All good advice above. I would just reinforce that moving a stand can put a damper on an area for a couple days. You can use all of the scent spray you want, and I would agree with using it, but make no mistake..they know you were there and will alter their use of the area temporarily. Even with all of the proper scent reducing soaps and sprays you need to hunt the wind as best you can. This one thing has helped me more than any other in getting shots at deer. Know the wind and how it reacts with your hunting area and never ever hunt a stand with a bad wind.
If I have an area I want to hunt I'll have multiple stands set for different winds. I also know where a SW wind goes on my property and it's not South and West. I choose the stand I'm going to hunt by wind direction first. All other things are secondary. (acorns are falling, food plot is prime, saw a big buck over there). Hunt the wind and take what it gives you.
I'm assuming when you say your "deer blind" you mean a pop up style ground blind. correct?
My experience with pop up blinds is they will draw more attention than a ladder stand or loc on stand. Are you leaving it in place or putting it up before each hunt ?
I hunt ground blinds in two different ways. I'll put them up in an open area or field in an area where it is visible from a long way off. This reduces the "threat" and I've had deer come within 30 yards of it as long as I have it placed in an area that they really want to go to. They are wary but do not avoid it entirely. If rounds bales are nearby I'll set up next to one of them and they pay almost no attention to it at all. This is usually a rifle set up. The other option is to brush it in to a point that I have a hard time finding it. This is the way to do it for an archery set up but brushing in a blind leaves your scent on every branch or leaf you put on the blind. Either way it needs to be done 3-4 days minimum before I hunt out of it.