5 Ways To Use (+ Set Up) The Squarespace Summary Block

Squarespace is one of my favorite things, if you hadn’t guessed that before. I love it. It’s simple, it’s efficient, it’s got great support, it’s easy to pass off to clients, and it’s just a really nice tool for online business owners and bloggers.

I’m launching a little mini-series today all about Squarespace. Today we are talking about one of my favorite blocks in Squarespace: the summary block.

The summary block is incredibly useful and can be used to accomplish an incredible amount of tasks on your Squarespace site. Through my site I use a summary block on nearly every page and quite a few on the blog itself. I’ve got five ways you can utilize the summary block on your own Squarespace site and a walk-through on actually setting it up below.

Learn five great ways to use the Squarespace summary block! [Tweet That!]


BLOG ARCHIVES

Creating blog archives are a fabulous way to get traffic to your old posts and let people see everything you offer at once. I saw my old blog posts views skyrocket when I created and promoted my archives page (plus it makes sharing your content easier, no more shuffling through your blog to find a post). The initial set up, if you do it similar to mine, will take a little bit of time – but difficulty level is basically nonexistent.

First things first, decide how you want to showcase your different blog posts. I chose to do mine in date order, but you might choose to do it by category instead. Either way, this is where the time portion comes into play – you’ll have to revisit each blog post and make sure there is an appropriate tag or category on each post.

What I mean by that: my archive is my month/year, so each of my blog posts has a tag that says “September 2016” or “May 2016” or whatever month/year it was that I created the post originally. When I created my archive, I had to revisit old posts to add those tags. It’s not exactly difficult, but slightly time consuming (this is the sort of task I would do when I was watching The Bachelor or something – thoughtless, but time consuming).

You’ll also want to make sure that each of your blog posts has a thumbnail assigned to it, preferably one that is ‘on brand’ and has a unified, cohesive look. You wouldn’t want a random image to appear in your summary block/archives, but rather something that has the title on it and fits with your overall aesthetic.

As far as setting up the page, you’ll need to first create a new page (probably an unlinked page, so it doesn’t show in your main navigation). You can title it archives, or whatever you deem appropriate.

The summary block will be the main element in the page. All you do is click the teardrop shaped tool and scroll down to the third section titled “summary”. I prefer the grid for this, but there are options that you can choose between (another popular one is the ‘wall’ for a Pinterest-esque look).

A box will pop up with further settings. From here you choose where to pull content from (your blog) and some general visual settings (that you can see the changes in real time to determine what looks best). For me, I chose a square, since my thumbnails are always square. I also chose small text, center aligned, and no metadata to show. The important part comes near the end, under ‘display’. This is where I tell this particular summary block to only show posts tagged with whatever corresponding month/year.

If you look at my archive page, that might make more sense. But each section is a separate summary block (all with the same exact settings, but a different tag filter). I separate the months with a little design element, just to make it look nice and cohesive with the rest of my site.


RELATED POSTS

Another great use for the summary block is within your actual blog post. You’ll notice in all my blog posts, at the very end, there’s an area that says “you might also be interested in:” and four other related blog posts. This is created through a summary block within the actual post.

Having a related post section is a huge value; it leads visitors onto the next post and keeps them on your site longer. If you are writing stellar posts you want to keep that momentum going and have visitors stick around for as long as possible (and even become a subscriber).

Setting up the summary block to function in this way is similar to the archives page, except this time we are going to do it within a blog post. So, if you are in the blog post window (where you’d actually type in your content), those same teardrop shaped icons appear to the left. Clicking that brings up the same options for adding different blocks, and the third section will be a summary block.

For my own blog posts I again use the square ratio, small size text that is centered, and show no other information or meta data (just the title and thumbnail). I use the grid here too, but carousel would be another great option if you wanted to show a lot of relevant posts (I only show 4). This time I use the category filter and only show related posts by category (so if the post is about social media, the related posts will be ones that I’ve categorized as social media posts as well).


TOP/FEATURED POSTS

In a similar fashion to the previous two examples, we can set a filter for a tag or category that you’ve created to mark your top posts. This again might take a little bit of time to travel back to posts that have done exceptionally well or you’re particularly proud of and tagging them accordingly. I tag mine as “top posts” (very original, I know!).

It’s a common idea to place this summary block into a start here page, a 404 page (learn more about customizing your 404 page here), or into your blog sidebar. Another common place would be a start here page, where I would use a carousel block to best showcase multiple posts.

I would use a carousel block because it easily shares more posts, but still could be designed as a small section that doesn't feel overwhelming or too distracting. The carousel option adds left/right arrows to allow visitors to scroll through however many posts you decide to share.

It might seem slightly overwhelming to go through and manage all the settings for each summary block – but once you know the settings that best fit your visuals, it will become second nature very quickly. If you generally make your thumbnails more vertical, you’ll use a different ratio than me. If you want to include the date or an excerpt for posts, you’ll toggle that information on.


PORTFOLIO PAGE

If you have a portfolio of work you can use a summary block to link to the individual pages or posts that showcase the work. Here’s how my portfolio works:

I have a separate blog that doesn’t have a sidebar and functions as my “portfolio posts” with each client’s work as a separate post. The link that I direct people to for my portfolio functions similar to my archives page, except it pulls content from my “portfolio blog” versus my normal blog.

You can do this too! Squarespace allows you to have multiple blogs. So, if you have any sort of client work to showcase or a need for some sort of portfolio, I recommend creating a secondary blog (instead of separate pages – keep your page count lower), and go through the same steps as we did in the archive page. The difference might be in how you display the thumbnails (I made the thumbnails larger), but you can edit that easily within the settings.


