Always Write Challenge Interview Series #16
Welcome to Always Write. I am your hostess, Marsha Ingrao, and today I welcome Amanda and Sandy as my guest challenge hosts. Together they co-host the challenge, Friendly Friday Challenge. The benefits of joining the challenge are:
- Showcase your photography, writing and posts.
- Be inspired to create more diverse posts.
- Challenge yourself to get creative with the weekly prompts.
- Make new blogger friends.
- Build a blogger community.
Please make Amanda and Sandy feel right at home here by leaving them lots of comments and following the links to visit their blogs. Now let’s learn a little about their back stories.
The idea for the challenge happened years ago when I
was chatting to with Snow who has been blogging for almost as long as I have. Snow and I had an odd relationship as we are at opposite ends of the world, as far away as you can get, so our opposing perspectives were always going to be interesting, yet we had the common thread of growing up in Australia. Snow was keen to create a photo challenge โ a major interest of hers but lacked a little confidence to go it alone and thatโs when I got involved.
I had run a weekly Monday Mystery Photo Challenge on my blog for almost five years and was looking for something new and offered to help out. That is how we created the Friendly Friday Photo Challenge in 2018. I wasnโt keen on the name at first, but it has grown into its identity.
Sandy joined as a co-host when Snow retired. We also had the help of a third host, Manja, an avid photographer, who ably stepped in at times, when life got too busy for blogging. Click on the links to see their blogs.
Sandy and I haven’t met in the person but meeting would be like some of the meetings I have had with pen pals. When you exchange in writing, you know so much about a person, it is like meeting with an old friend. It is always a lovely surprise when it happens. Sandy and I collaborate very well so I think we would sync well in person too!
I agree, meeting would be a treat! Amanda makes a good point. Blogging and co-hosting is like having pen-pals. Except that communication is immediate and stamp-free. Being geographically far apart means that weโre almost guaranteed to have different experiences to blog and talk about.
I started participating in the challenge almost exactly two years ago on May 17, 2019. The challenge was Chairs and I remember thinking โFinally, a chance to use this photo.โ
Iโd been walking through an old part of town when two chairs caught my eye. I took more photos but because the place was empty, there was nothing to blog about. Friendly Friday allowed me to start with a picture of the chairs, then peek through the doors into the rest of the place.
I found other Friendly Friday topics prompted similar memories and I had fun finding and writing the posts. When Amanda called out for a co-host, I thought โWhy not?!โ
I like the way Friendly Friday has nurtured a community of interactive bloggers and also how it has evolved to incorporate stories, recipes as well as amateur and semi-professional photography which Sandy my co-host elaborate on. To differentiate the challenge in the blogosphere, we really do try to make each theme novel and unique, adding some suggestions to get the creative ideas flowing for participants.
We can see that participants love the food suggestions. – Marsha
My mouth is watering now! I like seafood and I love (smoked) salmon, especially on a slice of baguette. You must have an amazing memory, remembering all those salmon dishes and the progression of how you became more and more enthralled by it. My best salmon story has to do with watching a black bear catch one on Vancouver Island a few falls ago.
Liesbet
Photographic tips and links are useful to any of us who use media to embellish our posts. New bloggers can gain exposure and attract new followers by posting links on the current hostโs Friendly Friday theme post page.
I want the challenge to trigger stories. Sandy
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Much like my first post on Chairs, I want the challenge to trigger stories. There are many challenges which are focused wholly on pictures as the end point. To me, photos are starting points. Their purpose is to enliven a memory or embellish an interesting fact or event.
It takes me about a day to write up the Friendly Friday post. It takes longer to come up with a topic, although most of the time, itโs simmering in my subconscious. Itโs like a deadline that I know is coming up but I pretend to not think about it. At least, until the Monday before the Friday that itโs due ๐
I donโt know how long it takes, but as I try to expand the topic, it might be written up over a few days, or on the one day. Depending on what is happening in my own personal life, it is something I might write up a week beforehand and refine over several days. I have a lot of drafts sitting there waiting to be transformed and given life. Sometimes, I get an idea for a theme from the conversations and comments from other bloggers. That is especially nice.
For me, the challenge is finding a topic which can be both straight-forward or interpreted. I ask myself, can this topic be illustrated by more than a photo? Can I provide examples, which are more than just photos?
Because of Amanda’s influence, Iโm sensitive to geographic differences when I think up challenge topics. Whenever I think of seasonal themes, I always pull back because Australia is two seasons ahead of everyone in North America and Europe.
Once I have a topic and examples, I write it up. Then Iโll find and add the visuals. Photos are easy visuals but I might also add graphics, video inserts and other media grabs.
