21 Most Annoying Things About Travel Bloggers

I’m a travel blogger. Between AI, big layoffs at travel publications, and the ever-changing social media landscape, it’s a really uncertain time out there for us. 

I’m also self-aware enough that I know there are things people find really annoying about travel bloggers, and that will hold true no matter what happens next. This online space is steeped in clichés and can be fairly ridiculous.

Let’s dig into the most annoying things about travel bloggers as compiled from an examination of online platforms and maybe even my own actions.

Disclosure: Please note that some of the links below may be affiliate links, including links through the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases .  At no additional cost to you, I earn a commission if you make a purchase. I won’t recommend something I have not used/would not use myself, and any income earned supports the upkeep of this site.

Why do people hate travel bloggers?

People hate travel bloggers because many bloggers make themselves an easy mark. They can be a lot . 

A man meditates on a mountain, thinking about the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

Now, here’s the thing. I love my travel blogger buddies . I’ve made all kinds of online connections with smart, funny, like-minded folks. I like ‘em enough that there are quite a few I’d hang out with in person. As an introvert, that’s a big deal.

I have found incredible folks out there doing the best they can, learning, supporting others, and being hilarious. This isn’t for them…or maybe it’s for all of us? 

Here’s a sampling of what I found on Reddit threads re: Why are travel bloggers annoying?

“I don’t give a shit about what some generic, uninteresting 26-year-old thinks about life. I really don’t.”

“I just need to rank high and don’t give a crap about anything else.”

“They’re people that only show the good stuff and want to create an image and seem like everything is always perfect.”

“They’re tourists pretending to be experts.” 

“They’re trying to sell me a course on how I can start a blog and travel the world, too.”

“A laptop on the beach? Good luck with work in direct sun.”

That last one hits hard.

Whether you love ’em or hate ’em,

1. They live in a bubble.

The people I enjoy interacting with the most online are fellow travelers. Many of them are fellow travel bloggers. That can be a dangerous spot to be in because you can find yourself in a bubble with a lack of real perspective.

It’s why we all get into conversations about the latest garbage thing some tourist did abroad. It’s why we get into a frenzy about the latest garbage thing some other travel blogger did that really wasn’t that bad but let’s all talk about it anyway. 

We hang out with other bloggers online. We hang out with other bloggers or “travel people” at conferences or meetups set up by other travel bloggers. When we need advice on our blogs or our travel plans or life goals we reach out to these safe people who think like us.

I’m currently nomadic , much to the chagrin of my mother , so I feel like I’m in a super bubble sometimes. I try to keep in touch with friends in the “real world” on a regular basis for some perspective on what the heck is actually going on out there beyond myself. 

A group has some wine on a Zoom call the keep in touch and talk about the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

The real world can be scary. It’s cozy in the bubble. With the bubble comes privilege, though, and I know I have to remind myself of that on a regular basis.

2. They’re judgemental as hell.

Travel bloggers love insisting that you do things one way over another because that’s how they like to do it. The thing is, they judge other travel bloggers, too.

Heaven forbid you want to make a business out of your blog. You’ll get all kinds of purists coming out of the woodwork to talk about how they wish we could go back to the good old days of travel writing when we could publish evocative content and get paid for it.

You mean like, in travel magazines? All of that still exists out there. You just have to know where to look and how to pitch to those outlets. 

If that’s what you want your blog to be, though, you have to be comfortable with it being for your eyes only or for the eyes of your superfans. 

Honestly, I love a good travel story, but when I’m planning a trip somewhere, I don’t need to hear about every single feeling you had about every single nip of gelato on your Italian vacation . I’m sure you had a lot of it. We all do. I’m sure it was delicious because it just is.

I want to know where I can find it, friend. TELL ME WHERE TO FIND THE GELATO . 

A woman eats gelato, but she's not saving the world. Entitlement is one of the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

3. They get super defensive.

We all have that one friend that you have to tiptoe around because they’ll absolutely lose their shit if you criticize any of their actions/decision-making/etc. Maybe it’s a family member. It could be completely innocuous. It could be coming from a place of concern, even love. 

It doesn’t matter. 

Wait. Why are we spending time with this person?

Many travel bloggers exist in this space. You try to be helpful and tell them they really shouldn’t be doing this thing because it’s in poor taste, violates affiliate rules, is downright offensive…and they mock you, or snap at you, or block you.

I try not to be a know-it-all. I really do. I’m not out here emailing people about all of their grammar errors. But sometimes we do silly things or even harmful things, and feedback can help us grow or correct those things.

Also, you’re blogging about the best things to do in Lisbon, not curing cancer. 

4. They’re self-important.

On that note, travel bloggers really need to chill sometimes. I get that you’re really into the thing you’re doing, but not everyone cares about that as much as you do. 

That stings to read back even for my own views of my “work.”

Beyond helping people plan a fun trip, we are not out here doing the gods’ work.

Note: I don’t know what you believe, nor do I care. It’s a little “g” on purpose to allow for freedom of whatever.

A group of friends walk on the beach and talk about the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

Before starting my own blog, I was seeking deep meaning in my chosen professions. I was a journalist for a while, covering state legislatures and talking to grieving humans and, sometimes, writing about kids reading children’s books to dogs in the library.

That was a slow news week.

After getting tired of making pennies for the hours I’d put in weekly, I decided to really hit the jackpot with a gig in education . 

I lasted eight years as a special educator. I worked with difficult, at times abusive kids, grieving humans, and, sometimes, ran school newspapers.

Everything is connected, people.

I burned out completely. It was too much. I was giving too much of my time, myself, my resources , and my sanity. It was a worthy cause, for sure, but it was all I had.

As a travel blogger by night (freelance work is my “day job”), I have to remind myself that this isn’t like that other stuff. Nobody will grieve when I don’t publish for a week or disappear from social media for a while. 

There are 10, 20, 30 bloggers right behind me, all trying to do similar things . Travel blogging is supposed to be fun. On a higher level, it’s supposed to inform or entertain or engage. All of that is great. You’re still not curing cancer, though, so can we stop with the platitudes?

5. They’re in an identity crisis.

We all feel some confusion over what we’d like to be and what we’ve become. Maybe you’ve gone too far down the robot slide and want to return back to the light. Perhaps you don’t want to write like a personal diary anymore and make a business out of your blog.

No one cares if you have to do an about-face for the better. I’m rooting for you. We’re all rooting for you.

I’m constantly wondering whether I should just scrap the whole thing and start over. I have hundreds of posts at this point and still look at some of them like, “Who allowed you to exist in this space?”

Some of it is probably your (and my) imposter syndrome. Some of it might be a sign that some perspective-taking is necessary. Your blog isn’t your identity, or at least it doesn’t have to be. It’s a sunny day outside. Go touch some grass.

I don’t mean that in an offensive way, by the way. I mean it literally…like, it’s fun to go out and touch grass and have yourself that park picnic travel bloggers are always talking about.

6. They’re not transparent.

If you hated a place, say so. If you’re embarrassed that you loved a place, say that, too. I love that for you. You should be able to own the fact that you’re a Disney adult without shame. I’ve made it very clear that I’m not into cruises , but I’m not out there making cruisers’ lives miserable.

Is that what they’re called? I feel like that word has a few different meanings these days.

Anyway, own whatever it is that you’re afraid to own. 

A woman gets ready to sip on some spicy beer, not one of the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

7. Solid info isn’t as important as SEO.

If I’m writing about day trips from a city, I’m not going to give you information about what you can do in that city. Going to the local history museum in that city isn’t a day trip. It’s just… being a tourist in that city.

On the other hand, if I’m writing about day trips from a city , I won’t tell you about a place that’s like half a day’s drive from that city. It’s not a day trip when you need multiple days to make it happen.

Why do bloggers do this? SEO.

They have a list of keywords they feel like they need to use in a post and they’re going to use them even if it means you have a crap experience as a result. 

I try to leave comments on some of these blogs but a lot of them have comments turned off. I wonder why?

There are ways to please the Google gods and share solid information about places you’ve visited. I promise. 

8. Solid info isn’t as important as churning out the content.

It takes me a really long time to put content together. Some of that is my perfectionist streak. Some of it is my journalism background. I like things just so, and I like them accurate. That’s a good thing when it comes to sharing information, right?

If you’ve been paying any attention to what’s going on in the world of AI lately, you’ll know that things are getting weird online. Tools like ChatGPT hallucinate information and bloggers are out there publishing it anyway because it means they’re feeding the Google machine.

A woman pets a fake horse, one of the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

Supposedly, Google is going to start penalizing AI that leads to misinformation online but will support AI if it’s appropriate. That means nothing to me.

If you’re using AI to speed up your internal processes, I’m not going to hate on that. Kudos for teaching the robots to do things that you don’t feel like doing.

Can AI handle all of my follow-up emails, by the way? That’s the worst.

If you’re using AI to replace you completely, that’s weird. The responsible thing would be to let your readers know that in some way. You should also have a solid editing process in place to make sure that you’re not publishing nonsense that the robots made up. 

I have seen so much of this lately, and it’s forced me to return to some of the big travel sites for a good chunk of my travel information. At least they have editors if they’re also on the AI train.

I want to use blogs to plan my travel. People want to trust what they’re reading. For the love of Pete, fact-check your word before you hit publish. 

9. It’s all too good to be true.

If you got food poisoning somewhere, I want to know so I don’t also find myself a sweaty mess on the bathroom floor. You don’t need to paint a rosy picture of every destination to connect with people. In fact, the opposite is true. 

You don’t even need to paint a rosy picture of every place to rank if that’s your priority.

One of my highest-performing posts month after month is my post on Tombstone, Arizona . I say some things in that post that I guess are too political for some. I express some discomfort I felt about certain things I saw.

What’s happened as a result?

Outside of the boatloads of traffic, I get boatloads of angry comments. Some folks call me a stupid bitch. Others tell me to go back to California . (I’m from Chicago, but that’s probably worse in some way.)

Did it sting? Of course. I’d be a liar if I said I was just pleased with the traffic. Despite this wild rant I’m on right now, I don’t set out to collect negative feedback. 

Will it change the way I do things in the future? No. If I’m uncomfortable somewhere, I’ll say so. If I think a certain group of people will feel uncomfortable somewhere, I’ll say that, too. 

10. Is anything real?

I’ve already gabbed on about AI, but you can catch travel bloggers in quite a few pickles if you care to see whether they do things like buy social media followers, too. 

It’s a reason why I could give a hoot about that “huge” Instagram influencer with all of the followers but garbage engagement. I don’t care about them, and neither should you. 

You should be especially mindful if you want to replicate what they’re doing, take advice from that person, or even pay for advice from that person.

That’s silly. If they bought followers at some point to pad their numbers, it’s whatever. Good for them. There’s no use getting jealous about it, though. Social media isn’t real. 

11. They’re supportive in theory.

There are a lot of nice, cool bloggers out there that I feel a legitimate connection to. I’m sure they know who they are. 

A woman gets ready for some wine and to talk about the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

The blogging community as a whole can be a beast to navigate, though. 

It sucks to approach every new follower on social media with skepticism. What do they want? Will they just unfollow me as soon as I follow back? Will they message with whatever they’re selling now that we’ve connected?

Are they trying to get me involved in the cult of travel agents to get a referral bonus? It’s a lot.

12. They lie.

This comes back to the bit on transparency but takes it a step further. Travel bloggers who use their platforms to sell you stuff with the idea that you too can be just as successful as them if you buy this one thing are the worst.

No, I’m not saying we should all share our financials. I applaud bloggers who do that sort of thing in a transparent way. That’s really brave and it takes a lot of work.

But if you’re going to start selling SEO courses or ebooks about how to become a successful blogger, there needs to be something there to back up your claims beyond how much money you made from the stuff you sell.

That money you made is often on the backs of suckers who buy those courses. A closer look might reveal that you’re really not making much off your blog at all. 

It’s your courses. 

That’s not as impressive a claim when you’re asking for my credit card’s expiration date. 

13. They’re entitled.

We all love free stuff. Any travel blogger who says they don’t love the potential perks associated with blogging is a liar. 

Oh, you’d rather stay pure and wax poetic about the sunset you saw on the Mediterranean Sea? I’m sure it was beautiful, but you know freebies sweeten that experience.

That all said, you shouldn’t assume you should be getting free stuff wherever you land because you blog for fun or even for a living. First of all, free stuff doesn’t pay the bills. It’s also super presumptuous.

Folks, we have lived through a pandemic.

A woman wears a mask in a park. She looks like she has perspective, while a a lack thereof is one of the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

We’ve watched our favorite small businesses shut down and the travel industry itself was completely upended. 

Be reasonable.

14. They’re all about the (promotional) Benjamins.

There are some blogs out there that are only in it for the moolah. It’s not even that much money, but it’s enough of a driving force that their content has become a constant barrage of promotional affiliate content.

I use affiliate links. I promote tours and hotels and hiking gear and dog poop bags. I should hope it’s not in your face, but feel free to come at me if you feel duped.

Self-promotion is a biggie, too. Some of us are worried more about our personal brand than promoting the destination. We’re worried about letting people take a look underneath the hood to see your real personality.

I promise that being real sells, too. 

15. They fancy themselves better than the average tourist.

If you haven’t participated in a conversation about the differences between traveler vs. tourist, you truly haven’t lived.

Oh, you want to take a photo of yourself in front of the most popular attraction at that destination? Better move it along because such and such from some .com is waiting to do that very thing and they do this for the greater good.

Come off it.

You are not better than any other traveler. 

Well, maybe you’re better than those jackwagons taking glamour shots on the tracks at Auschwitz-Birkenau , but the vast majority of travelers are just doing the best they can. They’re just trying to have a nice time, or an educational time, or a delicious time , or a relaxing time.

Quit judging them for traveling differently than your ideal. They may not want to live out of hostels for months at a time. I know I don’t, by the way. It sounds smelly.

16. They lack a thesaurus.

Epic. Ultimate. Come on, guys. I know we want to rank on the Google machine but there have to be better ways to do so. Google likes hearing it’s “the best” anyway, so you may as well just stick with that.

If you’re giving me an ultimate anything, it better deliver on that promise. 

Have I done this myself? Absolutely. Am I trying to break myself out of this urge to get all hyperbolic about this, that, and the other thing? That’s also true. 

17. They fancy themselves more authentic than you.

This goes back to the right and wrong way to travel. If you’re not able to spend a couple of weeks , even a full month somewhere, you’re not a real traveler. 

If you’re not able to sit around in a coffee shop during your trip for the bulk of an afternoon, you haven’t experienced anything of value. 

Note: I’ve witnessed these same bloggers hawk the shit out of their social media profiles and YouTube channels to locals just trying to make them a sandwich. 

Is that authentic? 

Put the business cards away and pay the man what you owe him and step aside so that I may also have a sandwich.

I refuse to judge people for visiting a place that isn’t off the beaten path. What’s that even mean, by the way?

A woman poses on a beach, certainly not one of the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

If you want to spend your one week of vacation at an all-inclusive resort, have at it. You (probably) worked hard for that cheddar, and you deserve to treat yourself as you see fit. If you sold photos of your feet for that resort trip, I’m not even judging you for that. 

Get that foot money, honey.

Your travel is no more or less authentic than the smelly guy who’s been backpacking for six months and snores his way through cheap hostels. I keep coming back to this image because it’s disturbing, frankly. Where’s the joy in it? Here I go, judging smelly guys. I’m not perfect, either.

Your travel is authentic because you’re out there exploring the world. It’s authentic for that smelly guy because he’s living his best life. Travel is already authentic because you chose to spend your time and resources on travel. That’s a huge deal. Celebrate it.

18. They’re arbiters of taste and what’s overrated.

If your only hot take is about how people should skip Paris, it’s become a cold take. First of all, get some new material.

Second, you don’t know if there’s that traveler who has been saving up for that Paris trip for months that is now second-guessing themselves because of your opinions.

Was that your intention?

If so, why? Who hurt you?

Let people like what they like.

Fun fact: Calling destinations overrated is overrated.

Share your opinions to your heart’s content, but don’t rain on someone’s parade because they don’t agree with you.  That’s unless it’s about oysters, in which case they are the boogers of the sea and you can’t tell me any different.

A man gets ready for a shooter, not one of the most annoying things about travel bloggers.

19. They lack perspective.

You can have an identity beyond travel blogging. There are things going on beyond your camera lens that are more important. Recognize the privilege involved in what you’re doing. 

People hate us not because they ain’t us, but because quite a bit of what’s published out there is tone-deaf. You don’t need to work through your guilt about how lucky you are in everything you put out there, but if you completely ignore that privilege, that’s lame.

That goes for folks who work to travel vs. work to live. Good for you. I don’t have any kids, so tend to spend my money on experiences, food, and treats for my dog.

Acknowledge the fact that you can make the decision to prioritize travel over anything else. 

You are very lucky and in the minority.

20. They can be misleading.

Outside of hallucinated AI information, bloggers who bop from one spot to the next just for the pic or to say they did can miss out on important context about those destinations.

It can be difficult to learn about the cultural norms of every single place when you’re on the road all the time, but that’s part of what you signed up for when you decided to do this thing. 

You can learn simple things like appropriate greetings, how to behave in sacred spaces, and how to behave with your partner in some parts of the world before you go to a new place. This is especially true if you’re going to advertise your exploits on social media.

Information is power, and disinformation can be even more powerful.

If you’re traveling to the United States, by the way, we tip our servers. It’s a whole thing, but it is what it is.

21. They lack a sense of humor about their lot in life.

If you’re a blogger feeling called out, that sounds like a you problem. I’m kidding a little bit, but if there’s any profession (or hobby) that requires a lighter touch, it’s travel blogging.

Why are so many of them so serious all the time?

A woman who is a little too happy, one of the most annoying things about travel bloggers

Travel can be messy and hilarious. Whether you hate the idea of being an “influencer” or not, we’re in that same bucket with the ladies with the butts and the flowy dresses. 

Fun fact: Frankly, I don’t care if I come across this kind of thing while traveling, as long as they’re being respectful to that place. 

At least they’re obvious about their identity.

They want to pretend like they hiked to the top of that mountain in that dress rather than tell you the real story about changing into that frock in the tick-infested woods nearby. Whatever. You do you, sister. 

Obviously, I’m bright enough that I can tell when content is overly staged or unrealistic. It’d be great if these things came with a disclaimer. Will I go protest about it in the streets? No. We have bigger fish to fry.

It’s OK to be a little annoying…sometimes.

I feel like I attacked myself in some ways with this one, but I think that just means I’m self-aware. It’s OK to laugh at yourself and make fun of the broader travel bloggerverse. It’s been getting a little too serious out there to the detriment of the content. If you don’t inject yourself into your work, the robots have won, right?

Ready to Be Less Annoying Somewhere?

Your Flight:  I use a variety of tools to find cheap airfare, but if you’re looking to book during a particular period of time, you should start your search on  Skyscanner . It’s a great way to watch flights for a while, too, and save some cash that way.

Adventurous folks may love subscribing to  Going , formerly Scott’s Cheap Flights. You’ll get all kinds of deals in your inbox throughout the year. Yes, it can become dangerous.

Your Accommodations:  For hotels, start with  Booking.com . Compare that with what you see on Hotels.com . Find apartment-style accommodations on  Vrbo .

Seeking even more wallet-friendly accommodations? Try  Hostelworld . Their picks are heavily vetted and reviewed to offer you a safe experience for budget travel.

Etc.:  For general travel goodies, visit my  Favorite Things  page. For more information on planning your travel and travel tips, visit my  Travel Tools  page.

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Agnes Groonwald

2 thoughts on “21 Most Annoying Things About Travel Bloggers”

Me? Judgmental? Insanity!

Definitely a lot of this is true, which is why we get such a bad rep. Fairly recently I posted my disdain at the words “no travel bloggers” in travel article requests, and a few people responded slipping out their biases – like travel bloggers are bought, they’re not average people, they just want to advertise their site, etc etc. Made my heart sink a bit.

