One of the most rewarding things you can do as someone who knows their way around the internet is help a friend start a blog. I have done this multiple times over the years, and it never gets old watching someone publish their first post and realize that they now have a platform to share their ideas with the world.

The Power of That First Publish

Back in 2009, I helped my friend Richard launch his blog InkHammer.com over pizza. He was a former newspaper journalist who wanted to explore the intersection of traditional journalism and blogging. I walked him through setting up WordPress, picking a theme, and getting his first post live. That first post went up, and the site was quiet. Really quiet. That is completely normal.

Every blog starts with zero readers, zero comments, and zero traffic. The silence after your first publish can be discouraging if you do not expect it. That is exactly why having a friend who has been through it before makes such a difference. You can set realistic expectations and provide the encouragement that keeps someone going through those early quiet days.

Why This Matters in 2026

Starting a blog or any kind of content platform is easier than ever from a technical standpoint. WordPress, Substack, Ghost, Beehiiv, and a dozen other platforms make the setup process straightforward. But easier technology has not eliminated the real barriers: knowing where to start, having the confidence to publish, and understanding how to grow an audience over time.

Those are the things a knowledgeable friend can help with. Not by doing the work for them, but by demystifying the process and being available when questions come up.

How to Help Someone Start a Blog the Right Way

Start with their goals. Before you touch any technology, ask what they want to accomplish. Do they want to build an audience? Share expertise? Support a business? The answer shapes every decision that follows, from platform choice to content strategy.

Keep the tech simple. Do not overwhelm them with plugins, themes, and customization options on day one. Get them to a functional site with a clean design and help them publish their first post. Everything else can come later.

Set expectations about traffic. Explain that building an audience takes months of consistent publishing. Nobody goes viral on their first post, and that is okay. The goal on day one is to establish the habit of creating and publishing content.

Be available for questions. The most valuable thing you can offer is not the initial setup. It is being someone they can text or call when they hit a snag three weeks in. Most people who abandon a new blog do so because they encountered a problem they could not solve and had nobody to ask.

Promote their early work. Share their first few posts on your social media. Leave a thoughtful comment. Send it to a few people who might genuinely be interested. Those early signs of engagement, even from a small number of people, provide motivation that keeps new bloggers going.

The Bottom Line

If you have the knowledge to help someone start sharing their ideas online, do it. It costs you a couple of hours and some pizza, and it could change the trajectory of their career or business. Some of the most impactful things I have done in internet marketing were not my own projects. They were the nudge I gave someone else to start theirs.

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