{"componentChunkName":"component---src-pages-blog-js","path":"/blog/","result":{"data":{"site":{"id":"Site","siteMetadata":{"title":"Gatsby + Sanity","author":"@gatsbyjs","description":"Kick off your next, great Gatsby project with this default starter. This barebones starter ships with the main Gatsby configuration files you might need."}},"allSanityPost":{"edges":[{"node":{"id":"b1988f78-838e-5f26-a1ac-77d3bdcee66f","title":"Site Preview","publishedAt":"January 28, 2020","mainImage":{"asset":{"id":"image-071ea1fa50af6fa16a79b65ca5070fa87a6a4b6d-701x438-jpg","fluid":{"src":"https://cdn.sanity.io/images/dwkgbi7l/production/071ea1fa50af6fa16a79b65ca5070fa87a6a4b6d-701x438.jpg"}}},"excerpt":"This is an excerpt.","slug":{"current":"site-preview"},"body":"**Preview** is a way for the authors and editors to get a sense of not only how their work is presented, but more importantly, perceived. We think of preview as “empathy portals”, as tools that make authoring easier by letting you relate to the user experience.\n\nLooking at previews this way forces the question: Why should previews then be restricted to just a web preview? If your content will end up in different places in front of different people, shouldn’t that inform how we accommodate previews in the CMS? Content strategists such as Karen McGrane and Jeff Eaton raised this question over half a decade ago, but it still seems to us, that previews are mostly thought of in terms of seeing how changes look like on the website. At least, there is where the current innovation and energy goes.\n\nWe want to broaden and challenge the established ideas of what previews in a CMS can be. So we made an array of examples of different previews that we hope can be of use and inspiration.\n\nAnd of course, we'll start with the obvious example, just to get that out of the way.","categories":[{"id":"65735d6b-08d3-5e15-819d-5e963c73581c","title":"SEO"}]}},{"node":{"id":"b61a495f-2cd7-524c-a0a3-43cd47b31678","title":"Challenge","publishedAt":"September 25, 2018","mainImage":{"asset":{"id":"image-e6fc50f2a3ef047fa62a10436e50000f7c167f22-1000x667-jpg","fluid":{"src":"https://cdn.sanity.io/images/dwkgbi7l/production/e6fc50f2a3ef047fa62a10436e50000f7c167f22-1000x667.jpg?w=800&h=534&fit=crop"}}},"excerpt":"Sometimes, we simply require someone to show up in our life and challenge us. This morning, a coach asked me what would happen if instead of planning my new routine, I just committed to that routine every day for a week.","slug":{"current":"challenge"},"body":"Sometimes, we simply require someone to show up in our life and challenge us. This morning, a coach asked me what would happen if instead of planning my new routine, I just committed to that routine every day for a week.\n<table class=\"table-style\"></table>\n So I committed. And this week is going to be AWESOME. \n\nThere are times when small, laughable goals are what we need to bust through unhelpful habits and make progress. But then there are times when we know exactly what needs to happen, we are excited about the possibilities, and we need to just DO IT. \n\n ### Who do you have in your life who challenges you? ","categories":[]}},{"node":{"id":"c3e3b48c-c988-5b93-89b3-45582d94af4d","title":"A Draft Post","publishedAt":"August 30, 2020","mainImage":null,"excerpt":"This is an excerpt for a draft post.","slug":{"current":"a-draft-post"},"body":"This is the content of the draft post.","categories":[]}}],"group":[{"fieldValue":"SEO"}]}},"pageContext":{}}}