NYT: Blogs falling in an empty forest – Dumb Article

June 8, 2009 by homeschool10x

A sort of stupid article appeared on page 1 on the New York Times Sunday Styles section today titled: “Blogs Falling in an Empty Forest.”  The essential mistake was when they compared “blog failures” ie abandoned blogs to closings of restaurants.  Why is that stupid?

Restaurants are primarily businesses that take a cash investment. Closure generally means failure in a significant way.

Blog are primarily creative expressions that take no cash and virtually no effort. Many are created by a person as a type of diary to express something which, once expressed, can be retired successfully. I know loads of “divorce blogs” where people used it as cathartic way to express themselves during a difficult time. When the time was over, they stopped.

The intelligent or meaningful comparisons of abandoned blogs might be to efforts to write a script, exercise regimes, or books started to read.

Now the article does include the important point that some blogs are started with commercial ambitions which often, like many startups, don’t succeed. And like many exercise plans or diets, a blog commitment is not forever.  But the article failed to actually explore the types of blogs, the purpose of blogs, and which of these tend to be disappointments, and which tend to succeed. Of course, the article really annoyed me because there was no way to comment on it directly.  Although I am a lifetime NYT reader and subscriber (currently on the weekend plan), the combination of no comics and no ability to discuss articles online is slowly killing my enthusiasm for it.  Also, some bad articles. I sure wish they would get their act together. Is it that hard?

Here’s part of the article: 

“HI, I’m Judy Nichols. Welcome to my rant.”

Thus was born Rantings of a Crazed Soccer Mom, the blog of a stay-at-home mother and murder-mystery writer from Wilmington, N.C. Mrs. Nichols, 52, put up her first post in late 2004, serving up a litany of gripes about the Bush administration and people who thought they had “a monopoly on morality.” After urging her readers to vote for John Kerry, she closed with a flourish: “Practice compassionate regime change.”

The post generated no comments.

Today, Mrs. Nichols speaks about her blog as if it were a diet or half-finished novel. “I’m going to get back to it,” she swears. Her last entry, in December of last year, was curt and none too profound. “Books make great gifts,” she began, breaking a silence of nearly a month.

Like Mrs. Nichols, many people start blogs with lofty aspirations — to build an audience and leave their day job, to land a book deal, or simply to share their genius with the world. Getting started is easy, since all it takes to maintain a blog is a little time and inspiration. So why do blogs have a higher failure rate than restaurants?

According to a 2008 survey by Technorati, which runs a search engine for blogs, only 7.4 million out of the 133 million blogs the company tracks had been updated in the past 120 days. That translates to 95 percent of blogs being essentially abandoned, left to lie fallow on the Web, where they become public remnants of a dream — or at least an ambition — unfulfilled.

 

 

Thus was born Rantings of a Crazed Soccer Mom, the blog of a stay-at-home mother and murder-mystery writer from Wilmington, N.C. Mrs. Nichols, 52, put up her first post in late 2004, serving up a litany of gripes about the Bush administration and people who thought they had “a monopoly on morality.” After urging her readers to vote for John Kerry, she closed with a flourish: “Practice compassionate regime change.”

The post generated no comments.

Today, Mrs. Nichols speaks about her blog as if it were a diet or half-finished novel. “I’m going to get back to it,” she swears. Her last entry, in December of last year, was curt and none too profound. “Books make great gifts,” she began, breaking a silence of nearly a month.

Like Mrs. Nichols, many people start blogs with lofty aspirations — to build an audience and leave their day job, to land a book deal, or simply to share their genius with the world. Getting started is easy, since all it takes to maintain a blog is a little time and inspiration. So why do blogs have a higher failure rate than restaurants?

According to a 2008 survey by Technorati, which runs a search engine for blogs, only 7.4 million out of the 133 million blogs the company tracks had been updated in the past 120 days. That translates to 95 percent of blogs being essentially abandoned, left to lie fallow on the Web, where they become public remnants of a dream — or at least an ambition — unfulfilled.