Probably my least favorite thing about a lot of bloggers is acting like travel is so accessible to everyone, like there aren’t people out there who don’t know where their next meal is going to come from – let alone a “cheap” flight of $200.

Of course people lying and using AI to do their work is also up there. It’s a real shame because when there’s a lot of garbage posts, it tends to hide the genuinely great and helpful blogs that there are.

I started my blog several years ago for fun and am still enjoying it. My blog isn’t big by any means but it’s a great creative release to talk about my travels. I might be #9 but even though I talk about the bad part of my travels, there’s not a lot. I like a lot of places I visit! But what’s really made me stick with it is the great people I’ve met in travel blogging – mostly via Twitter. It’s great to have genuine people to relate to. (I’m definitely a #1 too !)

Anyway, thanks for sharing! Have a great day, Agnes. I’m off to read your post on Tombstone…

Thanks for the comment, Lilly! Twitter has definitely been such a fun place for us to gather, share intel, even laugh at ourselves. The bits about privilege definitely irk me. No, everyone can’t just go off and take a vacay. No, it’s not a question of priorities. 🥴

Comments are closed.

Little Grey Box

7 Biggest misconceptions about being a travel blogger

B efore I became one I didn’t really know what being a travel blogger was about. Over the past few years, I’ve learned a lot and noticed a pattern in a few common thoughts, opinions and comments made about my life as a travel blogger. Some are totally accurate and others are way off the mark! Seeing as there’s no magic crystal ball that allows people to see inside the true life of a travel blogger , I thought I’d share with you 7 of the biggest misconceptions I’ve come across and the truth behind them. If you’ve got any questions about the #BlogLyfe feel free to ask in the comments below and I’ll do my best to turn them into another blog post for you!

1. I’m paid to create good reviews

I may be paid to review a hotel or product, but what I’m paid for is my time creating the review and sharing it with you guys. I am never paid to say something positive and there is never a requirement for me to have a certain opinion. If a brand ever did have the guts to ask me for a good review or tried to set out what I need to say, I wouldn’t work with them. That has never happened because a brand would never ask and I would never say yes. The most they do is send a list of things they’ve got going on at the moment, so if I feel the need to include them, I can… this can be things like hotel features, flight routes etc.

This misconception makes me really angry because it undermines my job, devalues my work and makes me feel like my morals are questionable. Every review I write is an honest reflection of my genuine opinion.

How to spend an enjoyable 24 hours in Brisbane City

2. I must have a lot of money because I’m able to travel so often

Ahhhhhh nope. My bank account can back me up on this one! Matt and I earn far less than we used to in our office jobs but we travel much more because it’s our job. We’re able to travel a lot now because our trips are nearly always taken care of by the client we’re working for. So while our income is smaller we don’t need to earn as much because what we would have spent our income on previously, travel, we now don’t have to pay for because it’s part of our job. When we do travel off our own pay packet it’s a real ratchet affair (Google search: How long can a human survive only on instant noodles?)

7 Biggest misconceptions about being a travel blogger

3. I don’t have a real job

Someone hold me back! I swear to Oprah, my eyes are going to roll right out of my head one of these days and I’m going to bitch slap someone right off the internet. It’s easy to criticize and undervalue someone else’s job when you’ve never done it, I get it! But a LOT of work goes into being a travel blogger .

Matt and I do everything ourselves, we: create all our written blog posts each week and video content for YouTube, do all our own social media, maintain relationships with clients and build new ones, negotiate contracts, do a ton of paperwork each day, respond to hundreds of emails, do all our accounting and we both still freelance on the side. We do interviews and photo shoots, do our own PR, write our own press releases and much, much more.  We’re small business owners and there are hours and hours of work that go into it each day. I work 1000 times harder now than I ever did in my old job, mostly because I love it so very much.

7 Biggest misconceptions about being a travel blogger

4. I get to see all the places I want to see whenever I want to see them

I have a big travel bucket list in my mind, but at this stage of my career I’m not really checking things off like you might imagine. Where I’m at right now, I go where the work takes me. So it’s not quite as simple as looking at your bucket list and thinking, “I’ll just take that two month trip to Norway I’ve always dreamed about and it’ll be free because I’m a travel blogger.” Ahhhhh nope. I go where offers tell me to go which, at the moment, is mostly Australia and Asia. As the blog continues to grow I’ll have more offers come in from more places and these will take me to those far-off lands I want to visit.

7 Biggest misconceptions about being a travel blogger

5. I keep all the good tips for myself

Each day I receive private messages and emails from people asking me for travel tips on destinations I’ve covered on the blog. All the best tips I have to offer are up on the blog, ready to go! I don’t keep any tips for myself and sending me an email asking for a personalised itinerary for an upcoming holiday won’t yield any new info. Everything I love and would recommend for a destinatio n is already up on the blog, laid it out with pretty images and links too!

7 Biggest misconceptions about being a travel blogger

6. I’m an idiot and everything I do sucks

You gotta have a thick skin if you’re going to be a travel blogger because there’s a lot of hate in the world. People will call you all kinds of names, they’ll tell you-you’re stupid and a massive idiot, that you have no idea what you’re talking about, that you’re fat, ugly, annoying, racist and the things you’ve spent hours creating are useless, terrible and the worst thing they’ve ever seen in their life.

A lot of hate will come your way, but the truth is you aren’t any of those things. People often need an explanation for their own shortcomings, a narrative to justify why they behave or feel a certain way. When they see you doing well and being happy, calling you a fat, ugly, idiot justifies why you irk them so much and devalues your success. Just remember… ALL bullies are cowards. There isn’t a truly strong, confident person alive who would put another down so if they’re putting you down, they aren’t strong. They’re a weak person looking to justify your success and their own problems.

7 Biggest misconceptions about being a travel blogger

7. I’m super outgoing and want to be best friends with everyone in the world

This is a tough one. I’m an introvert by nature, I’m also confident, a good communicator and comfortable in front of a camera, with a strong personality. Those last points often lead me to come across as an extrovert, which I’m definitely not. Despite the fact I share a lot of my life with the world I’m actually a really private person who doesn’t trust easily, has few very close relationships and rarely lets people into my inner circle.

It’s a hard balance to strike… sharing your life with the world but keeping parts of your life just for yourself. At the end of the day , I always remember I don’t need to justify or explain anything to anyone. I can’t control anyone else’s perception of me, all I can do is be honest, share what I’m comfortable with and know, deep down, who I am. If you’re a newbie travel blogger it’s important you set your boundaries early and stick to them, you have to keep some parts of your life just for yourself.

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Why I Hate Some Travel Blog Posts

Why I Hate Some Travel Blog Posts

Travel works a great transformation from within. 

Travel broadens the mind.

Travel makes you more tolerant.

Travel shrinks the World.

Travel brings the people of the World closer.

Why I Hate Some Travel Blog Posts?

This does seem like a Utopian dream, doesn’t it? But I do believe in this dream, at least to a large extent. But occasionally I come across a random post by a self-styled ‘travel blogger’ that punctures this Utopian dream.

These are posts by people who travel in the physical sense but are mentally confined within the four walls of their own homes, villages, cities or countries. They do not realize that there is a whole new world out there which has a different way of living and doing. For them, there exists only one yardstick and that is their own rusty one.

I get really angry when I read such ill-informed, presumptive and patronizing posts for the following reasons:

Posts

Generalization

These posts revel in generalizations, they generalize about a country, its people and its culture. What really rankles is that they put on an air of expertise which presumably they have acquired over their vast experience of having spent 24 hours in that country!

They take one experience and extrapolate it to the entire country, its people and culture. Some of them scrounge for accommodation in the dingiest of places, places that even the lowest of the locals would not touch with a barge pole and then write in their posts about the miserable living conditions.

I am fine with a candid and honest write-up, but the question is; are you qualified and experienced enough to pass judgment?

Stereotyping

This is another of the ills that infect the kind of articles that I am referring to. You are scammed or robbed by a person of a particular community or race or country and immediately you rush to stereotype the entire community, race, and country as thieves and scamsters. It is worth reminding these self-styled travel writers that all kinds of people make up all types of countries and communities. The good, bad and the ugly exist in every religion, country, and community including their own.

Patronizing

Some of the posts assume a patronizing tone, an attitude like – “I am OK, You are not OK”! Just because things are done in a different way does not mean that they are necessarily an inferior method. It could actually turn out that you were yourself wrong all these years, but your myopic vision ensured that you thought what you did was right!

Narrow Minded

I am reminded of one specific instance where one of our “travel experts” who was on a voyage of “discovery” to an exotic land asked for some “real food” as he was hungry to the puzzlement of his hosts. He did not realize that what was in front of him was “food” for them!

Some posts take great pride in highlighting the negative aspects of a place, people, country or culture. The pity is that they have not even understood all the aspects before putting pen to paper. What is the motivation that drives them to do this? Is it mere insensitivity or a desire to attract more readers who in turn chip in with their “expert comments”.

The list of the symptoms that afflict this kind of diseased posts is endless. The only saving grace here is that these are small in number and are swamped by the more transformative, informative and inspirational pieces by real travelers with a real passion for exploring and understanding the World and its incredible treasures.

Travel opens doors and I hope some day the doors of the minds of these ‘travelers’ open and let in the sunshine of knowledge and tolerance.

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55 thoughts on “why i hate some travel blog posts”.

Hi Sandy, Being open is a fun way to travel. This helps me suspend judgment. Also, I get to see there are so many fascinating ways to look at the world from different perspectives. I do love most travel blogs but rarely do the straight laced, common travel blogger type post. Add a little bit of flair, some humor and a few wacky stories too, to my blog and brand. Ryan

Sounds about right. I have a difficult time writing about a place I’ve only visited for a few days–when that happens I preface my post with the statement that I don’t feel like I got a full experience of a place. I also prefer a balance in describing an experience–I want to know what’s good and what’s bad. It’s always better to hear about the experience than just a rundown of what there is a city.

I agree with all your points but I tend to avoid words like “hate”, etc. They just charge your day negatively which is not many people’s glass of beer.

Cheers to a wonderful Friday!

I agree with your views. One should include the culture about the place they visit but some trips are so short that you don’t get to know the place and its people much and just have to go with a quick exposure to the city.

Man, you do not want to read my blog. I revel in negativity.

I like all your points here, this speaks about how we travel bloggers should be responsible enough in all ways. When I go to a certain place I constantly make sure that I immersed in their culture to experience the whole lot.

Thank goodness for calling out that the ridiculous posts are the minority. Yes, there are some posts that make me cringe, but I really do enjoy the majority of the content that travelers create. I do chuckle though when I read a post about “Must-see” sights in a place when people clearly were only there during a long lay-over. Good times.

Couldn’t agree more! We like to take it really slow when we travel, no less than a few weeks in a given country, and usually no less than a few months!

While I agree mentioning downsides of a place but writing a post merely to criticize and attract readers and hit to blog is unacceptable to me too. I do see a few bloggers indulging in that. very well brought out issue.

I can only agree – Stereotypes and wide generalizations are dangerous anywhere, and I hate when those 24 hours guides or a few days somewhere claim to know everything about that country / place. As a travel blogger it is outright dangerous to perpetuate this…This is not to say everything should be white-washed, but people need to really think before they type!

I do agree with some of your points. In our blog we try to point out everything. The good, the bad, but never with a generalizations. I guess that is one of the reasons why blogs are so popular because they are opinionated and honest (for the most part at least)

Totally agree with you on your post 🙂 Great write up 🙂

Really interesting post. As travel bloggers it’s important to be aware of our prejudices.

I will sum this up with one of my favourite statements i often tell people in regards to why we travel “Its to easy to think where we live is how the world is”. Don’t be confined to that thought

I agree that travel should open our eyes, our hearts, and our minds to new experiences. It frustrates me as well when I see other travellers complaining about the quality of the food or accommodations. If they want everything to be like at home, they should stay home!

I do think that travel blogs like ours are great in that they open people’s eyes to different experiences and give them insight into what to expect in foreign lands.

I agree on all your points. That’s why I stay away from bloggers like that. More often than not they just want the page views and do not really aim to inspire.

I agree with you – it’s sad that travel doesn’t open everybody’s mind – such potential for a transformation but sometimes it just doesn’t happen. I also find it very disheartening when those who travel take to platforms online and push generalizations and stereotypes. We’re the people who should be breaking them down.

Interesting post, I definitely agree with most of your points. I like your blog a lot & always look forward to your new posts, keep up the great work

I do agree, generalization is not healthy, but in some way I can understand why some people are not as tolerant especially when they experienced something bad (say they got scammed). It doesn’t mean that the bad things don’t happen in other places but because the bad thing happened in a specific place, it will be forever associated with it.

So I think there should always be a balance when writing about the place we travel to.

A very interesting post indeed! I’m glad that these writers (and also travelers I’ver personally met) are far and few between! Sometimes I wonder why people bother to leave their home country at all, if all they are going to do is find the negative. Even when I’ve lived in a place for a couple years, I know better than to view a whole country based on the few souls I’ve encountered. Thanks for sharing!

Interesting post that gives you some food for thought and great that you decided to share your opinion on the matter. I definitely agree that we as bloggers should avoid this. Or simply put we as humans should avoid all these but especially as bloggers inspiring people and motivating them to travel. Honestly, I have barely seen any of these though in blog posts and do read quite a lot of blogs. Sometimes it is even the opposite I get sick of “everything is so great” attitude.

I definitely agree with you on some points. It try not to judge people or think negatively but of course I’m only human! Love your honesty, thanks for sharing 🙂

Thanks for sharing and I think in the end – everyone would like to be an expert, but there is just to much to be explored before becoming an expert. Maybe it could apply to my hometown even I grew up there! @ knycx.journeying

I agree with a lot of this. I definitely think it’s fair to show a balance, nuanced image of travel, so people get a realistic idea of what some places and what being on the road in general is like, but I think every place has something intriguing and beautiful to be discovered, and that’s what I like to find.

And generalizations kill me too, especially when they’re negative. “I met a rude person in X, so all X people are rude”.

I fully agree with what you write on your post, it is just that I would have added 20 points more! lol The posts that I hate most are those describing places that are on their bucket list! Why people write about Madrid (for example) before going to Madrid, just because they want to go to Madrid? Crazy (blogging) world!

This was an interesting read. I do agree with most of what you said though. As travel bloggers, we should all be more careful about what we say 😀

Hahaha, what a great post . There’s a lot about travel blogs that can be pretty annoying! Luckily there’s so many blogs that you can find ones that don’t annoy you! 🙂

Nice post, though I wonder if its a bit too judgemental! I mean does having a 24 hour adventure in a city make it any less than an expat living there for 3 months? Perhaps but I would rather have one day than hear about it for 1,000 days! right?

Being part of this community is all about being supportive, so when a blogger makes a post that is “narrow minded” or “patronizing” other bloggers tend to go along with it. Which is unhelpful. This is why I’m glad you made this post and called that out which in turn, expands discussions on written articles.

Having said that I would like to agree with you on spreading the sunshine of knowledge but instead of ‘tolerating’ maybe we could go a step further and be ‘understanding’, to learn more about what we may at first feel strongly disagreeable with in other cultures so we do not just tolerate but see how things happen for reasons then have more constructive discussions like this one! Great to see a fellow blogger voicing out!

Blogs should educate. If the post is an honest and open account of the bloggers experience I don’t have issue with it. I do have issue with bloggers who don’t travel or write posts about places they have not been to.

I totally agree with all your points. This is increasing these days as bloggers are creating content just to get hits and not to be informative.

I agree with you. There are times when I have read posts which i find to be really resting on the stereotypical understanding of a culture . I think one should be liberal enough to understand that every place is different and difference is where the real beauty lies. Else, there would be no fun of travelling if everywhere on earth was the same.

😊 I agree that some blogs can be rather annoying. The next time you come across a piece that you find poorly respresents a place, do share your travel story/experiences via comments. It may not completely assuage the situation, but it will provide an alternate viewpoint. That said, those that travel without tolerance will see countries, but not understand them.

Interesting write-up. Presentation is equally important as content.

Great insight as we are travel bloggers ourselves. One of my own pet peeves are the blogs that gear everything to the readers as if you can live my life too and many are not truly living on the road but have home bases or even jobs. We actually work but travel frequently and are careful not to market ourselves as anything different than that of a frequent flyer. Good post the negativity and generalization gets to me as well 🙂

A very deep nice message hidden in the post and its time for such bloggers to click their mind and write for public benefits and for just playing with their feelings. So write so nice for the sponsored post though it might not deserve…

Very well written. I recently met a German girl who was judging India based upon her experience in just one state for only a week. I kept silent (I didn’t want to ruin my breakfast) on her stupidity and thanked God that she was not a travel blogger.

Interesting food for thought here. I have come across some posts like this and agree that generalizing can be very dangerous, but it’s also important to be able to share your personal thoughts and insight in your writing. It’s also important to recognize that you can’t be an “expert” on a country after spending 72 hours there. Will keep pondering on this issue!

This is a fantastic post and I completely agree with you. There are some places that I have traveled to numerous times and STILL find it difficult to write about it because I find that there’s still so much to experience it. I do get super annoyed too when I read posts or see IG/FB accounts where people claim to have visited SO MANY countries, but really they’ve barely scratched the surface. I prefer travel blogs that have a more focused niche, where they tend to really explore and experience a country beyond the touristic route.

Wow. You’ve illustrated great points. I guess, it’s not just for some travel blog posts also but it could be applicable to other blog posts belonging to another niche as well. I admire those who really take time and connect with the place and not just mere stepping on a stone and running off again.

Whenever I travel, I see to it that I experience the place beyond the tourist attractions. I do it through mingling with the locals. I am also in love with slow travelling. It provides you with the chance to know the place in a deeper sense.

airinaapril.blogspot.com

Perhaps I am not looking hard enough – as if I really want to – but I haven’t come across too many negative blogs over the years. My biggest pet peeve are bloggers who are clearly writing sponsored posts about about a city or country that they barely spent any time in – or haven’t been to at all – simply because they are being paid by a hotel or airline that they partnered with. Granted there are some well written sponsored posts. However, for every well written sponsored post, there is an equal amount of cringe worthy write ups if not more. You just feel for the author as they struggle to string along a coherent, worthwhile 250 word blog post for us to read. If you are going to write a sponsored post, then please make sure it is of a place that you spent some quality time in, like more than 48 hours!

I HEAR YOU! Though I haven’t read these narrow-minded behaviours on blogs but seen them in the news. It’s really sad and disappointing especially when there is that assumption that the world should be the way they see THEIR world.

Agreeing personality here. Some people would just like fame, money, likes, and shares, some don’t even know what was really on the place because they only made it our pure research. Travel blogs should be informative, sensible, and cool.

I agree with you in part but I also dislike blogs that only see the positive side of travel and act like every place they visit is some kind of utopia. It’s fine to dislike somewhere, it’s fine to have bad experiences and it’s fine to blog about them.

I do agree that these experiences shouldn’t lead you to dismiss a whole country or culture though.

Really valid reasons..I guess I would as well hate a blog post if it were generalizing people or showing narrow mind or not respecting the culture and tradition of the place that it writes about…

I believe all your reasons are valid, especially about generalization. You can’t pretend like you’re the Tourism Ambassador of Whatever Country if you’ve only spent a few days there. Travel should be more about storytelling, not generalizing.

travel makes us more positive. love your writing.

Such a true observation. Especially when travelling through India I made the experience, that I was at many different people’s homes and the habits where very different everywhere (even in the same city) and locals denied things as being like this in their culture, that other locals had claimed before. So there is a great variety of people EVERYWHERE. It may seem impossible to find an objective description of countries at times, but we have to understand that those who we are meeting are individuals (with their own believes and customs).

