Web development , php , ajax , symfony, framework, zend
A Great Interview with Steven Snell the founder and editor of two big design blogs in the design community Vandeley Design Blog and Design Mag, who shares his tips on how manages over 7 blogs with still be capable to mange time to peruse a freelancing career. Feel free leave your thoughts and feed back about the interview.
: I’m 31 years old and I live in New Jersey with my wife, although we’re planning to move to Pennsylvania at some point in 2010. I am a designer and blogger, but I spend more time on blogging than designing these days. I manage two design blogs plus a network of niche gallery sites.
: My days are different depending on what I need to get done. Typically I try to get as much blog-related work done on Mondays and Tuesdays as possible so I don’t have it hanging over my head the rest of the week. Most of my client work at this point is for on-going, long-term clients, and I’m really only taking new projects that are a perfect fit for my situation. Typically my days start at 6:30 and sometimes I wind up working into the evening, but not as much as I used to.

: My biggest tip is to start part-time if possible. I had a job that was totally unrelated to web design (I was an auditor) so I had to start from scratch. If I had left my job immediately it would have taken me a long time to work my way up to a full-time income and the stress would have been really high. I waited until it was very safe and as low risk as possible to make the jump to full-time. Looking back, I probably should have left my full-time job a little earlier, but I waited until my wife and I were comfortable with the decision. My other piece of advise is that if you are freelancing part-time and you have a full-time job, don’t live off of your freelancing income. That will make it more difficult to ever leave your job because your standard of living will drop. Reinvest what you’re making into your business or just put it away in savings somewhere. Having some savings will also make it less risky to quit the job eventually.
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: I’d say the usual ones like Smashing Magazine and Six Revisions. Also, I like the SpoonGraphics blog, Spyre Studios, and recently I’ve been following Instant Shift.

: I think the best thing you can do is to focus on quality of content rather than quantity. Publishing 5 average posts per week isn’t going to help you to stand out, but 1 or 2 really good posts will. Focus on what you do best rather than what everybody else is publishing, and always work to improve skills that will open up new possibilities with your blog.
: Well, I recently did a re-launch of the DesignM.ag Job Board (http://designm.ag/jobs/) that made some improvements from the old job board. That was something I had been working on for a while and I’m still working to make it a better resource for everyone. I also have some plans that will hopefully free up some more time for me to work on Vandelay Design within the next several months, so I’m hoping to do some new things there, but nothing is set at this point.

Steven Said: Photoshop, only because I have more experience with it.
Steven Said: Subscribers. I’ve gotten more into Twitter over the past year, but I’d rather have people chose to receive my blog posts as opposed to choosing to receive my tweets.
Steven Said: Probably designing, but I’m not sure that I would be completely happy if I were forced to do just one of the two.
Steven Said: PC, again, only because it’s what I have more experience with.
Steven Said: I guess I would say Vandelay Design. I think it means more to me since it was my first blog, but I spend more time these days on DesignM.ag.

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2 Responses to Interview With The Man Behind Vanderley Design and DesignMag
Homework Help
March 19th, 2010 at 4:07 pm
Like others have pointed out, there are some online ways of making income, just be sure you find one that doesn't cost you anything to be a part of it, and one that you believe in. If you want more info on what I have been doing, feel free to e-mail me at Good Luck!
Fahad
March 20th, 2010 at 7:00 am
There are 3 methods:
It will also give you a link and increase the weight of your page.
1) You have to submit your articles to a social networks. Use this free tool to do that: Apart from live traffic, you'll get links, and search engines will give more weight to your posts.
2) Comment on the popular blogs related to your niche: go to Google, enter your main keyword and then click on the "Blogs" link on the top left hand side. It will show you all blogs who wrote about that subject recently. Open them and see how many comments they've got in average. Post a nice reply there in order to get their visitors
3) Write a unique articles and post them on 3rd party sties, such as – it will also increase your blog's weight and give you readers.
But there is a small problem: Google and other search engines don't like 3rd party blog platforms such as Blogger, Livejournal and WordPress.com. They don't give weight to such blogs so you must be aware that you won't have so many visitors as you would have on your own blog with your own domain name. Also there are not a lot of tools you can use and you won't be able to fully monetise it.