My pre-publish blogging rituals

I blogged about my Blogging Kanban. This post is about the multi-step process that happens after I deem posts finished and ready to move to the actual blog. It consists of three main tools… Write Good Linter, Microsoft Edge’s Read Aloud feature, and Sq…


This content originally appeared on daverupert.com and was authored by daverupert.com

I blogged about my Blogging Kanban. This post is about the multi-step process that happens after I deem posts finished and ready to move to the actual blog. It consists of three main tools… Write Good Linter, Microsoft Edge’s Read Aloud feature, and Squoosh. It’s about 30-50 minutes worth of work and puts that final bit of polish on my posts before I ship it out to the world.

Export from Notion (1 min)

The Notion export modal dialog

As I said in my last post, I now do all my blogging in Notion. Exporting from Notion is straightforward. It provides you with a Markdown file and a folder full of images inside a Zip file. I extract the ZIP and copy past the contents into a new draft on my blog inside VS Code.

Open in VS Code for last-minute edits. (15 minutes)

A markdown post opened in VS Code where entire paragraphs are highlighted orange indicating a grammatical mistake

The next step is to pull the content into the local version of my site and add some last minute grammar fixes in VS Code. In VS Code I have the Write Good Linter extension installed looking at my Markdown files. I also have Error Lens installed which pairs well with Write Good.

Write Good is a Grammarly-like tool which flags a grammatical errors, passive voice, as well as weak words like “just” and “simply” which can weaken meaning. Detecting a Markdown file, Write Good starts flagging paragraphs and squiggling grammar fixes and Error Lens highlights the whole paragraph to let me know there’s a problem. Now I work to make the bitter orange highlights go away.

Initially this was time consuming work because my natural tendency is to write, think, and speak in a more passive voice. Over the years I’ve gotten better at appeasing the linter and also not caring about my use of passive voice.

Listen in Edge Read Aloud (15 minutes)

A blog post opened in Microsoft Edge with Edge Readaloud’s options menu open

Next I open my localhost site in Microsoft Edge and use Edge’s killer Read Aloud feature to read my blog post back to me. Read Aloud is a Text-to-Speech tool that leverages Microsoft’s Cognitive Services API. CMD + Shift + U brings up the Read Aloud toolbar where you can select the voice and the speed of the screenreader.

I listen using the Microsoft Aria Online (Natural) voice option at the fastest speed. In fact, I use this feature all the time. 80% of blog posts I read are actually read to me by my robot assistant Aria. The “natural” voices Microsoft offers are pretty great at fast speeds, but for an in-depth look at some of the tradeoffs of speed vs. accuracy in synthetic speech, read this Léonie Watson post on synthetic speech.

Listening to my post helps capture obvious grammatical errors the linter didn’t catch and helps me discover terribly worded sentences. It’s not perfect (this is obvious if you’ve read my blog before) and typos and bad grammar slip through, but I trade speed for accuracy and I know that.

Occassionally this spins out into content refactors; rewording or re-organizing an idea that isn’t landing. The other day I deleted a whole five paragraph pre-ramble because it wasn’t until I listened to it did I decide I didn’t like the intro.

Without a doubt, I can say this little step of listening to my own writing has made me a better writer over the last couple years. I’m not a professional by any means, but listening has helped me find my voice. It’s been an incredible way to speed up proof-reading.

Squoosh (2 minutes)

The UI of Squoosh app making images for this blog post smaller

Once the site is ready to go, I make sure all my graphics are Squoosh’d. I should probably automate this or figure out a better way, because my new 4K display is telling me I’m shooting myself in the foot a bit by sending 1200px wide compressed images, but this is my current process.

Deploy to Netlify (1 minute)

When the local build looks successful and all files committed, I push to GitHub. My changes soar over the information highway to GitHub, a webhook notifies Netlify to pull the new content and start a new build of my site. The deploy on Netlify takes ~1 minute to finish. While I wait, I start drafting a tweet.

Tweet (1 minute)

When my build completes, I grab the URL and tweet it out. This gives me a chance to preview any opengraph images I attached as well as a last chance to find any typos in my title.

Then, after I tweeted, I realize I made an enormous typo or grammatical mistake. I apologize to my more astute readers and fix and commit a half-dozen times before calling it done and moving on to the next post.


This content originally appeared on daverupert.com and was authored by daverupert.com


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