This website requires javascript. Ideas for a Cancer Support Blog
Home
Memberships
Need help with a project? Submit a work order to get a quote from over 6,000 professional service providers...
Find
Tools


Ideas for a Cancer Support Blog

Ideas for a Cancer Support Blog

Start your free blog at LiveJournal.com, WordPress.com, Blogger.com, Multiply.com, or Tumblr.com.

The goal of this blog will be to document your progress through solving a cancer problem. Blogs that solve a problem are the most visited blogs on the Internet! The blog will store 33 pages (or posts), and each page will address the following issues below:

Page 1: The Battle

Describe your battle with a cancer problem. Begin with the first onset of the problem to the state it’s in now. Go on to describe how this battle consumed your time, energy, and resources (funds) and explain how the battle has affected you emotionally and physically. Compare this impact to those you know who don’t suffer from a cancer problem.

When finished, explain why you’re creating this type of blog in the first place and why you think your readers will benefit.

Page 2: Past Efforts

A Google Spreadsheet can help you organize your attempted solutions before you write about them. List each solution in the left column, and then describe the result of each solution in the column next to it.

List all the solutions you tried in the past, and then describe the results of each.

Include the names and measures of all applications and then describe the results of each. If you avoided some proposed solutions, explain why.

Page 3: Suspected Triggers

List all the events suspected of triggering the problem. To confirm your suspicions, make a commitment to monitor and document your daily events for an entire month in an online calendar. Note the results of each potential trigger.

Page 4 – 32: Current Treatment

If your cancer program accompanies an affiliate partnership, include your affiliate links to earn a little commission.

Describe the cancer program you’re using to solve the problem today in detail. Include the what, when, where, why, and how. Write about the cancer program’s application and warnings, and then describe what your next plan of action will be should the cancer program prove to cause more problems than solutions.

Then as you did before, make a commitment to monitor and document the the process for an entire month. Only this time, include the results of the cancer program in the calendar created above. Add photos or videos to create a visual, progressive timeline. The content of each calendar page could contain something like this:

Date:

Encountered stressors:

Current situation:

Strategy applied:

Strategy’s results:

Photo, Video, or Audio:

Be honest and comment on your commitment to your cancer program. And include events that stood in your way of progress each day.

Tools

Don’t forget to supplement your cancer blog with interactive tools. You could:

  • Provide a list of links to helpful cancer websites
  • Include cancer videos
  • Conduct a survey about your cancer issue
  • Link to software designed to monitor your cancer’s situation
  • Point to relevant cancer books on Amazon

When it’s all said and done, you will have the unique content required to maintain a lucrative presence on the web. Of course, if you need help developing these things, outsource them!

Page 33: The Conclusion

At the end of your cancer program, describe the final result, and then post questions that continue to be unanswered. Why or why didn’t the cancer program work? What part of your commitment played a role? Will you try the same cancer program again? If not, why? What part of the cancer program is still unclear? What further work, research or experimentation could be done? What do current trends suggest?

All Pages: Comments

Be sure to encourage your readers to comment and thank them in advance for doing so. Invite personal stories as well, and don’t forget to reply to the comments you receive.

Our Sponsors
Goodie Bag (Related Content)

One More Thing

Do you have a question? Suggestion? Want to offer some feedback? Experiencing trouble with the site? Feel free to contact us so we can help.

Cite this page APA style: . (). On Just Outsourcing by Nicole Miller, Service Provider. Retrieved from , Sacramento,CA. Last modified: 06/06/2012

Nicole Miller is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com.

Comments

NOTE: All comments, including @twitter seeds, are moderated. Comments that (1) use keywords or urls as names in the name field, (2) point to a spammy website, (3) use abusive language, or (4) are posted for SEO purposes only, are immediately rejected. [Back to Top]




Leave a Reply