I think Sandy talked about the steps we take โ much the same way any of us prepare a blog post. We sit down to write and put ideas to life via the keyboard and images. It is not so scripted that I decide on the topic then go out and hunt for pictures to suit. Life is way too busy to do that. The theme floats around in the ether before it settles in my head! Haha!
Ours is a non-competitive, everybody-wins event! This is a laid-back fun activity and I donโt try to promote it too much. Iโll look up all the pingbacks and comment on participant posts.
When we moved to a bi-weekly format, I started posting reminders on the second week which include entries from the first week. This is more to encourage participation. Iโve gotten feedback saying itโs nice having a list in one place for others to click through the entries. As long it remains manageable, Iโll continue to do that.
We have a logo that people can use it if they want. Other than that, I donโt use other social media to promote content.
Participants respond with their own stories, which is one of the Friendly Fridays hosts’ goals. Here is one example. – Marsha
Very informative and love the video clip. Removing the shoes before entering a house or temple is regularly followed in Indian culture as a matter of respect. Thank you.
Philosophyvia.photos
Like Sandy, I always visit participantโs posts. If someone has taken the trouble to participate, it is the polite and necessary thing to do as a host. It is often surprising and always a delight to see how individual bloggers choose to interpret a theme.
Hosting a challenge does take time so I donโt feel it is necessary to expand it to other platforms at present. Facebook groups come and go and if there was a strong need, I would consider it.
My feeds are syndicated via Twitter @forestwoodfolk. That is pretty much all. WordPress has a big community to draw from. Even though I had someone ask to join the challenge, who didnโt currently have a blog, it seems much easier if the participant is already using the same platform.
Always participate in any challenge only if you want to do so. You must be interested in it, or else the lacklustre approach will show in your writing.
As for hosting a challenge, you must be committed and have a reasonable number of followers to start with. It is pretty soul destroying if you launch a challenge and do not get any participants.
Consistency and participating in other challenges are certainly highly recommended. It is also better to have one or more co-hosts, I think. This ensures that you will start off with a few others participating. I do recommend hosting challenges though. You will nurture a wonderful community and find new blogging friends from all over the world! Maybe you would like to guest host our challenge? Drop us a line.
Another recommendation from me might be to find your own challenge niche. Make your challenge stand out be being individual, different, or unique from others in some way. This will set you apart from a generic run of challenges existing in the blogosphere and help ensure your success.
As for hosting a challenge, you must be committed and have a reasonable number of followers to start with. It is pretty soul destroying if you launch a challenge and do not get any participants. Amanda
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Last year, Amanda and I discussed how to evolve Friendly Friday. We wanted it to be more than just pictures. Weโve expanded it to include pure narrative, cookery, videos, and anything else that captured the imagination. We also made a subtle change in name from Friendly Friday Photo Challenge to simply Friendly Friday Challenge.
Part of the ‘challenge’ in challenges, is keeping it interesting. I appreciate bloggers who sometimes mix-it-up with different perspectives or new ideas. Recently, Verรณ from My French Chronicles kicked off a vlog collaboration where instead of photos, people contributed videos on a theme. Given that most of us were travel bloggers who were homebound by the pandemic, her idea was a virtual trip around the world, of views outside our windows. Verรณ published the first ‘Bloggers with a View’ video, Amanda did the next one on ‘Mornings’ and I did a subsequent one on Market Days. Vlog collaborations take more work to pull together but the videos are fun. Maybe we’ll do more …
Who knows where Friendly Friday Challenge will go in the future? It is a living thing, evolving and growing, changing, and remoulding as we as hosts see fit. It is like predicting numbers on a spinning wheel. Where will it stop; who knows?
Biographies
Amanda
Amanda lives in Australia. She designs fabrics using Scandinavian Designs and Traditional Norwegian Rosemaling and writes about things that interest, puzzle, or frustrate her. She has traveled extensively and loves providing information that is helpful or important to share with others including recipes.
There’s a cornucopia of topics on her blog, from travel and lifestyle to photography and cooking. As part of a diverse global community, she values your opinions and comment and welcomes your comments.
Sandy
Sandy is an amateur photographer, writer, and traveler. She used to work with high-tech computer software until she realized that she was missing out on a low-tech human world. She decided to break from corporate life and rediscover the joys of creative writing and photography.
Over the last ten+ years, Sandy has split her time living in Toronto, Beijing, and Singapore. After retiring and returning to Canada, she and her husband considered relocating outside of the big city. They fell in love with the wild Pacific coast in British Columbia but couldnโt quite give up city life. Now, they split their time between Toronto and Ucluelet on Vancouver Island.
Thanks to both of you for your time. It’s been a pleasure getting to know you both better.
Now It’s Your Turn
Do you have questions, comments, or links to share for and with Sandy or Amanda?
If you host or enjoy participating in specific challenges and would like an interview on Always Write, please contact me.
Your babbling is music to my ears. Please leave a comment!