
A reader from FirstStepBlogging.com recently asked, “Is blogging still a thing in 2026?” and I had to pause for a second before answering. Not because I didn’t know the answer, but because I understood where the question was coming from.
If you look around right now, blogging doesn’t feel as visible as it used to. You don’t hear people talking about it the same way. It’s not trending. Nobody’s really saying “start a blog” the way they did years ago. Everything feels faster now…short videos, quick posts, content that shows up and disappears almost instantly. So naturally, it starts to feel like blogging got left behind somewhere.
But it didn’t.
It just changed.
I actually started blogging around 2008, and it was a completely different world back then. There was no real pressure to optimize anything. You didn’t think about SEO the way people do now. You weren’t worried about algorithms or content strategy. You just wrote. People found your blog through blogrolls, comments, and word of mouth. It felt more personal, more open, and honestly, a lot simpler.
That version of blogging doesn’t really exist anymore.
Now, everything online is more competitive. There’s more content, more creators, more noise and even the addition of Ai. And people consume things differently too. Most people scroll instead of read. They want quick answers, quick entertainment, something they can process in seconds.
So when people compare blogging today to how it used to be, it’s easy to assume it’s not working anymore.
But the truth is, people still search.
That part hasn’t changed at all.
When someone actually wants to figure something out—when they have a real question, or they’re trying to make a decision, they don’t just scroll and hope the answer finds them. They go looking for it. They type it in. They read. They compare.
And when they do that, they’re not looking for a quick clip. They want something that actually explains things. Something clear. Something they can sit with for a minute.
That’s where blogging still matters.
A good blog post doesn’t just grab attention for a second. It holds it. It answers the question properly. It gives people something they can come back to. And that’s something short-form content can’t always do.
Another thing people don’t think about is how long content lasts.
On social media, you can post something and it’s gone within hours. Maybe it does well for a day, maybe it doesn’t. Either way, it fades quickly. You’re constantly starting over.
With blogging, it’s different. You can write something today, and it can still be bringing people in months from now. Even years. You don’t have to keep chasing attention the same way because the content keeps working in the background.
That kind of consistency is rare right now.
And honestly, that’s one of the biggest reasons blogging is still very much a thing. It’s just quieter about it.
There’s also something else that matters more now than it used to, ownership.
When you’re building on social media, you’re building on borrowed space. Algorithms change. Reach drops. Things shift all the time, and you don’t have much control over it. One day your content is everywhere, the next day it’s barely seen.
With a blog, especially one you own, that’s different. It’s yours. You decide how it looks, what you post, how it grows. There’s something stable about that, especially when everything else online feels unpredictable.
At the same time, blogging doesn’t really stand alone anymore, and that’s not a bad thing.
The way it works now is more connected. You might write a blog post, and then pull pieces from it for social media. You might turn it into a video idea. You might send it out in an email. Instead of creating new content from scratch every time, the blog becomes your base.
That’s the part a lot of people miss.
They think blogging has to be this separate thing, when really it works best as part of a bigger system.
There’s also less competition than people think. A lot of people stopped blogging because they moved to video or got discouraged when things didn’t grow fast. So while it feels crowded online, there are actually fewer people consistently writing quality content than there used to be.
And that creates space.
Especially for people who are willing to be patient with it.
Because blogging is not instant. That’s the trade-off. It doesn’t give you quick results the way social media sometimes can. But what it gives you instead is something more stable, something that builds over time instead of disappearing.
And not everyone wants to be on camera all the time either.
That’s another reason blogging still matters. It gives people a way to build something without constantly showing up visually. You can take your time, think things through, explain things properly. It’s a different kind of connection.
So when someone asks if blogging is still a thing, the honest answer is yes, but not in the way people expect.
It’s not loud anymore. It’s not trendy. It’s not something people brag about starting.
It’s just working in the background.
And the people who understand how to use it now? They’re not always the ones going viral, but they’re building something steady. Something that lasts longer than a post that disappears in a day.
So blogging is still here.
It just doesn’t need the spotlight the way it used to.





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