The Ultimate Blog Podcast - Monetizing Your Food Blog with Kayla Burton
Episode Date: October 15, 2024In this episode, we’re excited to chat with Kayla Burton, the creator of the food blog Broken Oven Baking Company and a coach for food bloggers. Kayla shares her journey of starting a food blog beca...use she loved web design and baking, and how she monetized and grew it until she could quit her 9-5 job. Today, Kayla explains how she gets feedback from her audience to create content they want, how she got brand partnerships as a new food blogger, what creative revenue streams a food blogger can use to monetize, and her best advice for food bloggers who are just starting out. Tune in to be inspired and get tips to monetize your food blog!🔗Show notes for Episode 148
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Welcome to the Ultimate Blog Podcast.
This podcast is the podcast we wish we had when we started blogging.
I'm Amy Reinicki and I'm Jennifer Draper.
Our episodes dive deep into how to monetize your blog,
sharing unique insights and practical tips.
We bring you in-depth interviews with successful bloggers and
experts who offer valuable, actionable advice.
Our mission is to educate, support, inspire,
and empower you in your blogging business.
Welcome to the Ultimate Blog Podcast.
We have a lot of food bloggers who listen to the podcast.
And I think this new direction that we're going
and really talking to you guys about
how to monetize your blog and how to make money is important to hear from people who
have been in that race and done it.
And I connected with Kayla Burton and I just knew right away that we needed to bring her
on so she could not only share her story, but share what she's done in order to grow
her food blog and grow now a coaching business
in a seemingly a short amount of time. And so I'm really excited to introduce you to Kayla Burton
today. Kayla, welcome to the Ultimate Blog Podcast. Thank you so much for having me.
Yes. Well, we connected on Instagram. Kayla actually followed us and I went and peeked
and was like, oh, I like what Kayla does.
And I think I actually messaged you that day and was like,
I would love for you to come on the podcast
and talk about what you do.
So I was instantly attracted to what you do, Kayla.
So can you tell our listeners what it is that you do
and a little bit about your blog?
Yeah, so I started my baking blog,
Broken Oven Baking Company in 2020,
and I didn't really know anything about blogging
when I started it, so I just started learning
everything I could about SEO, keyword research,
and just blogging in general.
And I just fell in love with the technical backend side
of things, and user experience experience and all of that.
Cause I guess growing up, I always enjoyed just like playing around with web design and
I would make animated icons for aim and stuff like that just for fun.
But I also enjoyed baking a FIGRAMA.
So that's how I got into this kind of just combines the best of both worlds.
I love that.
Yeah. So then I just quickly implemented everything
I learned on my own site.
And then I think I qualified for Mediavine
within two years of starting my blog.
And I was also doing brand partnerships at the time.
But I think just doing all of that and learning everything and applying
it to my own blog, I really enjoyed it and I wanted to help other bloggers get there.
So then I started just sharing whatever I could.
And I also had an audit with Casey Marquis and he started using my blog as an example
so people would reach out to me with questions.
And I just really enjoyed connecting with everybody and answering their questions. And so last year I started helping other bloggers by doing coaching. So like just
auditing their sites, seeing where they could improve SEO and user experience and stuff like
that. And so I've just started diving into that more and now I share like helpful resources for
food bloggers that who struggle with technology,
but they want to understand the back end of things better. So I just try to break those
things down into like little digestible tidbits and tutorials.
I think that's just one of the neatest things about the blogging community is that there's
so many great connections to be made. There's so many awesome resources out there.
And it's so fun to meet other bloggers
and hear what they're doing
because there's so many different paths
that you can take along your blogging journey
to create a sustainable business out of it.
And I'm sure people are curious
to know a little bit more behind the scenes
about when you started your blog,
it was a time when a lot of people were blogging and there was a lot of competition out there,
but you obviously were able to stand out amongst the crowd and gain some traction
and gain enough traction to get traffic and monetize your blog.
So I'd love to roll it back just a little bit for all the people listening who are like
Can I even start a food blog today? Like there's a lot of them out there. What can I do you talk about like how you?
Decided to start blogging about baking specifically and then talk about if you've niched down even further and
What do you think that means for other people who might want to start a food blog right now?
