For a long time, I thought blogging was something other people did.
Travel influencers
Lifestyle creators
People with ring lights, curated Instagram feeds, and unlimited time to post online.
I was a busy lawyer, who was juggling my career and mum life. My world was deadlines, court schedules, billable hours, daycare pick ups and after school activities. Blogging felt like a hobby. I didn’t have time for hobby’s and blogging had nothing to do with a ‘serious‘ career. At least that’s what I thought.
But starting a blog as a professional turned out to be one of the most valuable career decisions I’ve ever made.
If you’re wondering whether you should start a blog as a professional, the short answer is yes. Blogging is no longer just a hobby—it’s a powerful tool for building authority, creating opportunities, and even generating income alongside your career.
I started my first blog on LinkedIn. I set a goal to read one “self-development” book a month. I then wrote about it. What I had learnt, how it (didn’t) impact my job and any future ambitions I had from said new learning’s. It’s from this first blog that I’ve truly understood why professionals should start a blog. Be it about their career or something they’re just interested in.
I did it, not because I wanted to be an influencer.
Not because I planned to quit my career.
But because I needed an outlet. Somewhere to share. Somewhere to put my thoughts into words and sentences that made sense. I was scared at first, but slowly started attracting a small following. Then followers started commenting. We’d have discussions in the comments section. And then.. well, then I was approached by someone who had seen my blog and wanted to offer me a job. A real legal job. FROM. MY. BLOG.
This was when I realized, blogging was more than just putting thoughts to paper (or screen). It was a tool. Blogging has become one of my most powerful tools, career and otherwise. And I’ll share why it could become yours, if you start today.
You don’t need to travel the world, or become a full-time content creator to benefit from a blog.
Let me show you how.
For a lot of professionals I’ve talked to about my blog, many of them shared similar sentiments. A blog sounded like something they might “one day” if they had more time. Better yet, it sounded like something their gen-z colleague might do in the weekend (they won’t be, trust me). But the internet has changed how expertise and knowledge works these days, especially if you’re a professional.
Let me share with you how:
In the past, your reputation mostly likely lived inside your workplace. Your firm, your company, your industry network and your friends and family.
You’d go to industry expo’s, conferences, symposiums, maybe even a research seminar and you’d network. If you’re successful – you’d hand your card out to new connections, build a business relationship then bring in clients.
But today, your reputation lives online as much as it lives in your workplace. Online, your reputation can be scalable, and can be visible to people and opportunities you’d otherwise never see. This is where a blog comes into play.
Done right, a blog can become another professional platform. Instead of waiting for your annual conference or a chance meeting with that next ‘big’ client, you can take control. Your can put yourself in front of that client by publishing content and becoming searchable. Through a blog, you can set yourself up to be found day or night, for years to come.
Instead of relying on your CV you can build a portfolio of tangible work to back it up. Better yet, you can show results as well as how you think, that helped you achieve those results.
And that shift is powerful.
Most professionals spend their entire careers building assets they don’t control.
Your employer owns your work, your company owns your projects, your industry reputation stays in a small professional circle. Your autonomy and control is limited.
But unlike a social media platform, where the algorithm replaces your company or employer, a blog is different. Every article your write, share or create becomes an asset you control. With that you can:
You own the platform and the content.
One of the most underrated benefits of blogging is this –
It forces you to clarify your thinking
Writing about your ideas, your experiences, and lessons from your career helps you develop a clearer perspective. This is true for most blogging – but when you publish that thinking online, something interesting happens.
People start to see you differently – this is a good thing, don’t be scared. Instead of being “another professional in your field,” you become someone who might:
In other words, blogging builds authority.
When I started my blog, I had no master plan. I simply started writing about what I was learning as I powered through books. It didn’t just become an outlet for me, but it also synthesized and helped reinforce what I was learning. While I started writing about career specific topics, I thought why not do the same thing with travel.
LinkedIn didn’t seem like the best platform to share my travel lessons though. That’s where I learnt how to build my own blog platform. Unlike my career blog on LinkedIn, my writing about travel wasn’t susceptible to the platforms algorithm.
As I continued writing on both blogs, over time something unexpected happened. Both blogs opened doors I never would have predicted. Blogging has the real and honest chance to lead to opportunities like:
If done right, it can even bring in a consistent income. The key point is these opportunities often appear indirectly. People find your writing, connect with your perspective, and reach out.