A FAUX “READ MORE” BLOG

This is very similar to an archive page too, but sometimes I have clients that want to create a blog that uses excerpts and “read more” buttons. Although Squarespace templates definitely allow for that (you just need to actually add the excerpt for it to toggle that feature ‘on’ – under the options setting within individual blog posts), there are some limitations within certain templates. The main limitation is whether or not the thumbnail or blog post graphic will show.

After hitting that bump a few times, I figured out a way to create a faux “read more” page for blog posts. This is set up exactly the same to an archive page, except I use the “list” option so that the page follows a more traditional blog look. The excerpts are added manually within each blog post, and the only settings difference is I turn the checkmark on to show excerpts and I don’t use any sort of category/tag filter (so all the posts show).

If your template doesn’t allow you to turn on a sidebar on regular pages you can go through the steps of manually creating a sidebar that is the same as your actual blog page (by using the teardrop icon to add the different elements and then drag/dropping/resizing it to be the same size).



Why Strategy is a Hugely Vital Step in The Branding Process

Branding design has been my focus for over a year now. I recently underwent a bit of a revamp in regards to my services, though. I had one of those moments where I know what is right and can coach others, but hadn’t revisited the ideas for my business and myself. Here’s what kept happening: I’d work with a client who would need more than what we had originally talked about or was included in my package. It would be random tasks, not directly design related, and I was always unsure of how to tackle the awkward “well I don’t really…that wasn’t included…money…” conversation. I thought I had landed on the answer in developing a coaching package, because to me it made sense that most of the questions fell into the realm of starting a business, what to do, where to post, how to make opt-ins, etc. But that didn’t feel quite right either; I couldn’t find a way to organize the package enough to have a detailed end result but also leave it open enough to feel flexible and customizable.

I’m being transparent with this process because I think it’s good to point out that owning a business isn’t all hashtags and retweets and big launches, but instead there are moments of confusion, trial and error, and so on.

Moving forward, I kept thinking on it. Usually at 2am when I couldn’t sleep. How could I make sure that my time and energy were being compensated, my packages were clear cut and made sense, and my clients were getting everything they actually needed to be successful?

It dawned on me the way best ideas do: in the shower.

I was thinking through my design process. Thinking of ways to make it more efficient, more explainable, and more approachable. I was thinking through ways to differentiate myself from competition, but actually provide something useful and needed.

When it hit me, it hit me in a total “omg, duh” kind of way, because if I look back at the evolution of TheCrownFox, THIS is what I initially started out wanting to offer. I started out using a tagline that said something about “strategy and design” but then somehow along the way abandoned the strategy portion and lumped myself in with all the other designers out there. Oops.

I’ve mentioned this story in another blog post, but that’s not the point of today’s blog post. What I wanted to talk to you about is why having a branding strategy is important and why I now include three strategy sessions in my signature process. Edit: as of 2017 I no longer offer branding + strategy design. But this post would still be helpful to learn why strategy plays an extremely important role in design.


DESIGN DOESN’T DO EVERYTHING

Let’s be real for a second – design isn’t the end all, be all in business. I obviously think design is very important and valuable and necessary for how you position your business, but it’s not going to solely grow your business.

Good design is important, but it won't grow your business by itself. [Tweet That!]

I hear you, as a designer what the heck am I talking about? Hey. I have a business online and I can tell you that there is more time put into social media, content, and client work than into actual design. There are tasks I do every day to grow my business that don’t require me opening Photoshop or Illustrator or anything like that. I know that design is important, but it’s not the focus.

You do need good design when it comes to having a memorable and impactful logo, having cohesive social media graphics, having a kick-butt website, and so on – but just having those things isn’t going to do enough. It’s not going to make people come to your website, subscribe to your list, buy your products, etc. It might help those causes, but you need more than design. You need strategy.

You need a strategy to get your blog content shared and accessible, a strategy to know what and when to post on social media, a strategy for your newsletter, for your list, and for growth. Having great design with no strategy is like me baking a cake: it might look really good on the outside, but when you cut into it there’s a weird sound and it deflates and looks both gooey and burnt at the same time (how!?). Maybe that’s a bad metaphor, but I think you see my point.


BRANDING IS ONE HUGE UMBRELLA

Here’s where I get kind of mind-flippy – BRANDING is important. But branding does not equal design.

Branding is a big deal. First you figure out your groundwork – your foundation or base for your business, then you work on the visuals… but what next? That’s when we focus on strategy. In Set Up For Success there are three strategy calls throughout the entire process – they help inform the visual development and help clients get a vision for moving forward and answer the terrifying “what next?” question.

Strategy is kind of an intimidating word, right? Like it sounds like it might be manipulative, or skeezy – but it’s not. It’s just creating and having a plan for business growth. I want clients to end our time together knowing where their leads are coming from, what interactions they are going to have with these leads (through newsletters, funnels, etc.), and how they are going to get their business noticed and growing. If you don’t know the answers to this for your own business then you need to revisit your overall strategy.


IT’S NOT: BUILD IT + THEY’LL COME

Something that basically sucked to learn in online business is that it’s not “build it and they’ll come” in regards to customers or leads. It’s more like “work, work, work, work, work” and then maybe pause for a snack and work some more. Creating content, interacting on social media, writing newsletters, hosting webinars, doing Facebook live… there is a ton to do.

Navigating that and having a plan of action to accomplish all of those tasks (and more) falls under strategy and falls under what I want to help clients do. My main goal is have people be successful after we work together and at this point, just designing isn’t enough.

So, all of that to say that strategy is essential for your business growth and figuring it all out on your own is tough. It took me nearly a year of perfecting my process and packaging to figure it all out and I don’t want it to take you that long. Even if you already have a killer website and beautiful logo, you can still work on your strategy moving forward and make sure your business is ready to blow the end of this year out of the water.