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by the numbers 2021

As a data blogger, I’m delighted to embark on a meta-blogpost, benchmarking some milestones for this year and seeing what can be gleaned from the various wordpress/social media/SEO data sources. Digging into this has already helped me learn a heck of a lot and I am going to make some tweaks as a result.

Perhaps you also have a website or a newsletter and you might find it interesting to see how I make commentary on these metrics. If you do, I’d be delighted to hear from you!

I don’t need to remind you that 2021 was an indisputably challenging year. In this blog post, I’m going to celebrate the good – reaching new people, and writing about what’s important to me with those of you who have stuck around. Thank you for being here! Thank you for being you!

So what

I often *END* blogposts with a “so what,” but when talking about metrics, I think it’s always best to start with one. After all, metrics can be so dreadfully misleading, ego boosting, and lead to the wrong conclusions. That’s the last thing I would want. D:

My goals at TDAA are threefold (I’m always looking for better ways to express this, here’s just a quick brain dump)

What started out as a passion project to write about spreadsheet tips has taken off big time! Now I spend $100s per year just on website maintenance, and I have a thriving mini-consulting practice that complements my full time work as a Salesforce admin for a local philanthropic foundation. This year, more than 90,000 sets of eyeballs will grace this blog! Somewhere along the line, I decided it was important to me to find people I don’t already know, and create resources that can help people along their spreadsheet wrangling journey or at least start a dialogue. I haven’t ever done any “sponsored” posts or the like, but I’ve started to make choices that will, indeed, help the blog reach more people. You’re going to hear more about that in the paragraphs below. I have a responsibility to myself and to the communities impacted by the blog to write accurately, pursue meaningful goals, and reflect seriously about my mission.

According to WordPress…

Context: This is the 4th full year of TDAA! These metrics (in this section and all to follow) do not include this post, or any “views” after 12/27.

top 10 blog posts (plus bonus one!)

  1. How to Build a Table in Google Sheets
  2. Admin emoji
  3. Introducing: xlookup
  4. Did ella baker have a rolodex?
  5. Let’s table it
  6. Digital self care vol iii
  7. How to populate multi-select picklists in google sheets and salesforce
  8. going with the Flow
  9. from bus boycott to badass bureaucracy
  10. snowfakery til you makery
  11. on jevons’ paradox

Reflections:

SEO

Last year, the extent of my knowledge on SEO (Search Engine Optimization) was that one of my posts performed well on Google, but I never really understood “how” or “why.” This year, I implemented some special SEO plug-ins so that I could see what people search for, and how they get to my website. The app additionally suggests things that I can do to improve SEO, some of which are contrary to my goals (so I am obviously not doing them!). (Examples: writing shorter posts, different style headers, more links, etc). Learning what other people do to get higher eyeball rankings is an interesting process, in and of itself.

According to WordPress:

According to Google Search Console (only since 12/12/21 when I set it up)

Things I want to do differently next year:

  1. Assume that people reading blog posts do not know me personally
  2. Resist urge to be consumed with SEO
  3. Write more descriptive excerpts
  4. Make a list of tech questions that *I* search in Google
  5. Pay attention to subject headers – can they be more descriptive without losing flow?

YouTube

This is the first year that I started making videos for YouTube, focused on how to use Conga Composer, a third-party app for Salesforce. As of a few days ago, I’ve reached 500 video views! Today, I dug into the YouTube creator metrics and learned a few insights:

Big projects and synchronous activities

It’s not only eyeballs and metrics around here. I’m also super proud of some big projects that have only indirectly made it onto the blog! (Transparency note: I got paid for most (not all) of the projects described below). These projects spanned issue areas from antiracism to queer liberation to reproductive justice and more. Here’s a few highlights:

Swoon

I love this work with my big, messy heart. I know it’s important to many of you, too! I’d love to hear in the comments what most resonated with you from TDAA this year – and/or – something from your own suite of accomplishments that aligns with the TDAA mission. Don’t be shy, hearing from you will 100% make my day!

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