Travel can really only bring benefit to the traveller, once he/she lets go of how things are back home.

A very well thought and written post. I agree some of the travel bloggers just highlight the negative thoughts, views, about the place and culture without having the in-depth knowledge for the same. I personally fell its good to mention both pros and cons in the post but only after validating and understanding the perspectives. Travel opens the mind and doors for so many actually.

Absolutely agree with your point of views. I also have to add, travellers don’t necessarily have to make judgements, they can see the world and narrate their experiences without actually deriving any inferences based on their limited interaction with the locals.

I agree on to some of your points here, while generalising elements when traveling, it’s still not nice to say good or bad about a certain place or situation just because we/ they’d had experience it. Traveling is supposed to be fun and however we do it, enjoyment is the best medicine.

ha ha I love this. I get very frustrated with some people who are very dismissive about countries without even giving them a chance. Also those who complain about how terrible somewhere is when they paid next to nothing. You get what you pay for!

Very interesting post! For me, travel is about experiencing another way of life and meeting new people (and that has happened even in my own state). It has broadened my perspective. I’m okay with some negativity in a post if it is warranted. I’d rather hear the good and the bad because otherwise the blogger can seem like they are selling a fantasy rather than relating a real experience. But needless negativity because the place is not like home is ridiculous. I can’t even imagine what it would be like to have a travel partner like the person you described in the “real food” situation. That would make me crazy!

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Local Adventurer » Travel Adventures in Las Vegas + World Wide

The Ugly Truths of Being a Travel Blogger

Anytime we meet someone new and the conversation and get asked what we do, we’re always hesitant to say we’re travel bloggers. It’s not because we hate our jobs (although sometimes we do), but because the perception of travel blogging tends to be skewed. Our answers are followed by a slew of questions and remarks like “it must be nice being on vacation all the time.” I’ve even had one person tell me it’s not a real job. 

Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of aspects about our line of work that won’t have us crawling back to a 9 to 5 anytime soon. But if you step a day in our shoes, you might not think it’s a dream job anymore.

After talking to some of the top travel bloggers and influencers and gathering their thoughts, we decided to share the many common themes that give you a glimpse of the worst parts of what goes on behind the scenes. Also, because we want you to see both sides of the story, stay tuned later this month for the flip side – the best perks of being a travel blogger.

The Ugly Truths of Being a Professional Travel Blogger // Local Adventurer #blogging #travelblogger #ontheblog

Last Updated: Aug 14, 2018

What You Imagine vs Reality

We made this pi chart as a fun intro. I saw a similar pi chart when we were in the photography business, where people constantly thought we spent most of our time shooting photos and traveling to exotic places.

How you think a travel blogger spends there time vs how travel bloggers spend their time Pi Chart // Local Adventurer #travelblogger #travelblogging #blogger #blogging #bloglife

Other People Won't Respect It as a Job

It’s still a pretty new profession. I grew up in a community where people don’t completely understand what blogging is, let alone travel blogging. They may have a vague idea what it is but not a full grasp of it, despite me explaining it many times over. It’s easy for them to just slip into an assumption that all I do is travel and I think that they struggle to find value in it. For example, my own family doesn’t understand it. I write movies on the side — as a hobby — but because members of my family don’t understand blogging and they understand movies well, they introduce me to their friends as a screenwriter instead of a blogger. It makes me sad a little bit because I am really proud of my work as a blogger, much more than my work writing movies. But I know that it’s hard to expect the people around me to be proud of something they hardly understand.

Many still don’t understand the hard work that is required to keep a travel blog running full-time. Travel blogging is composed of two words, and people always forget the second half of it: blogging. And blogging isn’t just about writing. Being a professional blogger these days means you also have to take care of marketing, your own branding, maintaining your social accounts, taking photos, editing videos, brainstorming, strategizing, finding clients.

Yoshke from  ThePoorTraveler

It's a Grind

Contrary to what you see on Instagram, being a travel blogger isn’t just about sitting on the beach and snapping Insta-worthy photos. It’s a grind! You’re never disconnected, always networking, working social media, writing, reading, dealing with trolls, and learning new skills like coding and SEO. Like any business, everything is on your shoulders. That is very liberating, but it can be incredibly stressful at times too (especially if you’re a workaholic like me!). I’m definitely not complaining, but this job is not nearly as glamorous as the internet makes it seem!

Matt from  NomadicMatt

The Ugly Truths about Travel Blogging - The Cons of Professional Travel // Local Adventurer #travel #traveltips #travelblogger

It might be the dream job, but it's the worst vacation

I think often people see the travel blogging lifestyle as one big vacation but there is a ton of work that goes into planning, creating content while on a trip and then publishing that content after the trip. It is an amazing job to have but at the end of the day it is still a job. We don’t post the pictures of editing videos into the night and the days spent writing or editing photos in the office.

Josh from  CalifoniaThroughMyLens

Dating is a challenge

It is hard enough to date in a large city like NYC, but when I do meet someone that I want to go on dates with, I struggle to find time when I am not traveling. I have had to tell guys before, I’ll be back from this country in one week, so I’m free Saturday or Sunday but Monday I head to this country. My schedule is always changing, so dating can feel impossible. I have also met a previous boyfriend while traveling and tried and failed at the even more challenging long-distance relationship. In addition to not being in one location long enough to really date, it is very tricky to describe what I do to people on a first date. Most people have no clue what I do and so an entire first date can be spent only answering questions about what I do. I like talking about my job, but it is so distracting on a first date. If I’m only explaining what I do, I cannot learn more about the other person.

Jen from  The Travel Women

You Sacrifice Your Personal Life

The biggest negative is the lack of personal life. We lost our circle of friends because we worked so hard to build our careers and spent so many years traveling full time. We lost touch with family and friends. Our nieces and nephews grew up and we missed it all. That is time we’ll never get back. And while there are things like Facebook and Skype that allow us to chat online regularly, nothing is better than human contact.

It’s important to have people in your life that know you for you who are. Not business associates, not people you meet on the road, or at conferences, but people that are lifelong friends who know the good and the bad and still accept you. We have had to rebuild those bonds and it takes time. I think a lot of people have tunnel vision when building a career and let something slide. We let our relationships with family and friends slide and are working to fix that. It’s important to make time for people no matter what the career.

Dave & Deb from  The Planet D

The Ugly Truths of Being a Professional Travel Blogger // Local Adventurer #blogging #travelblogger #ontheblog

BACK TO TOP

Seriously, it just sneaks up on you

My dedication and love for my work is endless, but I almost lost my partner and the love of my life because I did not take the time to prioritize and nurture our relationship.

It is easy to get caught up in your work, especially if you are passionate about it, there is nothing wrong with that – until it takes up your whole life. Almost losing the most important person in my life made me realize that my work will never be as important as the people I love.

Everyone is always trying to find their purpose in life, but what we don’t often realize is the toll it can take if we let it consume us. Learning how to blend work and personal relationships has been one of the hardest things I’ve had to do, and it is still a process I am learning everyday.

Deb, The Offbeat Life Podcast

Your Job is Never Done

The downside of being a travel blogger is the fact that your job is almost never done. There’s always something more you can write about, always a new place to discover, always something you can improve on your blog and so on.

As a blogger, you also need to develop several skills such as photography, social media, SEO, networking, marketing and also some basic knowledge about design and web-developing. So, being a successful blogger nowadays with all the competition out there requires the skills of several regular jobs, all in one.

Some people think it’s a constant vacation, but in reality it’s almost never like a vacation, even though the experiences are fun and worthwhile (at least for me). I used to work 40 hours a week, now it’s more like 80 hours per week. However, since it’s my passion, I’m more motivated to work 80 hours as a travel blogger than 40 hours as a salesman like I used to.

Alex from  SwedishNomad

You can work from anywhere, but that means you're working everywhere

One of the positives and negatives is that I can work from anywhere. This usually means I work long hours, much longer than my friends that have 9-5 jobs do. Also, I often don’t get to fully enjoy a destination or do a ton of sightseeing. Instead, I’m usually working and writing about my previous destination(s).

Johnny from  JohnnyJet

You are Doing Multiple Full Time Jobs

For each trip there are countless hours spent researching potential partners, negotiating contracts, planning itineraries, taking/editing photographs, taking notes, doing keyword research, writing blog posts, creating pinnable photos, posting on social media, marketing content and creating ROI reports for clients. Phew! And all of that doesn’t include general blog maintenance, updating old posts, brand promotion, doing interviews, creating for collaboration posts, answering reader emails and managing freelancers.

Annette from  BucketListJourney

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

You have to keep Investing time and money

Although most people think that all we do is travel and play, what a lot of people don’t realize is that there’s a lot of work that goes into every photo, article, social media post and more. While a lot of people think we just write and post a bunch of pictures, because our blog is our business, we put a lot of work into what we do. Every article is properly researched so we can rank on Google, tons of time is put into editing photos, writing great content, not to mention all the skills that we invest to keep improving.

Most bloggers juggle multiple hats as a salesperson, tech guru, photographer, videographer, social media strategist, writer and more! At the end of the day though, starting a travel blog changed our lives and although it is a lot of work, we wouldn’t be doing anything else! It is now our full-time income and has funded our travels around the world for the last three years.

Anna from  Adventure in You

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

And It's A serious investment

You lose money for at least the first year. Not enough people recognize and talk about the necessary investment of money in travel blogging especially in the beginning. Travel, gear and educational resources all cost money. One of my biggest regrets was not saving more money before jumping into full time travel blogging as so many things that could help me travel to new places, improve my blog, the quality of my photos and videos and my marketing would cost money.

Jen from The Travel Women

There is no roadmap - you have to keep learning

Without sounding redundant, we echo what they’ve all said about the hardest, unseen parts about being a travel blogger.

In addition to the long hours, lack of community, and constant grind, another tough part is that there is no road map. It is still the wild west in the space, which gives you the freedom to make it up as you go, but also makes it difficult because there is no set model.

Fortunately, Esther’s background in photography and creatively pairs well with my background in sales and account managing. Regardless of that, things are constantly changing so you have to stay on your toes, adapt to the flowing landscape, and keep learning new skills to stay on top.

Below is a photo of Esther working from an Uber. It’s on the more extreme side of how we work, but when we have back to back deadlines, this is what we look like.

Esther & Jacob, Local Adventurer

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Have you considered being a travel blogger?

“Meet

ESTHER + JACOB

Esther and Jacob are the founders of Local Adventurer, which is one of the top 5 travel blogs in the US. They believe that adventure can be found both near and far and hope to inspire others to explore locally. They explore a new city in depth every year and currently base themselves in NYC.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

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These Travel Influencers Pivoted During The Pandemic

“I watched my career shift from being the busiest I had ever been to obviously have everything come screeching to a halt.”

Stephanie McNeal

BuzzFeed News Reporter

Catarina Mello was in Finland when she first realized that COVID-19 may have a huge impact on her life.

Mello, a 30-year-old whose home base is San Francisco, was used to her life taking unexpected twists and turns. In 2017, she had been dutifully checking off boxes of success, working in marketing at Google, but she found herself feeling restless. After taking a trip to Indonesia, she started her Instagram account, @ professionaltraveler , determined to reignite some passion in her life.

From the first Instagram post of her Indonesia trip, she told BuzzFeed News, she felt determined to try to turn her page into a profitable business. She drew on her experiences in marketing and tech, starting with posting carefully edited and perfectly posed photos from trips she took to Greece and Bora Bora. She worked the algorithm and began pitching herself to brands for partnerships. Two and a half years later, when the income from her account surpassed her Google paycheck, she quit that job to travel the world. She now runs a team of five, who produce online courses on growing a brand on social media, as well as help run her account.

When Mello first heard about the virus, she figured it couldn’t be as bad as some were warning. As things escalated in mid-March 2020 , Mello went back and forth, wanting to finish her obligations for the hotel brands she was working with for the Finland trip, but increasingly worried she may get stuck there. Finally, she decided to leave in the nick of time.

“We managed to get out of Finland and connect in Germany right before it all closed and all flights got canceled,” she told BuzzFeed News.

It turns out, even digital nomads can be brought swiftly back to reality by a global pandemic. In 2020, travel bloggers, like all of us, were grounded, confined to their homes, and unsure how to keep their businesses running. Their partnerships were canceled, and they had to scramble and innovate to keep their head above water. Many spent long nights wondering how they would survive. When they did tentatively resume their trips, some dealt with travel-shaming from their followers (and others dealt with hate for even acknowledging the pandemic) on top of their own fears about safety.

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Instagram posts made by Catarina Mello in 2020. During the pandemic, she found new ways to "future-proof" her business by making more short videos and teaching online classes.

Whitney Haldeman, a 34-year-old who runs the Instagram account @Blonde_Atlas , was on a sailing trip in the Caribbean in March last year when COVID-19 cases began increasing around the world. She had begun what she called her “adult study abroad” in 2015, after being laid off from her job in advertising. Over the years, she built her passion for travel into a business, visiting more than 175 cities in 40 countries, sharing with her more than 60,000 followers on Instagram, and launching a business that plans bespoke group travel tours.

Haldeman said she tends to be an optimistic person, so when she heard about COVID-19, she chose to hope for the best.

“I was terrified thinking about the implications it could have, not just on my business, but also my relationships and life overall,” she said.

After the sailing trip, Haldeman parted ways with her boyfriend, who lived in London , and headed back to the US. They had planned to be apart for three weeks, but wouldn’t see each other for months.

Once her new reality slowly began to sink in, it was daunting.

“I watched my career shift from being the busiest I had ever been, to obviously have everything come screeching to a halt,” she said. She estimated that “at least ~95% of all my traditional income methods paused completely.”

Influencers expressed the terror that they felt in the early days of the pandemic — not just because of, well, everything, but also because their careers basically vanished.

Carmen Sognonvi and her husband, Serge, started their luxury family travel brand, Top Flight Family , in 2016. By 2018, it had become her full-time job.

In the blink of an eye, her family’s life changed. The couple and their two daughters went from jet-setting across the globe to not leaving their Brooklyn brownstone for anything except groceries for months. Before the pandemic, paid travel campaigns accounted for about half the revenue from their business, but in 2020 it only accounted for about 7%, she said, adding they were able to increase revenue from consumer brand deals to make up the gap.

2020 was supposed to be Mello’s most ambitious travel year yet. After COVID-19 hit, she had to cancel or postpone dozens of brand trips and ad campaigns. The future looked daunting.

“Suddenly, I went from having a packed year to absolutely no plans,” she said. She estimated she lost about $30,000 directly from canceled campaigns and press trips.

Jessica Serna, 26, has been posting about her travels on the account @ MyCurlyAdventures for about four years, focusing on finding exciting places to explore in Texas, where she lives. Like Mello, 2020 was supposed to be her most active travel year yet, but suddenly, she and her husband were scrambling to keep their business afloat. In the first three to four months of the pandemic, she estimated that her influencer income decreased by about 20%.

“Little by little all of our trips disappeared. Website traffic also disappeared practically overnight,” she told BuzzFeed News.

Serna and the others didn’t have the option of sitting and waiting for the world to open up. They had to pivot and get creative. While this was challenging at the time, the influencers say it ultimately left them stronger than before.

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Jessica Serna says she saw her income decrease by 20% during the start of the pandemic.

Mello believes that while lockdown obviously caused many challenges for the influencer industry, it also accelerated the trends like “the demand for online courses, the need for more authentic and real content on social media, the social obligation to use one's influence to speak up about social and political issues, the transition of retail to e-commerce, the transition to short-form video content, and more.”

Stuck at home, Mello was “forced to think of ways to future-proof my business,” she said, and think outside the box. She did so by working on new ventures, like online courses to help people grow their businesses on social media and creating more short-form video content.

Haldeman also tried out new things, and “committed to learning as much as I could and improving my skill set to be better at my job,” she said. She threw herself into studying, finishing a course with the Wine & Spirit Education Trust and a certification program in international tourism and events management.

“I just tried to create as many positives as I could,” she said.

{ "id": 127331442 } “No matter what approach they took, there was always someone in their comments section criticizing them for it.”

As the lockdown continued though, Mello realized she had an advantage.

“Brands quickly realized that they needed to leverage creators to reach their target demographic more than ever now that no one was going to stores or looking at billboards around the city,” she said. “I went from having all my contracts canceled, to getting a lot of new ones all at once a few months later.” With the new brand deals plus sales of her online courses, Mello said 2020 actually ended up being her most profitable year yet, which she called a “blessing in disguise.”

Pretty soon, a new question emerged: When should they get back on the road? Each influencer said she struggled with the idea of getting back out there. They were not only worried about safety, but about appearing out of touch, even if they followed all local safety ordinances and acknowledged they were willing to accept a level of risk others may not be.

“It's been interesting to see the broad range of reactions travel creators have had to this epidemic,” Sognonvi observed. “Some chose not to travel at all. Others chose to do road trips only, no flights. Some did domestic travel only, no international trips. But what I noticed is that no matter what approach they took, there was always someone in their comments section criticizing them for it.”

Sognonvi and her family slowly began to venture out last July, first with a staycation in Manhattan , then a trip to Colonial Williamsburg . In her posts from the fall, she emphasized how she believed that it is important to show how people could travel, giving her followers tips on things like picking a hotel with proper safety protocols and flying safely.

“It's time to normalize conversations about how to travel in a safe and responsible way,⁠ instead of just pretending that nobody is traveling,” she wrote in September. “That's about as effective as pretending that teenagers aren't having sex, instead of educating them on how to do it safely.”

Still though, her posts got heavily criticized by both people saying she wasn’t being cautious enough about the virus and those slamming her for acknowledging it at all. After Sognonvi posted a video on TikTok about how she believes families could safely travel to the Maldives, people accused her of “trying to bring COVID there,” with another calling it “not safe to post.” Then, she said, people started getting arguments in the comments about COVID’s survival rate. “It was crazy to see how polarizing the topic of travel was,” she said.

At first, Serna had struggled to figure out how to keep her business going, finding that at-home content she was making didn’t perform as well. However, over the summer she and her husband began making local trips, primarily outdoors, people began to respond.

“We found that because many people had their anniversaries, honeymoons, etc., canceled that they were looking locally and our page and website ended up seeing a huge surge,” she said. “Because our page primarily focuses on local travel, it ended up being an important resource for our community, and by the end of 2020 it was one of our busiest years yet.” By 2021, she said, they had tripled what they were making before the pandemic.

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TikTok posts from Carmen Sognonvi. She said she was surprised by how polarizing the response was to posts about her travel plans during the pandemic.

Not all of the influencers jumped back into traveling, though. Haldeman ended up moving to London during the pandemic to be with her boyfriend (her visa just happened to come through during that time) and barely traveled at all, besides a few car trips in between the UK’s lockdowns. To keep herself afloat, she developed online courses to teach others how to navigate immigration issues while traveling, how to be a digital nomad, and more. She also secured brand deals with wine companies after finishing her WSET certification.

“My mission has always been to help people be better travelers and really steer people away from irresponsible or insensitive travel of any kind, so I really tried my best to continue to advocate for that,” she said. “Instead, I tried to focus on being optimistic about the future and planning for trips down the road.”

She recently took her first big flight since COVID-19, to Greece earlier this month, writing on Instagram : “This one is for all my travel industry friends who spent the last year on the bench. Here’s to getting back in the game and back to work.”

Looming over any plans, though, was backlash. Travel bloggers are already the focus of much ire for their seemingly perfect and stress-free lives, and Mello braced herself for criticism when she made the decision to begin traveling again after about six months grounded. (She said she took precautions like getting tested frequently, planned mostly outdoor excursions, and only stayed in hotels with strict protocols.)

To her surprise though, her followers were mostly supportive of her decision to venture out.

“I received thousands of DMs of people saying they really needed that fresh travel content to get them through lockdown and isolation,” she said. “It gave them something to look forward to and gave them hope that maybe the world would get back to normal sooner rather than later.”