Yeah, yeah, it's definitely very competitive. I think that it's still a good time to start though. But
for me, what I did was, well, I actually started on not a very great theme or host. And so one of
the first things I did that I think made a huge impact was switching to a reliable, trustworthy
host and an optimized theme.
I would love to know who you recommend.
I'd just love to hear if it's the same people that we do.
Yeah, so for a host, I really like big scoots.
I've been with them for a few years, and they've been great.
They are amazing.
Yeah, is that who you recommend to?
It is.
And it's funny to me that if you had to? It is. It is.
And it's funny to me that if you had asked me seven years ago if I would have been excited
about a hosting company, that answer would have been a big no.
And I'm like, I love big scoots.
I love big scoots so much.
We can be passionate about a hosting company.
Yeah, I got to meet Katie and a couple other teammates last, no, actually earlier this
year when they were
in town for Tastemaker because I'm in Chicago.
Oh, that's awesome.
That's awesome that you're right there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So big skits for hosts and then for theme, I really like Feast.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's really popular.
They do a really great job.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like SEO friendly and user friendly on both sides.
So I just, I think it makes my life a lot easier as a food blogger.
Right. Anything to make your life a little bit easier. Yeah, there's plenty to do already.
And I got to meet like Skylar and Melissa and then at the like earlier this year, too. So that was cool.
I love that you brought up meeting some of the people who have created these things that help bloggers because I think a good reminder is that it's somebody who's trying to make this industry
flow easier, work easier for us.
And they really are real people behind it who are genuinely supporting bloggers.
So anytime I know that we recommend companies, it's because we have honestly thoroughly vetted
them and use them and recommend them to our students.
Sounds like you do the same thing, Kayla.
And I think you can have a lot of,
there's a different theme company that we love.
We recommend Restored 316 Themes,
but we know a lot of food bloggers used Feast.
And so I don't know, there's so many things to choose from
that I think it's important to say,
you've got to trust your gut, I think,
and find your quote unquote expert who you're
going to learn from and then be like, okay, I'm going to trust.
Otherwise it's kind of like anything in our life.
If we overthink it, because there's a lot of theme options, there's literally hundreds
of theme options out there, for instance.
Your theme is really important.
I guess my recommendation is probably going to be either go with Restore 316 or Feast.
That would be what we would suggest.
But I think that knowing that your theme actually is important, that's an important piece of
a food blog or a blog in general.
Don't skip that step because it is an important foundation.
Yeah.
I think it's important not only for your user's experience, but for your experience using
it yourself.
Because if you don't know how to work your back end, it's going to be so hard for you
to get content up and make a good user experience.
Oh yeah, I think that's definitely what holds people back sometimes is just the overwhelm
of being able to get it all set up from the start.
And then I think also just knowing is there space for me?
Does anybody want to hear what I have to say, I think is another common thing that holds
people back.
Do you think that that niching down even more is where we need to be right now when it comes
to food blogging?
Or, you know, do you think you could just say, I love to cook, I'm just going to make
all different kinds of recipes?
I don't know that there's a right answer for this.
I personally, I think do what you're passionate about and that will shine through
your content. If you're excited about what you're creating, your audience is going to be excited
about it usually, but you still want to make sure that there is an audience for it. So I don't think
you need to get super niche down. You don't have to put yourself inside of a box that's, I can only
make something that uses pumpkin. I don't know what's following.
I think you should be passionate about what you're creating and that's going to make it
like sustainable long-term for you because if you are limiting yourself, it's you're just going to
get wiped out and you're not going to enjoy it as the years go on. Yeah, especially as these Google
updates come out and really impact bloggers from time to
time and you feel so frustrated.
But like you said, if you're putting out content that you're passionate about and that your
users and your readers are wanting, I think that's just the fine balance in getting that
content to be seen, but also being able to grow and grow your audience and all of that
as well.
Yeah, you are your biggest threat to your business
So if you're not enjoying like the core of what you do
I think that's really gonna not set you up for success in the long run
That makes me think about a question for you in the beginning and you said like you were kind of into website stuff growing
Up, but what do you tell a person that you might meet in the beginning who is really struggling with that technical piece of it?
What do you say to them to encourage them?
I know what we say, it doesn't last forever, but how do you feel like you can really help
somebody understand that?