Without a platform, that discovery never happens.
Let’s address the obvious question. Can blogging make me money?
The simple answer is yes – blogs can make money. But let’s be real for a minute.
There are faster ways to make money if that is your sole purpose. It took me 4 months of consistent writing to make money from my travel blog.
But the reality is, the most amount of money I’ve made from my blog came over time. In fact, it was one of the main reasons why moving overseas to follow my husband was made possible. A blog is a long-term asset, that can create optional income streams with some consistency.
Lots of blogs, including mine, earn income through:
Not every blog becomes a full-time business (mine isn’t). But many become something equally valuable: a flexible side income. For professionals used to trading time for money, that can be a meaningful shift. My blog helped me step away from billable hours as a lawyer to focus on being more flexible.
A common misconception is that blogging only works if you have a massive following. But professionals don’t need millions of readers. When I started on LinkedIn I found 1000 relevant readers was far more valuable than a general audience of 100,000.
For example, imagine:
reading your work regularly. From all around the world. That’s an incredibly powerful network.
One reason I recommend blogging to professionals is simple:
It compounds.
The first blog post will probably get very few readers, no comments and even fewer clicks. The tenth a little more. But over time, your articles build a library of knowledge that continues attracting people long after you publish them.
Five years from now, a blog you start today could contain:
And unlike many professional efforts, that work doesn’t disappear (unless you choose not to renew your domain). All that work keeps working for you. The dividends grow as your content and it’s time on the net does.
Many professionals hesitate because they think blogging requires polished writing. It doesn’t. My first articles on LinkedIn were SHOCKING. But what people value the most is clarity and honesty. If you can explain:
then you already have something worth sharing. Your experience is the content. This is for careers, travel, fitness, health… Whatever you might want to write about.
Let’s talk about the elephant in the room. I’m probably on the money to say, you might have thought why bother blogging when AI exists. But hear me out when I tell you why now is one of the best times to start a blog.
There’s no denying it, AI has made content creation easy. BUT AI is generative, meaning it has to pull form a source to create (at least it does currently). Using the power of ‘search engine optimization’ (SEO) and specific AI friendly formats, blogs become a key part to generating information. Better yet, AI is fast becoming a strong sender of viewers to blog pages.
Interested in the source of the information, my blog has seen big number increases in viewership and sales through AI. For example, my biggest earner on this blog is through affiliate links.
When a busy, professional mum, with 2 kids wants to plan a holiday in Shanghai, they might use the following prompt:
“Plan a 10-day holiday for me, my husband and 2 kids in Shanghai during Easter”
AI scours the internet and pulls my 5-days in Shanghai article, and references it in it’s answer. It tells the mum to stay ‘at the SSWA Hotel, and refers to my blog article on why. The mum clicks through to my page, see’s I have a link giving her a discount. She books a 7-night stay in Shanghai through my link and I earn a commission.
Through the use of AI, SEO, and a blog article I wrote in 2024, I’ve made money.
The modern career is changing. Traditional paths are becoming less predictable, and professionals are increasingly looking for ways to create:
Blogging is not a magic solution. But it is one of the simplest ways to start building something of your own while continuing your career. And in a world where attention and ideas increasingly live online, having a platform can be a powerful advantage.
Most people wait too long to start.
They wait until they feel like experts.
They wait until they have more time.
They wait until their careers are “settled.”
But blogging rewards consistency over perfection.
Starting early means your ideas, experiences, and lessons have time to accumulate. And over time, that accumulation becomes something surprisingly valuable.
If you’re wondering how to actually start, here’s a simple breakdown:
If you’ve made it this far, you’re probably already thinking about starting a blog.
But here’s where most professionals get stuck. They either:
I know this because I’ve been through it myself. I built a blog that let me move to China, alongside a demanding professional career. I did it without a clear road map at the beginning, something I wish I had.
That’s exactly why I’m creating a short course:
A practical, no-fluff guide to starting a blog the right way — specifically for professionals.
I know you don’t have 2 weeks to get through an online tutorial. You probably don’t even have time to print and fill out templates. You need something that will set you up in less than a couple of hours AND the right way. This is where I come in.
Inside the course, I’ll walk you through:
This isn’t about becoming an influencer. It’s about building something that fits alongside your career and opens up new opportunities over time.
If that’s something you’re interested in, you can join the waitlist below:
Checkout my other post on how to start a blog, the right way, in 2026 here.
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