Serna said that she did not experience a ton of criticism either and that she believes being open about what precautions she was taking helped.

“We tried to stay very transparent with our community and because so many people could find trips that fit in their comfort level, we generally received positive feedback with very little pushback,” she said.

{ "id": 127331472 } “It's time to normalize conversations about how to travel in a safe and responsible way,⁠ instead of just pretending that nobody is traveling.”

While Sognonvi said she did receive criticism, it was from both extremes.

“Because our content always had such a strong emphasis on COVID-19 safety, we actually caught just as much flack from COVID deniers as we did from travel shamers,” she noted.

Now that vaccines are making traveling safer, it seems people are feeling ready to board a plane again. According to statistics from a study called the Coronavirus Travel Sentiment Index Report, half of American travelers “ indicated they are excited about travel in the near term.” The CDC’s current guidelines recommend that travelers wait until they are fully vaccinated before embarking on any trips and continue to wear a face mask on public transportation.

Mello believes that travel influencers can be a huge part of showing consumers they can travel responsibly and help revive the industry so many people depend on.

“I genuinely believed that it was possible to travel safely by getting tested and following mask and social distancing guidelines,” she said. “And I wanted to share that message with my audience. Too many communities around the world also depend on tourism, and the thought of them struggling to put food on the table was really difficult for me.”

Sognonvi agreed, saying that while travel influencers have always given their followers a window into a jet-setting life, now they can make a big difference by helping people feel more comfortable with travel.

“I think people appreciate being able to preview what the experience is like by seeing us go through the process first,” she said.

For Haldeman, the pandemic has only strengthened her resolve to share her love of travel with more people, and make it more accessible for all.

“I didn't hear anyone tell me they learned how much they actually appreciate clothes or material things,” she said. “Instead, for most of us, it's being out in the world together and connecting with each other in it. I don't think any of us will ever take that for granted again.” ●

This story is part of the BuzzFeed News Travel Week series .

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  • Middle East
  • North America
  • South America
  • New Zealand
  • Moving abroad
  • Start Blogging
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5 Blogging Practices that Make Me Want to Scream

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It’s been 5 months since my last rant . Wow, how does time fly!

It’s coming up on two years since I quit my job to become a full-time traveler blogger , and last week was my blog’s 5 year anniversary (stay tuned for exciting news!) so I have been doing a lot of deep thinking and pondering lately about life, my blog, the future, you know, the usual. You can probably see where this is going.

I’m going through a blogger mid-life crisis.

So a few months ago I attended an amazing blogger conference in Sri Lanka and was blown away by all of the incredible people there and positive conversations that were going on. But since then, like all good things, it came to an abrupt end when we all went home.

I realized when I started to think about my 5 years of blog stuff, recently I have inadvertently taken a step back from the travel blogging community over the past few months because I have been really frustrated with a lot of the attitude and behavior going on in there. Like really frustrated.

annoying travel bloggers

Through travel blogging and social media, many truly wonderful people have come into my life, and who continue to inspire me on a daily basis. And I’ve been able to follow my dreams and build my own business that have brought me some of the most amazing opportunities. And I am so grateful and happy for that, and I wouldn’t change anything in the world for the experiences I’ve had.

But as the years tick by, I feel like things are slowly going downhill. The interwebs have quickly become flooded with crap blogs and all sorts of seriously questionable behavior. There, I said it. Someone had to say it, might as well be me.

I’ve never been one to keep strong opinions to myself.

annoying travel bloggers

Nor is that to say I am an example of a perfect travel blogger. God knows sometimes I even annoy myself. In fact, I’ve probably been guilty of some of these points over the years. But I think it’s really important that bloggers can look at themselves and really analyze their own behavior; or, you know, use their brains before clicking publish. Wishful thinking.

I am not sure how many of you guys actually care about travel blogging, but many of you in the past have expressed interest to me in the behind-the-scenes of being a full-blown digital nomad (or lazy internet writer without serious career aspirations according to my family) and I know FAR TOO MANY OF YOU relish my haters , so why not indulge?

annoying travel bloggers

And for the small percentage of you that are bloggers, I’m very sorry if I’ve hit a nerve. And for any of you who are up and coming bloggers, this is for you. Chew on it, mull it over, ponder. Please. I’m writing this for the dual purpose of getting these feelings off my chest and also bringing people’s attention to some of the shady behavior going on in travel blogging.

While I try and generally keep my blog a happy and positive space, at the same time this has been weighing on my so much and bothering me for so long, I felt like I really needed to get it down on digital paper. My blog has always been a space for me to organize my thoughts and feeling, no matter how dark. So here we go.

Please excuse the lack of rainbows and unicorns, grab a cup of coffee, and get ready for a big, long-overdue rant about 5 blogging practices I’m totally sick of.

annoying travel bloggers

1. Gimme, gimme, gimme attitude

I’ve been to about a dozen travel blogging conferences and trade shows in 3 years and there is one reoccurring them above all else – the attitude of how much can I get?

Simmer down, people! Greediness is never attractive, and I can tell you the PR people you are hunting down like flies can read through you like a children’s book.

Don’t get me wrong, one of the main reasons I decided to become a full-time blogger was because I wanted free trips. Full disclosure. That being said, I did not go after free stuff like I was going to die tomorrow. I waited and waited and waited. I said no to contra when I was offered it because it wasn’t the right fit for my blog AND because I knew I didn’t have the influence to warrant it yet. I didn’t want to sell out.

annoying travel bloggers

I put my blog first and my love of presents second.

But the most important thing I did? I focused 100% of my energy on my blog itself and producing good content. Not SEO, not link baiting, not pandering to other travel bloggers for a hook-up. I held out. I had been blogging for two years and I spent another year figuring out how to build a community of people who were similar to me. I focused on writing better stories and taking better photos.

If you’re interested, I recently wrote about my 10 tips for starting a kickass travel blog .

annoying travel bloggers

Now when I go to conferences, I was astonished by the behavior of MANY travel bloggers. People who have been blogging for less than a year trying to get invited on trips. People who have literally ZERO engagement on their blog and somehow think they have enough sway to deserve not only a invite on a blog trip but also to be paid a daily rate.

I speak to all bloggers when I say this (and please please please listen) – you need to fully understand your brand, your value, and above all, YOUR INFLUENCE before you start marketing yourself and trying to work with brands and DMO’s.

Influence is the key word here – you are an influencer. People give you free stuff not because they like you, but rather they are investing in you because they believe you will bring them business. They are looking for a return from you, will you send them business? If you don’t think so, then ethically should you accept stuff?

And your numbers aren’t always the most important thing. There are blogs with plenty more traffic than mine but have no engagement and there are really small blogs with super specialized niches who have such a strong community of followers, you know they have a lot of influence. By keeper track of feedback, engagement and reader surveys, you’ll learn over time what kind of value your blog has and from there can develop good projects and partnerships.

The most important thing to remember is your audience – you will only want to work with sponsors that appeal to them, provide them something they are interested in. You have to know them really really well.

Instead of fixating on the freebies and perks, instead why not work on building relationships with the businesses you’d be interested in working with in the future? Go to workshops, listen to tutorials, take blog courses to work on improving the areas you need to before trying to make that leap into a business.

annoying travel bloggers

2. Lack of creativity

Maybe it’s just me, but I like creative people. When I read blogs, I like the ones that try new things, stand out, say something I haven’t thought about before or question things. Or I like ones that provide really valuable information that I could use. The most successful blogs stand out from the crowd.

I read a lot of blogs that focus on all sorts of amazing, weird, and different things and use all sorts of mediums to share their stories. Oh, and I only read about 5 travel blogs regularly.

I think to go into a field like travel blogging, you need to be a creative person. You are basically starting your own magazine or newspaper but you’re the one writing all the stories and taking all the pictures. And if you decide to do it on your own, on your own terms, in a way you are breaking away from tradition.

annoying travel bloggers

So what does it mean to be creative? I’m not saying you have to be the most amazing photographer or writer or whatever, but try and present things in a creative or new way, because, let’s be honest here, there is so much travel writing out there how on earth will you stand out otherwise? Or perhaps focus on what you are an expert in, what are your strengths? Tailor your blog around what you are really good at.

This is where things get tricky. There are some really amazing blogs out there that are really crap at marketing themselves. Content does not always win. And then there are the blogs that have terrible, eye-bleeding content, but are really good at marketing themselves.

Flashy graphics, beautiful designs, the latest themes, hipster fonts. Yes, that looks good but you need more than a snazzy cover to keep people around. For me, what the blog actually says and offers the readers is the most important.

annoying travel bloggers

Guys, I can’t stress this enough, creativity is super important in blogging. The market is absolutely flooded with blogs, there are millions of them. Is your game-plan going to be win new followers with flashy graphics or write the most kickass travel post EVER about the coolest experience you’ve had on the road?

Stop fretting so much over SEO. Stop spending all your time thinking about how to gain followers. Stop trying to optimize and guest post and do this and that that *might* get you a hundred new pageviews. And please for the love of god stop trying to game the system on social media. Don’t buy followers. Don’t use bots. Don’t play the follow/unfollow game. Take all that brainpower you are wasting on trivial shit and focus on creating something that will stand out and will last.

Trust me, that’s how you are going to be successful in the long run.

annoying travel bloggers

To be honest, there is also a massive dearth of creativity in the professional side of travel blogging as well. In my opinion conferences like TBEX, the leading biggest, baddest travel blogging conference in the world show a lack of commitment to innovation which drives me bonkers. Maybe it’s just me, but you would think that a conference that prides itself on being “the future of travel media” might put in a little more effort into actually being the future of travel media instead of their current business model of “what we’ve done has always worked so why change?”

I won’t be the first blogger to say that I go to see my travel blogging friends, not to learn something new. Yes, I do have blogging friends, even after this post. I promise. At least I hope I do. Eeep!

So how do you tell people to be creative? Well, that’s a tricky one sirs. What I usually do is keep an eye on what’s been done before then do the opposite. Or I think about how I normally would tell a story and then take one more step to make it more exciting and different. Challenge yourself.

annoying travel bloggers

3.  Sense of entitlement

There has been a massive debate in the travel blogging community for years now about how travel bloggers think they deserve to be paid to travel. This growing sense of entitlement among travel bloggers really bothers me.

Yes, you read that right. Somehow getting a $10,000 free trip to Tahiti isn’t good enough anymore. Now many travel bloggers think that their time deserves to be compensated.

I wavered back and forth on this for a long time. And again, to be perfectly up front, I have been paid day rates and I have upcoming trips that pay day rates. However, most of them have been Instagram trips, not blog trips, and those rates come from the fact that I sign a big fat contract selling my photographs and their full copyright usage. In laymen terms, I am not being paid for the fact that I am going on the trip, I am being paid as a photographer. That’s very different than asking to be paid on a blog trip.

why i hate bloggers

I think there are maybe a dozen travel blogs MAX out there that are truly big enough and truly command enough impact and influence that they deserve to be paid outright day rates. When they talk, people really listen.

I believe bloggers really need to refocus their energies on building long-term partnerships with brands that pay or work using their skills in social media, writing, photography or video and be able to cash that in on collaborations and projects that pay. I think bloggers deserved to be paid when they are selling content, in some way or another.

There are heaps of ways to make money as a travel blogger, and getting day rates on a trip shouldn’t be one of them.

Again this goes back to knowing your value as a blogger. And when pitching projects try and think about what else you might be able to provide that you could put a dollar amount on. How can you help? Do they need photos? Video? Maybe even blog posts for their own site? Could you potentially write the story for another publication that does pay?

annoying travel bloggers

4. Circle jerk community

I’m sorry for using the word circle jerk on my blog. Mom, please don’t Google it.

Moving on, while I really, deep-down, love the travel blogging community as a whole, something many of you might find questionable after reading this post, there is this really weird, bizarre “you scratch my back I’ll scratch yours” behavior running rampant around the blogosphere. And not in an honest way.

Like someone posting in a FB group “hey I’m going to Fiji, can someone please pass along the Fiji tourism board contact kthanksbye” and 20 people comment saying “Oh em gee, I’ve always wanted to go to Fiji, can you message me too?!”

Back to point 1 – greedy enough?

(Also, tangent, if you can’t find the contact of who you are looking for in any other way than posting in a 5,000 person public Facebook group, you probably don’t deserve to go to Fiji).

annoying travel bloggers

It’s like bloggers that only comment on other blogs. Why don’t you try to find your own followers than harpy off of someone else? Or those posts asking everyone to share their latest blog post and everyone else will reshare. Or just tweeting amongst other bloggers. Seriously, the list goes on and on.

It’s the same behavior I’ve mentioned before, instead of trying to attract new readers to a blog, many times bloggers are somehow magnetically drawn to other bloggers. They try to get their friends on trips they don’t deserve. They try and wheedle contacts out of people. I get daily emails from bloggers I’ve never heard of let alone have met asking me for all sorts of favors. Um, nope.

Trying to piggyback on other people’s contacts and work isn’t a good business model. Or worse, trying to snitch people’s projects out from under them is even worse.

Instead of trying to interact a lot with other travel bloggers, which don’t get me wrong, I do, I also have made a big point to observe and learn from other creatives, influencers and even other types of bloggers. It’s been really inspiring and has encouraged me to take risks, try new things and really think outside the box.

annoying travel bloggers

5. Unprofessionalism

Coming from someone who just wrote “circle jerk” in public forum, you might find this one hard to swallow. But bear with me.

The worst thing about travel bloggers is the lack of professionalism. And I don’t mean in their writing. Lord knows I drop enough “f” bombs on here to make a nun blush. That actually doesn’t matter.

I am mostly talking about their blogging practices, related to all of the above points. Many travel bloggers like to oversell themselves, make promises to the moon and back and then don’t deliver. Do I need to explain why that’s ABSOLUTELY THE WORST THING EVER and why that is detrimental to travel bloggers as whole?

Bloggers who don’t deliver are the worst offenders.

Would you believe just last year I did 6 major projects where I had to work my ass off to convince someone to work with me because they had had a terrible experience with a blogger in the past? That’s a terrible statistic.

annoying travel bloggers

I think one of the worst things I blogger can do is misrepresent themselves.

And I say that because I see that all the time. Especially from those bloggers who are really good at marketing themselves. They know all the key words that marketers want to hear and they know how to make themselves look really really good.

They say they have tremendous engagement. They say they have so much experience. They say they are the best blogger ever. But do they have the content and influence to back it up? Nopers.

annoying travel bloggers

Of course it’s also not so professional to sleep with guides on press trips, get so wasted you miss the early morning wake up call, or have a hissy fit on Twitter because you didn’t get an upgrade on your free flight, seriously guys, the list could go on and on.

I think it’s time I probably stopped, don’t you?

Bloggers as a whole are a self-made industry. There aren’t industry regulations and standards. Anyone and their mom can start a blog, so it’s really important that we put on a good face and do our best. My philosophy? Underpromise and overdeliver.

This is directed for new and old bloggers alike, I think there is a lot that can be done better and more that we can become aware of, don’t you think?

Over and out.

What are your thoughts on this? Are there any blogging practices out there that upset you too? 

annoying travel bloggers

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Great post Liz.. Agree with every single word..

Loving these tips Liz!!

I’ll definitely keep them in mind if anything comes up like it – although I’m pretty happy for my blog to be my memory bank (the number of places I’ve been to and I have so few memories of them) and a means to keep the fam updated on my wanderings!

Keep the tips coming so I’m all set for takeoff in Sep! 😉

My blog was my memory bank for 2 years, I just wrote for me, and even now I still write a lot of things that I just need to put somewhere.

And this is why you’re one of my favorite bloggers! You’re honest and sometimes downright ruthless, but I respect that. I was just at the Women in Travel Summit conference this past weekend in Boston. It was my first travel blogger conference. While I enjoyed the conference and felt I got a good deal of information out of it, I did notice a lot of the things that you mentioned above. The Facebook group for the conference attendees makes me laugh out loud. Prior to the start of the conference so many people kept asking what the weather was going to be like and what to pack and all I could think of was “aren’t you travelers?” Hello, it’s called weather.com! Now, after the conference, some bloggers are asking about how to get stuff trips with no followers, etc. Makes me cringe. I just started my travel blog last year and I have a small following. Yes, I would love to grow my blog, gain more followers, and get free shit. Doesn’t everyone?! But, at the end of the day, I write for myself because I genuinely enjoy it. Thanks for your awesomeness and keep being real! 🙂

I am a big believer that passion will get you through anything!

My favorite is a guy who copied and pasted content from other sites and then passed it off as his own. Word for word, with punctuation marks and everything. Then he’d go on the Facebook travel blogger discussion groups and brag about his awesome numbers and…ahem, cough cough…”hard work.” That was a good time to hit the unfollow button.

I have seen blogs like that too! The craziest thing was they posted the same blog content on the same week in the same fb group as the original blog post! That takes some balls!

That’s WHACK!

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Seven Annoying Things Bloggers Do

Posted on Friday April 22, 2022 Tuesday May 30, 2023

A lot takes place behind the scenes when creating a blog, vlog or even an Instagram post which non-creators may never fully appreciate. Thus, there can be a bit of friction and eye-rolling from non-creators when they are around creators in their element. Over the years, I’ve met and interacted with dozens of different personality types that coexist in the blogosphere and some interactions are better than others. Also, since I often travel with non-creators, this means I’ve probably been the annoying blogger to someone else too, ha! A bit of introspection is good for the soul. Here are the seven annoying things which bloggers do.

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Seven Annoying Things Bloggers & Influencers Do

  • Take Pictures and Videos of Everything
  • Go/Eat Out Solely to Gather Content
  • Convert Ordinary Conversations Into a Blog Post
  • Demand Free Things
  • Don’t Proofread Before Publishing
  • Don’t Do Their Research
  • Over-Monetize

1. Take Pictures and Videos of Everything

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

I take photos for my blog with my cellphone camera. My gallery has hundreds of photos because I’ll take as many pictures of everything as possible from multiple angles. That’s because you never know when that photo will become handy if you intend to write about an experience later. Many people are visual creatures, and may just browse your article for the pictures as a picture says a thousand words. As a travel blogger, photos and videos are the closest I can get in taking you on my travels virtually so visually documenting my adventures is a must. However, I try to strike a balance between how much time I spend behind the (phone) lens capturing content vs. unplugging and enjoying the experience.

If you’re not a creator, standing on the peripheries while that guy tries to take the perfect photo and video must be annoying. The friend trying to get her perfect food and tablescape shot before you can enjoy your meal may make you hangry. And worse, if your friends feel like their time with you is too staged and constantly under the scrutiny of a camera, they will find you exasperating. Taking 50 photos until you find a “post-worthy” one may get exhausting. However, to my non-creators reading this, I’m sure you enjoy scrolling and seeing those perfect shots on Instagram right? If so, be patient and allow the bloggers to take their photos and videos of everything. It’ll be worth it, I promise.

2. Go/Eat Out Solely to Gather Content

Pisco sour drink in foreground in bar at Aguas Calientes

I’m not guilty of this one, but I know several creators who only travel and tour to capture content. Sometimes I wonder if they really take away much from the experience. For paid gigs, it’s important to focus on gathering the content because someone is expecting you to deliver on your end of the contract so we’re not taking about these exceptions. I’m talking about the Instagram models who only sit on the shore to get a photo proving that they went for the ‘Gram but don’t want to smudge their makeup or get their hair wet. This also applies to persons who order multiple things from a menu just to get the shot and then dump the food afterwards. Thankfully I haven’t met any creators like this yet but I’ve heard about them.

