Writing the first ten posts is fun. Finding any one of them six months later is the problem. A blog that is easy to write but painful to navigate slowly loses its readers — and its author. Here is how to keep an archive that stays useful over time.
Clever titles age badly. Descriptive ones survive. If you cannot guess what a post is about from the title alone, your search box will not save you either.
When several posts belong together, link them. A short footer that lists Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 turns a scatter of pages into a coherent body of work — for readers and for yourself.
Old posts that no longer reflect you are not heritage; they are noise. Archive them, unpublish them, or rewrite the conclusion. Your archive should be a curated room, not an attic.
Pin the three posts you most want a new reader to see. The chronological feed is fine for regulars; the pinned set is what converts strangers into subscribers.
Textpad indexes the full text of every post. The moment you can type three words and land on the right page, you stop avoiding old material — and you start linking back to it in new posts.
Organization is not bureaucracy. It is the lightest possible scaffold around your future self. Spend an hour a quarter cleaning up the archive and the next hundred posts will write themselves.