블로그프로의 이상적인 고객들
세상에는 생각보다 많은 블로깅 플랫폼들이 있는데
블로그프로는 왜 존재해야할까?
열심히 개발하다가 문든 이런 의문이 들때가 있는데
왜 노션 블로깅 플랫폼이 존재하면 좋은지에 대해 간략하게 정리해봄
블로그프로의 특장점은
노션에서 모든걸 처리할 수 있다는 것
Substack이던 네이버 블로그던
내가 가장 자주 쓰고 좋아하는 텍스트 에디터인 노션에서
글을 쓰고 바로 계시가 가능하다는것
그래서 초기 스타트업 및 개인 브랜딩을 하는 개인들에게 인기가 많다
Professionals will not leave Substack or Ghost for “just another blogging tool.” They’ll only move if BlogPro offers workflow leverage that those platforms can’t match.
Why Professionals Would Use BlogPro Instead
1. Native Notion Workflow
- Professionals already use Notion for docs, notes, knowledge bases.
- With BlogPro, their writing stays in Notion — no context switching, no copy-paste.
- Updates are instant, two-way, and trustworthy.
➡ Substack/Ghost require separate editors.
2. Faster Publishing
- BlogPro skips friction: write → publish → done.
- SEO metadata, slugs, tags auto-pulled from Notion properties.
- Templates optimized for professional blogs (startups, consultants, knowledge workers).
➡ Ghost setup takes hours; Substack isn’t SEO-friendly at all.
3. Better for Professional Branding
- BlogPro blogs look like proper websites (custom domain, themes, landing-page feel).
- Substack looks like a Substack. Ghost looks like Ghost. Harder to stand out.
➡ Professionals want a site they own, not “hosted on Substack.”
4. Audience Growth & SEO (the missing piece)
- BlogPro is SEO-first → structured metadata, sitemaps, OG tags built-in.
- Substack is notoriously bad at SEO. Ghost is flexible, but manual.
- BlogPro can provide growth nudges (“this post could rank higher with X keyword”).
➡ Professionals who care about being found prefer BlogPro.
5. Lighter Than Ghost, Smarter Than Substack
- Ghost = powerful but heavy.
- Substack = simple but locked.
- BlogPro = “lean professional stack” — SEO + analytics + monetization baked in, without plugin hunts or network lock-in.
Who BlogPro Wins With
- Consultants / freelancers → Need a pro-looking blog tied to their Notion workspace.
- Startup founders → Want to share updates, docs, and product stories fast.
- Knowledge workers → Publish insights/research without juggling editors.
- Professional bloggers who care about SEO visibility (where Substack fails).