Tag Search on Technorati

The hot thing in social computing is tags. If you are not familiar, the idea is that you can associate words with a piece of data (i.e. hyperlink, photo, etc.) Del.icio.us pretty much started the idea. Flickr and 43 Things allows users to make heavy use of of them too.

Llike a good search engine, Technorati is now allowing you to search on tags. Here is their take on the term business. They are pulling from del.icio.us and flickr. The blog results need some work.

I’d put this in the “something to watch” column.

[via Scoble]

I am attending Blog Business Summit

I have been debating for about a month about attending Blog Business Summit.

I decided to pull the trigger today.

For those of you going, I can’t wait to meet all of you in person.

For all of you on the fence, do it. It is worth it just to meet all of the wonderful people who are going to be there. The discussions are going to be great. The presentations look interesting. What other reason do you need?

Now , I can’t wait.

For those getting there Sunday, I am thinking we need to put together a little trip to the library and/or sci-fi/music museum. Anyone?

BBS 05 Badge 1

Building a Better Blog

Brian Bailey from Leave It Behind has a post titled “Building a Better Blog”.

I like this post alot. I think is it time to think a little about how you are communicating with others with your blog. You can make improvements.

Here is his list with my thoughts:

  1. Use categories – I was just talking about this with Ben and Jackie yesterday. If you blog covers a wide range of topics, I think you should use categories. It lets your readers see what you talk about and lets them key in on the things that interest them.
  2. Use Titles – I am trying to get better at this. I think it is really important. Generic titles tell you nothing when you are reading RSS feeds. We are looking at using our blog content better at 800-CEO-READ and good titles is a key to readers being able to see what content will be of interest to them.
  3. Publish During High Traffic Times – I haven’t thought much about this one. I am going to experiment with this a little
  4. Syndicate Your Entire Post – PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE do this. If you have Typepad, go find the box to click to syndicate full posts. For others, find out how to modify your template. For those of you who are intentionally showing partial posts, you are losing readers. I know you want people to see your site and bump up those advertising measurements. I think you are going to have the opposite effect in the long-term.
  5. Click Your Own Links – I don’t do this enough. It is link verification and it helps others see you.
  6. Develop an Authentic Voice – I think this is something everyone does over time. Write about what interests you and you will be fine. The right people will find you.
  7. Tell Us Who You Are and How to Contact You – This really important. People are always looking at your about page and often want to talk to you one-on-one. Make it easy to do that.
  8. Don’t Be Afraid to Promote – I am mixed on this one. I rarely send others’ emails introducing or promoting my blog. I do try to create community events that draw bloggers and readers. I guess that promotes my blog in a slightly different way.
  9. Commment on Other Sites and Your Own – I think this is important. It is part of what blogging is about. It is creating conversation.
  10. The More You Write, The More You Will Have to Write About – I pretty much agree with this point. I know that when I have an idea, I have to write the post right away or else it is lost. Saying you will write it next week, rarely working. Just start writing.

Bonus:Content Brings Google – Absolutely. It happens all of the time.

[via Scoble Linkblog]

My year in review

This year has been great and so much has happpened.

When I started the year, I was working with my father. A month later, I decided that I needed to do something else. That something else started with staying home with my one year old.

That gave me some time to do things with this blog. The Business Blog Book Tour started in February. I held Brand Week and Finetuning later in the year. I also tried wikis with the BizBlog Directory Wiki.

I tried my hand my hand at distribution with the Kaospilots A-Z book. Fast Company reviewed the book and I stepped in to provide US distribution. I sold 40 copies of the $50 book. It was not a runaway success, but it was a great learning experience. What was better was getting the chance to visit Uffe and the school in September.

The BBBT led to an introduction with Jack Covert and 800-CEO-READ. We hit it off and started a blog to see what would happen. That led to another blog to run book excerpts. And that led to starting a podcast about business books.

On a sadder note, I lost my grandfather after a year of poor health.

We were able to travel quite a bit this year. We spent five weeks in Europe on two different trips. I spent a weekend in San Francisco after BlogOn. This last week I have been able to enjoy the beauty of the Colorado Rockies.

Finally, I have met so many wonderful people this year. I would not even know where to start in listing everyone here. I think you all know who you are.

At the beginning of last year, I could have never predicted where I would be now. Some might say I didn’t plan very well. I don’t see it like that at all. I think I am going the right direction. I think it will be interesting how opportunity presents itself in 2005.

To an even better 2005!!!

The latest essay on “Blogging is not for me.”

Joseph Epstein writes an one of those oh-so clever and plithy editorials in today’s WSJ. This one is titled “Blog, Blague, Blog”. As far as I can tell you need to subscribe to be able to see it. I do find it a little interesting that the editors didn’t make this available on the Opinion Journal.

I have decided to post the whole essay here. If I am pushing fair use a bit, I apologize.

Blog, Blague, Blog by Joseph Epstein

No big surprise, I suppose, in Merriam-Webster’s recent announcement that “blog” was the word most looked up on its Internet sites during the past year. Bloggers were much in the news; in fact, they often turned the direction of the news, and made a fair amount of news on their own. Bloggers caught up with many campaign lies during the past presidential election; by catching him out in shoddy journalistic practice, they cost Dan Rather an honorable departure from a long career.

Bloggers have become something of an auxiliary media, often doing the grubby journalistic work of picking up the essential threads left hanging by the major, or mainstream, media.

At their best, they resemble that small stockholder who ruins what was supposed to be a smooth stockholders meeting by pointing out that the company’s top executives seem to have been making ungodly profits by putting asbestos in the products of corporation’s baby-food company in Latin America. Politicians, journalists, public figures generally, have been served proper notice: Beware — Little Blogger is watching you.

