that someone will get to.
Pick which kind you want to be before the first post.
If you want help thinking through what your business should actually be writing about, or if you want someone to take the writing off your plate entirely, tell me about your project. I do this work for clients who’d rather build their business than become bloggers.