3. Convert Ordinary Conversations Into a Blog Post

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

I’m definitely guilty of this one. Sometimes my friends look to me as a Jamaican travel expert and ask me questions that they think I’d know the answer to. If I get asked about Jamaican rivers, waterfalls, hiking spots and even rum tours , chances are I can give reviews from my own experience. However, contrary to popular belief I haven’t visited many hotels because that’s not my preferred travel type. Therefore when I found multiple friends asking my opinion on which hotels to visit lately, I did my homework and created a post on Jamaica’s best all-inclusive hotels and boutique hotels to answer their questions and any future inquiries. It’s just convenient! No conversation is off limits though. Here are other articles which were born out of ordinary conversations with friends and family.

  • Is blogging still relevant in 2022?
  • Anatomy & Physiology of a Jamaican
  • Why I Said Bye to Lye (Chemical Hair Straightening)
  • Comparing The 3 Jamaican Rum Tours

Hundreds of reads for me, but perhaps an annoyed relative or friend or two, who knows? Instead, I hope they’re happy to have been the muse for another Adventures from Elle article. All loved ones are left anonymous on this platform so they shouldn’t be too mad, right? Nonetheless, if naming friends or sharing their stories and photos on the Internet, make sure to obtain their permission first or you may come across as that annoying blogger .

4. Demand Free Things

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Some creators demand free stays, meals and products from businesses in exchange for good reviews. This leads to reader distrust because reviews may come across as ingenuine, especially if all reviews appear to be 100% positive all the time and the blogger doesn’t seem to give a balanced review. Also, some businesses may find it annoying when dozens of creators show up on their doorsteps (or inboxes) requesting free things. For this reason, bloggers and other creatives often earn a bad name and this makes some businesses hesitant to partner with us. Pitching is important for professional creators to secure jobs and content, however, try to be as tactful and sincere as possible to prevent coming across as exasperating.

5. Don’t Proofread Before Publishing

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

You don’t want to be the blogger with content that is difficult to read because it has too many grammatical errors or typos. While we are human and mistakes can happen, if your content is repeatedly filled with errors, this decreases the quality of your content and you’ll lose your audience. Therefore, always take those extra minutes to reread your post before hitting publish. It’s good to review your post with fresh eyes on another day before publishing. You’re more likely to spot pesky errors that way.

6. Don’t Do Their Research

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

When choosing a niche, always select a topic with which you’re already an expert, or at least interested enough so that research does not become a chore. Why? Search engines match people with blogs that they believe will answer what they’re looking for. Therefore, your blog should provide quality content to satisfy your audience. A well-written article takes research, and may just earn you a new subscriber, social media follower or even a digital download or purchase for your efforts. You have to put out the effort to see rewards. Otherwise, your bounce rate will become high when your website does not answer what readers are searching for. People will dismiss your blog as lacking substance, and it’s annoying to waste precious minutes on a website which doesn’t answer what you were looking for.

7. Over-Monetize

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Have you ever visited one of those websites where there are pop-ups and just dozens of ads crammed into the article? Or, it always seems as if the writer is trying to sell you something with too many affiliate codes and programs woven into the content. This gets very annoying really fast. Therefore, make sure to tone it down on the monetizing! While monetizing is important, especially for professional bloggers, you don’t want to wind up annoying your readers and make your content difficult to navigate. This may end up being more harmful in the long run. Instead, add a fair amount of ads, like one to every few paragraphs or ideas and make sure that sponsored links and affiliate codes are limited to only few relevant ones.

Did you agree with any of the points in this post? If you’re a creator yourself, I hope you weren’t guilty of the above blogging misdemeanours. Don’t be offended though. You can still mend your ways, ha. Sound off in the comments below.

Lastly, subscribe to ensure you don’t miss new posts, and please purchase my quick travel guide on  Amazon  to help you explore the best of Jamaica.

‘Til next time.

Find Elle on  Facebook ,  Pinterest ,  Instagram  and now  YouTube .

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Rochelle | Adventuresfromelle

Adventures from Elle is a travel blog for locals & visitors who want to experience the best of Jamaica, one adventure at a time. The blog is curated by Rochelle Knight, a resident (M.D.) in internal medicine and published author. She began the blog in 2016 as a medical student & wants to see the world, starting with her home country. Purchase her book 'SIGHTSEE JAMAICA' on Amazon and join her in Jamaica! View all posts by Rochelle | Adventuresfromelle

26 thoughts on “ Seven Annoying Things Bloggers Do ”

Number 5 always happen to me even when I reread. Hence sometimes I do multiple checks post publishing. Thankfully, however it’s getting better and my audience tend to not pay much attention to errors (cause they are aware that I correct them once I see them)so I’m thankful for that but yes to number 5 more than anything else. Additionally sometimes it’s just the fast typing and Wp tend to type random things. That’s the annoying part for me 😂 but I’m getting over it.

Like Liked by 1 person

Listen, even years later and I still find errors in my posts. I’m currently doing some SEO to my site so I can get more search engine traffic and I cringe at some of my 2017 and 18 posts. But hey, we’re constantly works in progress and the only way we move in blogging is up. 🙂

Wow going to a restaurant for photoblogging and dumping the food?? Quite shameful. As for blog photos on a travel trip, some of that is no different than with a long telephoto lens trip. I do take alot of travel photo which I’m so glad: my partner died a yr. ago who was with me on a number of those trips.

In fact, I find it convenient to have blog posts on certain country or experience so I don’t waste precious time with close friends I hardly ever see with yet another trip conversation. They can see photos and commentary to read if they wish.

I try to proofread since yes, you need to respect the reader’s time. I’ve never in my life asked for free hotel, etc. just for blog content attraction. Nor am interested in monetizing my personal blog. If it is to support a business I run, sure. But I don’t run my own business.

I haven’t made a person except for 1 blogger central to a post. I might have to think about it….I have mentioned some folks which what they would prefer. Great blog post, Rochelle.

Thanks for sharing Jean! The thought of wasting food pains my heart, as so many persons could eat that food or would use the money spent on that food more wisely. I’m sorry to hear about your partner, but I’m glad you have photos to help preserve those memories for a lifetime. I enjoy that privilege too with blogging about my adventures. There’s so much I can say about ny trips and I know it makes me unbearable if I talk about it to someone with no interest. Therefore, my friends and family can join my adventures virtually and hear all about it if they’d like by just clicking the link. I know my mom never misses a post for that reason

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21 U.S. Travel Bloggers Worth Following

21 u.s. travel bloggers everyone with wanderlust should be following.

Travel Blogger

If being a travel blogger sounds like a dream job — well, it kind of is. Writers across America spend their days exploring fantastic sights in dozens of exotic countries, documenting what they experience and making a living as they go.

But that doesn’t mean the job is easy. Most professional travelers have made impressive sacrifices to follow their dreams, whether it's by selling all of their belongings, living in small apartments with several roommates, or just living very simply. Superb travel blogging also takes a unique knack for making extraordinary travel experiences resonate with the masses.

Here, we’ve rounded up some of the most engaging and inspirational travel bloggers across the U.S. And yes, a little bit of jealousy is OK.

A Dangerous Business

Amanda of the Dangerous Business blog

The blogger behind A Dangerous Business is Amanda, who decided in high school that she wanted to travel. An avid Lord of the Rings fan, she was determined to visit New Zealand and spent two weeks there in 2005. She has since been to over 50 countries on six continents.

With the hopes of traveling more, Amanda started A Dangerous Business in 2010, but isn't a full-time traveler. She enjoys the comforts of home — and her beloved cat — far too much. Instead, she created the blog as a hobby and a way to combat boredom at work. In 2015, after earning her Master's degree in Tourism Management, she went full-time as a blogger.

The goal of A Dangerous Business is to help people find ways to fit travel into their lives. Amanda works with global brands and destinations to create bucket-list-style travel trips, and has been featured on The Huffington Post and USA Today Travel .

Follow Amanda on her adventures by visiting her on Facebook and Instagram .

The Everywhereist

Geraldine DeRuiter Photo

An author and public speaker, Geraldine DeRuiter runs the award-winning blog, The Everywhereist .  

While her focus is primarily on travel-related topics, she does occasionally delve into content related to dessert and feminism. And she has an apparent fondness for Jeff Goldblum.

The Seattle blogger has been featured in Forbes , The Independent and The Huffington Post . TIME Magazine also called her work “clever,” while The New York Times described her as "dark and hilarious."

These assessments are evident when you explore The Everywherist, which showcases Geraldine's dry wit. Check out her Facebook page and Instagram page to keep up with her shenanigans.

The Blonde Abroad

The Blonde Abroad

The award-winning travel and lifestyle blog, The Blonde Abroad , is run by California native Kiersten Rich. She left her job in corporate finance to become a world traveler, and has now been to over 50 countries.

Through her blog, Kiersten hopes to inspire people to live a life they love and not settle for anything less. The Blonde Abroad is a multi-level business that allows Kiersten to earn an income through various streams of revenue. She offers social media and marketing consulting, content creation and blog mentorship retreats, and takes all-expenses-paid press trips to produce content for brands.

You can catch all of Kiersten's adventures on Instagram , where she does weekly Q&A stories on travel, work and personal topics.

Adventurous Kate

Adventurous Kate

Kate McCulley travels the world for a living and documents her adventures on her blog, Adventurous Kate . It all started in 2010 when she quit her job in online marketing to travel to southeast Asia for six months. Those six months turned into five years and she's now traveled across more than 65 countries.

Adventurous Kate started on that trip to southeast Asia, when Kate began building up her freelance work portfolio while developing her blog. In 2016, she moved to New York City, revamped her blog and downsized her travel, so she's only away from home about 25 percent of the time.

You can keep up with Kate on social media by following her on Facebook , YouTube and Twitter .

Land Lopers

A self-described former cubicle dweller, Matt Long is the man behind the LandLopers blog. His passion for travel led him to start the blog, but he doesn't backpack around the world. He lives in a house in the suburbs with his three dogs and has found a way to make travel his profession. The blog name comes from the word "landloper," which is a wanderer or vagabond.

LandLopers is a reflection of Matt's experiences, and provides information on many travel-related topics. He strives to make travel more fun and accessible by sharing tips on how to experience the best destinations around the world.

Follow Matt on Instagram , Twitter and Facebook .

Lee Abbamonte

Lee Abbamonte

A Wall Street veteran, Lee Abbamonte worked in energy and wealth management for eight years after earning his undergraduate degree in Finance and Marketing from the University of Maryland at College Park, and his MBA from the Thunderbird School of Global Management.

Lee is now a multimedia travel personality, brand ambassador and entrepreneur.

He's also the youngest person to visit every country in the world, plus the North and South Poles. His goal is to visit all 325 countries and unique destinations in the world via the Travelers Century Club list. He has been featured in or on a wide array of media outlets, including Fox News, ESPN, CNN, Sports Illustrated , the Washington Post and Conde Nast Traveler.

Lee documents his travels on Facebook , Instagram , YouTube and Twitter .

Sending Postcards

Sending Postcards Couple

The travel blog Sending Postcards is a labor of love between a married couple. While they don't disclose their names, they do share their story. After their wedding, the duo left Canada to travel the world together. The blog was essentially a way to document their extended honeymoon.

The two spent a year traveling around Africa, Europe and the U.S., living in Montreal for a few years before settling in San Francisco, which they currently call home. As they travel to various destinations, many right in and around California, they share their adventures on Sending Postcards.

Hippie in Heels

Hippie in Heels

Rachel Jones grew up in a small town in Ohio, where she lived with her brother and parents. When she got to college, she spent two summers backpacking in Europe and a month in Uganda. She went on to graduate with honors as a nurse. After 11 months as a cardiac care nurse in Charlotte, N.C., Rachel realized that a life in the "real world" wasn't for her. And so, she decided to retire from nursing and follow her heart.

She chose Goa, India, where she could ride a camel and climb a mountain, as her next home. It's where she's spent the last five years and where she currently documents her life on her travel blog, Hippie in Heels . She basically lives out of a backpack and survives on street food. While she's barely getting by financially, the trade off is worth it because she's been to 30 countries and counting. And she met the love of her life in India.

Follow Rachel and her Indian adventures on Facebook , Instagram and Twitter .

Pause the Moment

Pause for the Moment

In 2008, the day after his 24th birthday, Ryan headed to Dublin, Ireland for his first solo backpacking trip through Europe. The three-month experience was life changing, and in 2010, Ryan quit his job. He then set off on a trip around the world that was supposed to last six months to a year. His passion for the sun, the sea and adventure wouldn't let him stop there, and he's been on the road for seven years.

Now he's a digital influencer and travel blogger who has spent the last three years in Playa del Carmen, sometimes visiting Greece during the hot summer months. His blog, Pause the Moment , features travel guides and resources for destinations all across the world. In 2017, he started running small group tours to Egypt, which he plans to continue in October 2018.

Catch Ryan on his Facebook page and on Twitter .

Camels & Chocolate

Camels & Chocolate

A Nashville-based freelance writer and fitness buff, Kristin Luna runs the Camels & Chocolate blog. She was a college tennis player and marathoner, and she loves to travel with her husband. And while she's all about diving, hiking and skiing, she's not a nomad. She has simply mastered the art of balancing career with family and traveling.

Most of her freelance work involves influencer campaigns where she partners with brands and destinations to create original content. She also consults with small businesses on marketing and media strategy. And while she currently lives in Nashville, her blog has been around since 2007, so it's full of helpful and interesting information on tourist locations all over the world. Kristin has appeared in multiple media publications, including Redbook magazine, Glamour magazine, Marie Claire and National Geographic .

Camels & Chocolate has a social presence on Facebook , Instagram and Twitter .

Just Chasing Rabbits

Just Chasing Rabbits

Mississippi couple Mark and Jennifer Campbell share their travel stories on their blog, Just Chasing Rabbits . The self-proclaimed "young at heart" duo has been traveling together since 2004, when they went to New Orleans on their honeymoon.

Mark and Jennifer travel with a sense of curiosity, always on the lookout for unusual and amazing sites. They hope to inspire their readers to take everyday moments and turn them into unforgettable adventures.

In addition to giving readers an inside look at their travels, Just Chasing Rabbits also has an online shop full of cool travel-related products personally selected by Mark and Jennifer.

Keep up with the two lovebirds on Facebook , Instagram and Twitter .

My Itchy Travel Feet

My Itchy Travel Feet

A travel guide for baby boomers, My Itchy Travel Feet is the work of Donna L. Hull, the blog's chief navigator, and Alan Hull, the site's photographer. The Montana couple has been documenting their travels since 2008, covering both domestic and international destinations.

They have travel guides for a variety of places all across the world, and also have tips and ideas for themed trips like bucket list trips, cruises, romantic getaways and national park adventures. With Donna's preference for luxury and Alan's rugged sense of adventure, My Itchy Travel Feet has something for every baby boomer (and beyond) to enjoy.

Follow the couple on their travel journeys via YouTube , Instagram and Facebook .

Be My Travel Muse

Be My Travel Muse

Since 2012, southern California resident Kristin Addis has been a solo globetrotter. After working as an investment banker in Newport Beach, she got burned out and decided to make a big change. She sold her belongings — everything except a carry-on bag — and has since experienced amazing global adventures.

She's hitchhiked across China, taken a 35-day safari to Africa and spent two months hiking in Patagonia. She even became a Buddhist nun for 10 days. Her blog focuses on solo travel and outdoor adventures like hiking, camping and scuba diving.

New content is posted on Be My Travel Muse every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, offering readers ways to make the most of their travels. Kristin shares packing lists, country cost guides and exercise tips for novice and expert travelers from all around the world.

See where Kristin's next adventure will be by following her on Instagram , YouTube and Facebook .

Local Adventurer

Esther from Local Adventurer

Each year, travel bloggers Esther and Jacob of Local Adventurer move to a new city. The Atlanta natives decided on a year in each spot because it's enough time to discover amazing spots in each new place, without being too permanent. After moving across the country and realizing that they hadn't gotten to know their hometown as well as they should have, they decided to get out and explore.

Esther and Jacob travel full-time but focus on local destinations. They seek to find adventure in everyday life, seeing the world through a childlike lens that highlights the beauty in even the most mundane things.

My Beautiful Adventures

Andi Perullo de Ledesma

Chinese medicine doctor and travel photojournalist Andrea (Andi) Perullo de Ledesma is a Charlotte, N.C., resident and blogger who runs My Beautiful Adventures . She's a native southerner but has lived in seven states and been to over 50 countries on six continents.

She claims to live a very dichotomous life because she struggles with wanting to capture the world on film through travel and focusing on her experience practicing Chinese medicine, which she considers her true calling.

Andi's love affair with travel can be credited to her intrigue of diverse cultures, roads not traveled and life-changing experiences. During her time traveling the world, she met an Argentinean man, Lucas, who she married in Buenos Aires after five years of a long-distance relationship.

In 2015, Andi had a son, Joaquin, whom she calls her "most beautiful adventure yet."

Follow along as she travels the world on Facebook , Instagram and Twitter .

Hole in the Donut

Barbara Weibel

No, Hole in the Donut is not a food blog. But it might awaken your appetite...for travel.

Barbara Weibel is the owner/editor of Hole in the Donut, which she started in 2007. While working in various industries like marketing, advertising, real estate and public relations, Barbara was merely earning an income, but never felt passionate about what she did. She envied people who loved their jobs.

That's when she left her job and spent six months traveling solo around the world. She had no plans other than to go wherever the wind blew her. She documented all of her travels and blogged about the different places she visited. In 2009, she decided to become a full-time traveler.

Hole in the Donut is where Barbara shares her adventures in interesting countries. She features stories about the people she meets, the wild encounters she has and the spiritual lessons that she learns along the way.

Stay in the loop with Barbara's travels by following her on Facebook , Instagram , Twitter and YouTube .

Jessie on a Journey

Jessica Festa

Started in 2011 by Jessica (Jessie) Festa, Jessie On A Journey is an award-winning solo female and offbeat travel blog. Jessie was born and raised in New York, where she is a certified sightseeing guide.

She grew up traveling, taking North American road trips and Caribbean cruises. While studying at the State University at Albany in New York, Jessie had several opportunities to travel. She taught English in Thailand, backpacked solo across Europe, studied in Australia and hiked through China.

After college, her 9 to 5 job wouldn't allow her time to travel and Jessie realized that she had to spend her life doing something she loved, not something she was "supposed" to do. Now she runs her blog, offering readers tips on solo travel, as well as blog advice and resources for others who want to start a travel blog.

Hook up with Jessie on Twitter , Instagram and Facebook .

Travel Mama

Travelmamas.com

Moms who like to travel will find common ground with Colleen Lanin, the founder/editor-in-chief of Travel Mama . Colleen is an award-winning author with a Master's degree in Business Administration. She's also a member of the Society of American Travel Writers. She was invited to the White House as one of the 100 most influential travel bloggers for a summit on study abroad.

Colleen's stories have been featured in Parenting Magazine , the Chicago Tribune, Working Mother Magazine and the Orlando Sentinel . She has lived in California, Minnesota and southern France, as well as Arizona, where she currently resides. She shares her life with her husband, two children and a rescue pup.

Check out Colleen and Travel Mama on the Travel Mamas Facebook page and on Twitter .

Solo Traveler

Solo Traveler

Janice Waugh started Solo Traveler in 2009. When she became a widow and am empty nester, a love of travel fed her inspiration. Her personal musings quickly became public and now Solo Traveler is a community where people who love travel share tips, tricks and support one another.

The Solo Traveler publishes posts that highlight the benefits of solo travel and how to do it well. Weekly features cover solo travel destinations and photos provided by readers. The blog has a Facebook page with over 230,000 followers, as well as a Pinterest page loaded with more tips, tricks and solo travel ideas.

Tourist 2 Townie

Tourist 2 Townie

Gareth Leonard, a former Marketing Director, has a passion for slow, meaningful travel, which he shares on his blog, Tourist 2 Townie . After spending six years working to make other people's dreams come true, he decided to drop everything and follow his own path.

In 2009, he bought a one-way ticket to Buenos Aires and left his comfortable life behind.