That's one piece and yes, you have to know technical stuff moving forward, but you won't
always feel like that.
What do you say to encourage them or what did you say to yourself in the beginning when
you were there and learning this brand new thing that you'd never done before?
I would say just baby steps. You'll get comfortable with it eventually, like you say. But I think
a big thing is just not being afraid to play around with things. You can save backups.
You can use your staging site. Just don't be afraid to try new things. The more you
do it and practice, the more comfortable you'll get with it. But I think a lot of people just think they're going to
go in and break something if they touch anything, and that's usually not the case. And if you
do break it, you can always roll back and fix it usually.
That's why you need a good hosting company. Back to big scoots.
Exactly. Yeah.
Yeah, I think that's a great encouragement is that you likely will not break your site. You can always restore
a backup. Make sure you have your hosting obviously set up and backups and all that.
I just think the technical piece and that understanding of like, is anybody going to want
to be here or not? And I like what you said, if you're passionate about it, that's truly going
to show and shine through. We are definitely in a day and age where, you know, back when you started in
2020, I feel like Google worked a little differently.
We've had a couple of updates here that have posed some challenges for bloggers
is what I will say.
And so we've had to make a shift when it comes to creating content.
I'd love to hear a little bit about what you think now.
Is SEO still important?
Is that an area that you still focus on?
And how have you shifted with the Google updates?
I do think that SEO and like keyword research
and that stuff is still important.
I just, I don't think it needs to carry as much weight
as some people give it.
Like I think a lot of food bloggers just worry,
what is Google going to think?
How is Google going to react?
And yes, Google's important because it's such a big recipe
search engine, but you need to think about your audience.
Spend more time worrying about them
because you're not going to have a business or a site if there's
nobody going to visit it.
I still do keyword research and make sure
that my site is optimized.
But I think just I'm trying to add more personality into my blog and do more of what I'm passionate
about and what I see my audience likes.
What are some ways that you're able to connect with your audience to get some of that feedback
about what they like and don't like when you create any recipe or any posts?
Yeah, so I mostly engage with my audience on Instagram
and my email newsletter.
So if I'm testing a new recipe
or I'm trying to get ideas for something,
I might share a poll on my Instagram stories,
just asking for their opinions.
I also just recently sent out a survey to my audience
in my email newsletter,
just to get their feedback on what kind of,
like what are their baking preferences, what ingredients do they like, how helpful are
my recipes on my site, if there are any issues there, so stuff like that.
And I added an incentive with that survey, just I did like a giveaway.
So if you fill the survey, you can enter to win just like a broken up and baking up a
tote bag and stickers
So that just I think helps like foster a good relationship with my audience there to get them excited about my recipes and my brand in general
I like that you do that because I think what I've thought when you just said that
One we love the idea of a survey
That's something that we recommend to a lot of people. People like to share their opinions, so give them the opportunity to do that. But two, you said
that you gave them an incentive for doing that. So you weren't just asking and ask.
You actually had something that you were going to give them if they did it. And that what
you gave them is essentially marketing for your brand. And I am curious, you said a tote
bag and something else.
Is that something that you sell on your site and is this another way to generate revenue
or is this something that you do simply as a give back in different circumstances like
this?
I don't sell them.
I've had a few people ask, but I just like to use them as like a fun promotional kind
of marketing piece.
Yeah.
I think that's fun though. Who doesn't love
free swag? I think people love swag of any sort. People like free stuff. And so a lot of people
would probably fill out the survey just to win a giveaway or whatever. But I think the other thing
I was thinking when you were talking is you take yourself seriously and you treat yourself like a
business because you are. And I think that's sometimes where, especially in the beginning of this journey of blogging,
is that that is hard for bloggers to do and to take themselves seriously.
So is that ever an area that you struggled with or do you feel like you started and like
right out of the gate, you're like, yep, I am starting a blogging business and I understand
this?
Or was that like a mindset shift that took some time to get through?
No, it definitely took a lot of time. I feel like it's still happening. Yeah, because like
I never really even read blogs before I started blogging. So I just really liked the technical
website stuff and baking. And yeah, I don't really know.
It just kind of happened where I started gaining traffic
and a following on Instagram.
And I was like, it's just so weird
because I'm not used to that in real life.
