How to do blog re-runs intelligently

Warning: this content is older than 365 days. It may be out of date and no longer relevant.

How many of you knew me in 2008? In 2007? Far fewer of you than today, I’m sure. There’s a lot of good stuff on this blog – and on your blog – that you’ve undoubtedly missed if you’re a relatively new friend. Let’s talk today about how to intelligently do re-runs of your blog or other content.

First, you have to have an idea of what to re-run. Fire up your statistics package of choice. I’ll be using Google Analytics. Now, go to Content > Top Content. In the filter, type in the earliest year that you’ve got content for – in my example below, I typed in /2007/. Now look at the top content data you see. You’re looking at content for that year that search engines and visitors to your site still consider relevant today.

Top Content - Google Analytics

This is very important. Don’t use the data from way back then as a starting point because what was important and hot then may not be now. Use today’s data set (last 30 days) but filter on your post dates. I should add that if your URL structure doesn’t include the date in it, I have no idea how you’d do this. You’d have to know which of your older stuff was still popular.

Take a look at the list. Which stuff is evergreen, which stuff is still popular long after other content has gone to content heaven, in terms of audience interest?

Find a couple of these pages and pop them open in your editor. Re-read them, re-edit them, spruce them up, make any relevant updates to them, add links to your newer content that might have reference the older content, and then make a new summary post on your blog about the older pages you’re going back to.

Now, you may be saying, why shouldn’t I just copy and paste into a new blog post, so that it appears as brand-new content on my site? Those of you who mentally replied, “because older pages have valuable inbound links you want to keep”, pat yourselves on the back. Go back and spruce up, but leave the old URLs alone so that any existing links don’t break. You’ll also revive older comments and discussions if you leave the existing post alone and just shine a spotlight on it.

Remember this above all else when it comes to old content: it’s old to you, and probably you alone. In the ever-increasingly hypernetworked world we live in where new friends find us all the time, what you think is old content (assuming it’s not time-sensitive, like news, obviously) is brand new and fresh to them. Help them find your best stuff, no matter when it was written.

Here’s my old stuff highlight for now: How to build a video or camera stabilization rig for about $7. Still good after all these years, and for the very few of you who have been reading me for that long, did you remember this post existed, or was it just as much a refresher for you as it is new content to the newer friends reading it for the first time?

Good luck in dusting your old stuff off, and I look forward to reading what I’ve missed.


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Comments

14 responses to “How to do blog re-runs intelligently”

  1. John McTigue Avatar

    I've been wondering about this topic for a while now, and you framed it really well. I especially like the idea of recycling topics that are still relevant. Due to the way you list our blogs by date, the older posts tend to get pushed off the page, out of site, but they may still help someone new to your feed. I'm going to work on this. Thanks.

  2. jlbraaten Avatar

    Great idea, Chris! Two questions:
    1) Are there any standards for recency? I've only been blogging for about a year and I can already tell that I'll want to do this with one of my very first posts that still gets a lot of traffic. How far back is far back enough in your mind?
    2) What types of disclaimers should you put in your posts? I've read some alarming stories about how folks will get called out on revising content by someone exposing previously cached versions. In those cases it's usually because there was something controversial in the first place so maybe it's not a big deal. Would it ever be worth saying something like “I originally posted this on x date and have since updated it to make y and z changes?”

  3. Christopher S. Penn Avatar

    Good questions.

    1. Given the ADHD nature of the social media crowd, if you can't find mention of your original post on Twitter search, it's fair game because it's gone from memory.

    2. My disclaimer on my site reads in part:
    “I reserve the right to do whatever I want on my personal web site”.

  4. jlbraaten Avatar

    Haha awesome. Missed you on MoC this week. John's interview was pretty great though. Gotta love when people get all neuro science on Internet marketing. Have a great weekend!

  5. jmctigue Avatar
    jmctigue

    I've been wondering about this topic for a while now, and you framed it really well. I especially like the idea of recycling topics that are still relevant. Due to the way you list our blogs by date, the older posts tend to get pushed off the page, out of site, but they may still help someone new to your feed. I'm going to work on this. Thanks.

  6. jmctigue Avatar
    jmctigue

    I’ve been wondering about this topic for a while now, and you framed it really well. I especially like the idea of recycling topics that are still relevant. Due to the way you list our blogs by date, the older posts tend to get pushed off the page, out of site, but they may still help someone new to your feed. I’m going to work on this. Thanks.

  7. jlbraaten Avatar

    Great idea, Chris! Two questions:
    1) Are there any standards for recency? I've only been blogging for about a year and I can already tell that I'll want to do this with one of my very first posts that still gets a lot of traffic. How far back is far back enough in your mind?
    2) What types of disclaimers should you put in your posts? I've read some alarming stories about how folks will get called out on revising content by someone exposing previously cached versions. In those cases it's usually because there was something controversial in the first place so maybe it's not a big deal. Would it ever be worth saying something like “I originally posted this on x date and have since updated it to make y and z changes?”

  8. jlbraaten Avatar

    Great idea, Chris! Two questions:
    1) Are there any standards for recency? I’ve only been blogging for about a year and I can already tell that I’ll want to do this with one of my very first posts that still gets a lot of traffic. How far back is far back enough in your mind?
    2) What types of disclaimers should you put in your posts? I’ve read some alarming stories about how folks will get called out on revising content by someone exposing previously cached versions. In those cases it’s usually because there was something controversial in the first place so maybe it’s not a big deal. Would it ever be worth saying something like “I originally posted this on x date and have since updated it to make y and z changes?”

  9. Christopher S. Penn Avatar

    Good questions.

    1. Given the ADHD nature of the social media crowd, if you can't find mention of your original post on Twitter search, it's fair game because it's gone from memory.

    2. My disclaimer on my site reads in part:
    “I reserve the right to do whatever I want on my personal web site”.

  10. Christopher S. Penn Avatar

    Good questions.

    1. Given the ADHD nature of the social media crowd, if you can’t find mention of your original post on Twitter search, it’s fair game because it’s gone from memory.

    2. My disclaimer on my site reads in part:
    “I reserve the right to do whatever I want on my personal web site”.

  11. jlbraaten Avatar

    Haha awesome. Missed you on MoC this week. John's interview was pretty great though. Gotta love when people get all neuro science on Internet marketing. Have a great weekend!

  12. jlbraaten Avatar

    Haha awesome. Missed you on MoC this week. John’s interview was pretty great though. Gotta love when people get all neuro science on Internet marketing. Have a great weekend!

  13. […] Christopher S Penn’s blog, he brought up an interesting point.  Why not use some old content to touch on some relevancy for […]

  14. […] Christopher Penn describes how to do that very well, giving tips on ensuring you choose your best posts according to statistics. He then suggests you go back over the popular ones re-read them and re-edit them. If there are things which need updating, do so. Ensure you don’t break any links. Then shine a spotlight on to it […]

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