Category: Uncategorized

  • Report from the Blogging and RSS SIG on March 1, 2005

    The eBIG session on Tuesday night went quickly, though getting back and forth to Concord took a while. While the group was smaller than expected (rain contributed there), I enjoyed listening to Eric Rice and Steve Tennant. My own comments were less formal, with no presentation, but with this group, that was fine.

    Eric went first, and gave an informative “What is a blog?” presentation. Combined with the handout of the article “Blogs Keep Internet Customers Coming Back” from that day’s Wall Street Journal (page B8, and not surprisingly one of that day’s free features), Eric introduced most of the themes I had in mind around the business of blogging… which was fine. Steve did a useful walkthrough of his own sites, both his consulting business blog and the PeopleSoft Alumni Network.

    My points for business blogging were as follows, though I didn’t necessarily roll them out in this order, or probably with this much clarity. Always easier for me to write things down. Anyway…

    • Be committed to consistency. If you’re going to step up and represent your company, it’s not a stop-and-start endeavour. You don’t have to post every day, but if you’re not demonstrating that you care enough to commit time and energy to this effort, why should your readers? There are very few intermittent posters whose blogs resonate with many readers. It takes a volume of work to learn whether to trust and appreciate someone’s voice. If you want to earn the marketing impact in search engines, volume helps. Also, as Eric noted, after you’ve been going for a while, your readers might start worrying about you if you “disappear”!
    • Consider your audience. It’s anyone and everyone, perhaps, but really you’re writing for potential customers or partners or colleagues. Are you networking with like-minded professionals, or demonstrating your skills to potential customers? These aren’t contradictory goals, but the tone or language you use may differ.
    • Every word is public. Nothing you write will disappear, even if you delete it. Pretend every word you write could be written on the front of your house, for everyone to read. Expect that your spouse/boss/mother/child are reading. As has long been cited on the internet — but is even more true with blogs — you own your own words. That’s part of the power, but don’t be rash. That also plays into whether more than one person will blog on the behalf of the business. I don’t have a firm opinion here, but the lessons apply all the same.
    • Be human. While the above note may tempt you into incredibly stilted language out of fear of mis-stepping, if you lapse into vagueness or trivialities… well, why bother?
    • Be comfortable writing.. Yes, audio blogging and video blogging are getting easier, but most of your communication is still likely to be textual. No need to be an author or a poet, but real sentences, spelling, and capitalization reflect your professionalism.
    • When blogging for your business, think twice about ranging far and wide topic-wise. I don’t read that many “business” blogs, per se, but I think you should establish yourself as an authority in your business before you range more broadly. I write that knowing that I’ve been known to blather about topicality more than once. But clock isn’t a business blog.
    • Listen. A blog is a public face for a company, whether that company is a one-person organization or a multi-national with thousands and thousands of people. That face will garner some attention, especially in a world where most companies are — in essence — faceless. (Think automated voice response and how angry that makes you when you know that talking to a half-intelligent human would save you time.) If you don’t know what people are saying about your blog, you’re not learning, and you’re missing a large portion of the possible benefits. Customer support and market research are surprisingly large parts of what’s valuable about blogging for business. You also need to tolerate dissent, without succumbing to vandals. One person last night asked what you should do about someone complaining about your business on your blog. Engage them. If you can’t politely, firmly, and positively answer someone’s questions and concerns about your service, product, or business as a whole, then don’t start a blog. You don’t get the benefits of openness without putting in the effort. Separately, vandalism (comment or TrackBack spam) must not be tolerated, just like you wouldn’t leave graffiti on the front door of your business. If you don’t wipe out that noise, it shows others that you don’t care enough to clean up the mess… and it’s likely to encourage more vandals. (Broken Windows is The Atlantic Monthly article (1982) from James Q. Wilson on this topic in the real world. Annoyingly, behind the pay wall, but I’ll link to it anyway.)
    • Appreciate RSS. If you’re blogging, your software will generate some sort of feed. Make sure you make it obvious to readers. Also, as everyone said on Tuesday night, you’ll want an aggregator to do much of that listening, so RSS will be your friend as a consumer, too. Yes, I mentioned Newsburst as a free option, but I also mentioned My Yahoo, NewsGator, Bloglines, NetNewsWire, SharpReader, and FeedDemon.