No.
Yeah.
What was the point when you realized,
hey, I actually can make some money from this?
And what was that? Was it the ad network first or was there something else that came about
before you got on the ad network?
Yeah, no, it wasn't ads. It was actually brand partnerships. So I started my Instagram account
just sharing what I was baking January of 2020. And it was a whole different time on Instagram then.
It's so hard to grow now these days, I think.
But back then I got to 10,000 followers pretty,
like fairly quickly, I think.
And so brands started reaching out to me
about doing like partnerships and sponsored posts
and like just content creation for them.
So I started getting a couple of brand partnerships
and that was when I was like,
I can actually make a living from this.
So I quit my corporate nine to fives
and just went full time doing the brand partnerships
and learning SEO and all of that.
And then about a year after that
is when I qualified for Mediavine.
So you were able, I like numbers,
you don't have to share real numbers, but let's just
assume a nine to five, like you had to obviously pay your rent, pay your utilities, things
like that.
So the money that you were earning by doing brand partnerships was enough to replace at
least to provide for you.
I had saved up a few months of expenses before I quit my job, so that was just to hold me
over.
I knew that if I could devote my entire work week to my own thing, then I could eventually
replace my nine-to-five income.
So you had a plan?
Yeah.
Those are important numbers that we all need to run for ourselves so that we know where
we stand in our business.
I think that's one thing that people forget about is, okay, we have to be able to know,
what do we need to bring in and how can we do it?
And like you said, when you're getting ready
to make a big change,
you're taking a little bit of a risk,
but you're doing so very thoughtfully by saying,
okay, here's the amount of time I'm gonna give myself
to devote full time to this business.
Yeah, it's like a calculated risk.
Yeah, but knowing that you have the time to devote made it,
it's always risky.
I feel like when you're in the online space,
we just have to call it what it is,
and it can be risky for sure.
But I appreciate that you had a plan
and that you had money saved in order
to bet on yourself, essentially, which goes back to
that taking yourself seriously and treating yourself like a business from the start, which
I think is just, I just think that mindset shift can make such a powerful impact on where
a blogger can go in the beginning.
If you doubt yourself, if you doubt what you're capable of from the beginning, you won't go
very far, I don't think.
But if you take yourself seriously and you block off the time, then the sky's the limit
kind of thing.
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Use the link in our show notes to find a plan that works for you.
So when it comes to generating content and creating it and putting it out there, do you have a recommendation for how many blog posts,
a new food blogger who's wanting to build a food blog
currently like in 2024, what's that recommendation look like?
Is it X amount of times a week
or is it X amount of times per month?
Or how do you navigate that and how do you support a blogger
in that way to encourage them?
Yeah, so I think quality over quantity for sure.
I think in the beginning, you're just just getting used to how everything works and what your
schedule is going to look like.
So I think just figure out what you can accomplish in a week and just be consistent and share
feedback with yourself about how things are going.
Keep a journal if you can and just be like, okay, this is what I did this week.
This is what went well.
This is what didn't go well and I could improve on and just, I don't know, just learning.
I think just always learning and especially in the beginning so that you know, like, okay,
once I hit my peak, maybe I can do two recipes a week and that will be consistent and get me to
where I need to be.
Because if you think about it, like if your goal is 50,000 sessions and you know how you want to get there, just think backwards and be like, okay, I need to get this 150
posts on my site maybe. And they have to be really high quality keyword research, share
them on social, all that. And then just kind of think back, I have the capacity for two
recipes a week, so it'll take me this many weeks to do it. So just kind of planning, setting a schedule for yourself and just learning as you go.
Yeah, it's certainly a balancing act to learn. You know, more is better, but you want to create
that quality content. So you have to be realistic with yourself and what you can accomplish in a
week, in a month, whatever. So just really just diving in and testing out the waters and then
creating a consistent schedule for yourself once you have that piece figured out. And
you kind of need to know your goals as well. You mentioned like getting enough traffic
to get on an ad network, but I'd love it if you'd talk just a little bit about somebody
that's starting a blog and they don't want to wait, you know, two years maybe to get
on an ad network to be able to
bring some money in. I know brand partnerships are another possibility. How soon do you think
somebody could start pursuing other revenue sources when they start a blog? And do you
have any other recommendations for them to consider as well?