Blogs have many purposes

May 25, 2009 by homeschool10x

While many people debate what is truly a blog, I agree that you can do a lot with blogging software which is not a blog.  For instance, you can put your collection of jokers online.  This collection is put up with Google’s blogger software and it’s certainly not the finest collection of jokers anywhere. But it only took minutes using the blogger software.

Learn to Write a blog

February 8, 2009 by homeschool10x

Starting Feb 16th, the blog writing course is running again. Sign up now

Want to Blog, Learn Google First.

January 26, 2009 by homeschool10x

Blogging has a number of purposes…self-expression, socializing, networking, and a blog might get you a Better Listing on Google.

For those of us who care about search engine positioning, we should learn more about google from those geniuses at mapelli.com, And I quote, albeit changing donuts to bagels. At least in the first case.

Things to Know

  • google is not case sensitive: searching for bagels is the same as BaGels
  • search operators are case sensitive: searching for bagles OR bagels uses OR as the google operator, while bagles or bagels does not.
  • google default is to search for pages that include all of your search terms. Also the order of your search term is somehow relevant.
  • google excludes common words (also called stop words) like “I” , “the” etc.
  • some operators can be combined, while others must be used alone.

Basic Operators

+ forces words to be included in search results. Useful with stop words that otherwise will be discarded

- prevents a search term to show in results, for example searching for doughnut -cream can help you to avoid creamy doughnuts

OR returns documents with one of the given terms, like doughnut OR donut. You can also use | instead of OR: doughnut | donut

” “ using quotes forces google to search for the exact phrase (including stop words), try “doughnut at midnight” and doughnut at midnight (actually, using quotes is similar, but not equals, to doughnut-at-midnight … it would be interesting to know what is the exact difference in SERP)

~ allow to search also for synonyms of the given word. searching for doughnut ~tips finds also pages with the word help or guide etc.

* means every word. try “doughnuts with *”

.. Used to search in a range of numbers, “2..20 doughnuts” will find pages containing “I eat 3 doughnuts a day” and “I’ll never eat more than 15 doughnuts in a month”

This operators can be combined to create advanced queries, for example “I eat 1..100 doughnut OR doughnuts OR donut OR donuts each *”

Blogging and the news

January 17, 2009 by homeschool10x

I tend to think of blogs as a blend of information, news, and some personal commentary.  It’s the mix of the three and the personality and presentation of them which makes them interesting.  I like blogs on topics that I care about because there is an informed (sometimes) commentator bringing me a refined collection of the news, some commentary, and making it interesting thru their eyes. 

Getting the news as a source is a topic that interests me. I just read a post about three different approaches to education news aggregation: DailyMe, Pligg, and the social networking sites. I’d love to see someone run a big test on these along side the reigning leaders such as google alerts, yahoo news, and so on to see the differences between the experiences.

Blog Writing and the Principles of Fiction

December 29, 2008 by homeschool10x

The ideas behind our course on how to write an interesting blog are:

  1. People like help getting started blogging
  2. Bloggers love an audience and peer group to start with
  3. There are some lessons learned from decades of  writing episodes, comic strips,  and television serials that can be applied to writing a blog.  Simple concepts like having an ongoing theme or tension.  For instance, one blogger is often having trouble with her weight.  With a big party coming up, she buys a dress that is a tad too small for her.  As the event approaches, has she lost enough weight to fit into the dress?  The tension of this question can keep people reading the blog through months as she diets, exercises, progresses, and regresses.  Far too many bloggers just have a bunch of stand-alone articles. Each one might be good but there is nothing that keeps people coming back week after week.  There are also principles of character. And so on.

The blog writing course is part of the Time4Writing.com family of online writing classes.

New Age Journalism

November 24, 2008 by homeschool10x

While this story is not strictly blogging, it’s a web 2.0 story on steroids. As background, wouldn’t it be cool if you could get funded to do investigative journalism as a blogger? 

