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What I do feel strongly about is that blogs should be a less formal style (perhaps a little contreversial?) in order to help build relationships and open up debate.
Generally I find it easier to change myself than to get the rest of the world to conform to me.
Do I like it? No. I'm fond of the word blog. But I'm getting tired of trying to move the same baggage that comes with the word. Over and over again.
Simple example - a corporate website has an Article section. It's WordPress behind the scenes. Do they get what they can do with that, or are they using it to publish boring press releases? The argument I've heard (and even espoused) is, "Well it's a start. We can move them along after they get their Article section up..." But my experience is that rarely works.
Call it what it is: a blog. Use it the way it was intended.
Otherwise you're working with and for people that aren't really doing what you want to be doing which is top quality blog and social media development (which I know you can do!)
If people don't get it, you might be talking to the wrong people...
There are so few people that have a memory of blogs as the whole personal, 2-line, 1-page, no-formatting thing that it isn't worth worrying about.
Heck - only about 25% of the people in the Internet blog, so it's still the early stages.
Dan
A few days ago, someone added a blog to StumbleUpon. I stumbled upon the blog and liked the writing style of the author. It had many small posts that were pretty helpful. After 4 or 5hrs, what I saw was just crazy. Someone left a negative review about the blog just because it was a personal blog.
I still wonder what the heck was that. Do such people even know the proper definition of 'blog'? Just because a blog is of personal nature, someone leaves a negative review?
Activities like this make me sad about the future of blogging. If you look around in the blogosphere, the future seems to be really dark because most of the blogging-newbie types start a blog with the main goal to make money.
I'm already bored seeing hundreds of money-making-and-traffic-boosting-crap blogs popping up every day in the blogosphere.
I do think that "blogging" can carries a negative stereotype with certain people. However, it is certainly a recognizable medium. I believe that more and more "regular" website will be built using blogging style publishing systems and the line between blogs and websites will vanish.
-Fred
I also write with a mix of post styles: many are based on research (which bring me a lot of traffic), and others are based on my experience. Then, some are a combination. With almost every one, I include my own opinion. So, the more I think about it, I think I'll just call all of it "my writing". :)
Thanks Ben, that was thought provoking.
Have good content and don't worry about the rest.
- Martin Reed
The personal nature of integrating flickr, twitter, and any other -er web 2.0 app is interesting. However so are quality informative articles.
Blogs enable you to develop relationships with your readers long after they've left your website. They have enormous potential as a marketing tool in building trust and confidence in your expertise, although one which many businesses still hesitate to harness without there being an easily quantifiable ROI.
Thanks for linking to The Copywriter's Crucible.
Matt.
This might be because I'm a writer (for a living) and if I wrote the same thing for a paying market, it would be an article. So I'm writing articles.
In a blog.
On my blog, anyone with a "name" like that has his comment marked as spam and deleted. No exceptions. I don't put up with that crap at all.
I'm not trying to tell you how to run your blog; I'm just trying to figure out how I can turn off comment notification here if you're going to allow spammers to comment.
nice post
thanks for sharing the information.