I think you can get started as early as you want or even before. I think a lot of times
we think we
have to be at a certain point and be super comfortable, but really you just need to get
started even if you are uncomfortable and you will learn just by doing it. If you are
working on your blog, then clearly you are learning or you have those skills needed for
blogging. Copywriting, photography, recipe development, all that stuff, those are all things that you could monetize. So you could offer those services to other food
bloggers or like food brands if they're looking for recipes for their website, things like that.
I don't think it's too early to get started. I think you just have to put yourself out there
and get the experience in. So do you recommend that a blogger would just reach out to a brand directly and say, these are my skills,
this is how I can help, and these are my rates?
Is that something that they can do right off the bat then?
I would think so, yeah.
I would say go for it.
Just introduce yourself and try to establish
a good relationship with the brand
and see how you can each benefit each other.
How else do food bloggers make money? So obviously being on an ad network is a really powerful way to generate revenue.
But like Jennifer was saying,
it does take a couple of years usually to get on an ad network,
especially in the competitive environment that, that we have today,
especially in food blogging.
And so how are food bloggers making a lot of their money?
Are there other products and services that they're offering? Or what kind of things are you finding
that food bloggers are doing to generate more revenue? Yeah, I think there are a lot of options
out there these days and you just have to be creative and think outside the box sometimes.
But I've heard of people creating digital products, doing cooking classes online or in person,
doing eBooks and cookbooks. Like I mentioned, brand work, freelance work. Even starting a YouTube
channel, if you really like that kind of thing, you can monetize a YouTube channel. That's
similar to monetizing a blog and it takes the same consistency and building up good content.
But yeah, there's like all those different
things. And I think just building a branded community in general, like I think you can
eventually monetize just a community, like a little paid subscription for access to you
and like maybe exclusive rest fees or something like that.
Yeah, we went to a conference earlier this year that really talked about the power of community,
and it really hit home with Jennifer and I, that power of community. And I really think it's an
area that any niche and almost any blog could have a community. And that's recurring revenue
that comes in. So that's something that a blogger can think about when they're
thinking about all these different options
But I think you also have to weigh your time and know like yes, I need to generate revenue
Yes, I need to create content and all of that But I think there has to be a really honest conversation with yourself that you can do anything, but you can't do everything and so
Being real and saying okay, like I'm going to set some realistic
expectations for myself and my time and knowing that you're not a failure if you can't do
all the things. In fact, I don't think that the three of us, I don't think that there's
probably one of us here that would tell you to do every single thing because it's impossible.
You would need a team of like 15 if you did everything that everyone tells you to do to
grow a blog.
I mean, I think it can be very overwhelming.
So yeah.
Speaking of that, when I was getting started and like doing the brand partnerships and
learning SEO and all that stuff, I also like almost immediately outsourced my Pinterest
because I knew that was important for food blogs, but I never enjoyed using Pinterest
and I didn't really care to do that.
So I just focused on creating my content and SEO and like brand partnerships.
So I kind of diversified my traffic from the start, which I think really helped.
I think you said something really important there.
You didn't enjoy it and you trusted the process enough to say,
okay, I'm gonna outsource this
because I know it's an important part of my business,
but my focus needs to be elsewhere
where I can make more impact in my business.
And for you, that was Pinterest.
For somebody else that might be photography,
I'd love to actually talk about that if we can too.
Because I think a lot of people love to cook or bake.
They love the idea of having a food blog, talk about that if we can too. Because I think a lot of people love to cook or bake. They
love the idea of having a food blog, but they're like, I am a horrible photographer. How in
the world, or I don't have an expensive camera. So what advice do you give somebody who isn't
a photographer currently, does not know how to take like a decent picture, but they still
want to do that? What's your recommendation? And did you know how to do that when you started
or is that something else that you've learned along the way?
I kind of learned it.
I actually started off, my partner was taking my photos
because he started his own like product photography business
like the year before I started my blog.
So that was something he started off doing for me.
And then I was like, I want to have control over all of this.
So I'm going to learn photography and take over.
And I did always enjoy photography.
And I took photography classes in high school.
But I never actually really learned it.
So I kind of just got a camera.
