When we founded BigEye.ug, I wrote 99 percent of the articles that appeared on that website, at least for the first three months. I must confess, I had no prior background writing Entertainment articles, I had not the slightest idea on how to source those articles, yet those articles I wrote in those months set the foundation for the popularity of www.bigeye.ug as a website. However, looking back, I have a couple of regrets. My biggest regret is that I didn’t write many timeless articles. By Timeless, I mean articles that never grow old with time, you can read them ten years back or ahead in time and they will still make complete sense. Most of the articles I wrote back then, focused on the current news events. I know this was the fastest way for the website to grow, but it’s not the best way to build a foundation of content that lasts for years. Timeless content doesn’t seem to pay off in the short-term, yet looking at it from the long-term perspective; it’s more worthy a path for a blogger to take. Since then, I have changed my strategies. I now focus more on creating Timeless content and focus less on content that would fade with time. Let me give you an example of two articles; “Desire Luzinda’s Nude Pics Leak” and “Why Nude Pics leak, the phenomenon behind?” The former article will definitely do better than the latter in the short-term, yet in the long term, one would prefer that they wrote the latter than the former. Thus, the very reason my personal blog www.ortegaian.com has not grown faster than www.bigeye.ug did is because my personal blog focuses on timeless content. It takes time to build a following of people who are addicted to timeless content but when one finally does, the after-effects are just amazing. For example, for most of the questions people ask me, all that I have to do is to share a blog post from the archives of my timeless content and the post will answer all their questions. This is not the case with articles bound by time. Thus of late, I am doing less of time bound content, I am writing less on current events and choosing to write more timeless content. I am aware that even after I am dead, people may have to read some of the things I wrote. Today, you will comfortably read the writings of Aristotle, Marcus Aurelius and many great men and philosophers that lived back then because they wrote timeless content. I write for the generations to come. I love to write articles that would still be very relevant thousands of years from now. Perhaps a young child in future will be perusing the internet somewhere in 4000 and land on my articles from 2014 and be very inspired by the wisdom and knowledge that did flow in the millennial times. I tend to ignore fads and current events in my writing. Wars, natural disasters, and corrupt politicians have been with us for thousands of years. There are plenty of others who are compelled to write about those things, so I’ll leave that coverage to them. Will the content you’re creating today still be providing real value in the year 2010? 2100? 4000? Writing for future generations helps me cut through the fluff and stay focused on the core of my message, which is to help people grow. As long as there are people (even if our bodies are no longer strictly biological), there will be the opportunity for growth, so there’s a chance that at least some of what I’m creating today will still have relevance. And if I can write something that will be relevant to future generations, then it will certainly be relevant and meaningful today. In terms of traffic building, timeless content connects with people at a deeper level than time-bound content. The latter is meant to be forgotten, while the former is meant to be remembered. We forget yesterday’s news, but we remember those things that have meaning to us. So I strive to write about meanings instead of happenings. Even though we’re conditioned to believe that news and current events are important, in the grand scheme of things, most of what’s covered by the media is trivial and irrelevant. Very little of today’s news will even be remembered next week, let alone a hundred years from now. Certainly some events are important, but at least 99% of what the media covers is irrelevant fluff when viewed against the backdrop of human history. Ignore the fluff, and focus on building something with the potential to endure. Write for your children and grandchildren. So for any blogger reading this, there is great value in timeless content. Because we live in a generation that lives majorly for the NOW, you may be compelled to want to focus more on Time-bound content, but you can never always be the best at giving the breaking news, someone will always do it better than you. Yet with timeless content, an article of 1900 is still relevant in 2000. Write something that would make sense while reading it years from now, and you will thank me later if you take that longer and harder path, yet more fulfilling.