Now he documents all of his adventures in Argentina, as well as other destinations around the world. He gives recommendations on the best places to see, the coolest things to do and his favorite places to eat. Check out Gareth on YouTube , Facebook , Instagram and Twitter .

Morning Rundown: Biden could close border with today's executive action, extreme heat hits the Southwest, police say a revelation enraged ex-mayor before triple shooting

The most annoying people you'll encounter on a flight — and how to handle them

Image: Woman in airport with suitcase

I love traveling and spend a great deal of time dreaming up trips to destinations I’ve never been, I've mapped out dream trips to Africa and Indonesia, typed up imaginary itineraries for a day in Tokyo and designated portions of my savings for an adventure to Costa Rica to work with rescued sloths. In my reveries, I seem to always skip over one crucial detail: how aggravating travel can be , particularly when planes are involved. It's not about the plane or the crew or even the delays that get me; it's the people on the plane: the guy snoring loudly beside me, the non-stop chatterboxes across the aisle and the kid ruthlessly kicking the back of my seat for hours on end. The list goes on.

Evidently, I'm not alone in my grievances. Expedia polled over 18,000 users around the world, finding that we have a lot in common when it comes to travel pet peeves. The 2018 Airplane and Hotel Etiquette Study determined the five most annoying travel behaviors as follows:

  • The Seat Kicker/Bumper/Grabber (51 percent)
  • The Aromatic Passenger (43 percent)
  • The Inattentive Parent (39 percent)
  • Personal Space Violators (34 percent)
  • Audio Insensitive (29 percent)

The seat-kicker has four years running as the most annoying behavior, and inattentive parents always ranks highly.

Different year, same annoyances: It's time to change

"We've been looking at airplane etiquette for the past five years," Christie Hudson , senior communications manager, Expedia North America, tells NBC News BETTER. "We see some consistencies year over year. The seat-kicker has four years running as the most annoying behavior, and inattentive parents always ranks highly. It's really no surprise that some things go to the top of the list as we can all relate to how disruptive they can be."

Hudson notes that the research, aimed at shedding light on passenger behavior and opinions, is also launched with the intention of showing how we can all be more considerate (and contented) passengers. "We've all been guilty of less than polite behavior when traveling," says Hudson. "But there are some really polite travelers out there."

Are you guilty of these bad travel behaviors? @Expedia surveyed thousands of people and these are the worst: https://t.co/LCyCMvzJgW — NBCNewsBETTER (@NBCNewsBETTER) May 2, 2018

It comes down to 'empathy and patience' — plus some travel tricks

I like to think of myself as one of those really polite travelers, but I know there have been flights, where, stuck in the middle seat, I've passive-aggressively fought for the armrest, or when trying to sleep, I've stared down a babbling child with the fire of a thousand suns. And I'd wager to bet that I've also been an annoying passenger myself. My frequent choice to feast on a smelly egg salad sandwich has surely prompted groans from my fellow travelers.

When it comes to how travelers can do better to both curb their aggravation and their potentially annoying behavior, Hudson notes that it "really comes down to empathy and patience." But having a few travel tricks up your sleeve can certainly come in handy.

Be prepared with your own personal comfort items

Part of what makes these our irksome behaviors so annoying is that travel is already pretty stressful, and after going through long TSA lines and other airport pains, our nerves may already be worn down. Then we get on board to find less than ideal surroundings. To cope, we should plan out as much as we can ahead of the flight.

“Knowing what to expect before leaving the comfort of home always helps prepare you for what you can as well as can't control,” says Carolyn Scott, aka, The Healthy Voyager . “Be sure to pack a meal or give yourself enough time to eat at the airport before boarding. Have reading material, your favorite playlist [lined up], a comfortable neck pillow, an eye-mask and earplugs.”

Invest in noise-canceling headphones

Hudson strongly recommends investing in a pair of noise-canceling headphones to block out those screaming babies and loud talkers. Valiente wholeheartedly agrees, adding that you should also turn your face away from the area of noise.

The wearing of earphones can also deter people from chatting you up, with Youst noting it as "the universal sign for 'I do not want to be disturbed'."

Carry essential oils to keep out bad smells, and ditch the perfume

For tackling bad odors, Vanessa Valiente of V-Style , a fashion and travel blog, recommends carrying an essential oil or a face spray. "Smell it directly from the bottle to distract from the smell that’s bothering you, [or] put a swipe of it at the center of your neck to change the smell of the area close to your nose. But be careful with this: you don't want to bug anyone with your scents. For example, some people hate the smell of mint, so choose a scent with mass appeal that has a calming influence like lavender."

Valiente also advises against wearing perfume on a plane, noting, "It gives so many people headaches, and affects people's allergies."

Confront the seat-kicker (even if it's a child) with polite sincerity

"When someone is kicking my seat, bugging me or encroaching on my space, I just turn around and say, 'I'm sorry to bother you, but I think you're kicking or poking me,'" says Valiente. "This usually prompts a quick apology and an end to the nuisance. I have also asked people to scoot over a bit, and they always comply. Being sincerely polite, but upfront, is key. If kids are old enough to understand, I do the same thing with them. Children are easily intimidated by strangers and respond to direct conversation, so treating them like an adult and politely asking them to stop whatever it is they are doing always works for me."

If a child keeps on kicking, Jacquelyn Youst , president of the Pennsylvania Academy of Protocol suggests asking their guardian if they wouldn’t mind switching seats with them.

Ask if it's okay to recline

A personal space violation is often the result of the person in front of your plowing their seat back into your legroom. Before reclining, take a moment to check out the person behind you and whether reclining would be an imposition.

"Make sure the person behind you is not eating, using their laptop, or 6’9” tall," says Youst. "Ask if it’s alright to put the seat back a little. If they say no, don’t be offended."

Keep an eye on your kids and remind them that this isn't home

Expedia also ranked the most common hotel annoyances and found that "inattentive parents" topped the list (45 percent). Kris Morton, a frequent business traveler and travel blogger at Nomad by Trade notes that a little parental supervision can go a long way.

"I've seen kids in the hotel gyms swinging from treadmill handles like they were monkey bars, and at the free breakfast buffet using their bare hands to dig through the cereal dispensers so that the hotel staff had to throw away the entire container," says Morton. "When traveling with kids, make sure that the kids understand that this isn't home and that there are other people on the other side of the walls who may be trying to get some sleep."

Treat others as you wish to be treated — and take responsibility for your feelings

Your fellow travelers may be breaking the golden rule of treating others as they want to be treated, but you should keep this principle intact.

"Just because you want to push past me to get off the plane doesn't mean I'm going to push back," says Peter Lombard , founder at Globe Guides, adding that if we're exacerbated by the behavior of others, we should take responsibility of that feeling, and do what we can to prevent sinking into negativity.

"If I'm easily annoyed I need to take responsibility for that and travel in ways that manage my annoyance," says Lombard. "If I don't have patience I need to arrive at the airport during a quiet time. If I want good customer service I may need to spend a bit more on my hotel. If I'm going to get frustrated by a long and messy taxi queue, then I should request a car. If I'm not willing to do that, then I need to know that's my choice and I need to be patient."

Youst sums it up pretty perfectly by noting, “You'll reach your destination in either a bad mood or good. The choice is yours.”

MORE TRAVEL HACKS AND TIPS

  • How to pack a wrinkle-free suit
  • Save $520 (or more) on your next flight with these 4 airfare hacks
  • How to pack a carry-on (so you don't need to check a bag)
  • The top safety mistakes we make when we fly, according to flight attendants
  • How beat back flight anxiety
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Resources / blog / How to / Article

6 steps to become a successful and profitable travel blogger

May 21, 2019

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

If you've got the travel bug, get this guide on how to start and grow a travel blog, plus key ways to earn significant income as a successful travel blogger.

You’re sitting at your desk daydreaming about being on an island somewhere in the south Caribbean.

Just a fun little cliff dive will do.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

And when you need a break from waterfalls, your mind takes you on a quick plane ride to a quaint cafe in the middle of a historic European town with cobblestone roads running through it.

Ah, the joys of travel, adventure, and hopping between different cultures.

How do you make traveling while working a reality?

If you’ve ever dreamt about becoming a travel blogger, here’s a reality check -- you can make it happen and get paid to do it, but it isn’t a cakewalk. You have to be willing to put in the hours and hustle to monetize your blog .

Is it worth it? Definitely. Is it as easy as writing a few blog posts and calling it a day? Not quite.

Today, we share with you the realities of being a travel blogger and the steps you need to take to join their ranks as a well-paid traveler.

Let’s get to the important bits first: Just how worth it is becoming a travel blogger?    

How much can you make as a travel blogger?

You can make as little as nothing, or you can earn a substantial income as a travel blogger. It all depends on your persistence and having the right monetization plan set up.

After all, the demand for reading travel content online is growing. Digital travel content sees double-digit growth year-over-year.

When you’ve got your foundation properly laid out, you can earn over $3,000 per month , just like these fellow travel bloggers:

Nora earns over $3,000 per month from her The Professional Hobo travel blog. Nora has been traveling full-time since 2007 and has stepped foot on over 55 countries.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

At the mid-range, Monica earns $10,000 in monthly income from her The Travel Hack blog, which she started in 2009.  

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Finally, on the far side of the revenue scale, Matt Kepnes pulls in over $50,000 a month through his Nomadic Matt site. Matt has been trotting the globe since 2006.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Pretty impressive, right?

Don’t worry if a decade of blogging sounds daunting to you. If you continue to publish valuable content regularly, your audience will grow, and so will your love of the craft.

The main takeaway is to build up your stamina for the long-term. If you do, you’ll be miles ahead of the norm, where a whopping 59.3% of bloggers start a blog and then abandon it.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

With a bit of perseverance, running your own travel blog can be profitable because the startup and maintenance costs are relatively minimal. Still, some costs to take into consideration are:

Additional folks to help with your production as you grow and hire virtual assistants , freelance writers, and so on

Website maintenance, like hosting and domain registration

Automation and management tools, like your platform or email service

All in all:

You can earn a significant income as a travel blogger with today’s growing demand for digital travel content. So long as you keep up your blog over the long-term, you’ll be successful at it.

As for how to get started, check out our simple, six-step system below.

6 steps to start a travel blog

Step #1. find a theme based on your travel passion.

Your first step is to find an angle based on your travel passion. You don’t have to cover everything travel-related. Instead, narrow in on a niche or theme.

To whittle it down to one travel theme, ask yourself:

What is it about traveling you enjoy the most?

When you travel, what do you gravitate toward most? Is it the people, culture, food, natural environment, or history?

As an example, blogger Dan focuses on traveling solo and capturing the world’s scenic wonders through his professional photography, which is featured in his Dan Flying Solo blog.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Couple Megan McDuffie and Michael van Vliet focus on a completely different theme, and spotlight on their Fresh Off the Grid blog delicious foods and easy recipes you can make while camping and traveling to outdoor destinations.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

As you can see, you can get creative while selecting your theme and choose from a wide array of niches within the travel category.

The key is to get specific so you can focus on one niche audience. Once you’ve done that, and only when you’ve settled on a niche, you’re ready for the next step.

Step #2. Research and learn about your niche audience

Once you’ve selected your niche topic, it’s time to conduct market research . This step isn’t optional: market research is vital for understanding your audience and gaining clarity on what they’re interested in.

After all, your goal is to deliver to your blog audience precisely what they want and need. Good business is about solving people’s problems, ideally before they’re aware of those problems.

As for an effective way to conduct your research, start by diving into online forums, discussions, and social media groups to uncover popular points of interest within your topic.

For instance, a quick query for “travel photography” in Reddit pulls up several Subreddit threads within the 2.7 million large online community.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

This serves as a great place to glean some useful insights for your blog. You can brainstorm ideas on how to educate and solve some of your audience’s related problems based on what you glean from social communities.

Better yet, take it a step further and join these groups to start engaging with members to learn first-hand what they’re biggest struggles are and how they talk about those struggles.

That way, you can address their needs in your blog articles and provide valuable, educational content to your audience using their own words.

In a nutshell:

The only way you can serve your niche is by getting to know them. Use social communities and one-on-one conversations to dig into people’s problems and find ways that your blog can solve them.

Then, begin writing.

Step #3. Start writing regularly (and imperfectly)

When people ask writers how they produce so much content, the answer is always a little disappointing, but true: we just start writing.

You need to do the same. Because your blog is something you need to keep up over the long-term, don’t let your perfectionism slow you down at the starting line.

Your style, voice, content, formatting, and et cetera will organically develop over time. The important thing is to start writing a blog , not writing it perfectly.

Curious about which topics to cover in your first articles?

Use the info you gathered from your market research and focus on educating your readers about how to overcome their challenges.

The more specific and useful your content is, the better. 57.2% of people who thought the content was meant for someone else claim the content wasn’t useful.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Your first few attempts to write for your audience probably won’t be perfect, but the sooner you get started, the better you’ll become at writing for your niche.

Plus, the more you get to know your audience as you build relationships through your blog, the more you can cater to your readers’ needs, which means the better your content will be.

It’s a nicely self-sustaining cycle that way.

OK, the writing part is the bulk of the work, but if you’re just starting out, you’ll need to do some extra hustle with logistics.

Step #4. Purchase your domain name and choose a blogging platform

Your next step is to purchase your domain name and choose a blogging platform.

To purchase your domain name, check out these top five domain registrars :

As far as blogging platforms go, there are numerous platforms to choose from, including Blogger , WordPress , and Squarespace .

Keep in mind, your bigger goal is to monetize your site, so look out for the ability to integrate your blog with a product page, or use an all-in-one platform like Podia, which allows you to manage everything from a streamlined dashboard.

You can check out the platform’s ease of use by signing up for no-obligation free trial , where you’ll find an editor dashboard that has a convenient left-hand editing bar and corresponding real-time updates displayed in the right frame.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Pretty easy to navigate, yeah?

Regardless of the domain registrar and platform you choose, be sure to select those that work best for your budget and business goals over the long-term.

Many hosting packages boast attractively low prices for the first year, but significantly higher premiums once the promotion expires, so it’s worth checking out what your post-discount price will be for the coming years before signing anything.

After all, you’ll want to keep up your travel blog and grow your business over time, and that’s far harder to accomplish if you’re hit with unexpected fees midstride.

Once hosting and domain names are taken care of, it’s time to dig into the fun part of setting up your blog -- the design.

Step #5. Keep a simple design

Keeping with the theme, I’ll say it plainly: Use a simple design for your travel blog.

94% of first impressions are design-related, and 88% of visitors are less likely to come back if they have a bad experience. The more complicated your design is, the more chances you have for something to go wrong.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

To keep your visitors coming back, we recommend keeping a clean and simple blog design, which means:

Lots of white space

Easy to navigate

In other words, something like Chris and Rob Taylor’s 2TravelDads site.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

By following in Chris and Rob’s footsteps, you’ll create a positive user experience (UX) for your audience, which is essential for building your business.

Design-driven businesses have outperformed the S&P by 228% over the last decade, so keep that in mind as you continue to expand and grow your own.    

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

The big lesson is:

Maintain a simple design for your travel blog that’s easy for your readers to navigate. This will create a great UX for your visitors and strengthen your business growth overall.

Step #6. Upload and publish your blog content

At this stage, it’s time to upload and publish your blog articles.

Since you’ve already written your articles, publishing your posts is the easy part. Depending on your platform, you simply upload your written content in the form field and include a featured image.

If you want to get more advanced, you can set up different blog categories, include tags , write a meta description , and customize your URL slug .

Whatever you use, ensure you’re using it consistently. Publishing posts regularly is vital to the success of your blog.

Why? Your readers will get acclimated to anticipating your new content and relying you as the expert on your topic, especially as you accumulate emails and send out announcements about your latest article posts.

As for the nitty-gritty of frequency, bloggers who publish weekly are 2.5x more likely to report “strong results” than those who post monthly or less.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

So, make it a habit to maintain a regular posting schedule over time to grow your blog.

Now that you have your blog page all set up, it’s time to grow your audience and start monetizing your site.

Let’s dive into some tactics on how to promote your blog and grow your audience.

How do you grow your blog audience?

#1. tap into social media.

Use social media to publish posts about your travel blog articles and reach new readers.

66% of marketers use blogs in their social media content, so it’s worth using your social platforms to spread the word about each of your published articles.

If you’re wondering which channels to focus on, continue researching your niche market to find out where your target audience hangs out the most.

Most likely, your audience will be on Facebook. 61% of marketers claimed Facebook as the most important channel for the fifth year in a row.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Note, however, that Instagram is on the rise and can make for a great social channel for expanding your travel blog audience, especially because the platform is visually based.  

Like with all of your published content, be sure to post regularly, so your audience gets used to hearing from you as the expert on your travel topic. The more followers you accumulate for your content, the greater your industry authority will become.

Of course, getting a little outside help with said industry authority wouldn’t be a bad idea, either.

#2. Guest post on other prominent blogs

Another way to expand your audience reach is to guest post on other blogs that receive more traffic than yours.

It’s an effective way to get in front of a broader related audience, while also contributing your valuable knowledge by forcing you to write for a new audience, so it’s a win-win for both parties.

To guest post, follow five simple steps :

Find relevant blogs to target

Prep your guest post

Send your pitch

Write your guest post

Well-established travel blogs that accept guest posts typically have writing guidelines for you to follow, like Practical Wanderlust’s site.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

For a list of travel blogs that accept guest posts, you can check out these two lists by WritersInCharge or Effective Business Ideas , to see if they fit your niche.

Note, however, that while guest blogging is a viable strategy and good for building your audience, it's not as easy as it used to be and the return isn’t super impressive.

So, keep in mind this strategy may be a good supplement for audience growth, but it’s not ideal for driving the bulk of your outreach.

As for what is ideal for driving your outreach, check out our next strategy.

#3. Create a lead magnet to attract new readers

Use a lead magnet to entice new readers to opt-in for more of your content and join your email list.

A lead magnet, if you’re unaware, is an incentive you offer your visitors by giving away content for free in exchange for their email address so you can continue to communicate with and warm up your audience to your brand and other paid offers.  

Lead magnets come in a wide array of formats, including cheat sheets, templates, assessments, guides, how-tos, checklists, ebooks, whitepapers, video tutorials, and et cetera.  

For instance, founder of travel blog Backpacker Banter , Chris, offers a free guide at the top of his travel blog, where subscribers can opt in for his travel planning guide in exchange for their name and email.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

By collecting his readers’ contact info and email, Chris can then send subsequent emails to nurture his audience further.

In other words, he can email content that continues to educate his audience, touch on their problems, and help to solve their biggest needs, through more blog articles and paid offers.

Fortunately, the secret to making lead magnets work is pretty simple -- be clear about your offer. When you give your subscribers a good idea of the kind of content they’re signing up for, you can boost your opt-in rate by almost 85% .

Offer a helpful lead magnet to grow your blog audience and nurture them toward your additional valuable content and paid offers through your email list.

Now, let’s look at our last audience-builder for the day.

#4. Use SEO to build organic traffic

Using organic inbound marketing, like search engine optimization (SEO), to attract visitors to your blog is one of the most powerful ways to expand your audience.

Bloggers who earn over $50,000 annually rate unpaid organic Google traffic as the most important marketing channel for their blog.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

It’s no wonder when over 50% of traffic to websites in the travel industry comes from search.

What are some search engine optimization tips to use?

Use keyword research - You can try tools like Ahrefs and BuzzSumo to find out which keywords and terms are the most popular. If there is a lot of traffic and low keyword difficulty competing for those terms, that’s a good recipe for an article topic.

Match your content intent with your keywords - It doesn’t matter how many keywords are mentioned in your article if the intent behind those keywords doesn’t match up, so be sure to prioritize the humans behind the keyword volume.