I got a FUJIFILM X-T3 and just started
practicing looking at other food photos
and trying to recreate them with my own style and just learning
Composition lighting all the different settings and how they work together. So just a lot of practice
Yeah, I think even you don't need like a fancy camera
Especially these days like you can just use an iPhone like the camera
There's really good enough and I have clients who they only use their phones for videos and photos and they're doing amazing.
You definitely don't have to feel like you have to have the best equipment and be super
incredible at it.
It's one of those things that's like done is better than perfect.
Yeah.
It's just like you have to dive in.
You figure out what you enjoy doing, what you want to learn, and it's going to be a
learning process no matter what when you start something new.
So when blogging, you're going to have to learn a little bit about WordPress.
You're going to have to learn possibly a little bit about photography and social media and
Pinterest and Google and all the things.
But there are options to hire things out.
You can hire people, other bloggersgers like you mentioned before, if photography
is your own passion, you could offer your services.
But on the flip side, if you're a blogger and you can potentially budget, you can hire
out some of your food photography so that you don't have to focus on that piece.
It's all a balancing act because there is a lot to do and you can't do it all.
And like you said, done is better than perfect.
So just jump in, do the pieces that you want and see what you can get some help
with along the way.
Yeah, yeah, definitely.
Don't be afraid to try things and just continuously learn.
Always share feedback with yourself.
Yeah, yeah.
That's great advice.
I love sharing feedback with yourself.
I love you've said that a couple times and I I think that's important
It's not sharing criticism with yourself or beating yourself up about something that you don't know
But it's like oh, okay
I could do this better or I'm doing this really well or I'm really good at this and I'm not so good at this and
I actually hate doing it, but I think that's important in the beginning
I think it's important in the middle though, too
To just continually having those
conversations with yourself about where your business
stands and what's working and what's not. Because like
we've said, like in the beginning, blogging today
looks different than it did in 2020. It's going to
look different in 2027 than it looks today. And I
think just being willing to be along for the ride is
an important piece of it and considering it something
fun. And this can be a really enjoyable experience if we allow it to be. And I think that blogging
is a lot about learning, repeatedly learning over and over and so not getting too bogged down in the
things that you don't know because I mean, I don't want to be the bearer of bad news, but there's
always going to be something that you don't know, you mean, I don't want to be the barrier of bad news, but there's always going to be something that you don't know, you know,
that you're going to have to learn because things change.
And so that's why having like a strong community and having resources that you
can go to, I think is so powerful because we don't know everything.
And so we have to lean on people who know more than us and different aspects to
remind us of why we did this in the first place and knowing that we are here for a purpose and
our passion is worthy of being shared and we are helping people each and every day when
we share our content with the world.
So I'm thankful that you share in the way that you do and you seem so calm about it,
which I think is I love it because I'm not a calm person.
And I love when you remind me of Jennifer because you're both just, this is what you
do and this is how it's done and just go do it.
So I think that's important.
I think sometimes we can be emotional about it and we can make it very emotional.
And I'm not saying that blogging can't be emotional, but sometimes we can really talk ourselves
out of something.
Sometimes we need to talk ourselves into our strengths.
You can do this.
Yes, it is competitive to start a food blog right now.
Yes, this is a market that looks different than it did, but that doesn't mean that I
can't do it.
I always appreciate when I meet people like that who are just like, yeah, you should totally go for it. You should't do it. And so I always appreciate when I meet people like that who are just
like, yeah, you should totally go for it. You should totally do it.
Yeah. I'm like a full believer that anyone can do anything. Like my dad always told us
you can do anything you set your mind to. You become what you think. So that was kind
of ingrained in me. I love that. And now you're sharing that with
everybody in your community, which is really cool. Kayla, will you please let people know where they can connect with you and find you on
your website and your social media?
Yeah.
So for my baking blog, it's brokenupandbaking.com and I'm on Instagram and other socials at
Broken Up and Baking.
And then if you want like food blogging tips and resources, you can find me on Instagram
at foodblogcoach or foodblogcoaching.com.
Awesome. Well, thank you so much for sharing your journey and how you're growing your food
blog today and supporting other food bloggers on their journey too. So we're glad to have
you here today.
Yeah, this was fun. Thank you.
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