Hit “Save Draft.”

Recently, WordPress reminded me of the importance of hitting “Save Draft” when I am working on a fresh post.

I don’t know how it works for you, but most of my blogposts are composed over a period of time. I don’t usually sit down, type, and publish something in one sitting. I’ve thought about it for days. I’ve visualized it in my head. I’ve listened to the words that I am thinking about writing. That’s why publishing a post every day is nearly impossible for me.

Hit “Save Draft.”

Otherwise, with the click of a button, or the swipe of a finger, all of your hard work gets flushed into the blogosphere dungeon of lost forever drafts.

No bueno.

There you have it: Blogging tip of the day #1.

God is good. All the time. 

No matter what.

Know you are loved.

Praying for you. Praying for America.

Rainer Bantau —The Devotional Guy™

#bgbg2#BibleGateway

#JesusStrong

4 Comments

  1. Thanks for reading and sharing your process with us.

    Like

  2. Rainer, you’ve offered an excellent tip. I’m sort of “old school” when writing a draft of a poem or short story for a post. The original is written in my word processing document and saved there. Only when I feel that this draft is pretty much what I want, do I transfer it into WordPress. Other types of posts are easy to modify on WordPress and save with a new heading.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Thanks, Alan. I do something very similar. In this case I forgot to hit save. 😆

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Alan Kearns's avatar Alan Kearns says:

    I use the draft folder in WordPress every day; any Bible verses or ideas are saved there with a temporary title. All this is made easy by having my trusty tablet or phone by my side when I am reading, thus, my drafts are a notebook for me.
    God bless you today brother Rainer 🙏

    Liked by 1 person

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