Be mobile-friendly - Searches on mobile have far surpassed desktop searches, which means it’s imperative your blog content is optimized for mobile devices.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

An important takeaway is to focus on serving your audience relevant, useful content on your travel blog, which helps you become a credible expert on your topic. As people search for more info, your goal is to rank as the top resource within your travel niche.

OK, with audience growth under your belt, it’s time to leverage your growing audience and earn money from your travel blog.

How do you make money as a travel blogger?

#1. participate in affiliate marketing programs.

Looking for a simple monetization method? Use affiliate marketing to earn income as a travel blogger.

Affiliate marketing, if you need a refresher, is when you promote an outside business’ product or service on your blog and earn a commission for each sale you make on their behalf.

With 20% of publishers’ annual revenue being generated through affiliate marketing, it’s a profitable channel for monetizing your travel blog.

Top travel affiliate programs to consider are:

Amazon Associates

Booking.com

Cruise Direct

Sandals Resorts

TripAdvisor

If you’re curious about how much you can earn using affiliate marketing, founder of Living the Dream travel blog, Jeremy, earns about $25,000 per year through his travel affiliate programs.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

As you explore affiliate programs, keep in mind anything you promote should align with your brand and serve your audience (are you noticing a theme?).

After all, you’re doing all this work to build your credibility as a trusted resource, so it’s best to protect the credibility and loyalty that you’ve grown with the same audience-first approach to monetization.

The same is true for the next monetization method, as well.

#2. Partner with related brands

Another way to get paid as a travel blogger is by partnering with complementary brands.

Similar to affiliate marketing, in a brand partnership, you also promote an outside business’ product or service on your blog.

Rather than earning a commission on each sale, you earn income based on an agreement between you and your brand partner, which means the expectations and pay levels vary.

For instance, creator of Expert Vagabond blog, Matthew Karsten, earns $4,000 – $20,000 per deal with brand partnerships and influencer marketing, depending on what’s involved.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

For a frame of reference, Matthew’s travel blog overall pulled in over $250,000 in 2018.

Brands can pay you for a wide variety of travel-related gigs from guest posting to taking over their Instagram account to going on an all-expense-covered trip to one of their destinations.

To find brand partnerships, you can follow these five simple steps :

Reach out to brands that share your audience

Create content within a set timeframe

Understand the expectations

Be true to your brand (even if it means turning down freebies)

Build a relationship with the brand

Note that partnerships aren’t usually available for newcomers in an industry -- they’re often reserved for influencers -- so while this is one of the most lucrative ways to monetize, it’s also one of the hardest to land.

Fortunately, ads and sponsored posts are far more beginner-friendly.

#3. Use paid ads and sponsored posts

Another way to earn revenue through your travel blog is to use paid ads or sponsored posts.

Because your SEO is your most powerful way to attract organic visitors, we recommend using Google AdSense if you’re going this route. Google AdSense naturally aligns with your SEO tactics and complies with most adblocking suites' “ acceptable ads ” policies.

How does it work?

Basically, advertisers pay Google AdSense to show relevant ads on your blog pages that complement your content. Ads are displayed as text-only, image-only, or text and image ads.

Here’s an example of text and image ads displayed in one of A Broken Backpack’s travel blog articles.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

In exchange for the ad being displayed on your site, you get paid, though the amount varies depending on these factors :

Your blog’s traffic volume

The type of traffic

The number of advertisers competing in your niche

The type of content published on your blog

The position of your ads

Paid ads come with a fair warning, however. 92% of online ads aren’t even noticed, and 64% say ads today are annoying or intrusive, so you may not want to rely on paid ads alone.  

Another way to drive revenue to your blog site is through sponsored articles, where an outside entity pays you to include a mention of their product or service on your blog.

For instance, successful travel blogger, Raphael Alexander, dedicated an entire article on his Journey Wonders blog to his post sponsor Tep Wireless.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

It’s important to note it’s a legal requirement to include a disclosure for any paid sponsored content on your blog, which Raphael does at the end of his post.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

While you can earn a significant amount from sponsored posts, this one also comes with a caveat -- 54% of your readers don’t trust sponsored content, and 57% of readers prefer you run banners ads instead of sponsored articles.

If paid ads and sponsored articles don’t sound ideal to you, our final tactic is a more trusted way to monetize your travel site.

#4. Sell digital products online

You can also sell digital products on your own website, such as online courses and ebooks, to earn a significant income from your travel blog.

Creating online courses and publishing ebooks are great examples of how you can share your travel expertise while pulling in revenue, but don't just take my word for it. Let's look at some examples.

First up is Taylor Jackson, who sells his Make Money with Your Travel and Landscape Photography online course for $90, where he teaches students how to sell travel and landscape photography.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Another example is Nomadic Matt’s series of online travel courses , which teach his audience how to follow in his footsteps and become a successful travel writer, blogger, photographer, and vlogger.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Nomadic Matt also sells a wide selection of travel budget and tips ebooks directly on his site, including The Ultimate Guide to Travel Hacking ebook.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Online courses and ebooks aren’t your only option, though.

You can create other info products to sell , like guides, mini-courses, bootcamps, audiobooks, video tutorials, or even flashcards. The main ingredient, as ever, is to provide something of educational value.

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As you can (hopefully) see, you have a variety of options when it comes to selling digital products to your blog audience.

As always, offer your audience valuable solutions to their problems regardless of the format you decide to go with, and you’re as good as gold.

Your destinations and blog audience await your arrival

Getting paid to work while traveling is definitely doable. If you have dreams of exploring the world, you can become a full-time travel blogger and earn a significant income with these tips.

Let’s recap it for you:

Income levels for travel bloggers vary from zero to thousands of dollars per month, depending on how much effort and consistency you put toward your blog.

To start your own travel blog, find a theme based on your travel passion and conduct market research to learn more about your niche audience.

Once you begin to write regularly, you’ll have a consistent flow of content to publish, which means you’re ready to purchase your domain name. Choose a blogging platform that allows for a simple design when you’re shopping around.

After designing your blog site, upload and publish your articles regularly.

To grow your audience, use social media, guest post, create a lead magnet, or use SEO tactics.

Four ways to earn income as a travel blogger include affiliate marketing programs, brand partnerships, paid ads and sponsored posts, and selling digital products.

Ready to become a paid blogger and live the nomadic life?

Safe travels -- the world awaits.

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About the author

Cyn Meyer was a content writer for Podia , an all-in-one platform where online courses, digital downloads, and communities scale with their creators. Cyn also enjoys playing music, helping retirees live active, healthy, engaged lifestyles, and hopping into the ocean.

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Why I Hate Instagram Travel Bloggers

Are all these “TrAvEl BlOgGeRs” lying to us? Um yes. When I am scrolling through Instagram and I see these PERFECT photos. They take photos in places that I’ve been to, and I notice that uhhhh that’s not quiiiittteee what it looks like. Why are there pink skies, sparkles and photoshopped stars? Did you hike to this destination in a dress and heels? And you photoshopped everyone out of it? I see these photos and it 100% draws me to this destination. YES I want to see all these colorful buildings in Mexico, even though the color was saturated using Lightroom, YES I want a photo in a flowy dress looking out over the city of Mykonos even though that’s not what you pack when traveling, YES I want a photo of me living my best life to post to Instagram because I want my followers to be jealous. But, it’s all fake. FAKE ASS HOES. Sit back, and enjoy why I hate Instagram travel bloggers.

On the contrary, these bloggers get paid to promote a city, hotel or restaurant. So why wouldn’t they post an aesthetically pleasing photo of the best angles with as much eye-catching detail as possible? I would. And if someone would pay me to do that, you bet my hypocritical ass would do it lol. #getmoneygetpaid. I’m also a graphic designer so I understand photoshopping the birds flying overhead or photoshopping people out of the background. I GET IT. IT LOOKS GOOD. So why does it bother me so much?

Let me tell you my story of why I hate Instagram travel bloggers…

When I went to Park Guell in Barcelona , I expected the park to look just like it did in EVERY SINGLE PHOTO on the internet. Look, I googled it.

screenshot of Parc quell googled

And what do you see? The most vibrate, GORG colors. Then I went expecting what I see above and I was so disappointed. Every color was desaturated, faded, muddy. I bet once upon a time it did look like the google search photos above, but it deff doesn’t now.

This is what it looks like:

Parc Guell image

Now compare the SAME photo, angle and all to what you see on the internet.

Parc Guell image saturated

See what I mean?

ja rule tweet

Now it didn’t ruin the experience for me, I was disappointed but I still thoroughly enjoyed the park. Heck, I’ve been there twice. So now I look through a skeptical lens when I scroll through Insta. It actually inspired me to start this blog because we aren’t all staying at 5-star hotels in bikinis not worrying about thigh chafing. I try to be as boujee as possible, but realistic. Realistic Bouj . That’s my new slogan. You heard it here first, folks.

I decided to show you all the things that annoy me that Instagram bloggers do. And to bring awareness to the fact that a lot of these photos are extremely staged and your travel experience might look completely different than the photo you just scrolled by with the caption #blessed.

(I’m not trying to blast anyone or be mean so I’ve blocked out faces.)

Let’s get judgey

woman sitting on hammock at sea

Let’s start out small. I am fully LOL’ing at the fact that she is in a wedding dress. Did you have to pack this?

girl in dress in snow at castle

Again with the dress. There is a 98% chance if you were traveling to this castle, you will not be able to hike to this destination in this dress. IDK how she got there. Snow mobiled up the mountain. Stop. Quick change. Photoshoot. But ya know, do it for the gram.

photoshopped woman at ocean

I have a few reasons I don’t like this. One: I think she is photoshopped into this photo. She might not be but where the heck is her shadow?? Also, it looks fake. From her photo, the sun seems to be coming in from the top right which means she would have a shadow on the left. But the light on her body is coming from the front… where the sun isn’t. This means her body has been photoshopped onto this beachy background or it is SO over-edited it doesn’t make realistic sense. The color of the water is also changed. But people do that all the time so their photo matches their ~*~*~Flow~*~*~

photoshopped hot air balloon picture

Why I don’t like: The hot air balloons are photoshopped in!!!

circled images of photoshopped balloons

I circled the balloons above that are identical. Copy, paste, copy, paste. The solid color balloons are the same too but it’s easier to see with the striped ones. I bet there were like 4 in the sky and just cloned them cause that’s what I would have done haha.

photoshopped birds

Seems like we have another case of good ol’ copy paste. Look at how many birds look identical…………

Photoshopping people out

Disneyland with two girls

OH THIS BOTHERS ME. Literally a great example of why I hate Instagram travel bloggers… Photoshopping people out. I have been to Disneyland about 100 times. Maybe more. And unless these girls had some sort of early secret access there is NO way there is not a single other person there. LIESSSSS. I have been asked no less than 67 times to photoshop people out of the background of their photos. People EXIST… I don’t know why you HAVE to photoshop people out? More attention on yourself?

taj mahal image

Another deceiving photo with NO people in it. You are trying to tell me that you got a photo in India, the second largest country in the world, in front of one of the 7 wonders of the world, that attracts 8 million people annually, which is approximately 22,000 people a day, WITH NO ONE ELSE IN IT? I do see based on the shadows/light that this photo could have been taken at like 6am. So I guess it is possible. Though I’ve never been there at 6am to confirm or deny. ALSO, how is her dress doing that on the ends? It looks like it’s held up by strings.

girl in bathtub image

Girl please. Not only did you not eat all that, like, where did all those flowers come from? Is that part of the room service? These photos drive me nuts.

food at restaurant

Hi, ya can I order one of everything? Yes, six drinks for two people as well. And when you serve it can you sprinkle a variety of flowers on the table. It’s for the gram. Thank youuuuu.

Idk what to even say

girl photoshopped in snow

Now, dis sum grade A bullshit. Do you see the blur at the top of the mountains? There is a “haze”? You can see it clearly on her arm that’s up in the air too. THAT’S PHOTOSHOP. She took her photo and photoshopped the sky onto it. And she did it poorly at that.

sunrise over lake

The newest craze. Picture at the end of a boat with a fake, over saturated sunset.

sunrise over ocean

And you better wear a flowy dress. I just want to know when these bloggers go out on these boats at sunset for these photos is it literally just for the photo? Or do they enjoy the boat ride and spend time out there? These are the things that keep me up at night.

Ass ass ass

girl in Bali

Of course, I have to bring this up. ASS ASS ASS ASS. Did you know you can’t be a travel blogger unless you wear thong bathing suits and post pictures like these? I think it’s in their contract. Now our Instagram feeds are filled with women with banging bodies, ass out, in locations that are completely fabricated while we sit at home crying into a pint of Halo Top. Cheers.

Does it match my flow?

screenshot of Instagram

Travel couples… Do y’all even like each other? Also, who is taking all these photos?

screenshot of Instagram

Two hot people traveling the entire world with gorgeous photos and an amazing wardrobe. Hell ya I’m jealous.

screenshot of Instagram

Like, will you guys travel places if it doesn’t go with your Instagram flowww? Sorry, we can’t visit Canada! Our preset doesn’t look good on your landscape!

Ok, I actually do like some people

So I figured I would round out this post with travel bloggers I LOVEEEE because I don’t hate all Instagram travel bloggers. There are tons who are real and authentic. Their pictures are not only gorgeous but also NORMAL. I posted a few of my favorites below that I highly recommend you check out!

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

In the mean time I will continue posting authentic pictures on my Instagram (@gingerandivory) but the min someone comes at me with a $500,000 check you bet I will photoshop the sky into fricken outer space with me in a glitter bikini, ass out, birds everywhere and maybe an elephant cause yolo, with some random guy I’ll hire as my Instagram boyfriend. You will call me a sell out, but you can also call me rich.

Check out some of my other blogs. Camping in Idyllwild or First time International Traveler Questions . Or if you are in the mood for a good laugh, My blog on Greece .

gingerandivory 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.

Kassidy's Journey

Is Travel Blogging Worth It? (An Honest Look Into What Blogging is Like in 2023)

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If you’ve made your way onto this post, chances are that you’re either tired of working that 9-5 job or want to make some extra cash for traveling.

I totally get it, I’ve been there, which is why I’m here right now, writing this blog post for you to read.

You’ve likely stumbled across a list of ways to earn money from home and have found the words “become a travel blogger” super appealing.

Well, good news, I’m here to tell you that it is super appealing , and there are so many reasons why you should stop asking yourself, is travel blogging worth it?

In this post, I’ll go over why travel blogging is such a great job and why it’s worth all of the hard work that goes into it.

Are You Ready to Become a Full-Time Travel Blogger?

Check out this FREE webinar to see what it takes to become a full-time blogger (without having to learn social media)! 😆

Who I Am and Why You Can Trust Me

Hey there! I’m Kassidy, and you may be wondering who the heck I am and why you should trust me as I tell you a little about travel blogging.

Well, I’m just another normal person like you, who had a big dream of quitting my 9-5 and traveling the world.

Myself holding a large pile of sea glass that I found on a lakeshore.

That’s where I learned about travel blogging, took the plunge, bought a domain name, and started writing about “what would I take with me to a deserted island” and “updates on my road trip!”

Aka posts that no one actually cares about, besides maybe my mom and my grandma.

This was back in May of 2020, right after the world shut down, and I quickly learned that I loved staying at home for work and didn’t want to work a traditional 9-5.

So I started to do some research and was asking myself this exact question… is starting a travel blog worth it?

But then, I found Mike and Laura of Mike and Laura Travel in September of 2021 and invested in their Scale Your Travel Blog course.

This course has taken both of my blogs to new heights and has helped me learn everything that I need to know to be successful as a blogger.

My travel blogging stats.

I’ve learned that blogging is so worth the time and effort that goes into it because I’ve gotten to have so many amazing experiences with my blog.

Not only have I learned more about my home state, but I’ve been inspired to travel more around it, have gotten to work with great people, and have earned money from my website.

If you’re ready to jump right in and want to learn more about what it takes to be a travel blogger, sign up for Laura’s FREE training to help you get started. 👇

Sign Up for the FREE WEBINAR to Learn More Here! ➽

What is a Travel Blog?

Some people think of a travel blog as a website where people publish updates about their travels for their friends and family to read.

While this is the case for some people (and is how my blog started!), it’s typically not true for most blogs.

A travel blog is a website that contains useful posts and information about locations, tips, flying, foods to eat, and anything else that has to do with travel.

A view of Google Search with a travel blog in the number one position.

Many blogs are niched down into more specific topics such as vegan travel, family travel, Minnesota travel (that’s me!), etc.

If you’ve ever searched something online such as “ best hikes on the north shore, MN “, it’s very likely that those first few results are from travel bloggers!

So even if you don’t think you’ve ever read a blog, it’s very likely that you have!

Is Travel Blogging Worth It?

This can be a huge question and concern for people trying to jump into the world of travel blogging.

There’s a lot more to learn about creating a profitable blog than most people are aware of, and it certainly isn’t a way to get rich fast.

Starting a blog and turning it into a profitable business can be really tough and can take a long time to accomplish.

You’ll need to invest in yourself and really switch your mindset to show yourself that if they can do it, so can you!

In saying that, if you have the desire to succeed and want to change your life and live it how you want, then yes, travel blogging is absolutely worth it. 🙌

While there can be really hard patches and you will have to work hard, travel blogging is a great job (yes, it’s a real job, and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise!).

It can give you some pretty epic experiences such as paid trips, allow you to meet some awesome people, and write about the best places ever.

Plus, you’re able to have location independence and you can continue to grow your earnings as high as you want because the sky is the limit when you have your own business! 💰

But, if you don’t know what you’re doing, blogging can be pointless and can get you a whole lotta nowhere. So learn what it takes to be a great blogger with this FREE WEBINAR.

Pros of Travel Blogging

There are tons of positives that come along with being a travel blogger, and I want to highlight a few of the best here.

✅ You Get to Travel for Work

Of course, one of the top reasons that everyone wants to be a travel blogger is that you get to travel for work.

Yes, it’s true, there will be times when you might get to have a sponsored trip and you will get paid to travel.

You also are getting paid in ad money for writing about the places that you’ve been to and sharing them with the world.

This is a huge perk and is one of the main reasons that bloggers get into the travel space.

But be sure to read my cons below and how it isn’t always just fun and games, and there is a lot of hard work with those vacations.

✅ You Get to Help Others Travel

With a travel blog, you get to share your message with the world and help others travel to the beautiful places that you’ve been.

Whether that’s sharing locals’ insight into your hometown or giving your readers an itinerary for a trip that you took, you’ll get to share that with others.

I love being able to share my love for Minnesota with my readers on Kassidy’s Journey and help others plan their visit here.

Travel bloggers are some of the top people who help people plan trips.

Think of the last time you searched something such as ‘best restaurants in X,’ or ‘best places to hike in Y.’

Many of the results that you say when you hit ‘search’ were likely travel bloggers!

✅ You Have Location Independence

One of my absolute favorite parts about being a travel blogger is that I get to have location independence.

I don’t have to stay home to work, and I certainly don’t have to go into an office to work!

I can take my laptop with me wherever I go, as long as I have a wifi signal!

This makes it really easy to plan trips without having to take off work and go home to visit my family whenever I want.

✅ The Sky is the Limit

As your own boss, the sky is the limit for everything that you do and everything that you make.

If you have a dream to create something, there isn’t anyone else that’s going to tell you that you can’t do it, because you’re the boss.

You’ll also be able to increase how much you make based on how hard you work and what you put into it because there really is no limit to earnings.

✅ You Make Your Own Schedule

Another huge perk of being a travel blogger and being your own boss is that you get to make your schedule for the day!

That means if you want to be done with work by noon, you totally can.

And if you want to take a break during the middle of the day to go to the beach, you also can do that!

You won’t have to miss family gatherings, you can always go to your kid’s sports games, and you can take a sick day whenever you want.

Sure, there are some deadlines thrown in there such as publishing posts, contributing guest posts, or working with brands.