    I’ve garnered lots of this “common sense” from my own experience and from reading many other bloggers. Scoble and Steve Rubel come to mind as two whom have posted on this subject in some detail before. Sorry I’m too lazy at this hour to track down the exact posts.

    I do not speak for my employer. I don’t hide my employer, and I wouldn’t want to (I like what I do), but even as professional and personal blend/blur, there is a line.

  • Blogging and RSS SIG meeting tonight

    Tonight, I’m speaking briefly at the East Bay Internet Group (eBIG) meeting of the Blogging and RSS SIG (special interest group) on Jumping on the Blogwagon. What’s the Buzz on Business Blogging?. I don’t have much formal to say, but I’ll try and make sure that I’m clear about the general ethos (“rules” is too strong a word) of blogging, and share some common sense (you know, the uncommon kind). I’ll post an outline/notes here after the event, when I find time to to illuminate my outline with links.

    I’m curious to see what kinds of questions people have.

  • Different ways to start your day

    I’m no great shakes on a snowboard, but I enjoy the snow. I even feel, occasionally, the glimmer of why some people think it’s one of the best ways to pass the time. On Saturday morning, at Kirkwood, we enjoyed a sunny, windless day with few people on the slopes. The base is almost endless, though there was no fresh powder. Aside from that, I couldn’t ask for more.

    The one jarring note of the day was watching a snowmobile scoot by pulling a sled at the base of the mountain, at 9:30 in the morning. The sled had three people in it, one person lying prone, and two ski patrol members tending to the prone person. By tending, I mean performing CPR. A short while later, riding up the chair, we watched a chopper come in fast. It wasn’t there for sightseeing. I did a cursory scan of news sites to see what I could learn, but I can’t find anything to satisfy my (morbid) curiousity. It was a beautiful day… was it the last for that person?

    Obviously, the contrast is still with me, but I still had a great day on the mountain. Is that wrong?

  • Dinner with a reader

    So I had dinner with an RSS reader last night… a friend, not an application. Thanks for stopping by, Ryan.

  • Never need an excuse for these two

    I saw this Jon Stewart clip on bloggers on TV (not live, of course… TiVo). I’m glad someone took the, ahem, liberty of sharing it with the web.

    On a separate note, always glad to see another interview with Neal Stephenson, this time with Reason magazine. No hints of what he’s working on now, though.

  • Newsburst mentions in out of the way places

    I’ve been reading lots of blog entries about Newsburst. Those I expect, good and bad. What’s mildly surprising, but welcome, is mentions in outlets like the Hindustan Times (positive comments, despite the mistaken use of the word “downloadable” — Newsburst is a web application) and Circulation Management, which I didn’t know existed. That second article, “RSS Offers Easy Content Aggregation,” is a summary of what RSS can do for you, and it’s helpful to be part of the trio of readers mentioned: Bloglines, My Yahoo, and Newsburst.

  • Movie: Monster’s Ball

    Watched Monster’s Ball on Friday night, and I don’t know why Halle Berry won an Oscar for her role in this movie. The movie tried really hard, with all its symbolism and deep issues, but I didn’t enjoy it all that much. The characters shift dramatically, and the transitions are jarring. Skip it.

    Oh, and someone let the original movie website lapse, so monstersballthefilm.com is now just a link farm. Wouldn’t you keep paying the $10-20/year just to sell the DVDs?

  • WordPress 1.5

    So WordPress 1.5 is now available. Guess that means it’s time for me to figure out the up/sidegrade tactics for clock. Bets on whether I get that done this month?

  • Nice mention for Newsburst on Digital Experience podcast

    About minute 31 of the 40:00 podcast, the Digital Experience podcast mentions Newsburst, and the host — Lance — likes it so far. Glad to hear that.

  • Goal for June: Escape from Alcatraz triathlon

    I received an entry to this year’s Escape from Alcatraz triathlon via the lottery. Sometimes, you have to be careful what you wish for. I’m excited about the race, which I’ve never done, but I have to commit myself over the next four months to a level of training I haven’t put in for a few years. Though the land course is very hilly, and the sand steps are notorious, I’m most focused on the 1.5 mile swim in the Bay. I don’t fall to the level of Dana Carvey as a synchronized swimmer in the old SNL skit (“I’m not a very strong swimmer.”), but my progress through the water is slow. My goal is just to get through the swim as smoothly as I can and then trust my legs for the rest of the race.