PixelatedExecutioner wrote:
I'm just being facetious. Chalk it up to my wierd sense of humor.
My average right now is pretty high - around five minutes (I use both Feedburner and Analytics for my numbers), but I attribute that to the announcement for the winner of my Blizzcon ticket contest.
The day the report went up on WoW Insider, I had 1000 hits, and the following day had 500 and change. Before that post went up, my average was between 1 1/2 and 2 1/2 minutes, usually, and I'd say that 70% of my readerbase right now is solely made up by my guildmates (though I'm probably wrong, but I'm not using the right tools to track it - or maybe I am, I just don't know how).
I did read the article, and found a number of things that I'll be trying out in the future. It would probably be easier if I were a theorycrafter or had something profound to say about WoW at any given time, but...

Oh well.
I actually managed to go from 100 visitors a day to like 4,000 + visitors on Tuesday when my blog got linked on wowinsider when the WoW servers were still down (the dramatic increase of people even temporarily crashed the whole site).
In general, I try to have a mix of shorter posts and longer posts (shorter posts being quick announcements, but usually ending up with pretty long posts).
Anything that is going to be super-long is usually a how-to guide that I make seperate pages with only a short blog post linking to the guide for people who actually want to read the whole thing.
In general, I try to come up with somewhat sensational titles, that are still descriptive, from time to time (my favorite still being "Do I make you feel thorny?" when I wrote about why the druid thorns buff wasn't overpowered). I find a lot of people write analytical posts in a way that isn't approachable, so having good headlines and intro/conclusions that speak to the masses seems a good way for me to express what I want to get across.