There is now a start-up making this possible:  Spot.Us. It’s a community funded online market place for researching articles….

What is Spot.Us About?

Spot.Us is a nonprofit project of the Center for Media Change. We are an open source project, to pioneer “community funded reporting.” Through Spot.Us the public can commission journalists to do investigations on important and perhaps overlooked stories. All donations are tax deductible and if a news organization buys exclusive rights to the content, your donation will be reimbursed. Otherwise, all content is made available to all through a Creative Commons license. It’s a marketplace where independent reporters, community members and news organizations can come together and collaborate.

They seem to have a fancy grant from a journalism foundation and some online journalistic luminaries.

Here’s my thought. Way too much focus on money. Sure, money is a great place to start.  But wouldn’t it be cool if we could back projects not just by pledging cash but also, by offering visibility as in:

I could give 100K page impression above the fold, site rated as A+ on these criterion, to post an abstract of the article. 

Are there implementation problems and challenges? You bet. So it’s good that they are starting with money.  But would you be more likely to proceed on a piece if you had $1000 of cash or a guaranteed audience for your previews of 10M relevant viewers (and you got to place ads next to your article if they came over).
Just a thought. I like their vision. I’m just trying to see where it goes.

Blogging for money

November 18, 2008 by homeschool10x

Many people think that if they blog, they can make money. The fact is, it’s true.  Lets focus on small business right now.

If you had a business selling credit card services, you might want to promote it by writing a blog answering questions for merchants who want info on taking credit cards. This would be good marketing.

Or, rather than selling something, you could model your blogging business on traditional media companies, the main goal is to collect an audience and sell advertising.  In collecting the audience, you try to produce media that keeps them coming back.  And you cross sell your own materials. In todays column, you perhaps mention a great column that you wrote a year ago or a follow up one in two weeks. If you have two blogs, you hype one in the other.

Venomous Kate is such a blogger.  There are several things that I like about her blogging including the fact that she writes well and shares real information on her economics.  For instance, here’s a post with the reality of how much she made in August.

Basically, she says that she has decided to be a little less intense and her earnings slipped to about $2.5K for August from :  LinkWorth: $637.04. PayU2Blog: $130.00. Sponsored Reviews: $468.00. Text-Link-Ads.com $188.64. Others, including private advertising: $155.55. Online freelance writing: $850.00. (This income is directly related to having established regular readership at my other blogs where my writing on certain topics served to interest various online magazine editors.)

Total: $2429.23.

Topsy explains how to start blogging

November 18, 2008 by homeschool10x

Starting to blog is more than just writing and setting up the site. It’s a decision (which gets revisited all the time) about whether to blog, what to blog about, how to be open and be private, and how to find a voice and audience.

This is easier than it sounds. And it’s fun.  And I quote her post on blogging writing course

So the thought has crossed your mind a few times, but now you are ready to take the plunge.  To start your very own blog!  This is such an exciting possibility, but where in the world do you begin?  Of course you can throw caution to the wind, and sign up with a blog host, and figure things out as you go along.  But then all those words are going to start hitting you at rapid speed.  “Carnival.”  “Feed.”  “Permalink.”  “Pingback.”   And on, and on. 

You can hit the panic button OR you can backtrack and start back at the beginning.  And we’d like to help!  At blogwritingcourse.com we are offering a free blog writing course for brand new bloggers.  This course, called Get Ready to Blog covers everything from blog lingo to blog safety to blog promotion.  This is a fast and easy sweep through the world of blogging, and when you finish the course, besides having your very own “Ready to Blog” certificate, you will have the foundational knowledge you need to become a real live blog writer.

How to start a blog

November 16, 2008 by homeschool10x

There is not much easier than starting a blog. At least for those who know how.

To find out how. Read an article such as Brain Wallace’s on how to start a blog or listen to a blogger Youtube video on how to start a blog.  The fact is that if you really want to learn this, you should probably do more than be passive.  Take a quick free course on blogging which will take you through the process.