Archive for the 'Blog Trends' Category

Twitter plug-in make WordPress tweet-able

BlogKing July 16th, 2008

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I have been getting up to speed with Twitter now that Twitterific is available for iPhone. That is a killer app for the iPhone. Got a few minutes to kill? Just open your phone and check your twitter universe. On my desktop just too distracting and I already am hurting for screen real estate.

Now there is plugin Twitter Updater will let you automatically update your Twitter.com status with your most recent blog post. There are a few options to how the display will look when it updates. Neat that it uses tiny url to shorten link to your blog post.

iPhone SDK is hot, hot, hot

BlogKing March 7th, 2008

Apple announced details do the iPhone SDK today and I am impressed.

First a drag and drop UI builder, access to all OS X services, and extensive debugging and performance monitoring. The really big news is the free distribution via AppStore, a iPhone service that will allow WIFI or cell network download and install of new apps. Can you say instant gratification? Developer can charge any price and Apples handles all e-commerce and delivery for 30% fee. If price is free than there are no charges for developer or user. What company do you know will deliver your software for free? iPhone will also also auto-notify if is there is an update available.

This distribution model is a winner. Most software nowadays is given away and money made on premium versions, advertising or support services. Apple now has the hottest mobile platform by far.

We are going to see an absolute explosion of apps. Which will drive more iPhone sales leading to more apps etc.

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Business Week story on blogging is updated

BlogKing March 2nd, 2008

The seminal cover story “Blogs Will Change Your Business” from May 2005 has gotten a refresh.

New facts:

Yes, there were 9 million, but how many of them were active? Probably only a fraction. In early 2008, says Technorati Chairman David Sifry, the search company indexes 112 million blogs, with 120,000 new ones popping up each day. But only 11% of these blogs, he says, have posted within the past two months. That means the active universe is closer to 13 million blogs. Kevin Burton, CEO of FeedBlog, argues that the number should be lower, from 2 million to 4 million blogs.

Factoring in inactive one and 99% that are spam blogs still leaves 40 legitimate new blogs a day.

The divide between the publishers and the public is collapsing. This turns mass media upside down. It creates media of the masses.

Sitting in his office at Edelman PR (he switched jobs in 2006) overlooking Times Square, Steve Rubel says that blogs have turned out to be less important for companies than he anticipated. “Outside of tech,” he says, “big companies didn’t jump in. They viewed the blog audience as niche. They weren’t ready to be open, transparent, and loose.” For advertising, he says companies are more drawn to social networks, where they have the potential to reach millions of customers. (We should stress that social networks, a megatrend in media, is not even mentioned in this 2005 story. The emergence of Facebook, MySpace, and others is one reason we should take “blogs” out of the headline.) In fact, it’s worth mentioning that Rubel doesn’t blog nearly as much as he used to. He regards blogs as just a piece of his communications arsenal. He uses it for longer pieces. For the short stuff, he sends out bursts of thought and links to what he’s seeing and reading on Twitter, a microblogging technology.

Google entered the industry in summer 2006. But more meaningful than its stand-alone blog search was its growing ability to incorporate blog posts with Web search. Google is helping to erase the distinction between blogs and the rest of the Web. In doing so, it extends its dominance.

Blogs have become a staple of mainstream media. BusinessWeek has 20 of them. Publications of all sizes mix blog posts with other news, both online and in print. We’re getting bloggier. And more and more publications are subscribing to services that link to related content. These links steer readers away from the media sites, which would have seemed unthinkable until recently for mainstream publishers. Why do it now? Because if sites provide interesting links, the thinking goes, readers will return. One telling example: The New York Times runs Blogrunner.com, a site that aggregates everything from Times articles to blog posts. Still, big media is not dominating blogs or social media by any stretch. No one is. At the same time, certain blogs are turning into influential and lucrative media businesses.

Blogs are also a good tool to stretch a publication’s content and expertise, to provide different angles on stories, and to venture into new forms of media. In a sense, blogs and related social media provide laboratories for experimentation, new products, and, above all, new relationships with readers and viewers.

I think this portends a merging of blogs and other social media sites. It is just a matter of time before the OpenSocial platform is adopted by blog engines, like it is being added to Facebook and LinkedIn this year.

NY Times to utilize blog feed

BlogKing November 5th, 2007

Readers of The New York Times technology section will now get their news from a media outlet that practices what it has been preaching. The paper announced a Web 2.0 makeover for its technology section, which will now deliver blog-style reporting with updates throughout the day.

See the technology headlines in the middle column.

Blogrunner automatically monitors news articles and blog posts and tracks news events as they develop across the Web. Blogrunner alerts you to topics that are frequently linked to and commented upon. The publications tracked by Blogrunner are chosen by New York Times editors.

