Why WordPress is Still King for Bloggers
So, is WordPress worth it for blogging? Absolutely.
Free platforms like Blogger, Medium, or Wix might tempt beginners, but they limit your growth. For instance, Wix sites often load slower (Google research shows 53% of visitors leave if a page takes longer than 3 seconds to load). Blogger doesn’t offer much customisation. Medium can change its rules overnight and wipe out your monetisation strategy.
WordPress.org gives you full control. That’s why over 43% of all websites globally use WordPress, including massive blogs like TechCrunch and Mashable. If the giants trust it, why shouldn’t you?
Understanding Blog Success Rates
The numbers don’t lie. Research shows that:
80% of blogs fail within 18 months.
Around 5–10% reach consistent traffic and monetisation.
The average successful blog takes 2–4 years to become a full-time income source.
That sounds scary, but here’s the upside: most bloggers quit because they don’t treat their blog like a business.
Take two examples:
Failing blog: A beginner writes personal diary entries without SEO, posts twice in a month, and never promotes the site. Result? 30–40 monthly visitors (mostly friends).
Winning blog: Another beginner researches keywords, writes articles that solve real problems (“how to fix WordPress errors” or “10-minute recipes”), posts twice a week, and shares them on Facebook groups. Within 12 months, this blog grows to 20,000+ monthly visitors.
The lesson? Consistency and problem-solving content separate the 5% from the rest.
Step 1: Setting the Right Foundation
Starting with the wrong tools is like running a marathon in slippers, you won’t last.
Hosting comparison:
Hosting Provider | Average Speed | Uptime | Beginner-Friendly | Cost (per month) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hostinger | 1.1s | 99.9% | Very Easy | $2.99–$4.99 |
SiteGround | 1.2s | 99.98% | Medium | $4.99–$6.99 |
Bluehost | 1.4s | 99.9% | Very Easy | $2.95–$5.95 |
A good host + lightweight theme like GeneratePress can shave 2–3 seconds off load time, directly boosting SEO rankings.
Step 2: Writing Content that Gets Found
Google processes over 8.5 billion searches daily, that’s your potential audience. But you can only reach them if your blog speaks their language.
Examples of content that gets traffic:
Instead of “My weekend cooking pasta,” write: “Easy 15-Minute Pasta Recipe for Beginners.”
Instead of “Thoughts on SEO,” write: “How to Get Your First 1000 Views on a Blog with SEO.”
Stats that matter:
Blogs with headings, bullet points, and images get 94% more views.
Long-form content (2000+ words) earns 77% more backlinks compared to short posts.
Real-life case study: Neil Patel once republished an old post with updated SEO keywords and examples. Traffic to that single article jumped by 67% in 30 days. That’s why updating content matters as much as creating new posts.
Step 3: Getting Your First 1000 Views Per Day
This is the dream milestone for every new blogger. Let’s break it down with real strategies.
SEO case study: A travel blogger in Pakistan wrote 30 articles targeting long-tail queries like “best hotels in Skardu under 5000 PKR.” Within 8 months, she hit 35,000 monthly visitors just from Google.
Social media case study: A food blogger used Pinterest with vertical images. By pinning 3–5 times daily, she went from 0 to 70,000 monthly readers in 14 months.
Networking hack: Writing a guest post for an authority blog in your niche can send 500–1000 visitors overnight.
Remember: Google traffic usually grows like a snowball, slow at first, then faster as you publish more. Think 3–6 months of patience before results.
Step 4: Monetising Your WordPress Blog
You’ve got traffic, now it’s time to turn it into money.
Revenue examples:
A small tech blog with 50,000 monthly visits earns $600–$1000 from Adsense.
A food blog with affiliate links to kitchen gear makes $2000/month with 100,000 visitors.
A blogger selling an online course on SEO earns $5,000+/month with just 10,000 loyal readers.
Tip: Don’t rely only on Adsense. Many niches (like finance, software, and travel) pay much better through affiliate marketing. A single affiliate sale can earn $50–$200, compared to cents from ads.
Step 5: Keeping the Momentum
Blogging is a grind. The average blogger who makes it big writes 3–4 posts weekly in the first year. But here’s a secret: it doesn’t have to be all new content.
Repurpose a blog post into a YouTube tutorial (extra traffic source).
Convert a guide into a free PDF checklist (grow your email list).
Update old posts with fresh stats and reshare (Google loves freshness).
Pro Tips from Successful Bloggers
Case study #1: A fashion blogger started in Nigeria with only a smartphone. By publishing 3 style guides weekly and posting Instagram reels, she hit 200,000 followers and her blog earns via sponsored posts.
Case study #2: A finance blogger in the USA created just 40 detailed guides (2000+ words each). After 2 years, his blog reached 300,000 monthly visitors, now pulling $15,000/month from affiliate deals.
Pro hack: Use “topic clusters.” Write one long guide (like “Ultimate WordPress Blogging Guide”) and then publish related shorter posts linking back to it. This boosts authority fast.
Your Blogging Success Chances
The truth? Most blogs don’t make it. But that’s because most people treat blogging like a hobby, not a business.
If you’re using WordPress blogging to boost success chances, publishing consistently, promoting smartly, and sticking it out for the first year, you’re already way ahead of the 90% who quit.
Your future readers are searching for answers right now. The question is, will your blog be the one they find?

Chris Digital, tech enthusiast and digital marketer, shares insights on WordPress, SEO, Adsense, online earning, and the latest in graphics and themes.