The WebManager's Roundtable and Dick
Davies put on a powerful practical workshop for active
organizational bloggers – covering a broad range of attendee
inspired topics, such as process – better/easier blogging;
managing – avoiding blogger burnout or lighting the flame;
volume – achieving greater distribution & getting more
readers; comments – being a
comment shill & reader contributions; and writing
– finding the voice the readers want & building relationships.
From
the wealth of material at the front of the room and tips and
techniques shared by bloggers, here's some of the best - a dozen
golden nuggets:
- Always be thinking about your next blog and potential topics as you attend meetings, events, have conversations, read others – what can I add of value
- The Rule of One – one thought per sentence; one subject per paragraph; one topic per blog post
- On Editing: overworking a blog is like overworking a piece of metal – eventually it weakens & breaks
- About comments: do you invite them; conduct reader surveys; use the recent or most commented widgets; comment on other blogs; give a timely reply to all comments received or acknowledge them; and reuse the comments (with attribution) in other places
- Every post must have a purpose – as the test: Why would you want to read this post?
- A post offers another view; advocates a position; shares thoughts & ideas; educates; illustrates; and gives desirable alternatives – be clear in your mind and consistent within the post what you are seeking achieve
- Successful bloggers set a goal and run to meet that goal – e.g., 5 paragraphs, 10 lines, two posts per week
- Web 1.0 was push oriented – put it out there; Web 2.0 was two-way oriented – asynchronous dialogue; Web 3.0 is just now coming in with computers using comments, reader feedback, news, and other data sources to create content on the internet
- Timeliness is important when blogging; credibility is critically important as a blogger
- Analytics are useful to a point – don't obsess on them
- What a quick gauge of the influence of a post – Google the title to see who is reposting it and commenting on other sites
And
#13 for a baker's dozen: just as you may have different private and
public personalities, as a blogger you have an electronic
(on-line) persona –
the you
that appears to your readers through your blog and posts; establish
and refine your voice as a blogger and work to strike a clear picture
of who you are and remain consistent to that image – don't write
like a professor one day and a comedian the next. This is who the
readers are developing a relationship with and who they will follow
in Google Reader.
Comments
keep the learning going – please share your nuggets to help us all
learn to blog better.
Yeah, I'm still pondering that as an organization, product or service can have a brand, a blogger has an online persona, created by what the readers think of her.
ReplyDeleteIt's like a second chance!
And, readers like numbered lists :)
ReplyDeleteDick:
ReplyDeleteGood points - both brand 'loyalty' and blogger 'persona' are determined in the reader's mind.
Each is created.
Think about the flip side - the persona of Larry Hagman - JR on the show "Dallas" - a head of the pack jerk - but on the show "I Dream of Jeanie" he was a sweetheart, and apparently in real life was.
Carol:
ReplyDeleteExcellent comment. Readers rule!