Nice to see blog feeds getting adopted at the highest level of journalism.

Today is Blog Day

BlogKing August 31st, 2007

Today is BlogDay. With the advent of BlogDay three years ago, the premise is to spur bloggers to get to know one another. Become better acquainted with bloggers from other countries, and other areas of interest. So today, bloggers are encouraged to post recommendations of 5 new blogs, so readers can find new places to read.

So try these gems:

Sexy Widget This blog is all about distributed web strategy. Cutting edge ideas.

Thoughts and Philosophies  Social Media and more.

Blognoggle  Feeds from Top 100 business blogs.

Copyblogger  How do you write the best blog copy; good ideas here.

Small Business Trends  Anita Campbell has been blogging on this topic since 2004.

Enjoy and let me know what you think of these. You can add your intersting blogs suggestions in the comments.

Darren Rouse is hyperkinetic

BlogKing August 25th, 2007

Darren Rouse show what a day in the life of an [A list] blogger is like.

Life is speeded up in the 21st century!

Tips from WordCamp 2007

BlogKing August 25th, 2007

Check out this video of a session at WordCamp 2007 in San Fransico, July 21. [unconference like blog philly sponsored by WordPress]

Jeremy Wright of blog network B5 did a great job moderating a panel on blog monitization. Its 50 minutes long so I will tell you some of the highlites for me.

A list blogger Darren Rouse made $150K in 2006 from his blog. In 2007 it is now possible for mere mortals to make a living from blogging. Still hard work but now doable.

One reason why is that advertisers are moving money into blogs in a big way. Proctor and Gamble will be spending $50 Million(yes with a M) on a social media ad campaign.

He cautioned though that the average blog with less than 30,000 page views/month will not earn a full time income from advertising. Most blogs still are best monitized as a promotional vehicle to get consulting projects, a job offer or speaking gigs.

Be careful with paid links, Google doesn’t like them. Be sure to use no follow setting so links thru works but page rank will not since Google might interpret that as bogus.

Every week make one part of your blog 1% better. Try something different even when you don’t know if it works. In fact blog about your experiments.

Be part of a community; get to know your fellow bloggers especially in your own area.
Don’t be isolated.

And lastly, never lose the passion. Write about what really interests you.

Blog Philadelphia was resounding success

BlogKing July 15th, 2007

Around 300 people attended the two day(and evening party) event at the really nice Raddison Warwick hotel in downtown Philly. I found it really wonderful that the Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corp was a major sponsor. They are the people behind the new hip focused tourism site UWISHUNU ;Philly from an insider perspective.

This proves that Philly is no longer your father’s Philly but is finally changing it’s self concept to compete among the best cities in the US. Rocky and cheese steaks are so 20th century. Philly can be know as a hip, leading edge place that is not resting on past glories. Blog Philadelphia is another step in that transformation. Already scheduled for September is the first Philly Podcamp to keep the momentum going.

A wonderful announcement was the formation of a new organization for supporting independent consultants called sure enough Independents Hall. This is the brainchild of Alex Hillman, an energetic web developer and true Philadelphia promoter. The concept is co-working. Instead of being isolated in your home office you hang out a communal office and share the energy.

Blog Philadelphia is happening next week

BlogKing July 5th, 2007

This looks to be a fun and informative event, an two day unconference on blogging and social media. And it is free. See you there.

WordPress Makes Sense For Many Non-Blog Websites

BlogKing June 25th, 2007

Abhijit Nadgouda wrote a great post on the benefits of Word Press as a content management system:

Pages and Posts

WordPress supports two basic types of content - Pages
and posts. Pages are used to hold information that is valid for a bigger span of time. For such content, a change overwrites the earlier content. Posts are used for content which is more dynamic, like news and updates. In stead overwriting with changes, such content builds an archive.

Now, any web site that represents an entity - company, product, educational institution or an individual, at least in today’s age, has both such types of content. Providing news and updates helps keep the readers and customers uptodate through subscriptions.

The recent versions of WordPress also lets you set one of the pages as the homepage.
You can do away with the blog and archives look and create a corporate user interface. In a blog the posts take over the entire web site, whereas in a non-blog web site the pages get more dominant.

Categories

Sometimes you might have more than one content types for which posts
are suitable, like news and articles. In such a case you can use the categories to differentiate between the two. The categories can be hierarchical and there is no limit on the number of categories you have. This is one of the best tools to use for content classification.

Feeds

Feed
is one of the most used techniques by readers to keep themselves updated. WordPress generates feeds for both pages and posts and various other queries,
which you can offer to your reader and customers. It is also quite popular that these feeds can be easily converted to emails using various services. What this means is that you can reach out to the web, feedreader and email users by just publishing the content once.

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