Consider Your Audience
Your target audience will also affect your post frequency. If your audience is professionals or academics that do research throughout the week, but not on weekends, it wouldn’t make sense to publish blog posts on days they’re off work. Also, they probably can’t interact with too many posts per week. This could be considered a B2B (Business to Business) audience.
If your audience searches the internet every day for content, then it makes sense to most every day. This is a B2C (Business to Consumer) audience.
Consider the Size of Your Team
Also, consider the size of your team. Don’t plan more than your team can handle.
A team of one shouldn’t try to post every day. There’s only so much you can handle and you’re already running the rest of the business. It’s difficult to plan the topic ideas, create the content, and promote the content while running the business.
If you have a medium-sized team, such as a small agency, they could share the load and create post content or hire writers to create it. A team can bounce ideas off each other and reduce the planning time.
For a large team, you could have full-time staff creating the blog content. It makes sense for larger companies to include blogging in their marketing tasks.
If you have enough funds, you could hire writers to create the content for you. This is a great way of extending your marketing dollars outside of your team without hiring more staff.
Consider the Size of Your Posts
There are a lot of options for the size of posts. Some prefer lots of smaller posts. Others prefer fewer large posts. Regardless of which you choose or how you want to mix it, consider the post size in your publishing schedule.
Determine what you can handle and focus on that. Lots of small, consistent, posts eventually add up to a lot of content. Publishing one or two small posts per week is better than publishing one large post now and then.
Consistency vs Frequency
I’ve mentioned several times that you need to publish consistently. Publishing consistently can be more important than publishing frequently. Readers can get in the habit of returning to your blog on certain days to see your new content. Once they’re in this habit, keeping that schedule can be more important to them than the number of posts you’ve published.
Quality vs Quantity
In general, quantity can bring in traffic and quality can keep them on your site. You need both. However, quality is more important than quantity. Without high-quality content, your blog could look like keyword stuffing to gain traffic. Those types of blogs rank lower due to low quality. Higher-quality posts can get more shares and backlinks, which will increase your traffic.
Don’t force your content just to hit a publishing schedule. Missing a day is better than posting bad content. You don’t have to post every day. Many professionals consider 2-4 times per week to be an ideal posting schedule. Also, there is no one best posting schedule for every topic and audience.
For more about writing quality blog posts, see the article How to Write a Good Blog Post.
Test Your Posting Schedule