* * *

A blog, for those who have not yet looked up the word, is a journal kept by a private individual and made available on the Web. The etymology of the word derives from web log. (Through available software, a blog can also send its readers to other pertinent material through hyperlinks.) Persons who keep such journals are known as bloggers, their activity as blogging. Blogs, like private journals kept in pre-computer days, tend to be updated daily.

A name for habitual readers of blogs has not, so far as I know, been invented. Blogettes wouldn’t be bad, if it didn’t suggest exclusive feminity. The best available for now is probably blogophiles. There must be lots of them out there, for some blogs are thought to have large followings: Andrew Sullivan’s blog, for example, and that of the notorious blog gossiper Matthew Drudge used to get frequent mention.

After admitting all the successes of bloggers in politics and journalism in recent years, I myself remain a bit of a blogophobe. My problem with blogs is, to stay within computerese, a RAM problem. RAM is, of course, random access memory, denoting how much information one can store in one’s computer, or, in human terms, in one’s brain. Those little gray cells, as Inspector Poirot likes to call them, are dying off in impressive numbers in all of us; and do we wish to spend many of them reading blogs, in which a large percentage of the material cannot be relied upon, and lots more of which is beside any possible point? Well to remember that the French word blague, pronounced the same as blog, means to talk chaff, to hoax, to humbug.

Professional journalists may be under an obligation to check 12 or 15 blogs each morning. As an amateur, a mere kibitzer, I am not. I do not have enough RAM left in my brain to accommodate bloggers in the distant hope of gaining a bit of inside information, I cannot really accommodate them in what I think of as my intellectual hygiene. Forget inside information, it’s all I can do to handle outside information.

As for my intellectual hygiene, it begins with writing in my own, private, written-in-longhand journal, which I have been keeping for some 30-odd years and which no one else has ever seen. It continues with a brisk reading of the New York Times, beginning always with its obituaries (the only news that, as Ezra Pound said about literature, stays news). The Wall Street Journal is next. After checking my e-mails, with its many fine offers of cheap Viagra and chances to meet cheating housewives, I click over to ArtsandLettersDaily.com, which reprints a good selection of recent articles on culture and intellectual life in the Anglophone world.

I also subscribe to 12 or so magazines, from the English Gramaphone to the imprecisely named GQ, standing for Gentleman’s Quarterly (it comes out monthly and, with its explicit advice on sex, is decidedly not for gentleman). At night I watch “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer,” and try my best to steer clear of CNN or “Larry King Live,” not always with success. Information overload is, decidedly, threatened.

All success to the best of the bloggers. But, as the Jews of Russia used to say about the czar, so I now find myself saying about them: May they live and be well, but not too close to me.

A lot of explaining to do

I find I still have alot of explaining to do when it comes to everything going on with blogging, RSS, podcasting, and the social networking area.

I posted about 40 links to my del.icio.us account this morning. Based on the fellow linkage, some of the links are very popular and there are others where I am the first.

I just wanted to offer it as a resource and a place to you can direct people who are trying to get up to speed. Lots of ideas from lots of voices.

Discouraging blogging

Scoble has an anecdote about bosses who discourage blogging.

In my previous post, I got caught up in the institutions and abstracts of “branding” and “companies”. I am quickly reminded it is people who protect the history of a company. It people who protect the image of a company. Often, it is only people trying to protect their egos.

And it takes conversations to change those attitudes. So, we’ll just keep doing what we’re doing and wait for the rest to come along.

Branding and Blogging

All this talk about branding lately.

James Tauber says:

Recently, Doc Searls made the observation that the companies known for their brand don’t have nearly as many bloggers.

I was all ready to embrace this meme that blogging and branding were opposing when I stopped and thought—hang on, Tom Peters blogs. Tom, more than any other person taught me the power of the personal brand.

Then it dawned on me. Blogging builds your personal brand. Perhaps people that (are good at or want to) build their personal brand don’t sit well in companies that have a strong corporate brand.

I like James’ thoughts. I think he is exactly right. Blogs only work if they are written by people who have identities. Over time, those identities become brands. Apple wants you to think about the Steve Jobs brand or maybe Jonathan Ive brand, not a program manager developing the next release of Mail. I agree with Mr. Ruebel. Apple is not going to have people blogging any time soon.

Why is the assumption that bloggers will distract and not enhance these mighty brands?

How much longer can companies keep employees from doing this very natural thing of talking customers?

It’s hard

There is lots of buzz about the Mazada psuedo-blog [the site has been taken down].

I agree with everyone else. It doesn’t work.

My first thought was to say that corporate blogging is hard, but that is not true. It really isn’t that hard. There is no lead-time needed before you can do it. There is no technology barrier.

Maybe, it is hard for companies to talk to people. Without the veneer. Without the lawyers and message makers in between.

Companies don’t need an ad agency to figure out how to talk to people. You do need to decide how you are going to go to market, but then talk to people. If you are trying to figure out to talk to them, you are thinking too much.

[End Rambling]

Give you a little more

Evelyn said I short changed you on this post from a couple weeks ago. Consider this quote:

The best musicians are like the best programmers – and like the best bloggers, although notice I didn’t say the most popular bloggers – they do it because they can’t not do it. They write and/or play music for the same reason a writer writes: it’s how they breathe. And it’s as involuntary as breathing. Most of them can’t tell you why they do it. They just do, and they love it.

This may help you consider reading the whole post.