Back in January 2009, I accepted a 30-day blogging challenge on the Warrior Forum issued by Colleen Slater. The rules were simple: publish something worthwhile on your blog every single day for 30 days straight. No excuses, no skipping, no phoning it in.
At the time I was running MasonWorld.com and thought it would be a great way to build momentum. I had no idea how much I would learn about content creation, consistency, and myself as a writer in the process.
Why a 30-Day Blogging Challenge Still Works
The concept is timeless even if the platforms have changed. Whether you are publishing on WordPress, Substack, LinkedIn, or your own site, committing to daily content for 30 days forces you to develop habits that matter. You stop waiting for inspiration and start treating content creation like what it actually is: a skill you build through repetition.
During my 30 days, I covered everything from affiliate marketing basics and SEO tips to outsourcing strategies and how to overcome writer's block. Some posts were strong. A few were just okay. But every single one got published, and that is the point.
What I Learned
First, you have more ideas than you think. The fear of running out of topics is almost always worse than the reality. Once you commit to publishing daily, your brain starts noticing content opportunities everywhere: in conversations, in emails from readers, in problems you solve during your day job.
Second, consistency builds an audience faster than perfection. My readership grew noticeably during those 30 days because people knew there would be something new to read every morning. In 2026, this principle applies even more. Algorithms on every platform reward consistent publishing.
Third, some of your best content will come on the days you least feel like writing. The days I was stuck and had to push through produced posts that readers actually engaged with the most, probably because the effort showed.
How to Run Your Own 30-Day Challenge
If you want to try this yourself, here is how I would approach it today. Pick your platform. Set a minimum word count that is achievable, something like 300 words. Tell someone about it so you have accountability. Batch your topic ideas before you start so you are never staring at a blank screen with zero options. And give yourself permission to publish content that is good enough rather than perfect.
You do not need a Warrior Forum thread to make this happen. Find a friend, join a community, or just make a public commitment on social media. The accountability is what makes it work.
The Bottom Line
A 30-day blogging challenge is one of the simplest ways to break through creative resistance and build a publishing habit. I did it in 2009 and the discipline I built during those 30 days carried me through years of content creation, including the Late Night Internet Marketing podcast.
If you have been thinking about starting a blog or getting more consistent with the one you have, try 30 days of daily posting. You will be surprised what you learn about yourself and your audience.




Good job Mark – why the smiley face on 1/8? If it’s your b-day, happy belated – mine was the 6th.
LOL — January 8th is my mom’s birthday, but the smiley is a typo. Since it is mom’s birthday, I think I’ll keep it!
lol 8 followed by ) must have converted it to a smiley… funny that it’s your Mom’s birthday.
Good job Mark. I used to post just about everyday, but other than the extra content for the SE’s I saw more viewer interaction after slowing down. There are pros and cons to both. It will be less stressful slowing down the pace, that’s for sure.
I agree. That is something that Garry Conn has told me before too — if you post too much, your content just gets buried because readers are busy and they cannot keep up. It is also not great from an ROI standpoint — I can make a lot more money doing stuff besides writing for this blog. BUT, I like helping people — so there you go.
Thanks for the comment.
Regards,
Mark
Mark,
Are your hands tired yet? lol. Seriously though, I actually take the road less traveled. I write less often but try to wallop my readers with GREAT content every post. The rest of the time I spend promoting.
This method has worked for me for all 3 of my authority sites. While you would think that you would get less traffic because you post less, instead you get MORE traffic because you are promoting constantly.
Anyway, good digs man.
When you did the 30 days challenge, did you find yourself going in unexpected ways in your topics?
I’m interested in creativity, and creative writing and I’m extremely interested in finding ways to utilise the sub/un/conscious mind to harness creativity.
Never tried drugs to do it – I’ve been told by friends you just write crap, and I can do that without damaging my health!
Anyway, I’m interested to find out if you found anything unusual with the challenge.
I definately wrote about things that I would not have found time to write about before. My writing tends to get pretty technical (how-to and websites, etc). I thing drug-induced tutorials or product recommendations might not work. 🙂