Julia Fain is the author and designer behind , a home and garden website dedicated to small-budget modern home design ideas, DIY projects, and crafts. Julia has a background in product design and has collaborated with brands including Sherwin-Williams, World Market, and Hunter Fan. She has nearly 2,000 followers on and an impressive 5.1k followers on . 17勛圖厙 talked to this successful blogger to learn how brands can better work with influencers and influencers can work with brands.
17勛圖厙: So how long have you been blogging?
Julia Fain: Ive been in the web realm for a long time. Prior to 4 years ago I ran an Etsy shop and sold vintage goods online. About 4 years ago I went to a conference in Utah and it occurred to me that I couldnt scale what I was doing. I was going to max out on what I could earn doing what I was doing as one person. So I decided to try blogging for profit, for lack of a better term. So about 4 years.
17勛圖厙: Have you always been in the DIY space?
Pretty much! My husband and I are both product designers so it comes naturally to us to want to build our own things and fix things if theyre broken.
17勛圖厙: As a DIY blogger, how do you keep your volume up while creating. How are you putting out enough posts? You cant be every week, right?
Yeah. So for my sons room for example, instead of it just being one article for his room I highlighted favorite daybeds, how I came to pick the blue paint, and after I highlighted his room I did a feature on how we added contact paper to his desk. Instead of one blog post, I developed at least four blog posts for that whole project which helps me feel like its a better investment.
It’s tricky because I am a content creator, and I also try to maintain the traffic to my site. So, I am making sure that previous DIYs are still being re-pinned to my site and being seen by Google. Im probably posting an average of one DIY a month and that doesnt feel difficult.
Speaking of your sons bedroom, that was a brand partnership, right?
Yes, it was.
How do you like when brands approach you? Whats the best way to seek a relationship with an influencer, in your perspective?
It varies with different brands. For example, originally I met Sherwin-Williams at a conference and we connected that way. Weve maintained a relationship and Ive written several articles in partnership with them.
With Hunter Fan Company we connected on Twitter through some direct messages. So, its not always face-to-face. Sometimes brands reach out to me, sometimes Ill get emails from agencies, and other times Ill reach out to them if I feel strongly about their brand.
How do you choose what brands to work with?
Thats a good question. Most often it is because I already use that brand. Other times, I decide based on a brands reputation and its design. I recently reviewed a product brand new to the market and wanted to give it a try because of its smart technology and product design.
You have a big following on social media. How does that play into your overall content creation strategy?
It definitely plays into it pretty strongly and Ive targeted which social channels bring me the most traffic. I dont have a large Instagram following but I get a decent bit of traffic to my website through Facebook and Pinterest, and since my site is monetized traffic is important to me.
I try to be strategic with when I share content, and Pinterest is a long-term strategy. You dont just pin something once. You pin it for months, always trying to get the content out there.
Do you have any advice for people who want to be bloggers? For people that want to be working with brands?
Be strategic and try to grow at least 2 social channels. I dont think it makes sense to grow just one. Ive heard stories of Facebook or Pinterest accounts getting shut down for no understood reason. A lot of times its a mistake and they get their accounts back eventually, but still, you want to be strategic with yoursocial platform growth and diversify it.
Brands do look at Instagram, so it is important for that reason. But it makes sense to grow your other channels as well.
You have to be a little bit aggressive. I know some girls who are nervous to work with brands and I dont think you should be nervous. The people behind a brand are just normal people working their job.
You have to have proof that you can do the work. For bloggers, your blog is your portfolio. For example, I bought a ceiling fan and when my room makeover went live, I shared it with Hunter Fan Company and I said something simple like Hey I used your ceiling fan in this article, would you want to work with me in the future? And they did. Weve worked together several times since and they included my living room & fan in their catalog for this year. Show what youve done in order to get future work.
What advice do you have for brands who want to work with influencers better?
Do a little research on the person. I get emails every day where people spell my name wrong, or they ask me to add follow links to my blog. I get put on PR email lists frequently and thats great but this relationship needs to be mutually beneficial.
Tell me how you want to collaborate. Have a form of communication. Give us influencers a way to pitch ideas. Emails do go a long way and connecting on social media is beneficial because then both the brand and influencer can communicate through direct messages.
What do you have going on right now?
As far as the blog goes Im trying to grow my traffic right now. And Im always looking for the next paid sponsored post with a brand. Just yesterday one of my pitches was accepted for a sponsored back to school article.
One thing is a struggle for me: it’s easy to find lifestyle and recipe articles that are paid. Those come along frequently. But the home design and DIY paid collaborations are harder to find. Id like to have an ongoing relationship with a brand where were creating together. Every three months Im writing an article for them and we have an ongoing relationship. Thats what I am looking for.





One Response
Thanks for sharing. I read many of your blog posts, cool, your blog is very good.