How quickly time flies! It feels like I just started this blog, and it is hard to wrap my head around the fact that I have pushed that ‘publish’ button one thousand times (and many, many more times than that if you count edits, rewrites, and the like). Think about it—if you looked at each post on this blog for only one minute, it would take you over 16 straight hours to get from the first to the last post. That, by any standard, is a lot of content!

One of the great things about blogging engines is that all of this content remains tucked away underneath the external façade. The site doesn’t bloat with each post. All old content is neatly filed away, organized topically and still completely accessible, but leaving room for new content.

So, with all that content, how on Earth can somebody find what they are looking for on this blog?

That is the #1 issue with blog functionality: trying to allow for people to easily find content while still making it a pleasant user experience (and not just a card catalog for older work).

Here are the main ways that you can go ‘spelunking’ through the blog archives:

1) Just keep reading down the page

With the blogging software I use, the bottom of each page features a link labeled ‘older posts’. Think of clicking this link as turning a page in a book. If you want to keep going trough the blog, you can just click this link and keep reading. The main page features this, as does any subcategory page (all of those little file folder tabs at the top of the blog).

2) Click a tab—any tab

Those little file folder tabs at the top of the blog take you to what are called category pages. Every time I write something about bass, education, podcasting, or any other such topic I put it under one (or more) of those tabs.

Think of those tabs as more specialized mini-blogs about just one subject. If you only want to read about the bass, clicking the ‘bass’ tab will eliminate any content that isn’t specifically bass-related. This is a useful feature that also (conveniently) reduces my guilt at putting up gratuitous cat videos and photos.

You can do the same thing with any tab up there. Click the ‘education’ tab, and you’re reading an education blog. Click the ‘student resources’ tab, and you have a blog full of useful content for music students. Click the ‘bass videos’ tab and watch dozens (soon to be hundreds) of bass videos from all over the world. You get the picture.

3) Wormholes within the posts

I try to invite and engage readers in older content on the blog on a regular basis, and many of my posts will cross-reference older material on the blog, which will in turn take you to older material, etc. I try to keep the hawking of my older content to a reasonable level, letting new readers know what has come before without boring veteran bass blog readers.

Personally, I always like it when bloggers point the way to older content in their posts. I start clicking, like a rat in a lab experiment, opening page after page. Click click click…

4) Sidebar Highlights

The blog sidebar is an area that can become choked with uninteresting garbage all too easily. All bloggers struggle with sidebar clutter, and I am forever adding and removing items from this place on the blog.

At the top of the sidebar, I include a few lists highlighting posts that I think readers will enjoy or what I consider to be the more significant pieces of content on the blog. These lists include:

Blog Highlights

Crazy Gig Stories

Double Bass Features


5) The Search Bar

The types of tools described above are what I like to call ‘guided navigation’ tools. As content creator and blog manager, I actively try to point readers to what I think they will like with these features, and hopefully I succeed in highlighting posts that interest people.

Still, nothing can replace the usability of a good old-fashioned search box. Mine is located in the upper-left-hand corner of the blog, and you can use it to…. well… you know what to do with a search box!

6) The Archives

The archives are both the most comprehensive and the most bewildering listing of content on the blog. I don’t notice a lot of people digging through the archive pages compared to the other methods described, but you may want to give it a try. The archives are arranged in ‘drill-down’ menus. Each month has a triangle next to it that will open up a list of all the posts written during that time period.

I write a lot of posts, and the archive list can be fairly overwhelming, but click on a month’s triangle and take a look through the post titles. You may find something interesting. Also, you can click on the name of the month and a page will open up with all of the posts for that particular month.

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