But for the most part, you get to create your schedule every day!

✅ Possibilities to Work With Great People/Brands

Another plus of being a travel blogger is the possibility to work with brands and people that you love.

For example, you could be invited on a paid stay somewhere or a sponsored trip somewhere that you’ve been wanting to go.

Or maybe a brand that you absolutely love reaches out to you and asks you to test out its new product.

Or you reached out to them and they accepted the offer to work with them!

There are a lot of great experiences to be had as a blogger.

✅ You Don’t Have to Understand Social Media

A huge worry for me becoming a travel blogger was that I had absolutely no idea what I was doing when it came to social media (and I still don’t!).

But the good thing is that to be a successful blogger, you don’t even have to use social media!

That’s how powerful SEO is and having a good understanding of it can really help you scale your travel blog without even having to post once on Instagram or Facebook.

A banner for a training for earning money while blogging.

Cons of Travel Blogging

And of course, as with anything, there are certainly cons when it comes to travel blogging, which we’ll take a look at below.

❌ You Aren’t Actually on Vacation All the Time

Contrary to what people often think, travel bloggers aren’t just on vacation all the time.

Sure, they may take their work with them somewhere cooler than their hometown, but they’re still going to sit down and work, even if there’s a beach chair calling their name.

So if you’re looking for a job where it’s all play and no hard work, then, unfortunately, travel blogging isn’t for you.

❌ Judgements From Others

I’ve heard it many times, and I’m sure I’ll hear it again. Judgment from others who don’t understand that this is a business, and not a hobby.

It can be really tough to explain to others what you do if it doesn’t fit the mold of what is supposed to happen after you graduate high school.

But that’s okay if they don’t get it, it doesn’t matter, because it’s not their job and they really don’t need to understand.

If they don’t believe you, show them your bank account. 😆

❌ Unpredictability

One of the hardest parts about blogging is that it isn’t as predictable as a job that is salaried is.

There is no hourly rate or yearly salary that bloggers receive, and every month is typically different.

Seasons can affect how much you make, algorithm changes and updates from Google can affect it, and more.

It’s just something that you have to learn to roll with and know how to educate yourself on what’s happening over here on the web.

How to Start a Travel Blog

There is a lot that goes into starting a blog, and I couldn’t possibly fit it all into this post.

But I’ll give you a quick rundown of what it takes to start a blog so that you can have a better idea of the work that goes into it.

  • Brainstorm your niche and a name for your blog/domain name.
  • Choose a self-hosted company such as Bluehost to host your website online, and a blogging platform such as WordPress.org to create your blog.
  • Choose a theme (I recommend Kadence from WordPress!) and start designing your website and start getting it ready to publish content.
  • Create a Google Analytics and Google Search Console account to track your stats.
  • Learn SEO and have an understanding of keyword research through a course, such as Scale Your Travel Blog .
  • Start writing content and publishing well-written, SEO-optimized articles that target low-competition keywords.
  • Build backlinks to your blog and blog posts.
  • Start earning money through affiliate marketing by writing affiliate posts.
  • Grow your traffic and apply to an ad network.

Now as I mentioned above, there is a lot of stuff that goes into starting a blog, so this is a pretty basic list.

But these are the basic steps that bloggers take to start up their blogs and start earning a full-time income.

Best Travel Blogging Course

If you’re ready to start jumping into the travel blogging world (which is so awesome because it’s such an epic job!), then I really recommend that you invest in a coach early on.

I wasted an entire year blogging about nonsense when I could have been making money, just because I didn’t know what I was doing.

That was until I invested in myself, my future, and my dreams , by signing up for a blogging course and coach.

Scale Your Travel Blog

Laura from Mike and Laura Travel is a well-known coach in the travel blogging world, who took her blog from pennies to over 6 figures in 2020.

Yes, you read that right, she actually knows what she’s doing right now , unlike a lot of the other bloggers who monetized their blogs way back in 2010.

I’ve been able to learn everything that I need to know about monetizing my travel blog from Laura, and I’ve been able to take it to new heights.

A logo for a worthwhile travel blogging course.

She’s helped me feel confident in my blog, has helped me begin to monetize, and actually cares about her students and how they’re doing.

If you’re considering if starting a travel blog is worth it, sign up for the free webinar below to learn more about how to start as a blogger, right now!

Sign Up for Laura’s FREE TRAVEL BLOGGING WEBINAR here! ➽

Can You Make a Living With a Travel Blog?

The short answer is absolutely , yes you can make a living with a travel blog!

There are a few key ways that bloggers earn money from their websites; ad revenue, affiliate marketing, and paid products.

Of course, there are many other ways, but these are the top 3 ways bloggers earn income.

Now, remember, blogging isn’t a get-rich-quick scheme, it can take months to years to create a successful business for yourself.

But once you’ve got the knowledge down that they teach in Scale Your Travel Blog , you could be earning income in a much shorter time.

Is Travel Blogging Easy?

Although it may be tough for some people to believe, travel blogging is not an easy jo b , and it’s certainly not a get-rich-quick scheme.

Travel bloggers often work for years without getting paid anything before they start earning a full-time income on their blog.

Sure, it can go much faster, if you know what you’re actually doing, but most people don’t for a long time, and waste time just writing about whatever they want.

That was where I was at with my blog, because I thought that blogging was an easy, rich market to come into, and I would have loads of cash in weeks.

Clearly, that’s not the case. And you have to work for your income and success, but with a course and coach who knows what they’re doing, that success can come a lot faster.

Watch Laura’s free training to learn the best strategies for making your blog into a business a whole lot faster. 👇

travel bloggers are annoying reddit

Is Travel Blogging Too Saturated?

One of the biggest concerns that bloggers have before committing to their business is that the travel blogging space is too saturated.

And while it is true that there are thousands of other travel bloggers out there, it’s been that way for many years, and people continue to break through.

Think about it this way; there are tens of thousands of nurses out there that are all searching for the same job in the same field.

But that wouldn’t stop you from going to school to get a degree to chase your dreams of becoming a nurse, would it?

So why should you let other people who have decided to become travel bloggers affect your decision to become one too?

Are Travel Blogs Profitable?

Yes, blogging can be a very profitable business that you can earn a lot of money from!

Some of the top bloggers earn 7 figures, while thousands of others earn 6 figures each year!

Even if you’re just looking for a way to earn some extra money on the side, having a profitable travel blog can be a great way to bring in that extra cash!

FAQs: Travel Blogging

The amount of money that travel bloggers make ranges greatly, depending on the niche, how much work they put in, and how long they’ve been blogging. Some of the best and highest-paid bloggers make 7 figures every year. Others make 6 figures, and some who choose to use it as a side hustle, rather than a full-time gig, may make just a few thousand a year. Other bloggers make $0 per year, but these are the people who don’t have the knowledge or mindset that they need to succeed.

While you can certainly choose just “travel” as your niche, it’s going to be a lot easier to grow your blog with a more focused niche. Think smaller such as a specific location or a certain activity. Or, a type of travel such as vegan travel, travel with kids, Disney travel, etc. For example, this blog, Kassidy’s Journey, is only about Minnesota, so my niche is Minnesota travel.

You can start making money almost immediately on a blog with affiliate marketing, as long as you do it the right way. Running ads on your site is the other big way to earn an income, but to do so, you typically need quite a bit of traffic to your site.

No , it is not too late to start a blog, and travel blogging is not dead. Jumping into the travel blogging space without a niche can be really tough, but if you have a specific niche, it’s a lot easier to gain traction. If you know how to use SEO and affiliate marketing (which you can learn how to do both in the Scale Your Travel Blog Course !), you can earn money blogging.

The best way to get your travel blog “noticed” and start gaining traffic is to use SEO (Search Engine Optimization). SEO is a powerful tool that is the best way to earn income from your blog. You’ll be able to gain traffic through your posts that are ranking highly on Google, therefore allowing you to apply for an ad network.

How long it takes to start earning from a blog varies from person to person. But if you fully understand SEO and are well-versed in it, you could start seeing income in the first few months with affiliate marketing! Joining an ad network typically takes longer and could take a year or more.

Wrap-Up: Is it Worth it to Start a Travel Blog?

So now that we’ve gone through all of the pros and cons, ways to start, and more about starting a blog, is travel blogging worth it?

Yes, it is worth it, and for so many reasons like getting paid to travel, having experiences that others don’t have, and being location-independent.

There are so many great reasons to start a travel blog, so use what you’ve learned and get started today!

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Kassidy Olson is a Minnesota native that loves spending her time exploring her home state. She writes for Kassidy's Journey to showcase that Minnesota isn't just a flyover state. She's here to give her personal recommendations, insights, tips, and more to help you plan your trip to Minnesota, or help locals enjoy their home state more.

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Nvidia, Powered by A.I. Boom, Reports Soaring Revenue and Profits

The Silicon Valley company was again lifted by sales of its artificial intelligence chips, but it faces growing competition and heightened expectations.

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A display about Nvidia’s Blackwell platform dwarfs Jensen Huang as he presents it from a stage.

By Don Clark

Reporting from San Francisco

Nvidia, which makes microchips that power most artificial intelligence applications, began an extraordinary run a year ago.

Fueled by an explosion of interest in A.I., the Silicon Valley company said last May that it expected its chip sales to go through the roof. They did — and the fervor didn’t stop, with Nvidia raising its revenue projections every few months. Its stock soared, driving the company to a more than $2 trillion market capitalization that makes it more valuable than Alphabet, the parent of Google.

On Wednesday, Nvidia again reported soaring revenue and profits that underscored how it remains a dominant winner of the A.I. boom, even as it grapples with outsize expectations and rising competition.

Revenue was $26 billion for the three months that ended in April, surpassing its $24 billion estimate in February and tripling sales from a year earlier for the third consecutive quarter. Net income surged sevenfold to $5.98 billion.

Nvidia also projected revenue of $28 billion for the current quarter, which ends in July, more than double the amount from a year ago and higher than Wall Street estimates.

“We are fundamentally changing how computing works and what computers can do,” Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive, said in a conference call with analysts. “The next industrial revolution has begun.”

Nvidia’s shares, which are up more than 90 percent this year, rose in after-hours trading after the results were released. The company also announced a 10-for-1 stock split.

Nvidia, which originally sold chips for rendering images in video games, has benefited after making an early, costly bet on adapting its graphics processing units, or GPUs, to take on other computing tasks. When A.I. researchers began using those chips more than a decade ago to accelerate tasks like recognizing objects in photos, Mr. Huang jumped on the opportunity. He augmented Nvidia’s chips for A.I. tasks and developed software to aid developments in the field.

The company’s flagship processor, the H100, has enjoyed feverish demand to power A.I. chatbots such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT. While most high-end standard processors cost a few thousand dollars, H100s have sold for anywhere from $15,000 to $40,000 each, depending on volume and other factors, analysts said.

Colette Kress, Nvidia’s chief financial officer, said on Wednesday that it had worked in recent months with more than 100 customers that were building new data centers — which Mr. Huang calls A.I. factories — ranging from hundreds to tens of thousands of GPUs, with some reaching 100,000. Tesla, for example, is using 35,000 H100 chips to help train models for autonomous driving, she said.

Nvidia will soon begin to ship a powerful successor to the H100, code-named Blackwell, which was announced in March. Demand for the new chips already appears to be strong, raising the possibility that some customers may wait for the speedier models rather than buy the H100. But there was little sign of such a pause in Nvidia’s latest results.

Ms. Kress said demand for Blackwell was well ahead of supply of the chip, and “we expect demand may exceed supply well into next year.” Mr. Huang added that the new chips should be operating in data centers late this year and that “we will see a lot of Blackwell revenue this year.”

The comments may ease fears of a slowdown in Nvidia’s momentum.

“Lingering concerns investors had in the short term regarding an ‘air bubble’ for GPU demand seem to have vanished,” Lucas Keh, an analyst at the research firm Third Bridge, said in an email.

Wall Street analysts are also looking for signs that some richly funded rivals could grab a noticeable share of Nvidia’s business. Microsoft, Meta, Google and Amazon have all developed their own chips that can be tailored for A.I. jobs, though they have also said they are boosting purchases of Nvidia chips.

Traditional rivals such as Advanced Micro Devices and Intel have also made optimistic predictions about their A.I. chips. AMD has said it expects to sell $4 billion worth of a new A.I. processor, the MI300, this year.

Mr. Huang frequently points to what he has said is a sustainable advantage: Only Nvidia’s GPUs are offered by all the major cloud services, such as Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, so customers don’t have to worry about getting locked into using one of the services because of its exclusive chip technology.

Nvidia also remains popular among computer makers that have long used its chips in their systems. One is Dell Technologies, which on Monday hosted a Las Vegas event that featured an appearance by Mr. Huang.

Michael Dell, Dell’s chief executive and founder, said his company would offer new data center systems that packed 72 of the new Blackwell chips in a computer rack, standard structures that stand a bit taller than a refrigerator.

“Don’t seduce me with talk like that,” Mr. Huang joked. “That gets me superexcited.”

Explore Our Coverage of Artificial Intelligence

News  and Analysis

Google appears to have rolled back its new A.I. Overviews  after the technology produced a litany of untruths and errors.

OpenAI said that it has begun training a new flagship A.I. model  that would succeed the GPT-4 technology that drives its popular online chatbot, ChatGPT.

Elon Musk’s A.I. company, xAI, said that it had raised $6 billion , helping to close the funding gap with OpenAI, Anthropic and other rivals.

The Age of A.I.

After some trying years during which Mark Zuckerberg could do little right, many developers and technologists have embraced the Meta chief  as their champion of “open-source” A.I.

D’Youville University in Buffalo had an A.I. robot speak at its commencement . Not everyone was happy about it.

A new program, backed by Cornell Tech, M.I.T. and U.C.L.A., helps prepare lower-income, Latina and Black female computing majors  for A.I. careers.

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  1. 21 Most Annoying Things About Travel Bloggers

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  2. 21 Most Annoying Things About Travel Bloggers

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  3. 21 Most Annoying Things About Travel Bloggers

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COMMENTS

  1. Am I the only one that is annoyed by travel content creators ...

    Yeah the over the top fake positivity I find annoying. Stop watching them and go watch other content creators. People like Doyoutravel aka Jack Morris, Sam Kolder, Lostleblanc are experiencing lifestyle creep, they need to make more money to keep up with their lifestyles, so they keep pushing crap to make money.

  2. What do you think is the most annoying part of planning a trip ...

    I used to love reading the experiences of travel bloggers. I thought some offered great tips and fun stories. Now I hate travel blogs. They're full of ads and pop ups. They hardly offer unique information. Pictures are huge and, coupled with the ads, take up the entire screen, making it take forever to load and to find information.

  3. 21 Most Annoying Things About Travel Bloggers

    2. They're judgemental as hell. Travel bloggers love insisting that you do things one way over another because that's how they like to do it. The thing is, they judge other travel bloggers, too. Heaven forbid you want to make a business out of your blog.

  4. Rant: Why Travel Bloggers Are the Worst

    People are able to have amazing travel experiences thanks to the so-called credit card pimps. No, the real non-contributing zeros in the world of blogging are travel bloggers. I'm not a cynic and I personally know dozens of travel bloggers who are pretty nice people. My beef is with their line of work and the lack of value in it.

  5. 7 Biggest misconceptions about being a travel blogger

    2. I must have a lot of money because I'm able to travel so often. Ahhhhhh nope. My bank account can back me up on this one! Matt and I earn far less than we used to in our office jobs but we travel much more because it's our job. We're able to travel a lot now because our trips are nearly always taken care of by the client we're ...

  6. Why I Hate Some Travel Blog Posts And Articles

    Being open is a fun way to travel. This helps me suspend judgment. Also, I get to see there are so many fascinating ways to look at the world from different perspectives. I do love most travel blogs but rarely do the straight laced, common travel blogger type post. Add a little bit of flair, some humor and a few wacky stories too, to my blog ...

  7. The Ugly Truths of Being a Travel Blogger

    The Ugly Truths of Being a Travel Blogger. Anytime we meet someone new and the conversation and get asked what we do, we're always hesitant to say we're travel bloggers. It's not because we hate our jobs (although sometimes we do), but because the perception of travel blogging tends to be skewed. Our answers are followed by a slew of ...

  8. These Travel Influencers Pivoted During The Pandemic

    Travel bloggers are already the focus of much ire for their seemingly perfect and stress-free lives, and Mello braced herself for criticism when she made the decision to begin traveling again after about six months grounded. (She said she took precautions like getting tested frequently, planned mostly outdoor excursions, and only stayed in ...

  9. 5 Blogging Practices that Make Me Want to Scream

    There has been a massive debate in the travel blogging community for years now about how travel bloggers think they deserve to be paid to travel. This growing sense of entitlement among travel bloggers really bothers me. Yes, you read that right. Somehow getting a $10,000 free trip to Tahiti isn't good enough anymore.

  10. Seven Annoying Things Bloggers Do

    Seven Annoying Things Bloggers & Influencers Do. Take Pictures and Videos of Everything; Go/Eat Out Solely to Gather Content; Convert Ordinary Conversations Into a Blog Post; ... As a travel blogger, photos and videos are the closest I can get in taking you on my travels virtually so visually documenting my adventures is a must. However, I try ...

  11. WHY I HATE INSTAGRAM TRAVEL BLOGGERS

    I decided to show you all the things that annoy me that Instagram bloggers do. And to bring awareness to the fact that a lot of these photos are extremely staged and your travel experience might look completely different than the photo you just scrolled by with the caption #blessed.

  12. 15 Secrets To Becoming A Successful Travel Blogger

    1: Create Useful Travel Content. Writing Your Travel Blog. Writing a diary of your travels for family & friends is easy, but other than them, no one else cares. If you want strangers to read your travel blog, you'll need to provide something more useful.

  13. 21 U.S. Travel Bloggers Worth Following

    21 U.S. Travel Bloggers Everyone with Wanderlust Should Be Following Travel bloggers capture the imagination and transport us to new destinations. If being a travel blogger sounds like a dream job — well, it kind of is. Writers across America spend their days exploring fantastic sights in dozens of exotic countries, documenting what they ...

  14. The most annoying people you'll encounter on a flight

    Confront the seat-kicker (even if it's a child) with polite sincerity. "When someone is kicking my seat, bugging me or encroaching on my space, I just turn around and say, 'I'm sorry to bother you ...

  15. 6 steps to become a successful and profitable travel blogger

    The big lesson is: Maintain a simple design for your travel blog that's easy for your readers to navigate. This will create a great UX for your visitors and strengthen your business growth overall. Step #6. Upload and publish your blog content. At this stage, it's time to upload and publish your blog articles.

  16. Why I Hate Instagram Travel Bloggers

    OH THIS BOTHERS ME. Literally a great example of why I hate Instagram travel bloggers…. Photoshopping people out. I have been to Disneyland about 100 times. Maybe more. And unless these girls had some sort of early secret access there is NO way there is not a single other person there. LIESSSSS.

  17. Is Travel Blogging Worth It? (An Honest Look Into What Blogging is Like

    Yes, it is worth it, and for so many reasons like getting paid to travel, having experiences that others don't have, and being location-independent. There are so many great reasons to start a travel blog, so use what you've learned and get started today! Kassidy Olson.

  18. 5 Annoying Things About Traveling

    Do whatever you can do, but avoid traveling through LHR. Single Supplement: This is a really annoying reality of travel these days that will probably get worse. Hotels and cruise ships are not that fond of solo travelers. Think about it - a cruise ship or hotel that has a capacity of 4,000 travelers would only have a capacity of half that ...

  19. Nvidia, Powered by A.I. Boom, Reports Soaring Revenue and Profits

    The company reported revenue of $26 billion in its latest quarter, tripling its sales from a year earlier. Jim Wilson/The New York Times. Nvidia, which makes microchips that power most artificial ...