
| Recent
Articles |
PR
Tutorial: Try Not To Threaten Bloggers
If you are a software maker producing a product that may be harmful to the hardware
of innocent gamers, calling out the whistle-blowing blogger with a lawsuit threat
may be generally regarded as a bad move. When that blogger happens...
What Is Web 2.0?
There has been a lot of chatter lately about Web 2.0, as if the Internet is a
versioned software application. So what is Web 2.0? Simply put, Web 2.0 is a perceived
transition of the web to web applications. Web 2.0 is the next generation of technology
solutions where interactive content is the norm...
Opportunities 2006 - Usability
2006 is going to be a year where the creators of web technology have the opportunity
to make their services better in terms of integration, usability, and usefulness...
Website
Resolutions
As all of us view the new year, we determine various ways to improve ourselves.
Whether its eliminating bad habits, or improving quality of life, January 1st
is seen as a new beginning and starting point...
Taking Aim At Online Auctions
There's nothing like the simple joys of finding something on eBay, putting in a bid, watching the auction clock tick down, and having someone snipe the item out from under the rest of the bidders.
The longtime drawback to auctions online...
VoIP - A Layman’s Look - Should You Or Shouldn’t You?
So what's all this VoIP hype anyway? I mean we all know that our voice can be delivered to the four corners of the globe over telephone lines.
(Actually, I missed that part of second grade math where they taught us that a ball has...
|
|
|
02.01.06
Thoughts For The Beginning Blogger
By
Christopher Carfi
One of our clients is starting to charge full-force down the blogging path and asked for some feedback on the posts they were working on.
Not going to get into the details of what they're working on quite yet, but had some thoughts that I was sending over based on reading the initial bits that were being put together. About halfway through, realized that these items were fairly relevant across-the-board, so here they are. What would you add to this as far as suggestions for someone just starting down the blogging path?
"G-
First off ... Every successful blog eventually has a voice and a corresponding "positioning" (sorry for the marketingspeak) that is applied to it by its readers. The voice of the blog will evolve and, just like positioning in the pure marketing sense, a "tone" of the blog will be applied to you by your subscribers. This will take some time, but if you have a feeling as to how you would *like* to be positioned, you can certainly help it along via the choice of name, categories, commonly-used phrases, etc. Think about what you want the blog's mojo to be: is it an inside look at the tales of a startup? Is it a viewpoint and *the* reference on long-tail software, or perhaps SaaS? Something else?
Think about your blog's tagline. (The tagline WILL be reproduced elsewhere, so
try to make it capture the core of whatever theme you want to tie everything together.)
If the theme is still evolving, it may take a couple of months for the right tagline
to present itself...and it will probably uncerimoniously assault you in the shower
in the pre-caffeinated hours one morning. But it will show up. Write it down and
integrate it when it does.
The positioning and general mojo are ultimately critical...but short-term irrelevant. Just write. Then write some more. It'll evolve, and don't force it. It took about four months after inception for the Social Customer blog to find its voice.
Additionally, a well-conceived and executed "About" page is a must, as is a picture. A well-written post will trigger a click to the About page which will, if also well-executed, trigger a click back to the mothership. Make the About page personal. It's you!
A couple of other general thoughts:
- More links to other blogs inlined in the text! As a result of the current state of measurement and search tools, bloggers are narcissistic link whores (it's all about the Googlejuice, baby). The more links you throw out to others, (a) the more likely someone will come to your blog (since they saw your blog show up in their vanity feed in Technorati) and (b) they may even put a reciprocal link in one of their posts in the next week, pointing to "hey....here's a cool article on *x*" that shows how you can use whatever they are pimping in doing *x*. If you can't link to a blog, link to a news article. If you can't link to a news article, link to a product site. But link! As Anthony Kiedis so eloquently put it...give it away, give it away, give it away now. (However, for the love of all that is good and right in the world, please refrain from experimenting with RHCP tube sock attire. ::shudder::)
Last, but certainly not least, make sure you have an RSS feed that can be subscribed to on Day 1. Get readers on the drip. First one's free...
best,
c"
About the Author:
Christopher Carfi, CEO and co-founder of Cerado, looks at sales, marketing, and
the business experience from the customer´s point of view. He currently is focused
on understanding how emerging social technologies such as blogs, wikis, and social
networking are enabling the creation of new types of customer-driven communities.
He is the author of the Social Customer
Manifesto weblog, and has been occasionally told that he drives and snowboards
just a little too quickly. |