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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
I "have to". I'm a writer and a communications guy at heart. I'd be Blogging and Podcasting even if there wasn't a "publish" button, simply because I love to write stuff down or have a conversation about it.
Like you, there are some great Bloggers and Podcasters who have slowed down or disappeared, and that makes me pretty sad.
What makes me happy is knowing that someone like you cares enough to come by and read what's on my brain... thank you :)
I guess it depends largely on where your heart is... in the writing, just communicating, or in the ping-pong. Most folks will find a platform that suits them... but I agree, I do miss one of two really good bloggers who post less, or post shorter.
The only thing I could understand is the time that twitter and friendfeed take away from blogging. They can be a serious investment of time.
Last week, a podfaded show started towards making a comeback. It was a pretty popular show in the early days and I missed it when it quit. I was really happy to see that it was starting up again. It is Me and the Bean.
But, seeing that show come back made me think of a lot of the shows that were around in the early days, late 2004 -2005. There was a totally different feel back then, better feel actually. Much tighter community.
I have to admit, I got bummed for the rest of theat day missing the first days of podcasting, back when it was all new and we all had hopes of how it would play out.
But hey, things change. Hopefully people will find their way back to regular blogging, but at least you know where they are. A lot of those early podcasts just disappeared, along with the creators.
I know I just dropped episode #378 of the main show and have several new shows, such as the Animated Adventures, so I am not quitting anytime soon.
Just make sure you don't stop either.
I sort of think of platforms like twitter as an evolutionary improvement of email. Evolutionary, because a couple of key improvements have been forced: a character limit to keep it brief, and a subscription ("following") model to keep the noise down.
Now that I am thinking/writing, this is more a throwback than an improvement. This is what email was before rich text and html formats, and before spammers.
Is this what they were referring to five or six years ago when the prognosticators were saying RSS would kill email?
I know that many people are inspired to insights and action from my posts - even as they, admittedly, tend to comment less these days. I must admit that conversation is more fun when there is one outside my head ;-) To those who still like to read posts, do come in and comment - it really makes a difference in terms of taking the conversation to a new level.
I miss everyone too. :)
-> I think people are using Twitter and other social go-betweens b/c like you said, it is faster and more well, like regular conversation. But the Twitter experience is not a lasting experience, like a blog post can be.
Not enough thought processes go into 140 little characters.
Each has it's own use, right?
Rock on,
lawton
quantity vs value = value wins
However as I am currently starting up a new company (spun off in a new direction from my old company) I am now looking at starting a new business based blog.
I think that it is perhaps the intention behind the blog that affects whether people move to social media instead. If the main reason you blog is to keep friends updated about what's going on in your life, then Twitter and Facebook etc can do the job easier and allow you a richer interaction with your friends. If you use your blog as a means of self expression, promotion or to make money in some way then you're more likely to keep on blogging as it's more visible through search engines etc, is more possible to mould into your own personal brand and is probably the right tool for the job.
But there's nothing more depressing than a deserted blog of several months or even weeks. I post to my personal blog, (very niche and which I started 3 years ago) every week. I used to blog 3 times a week, but decided that was the quickest way to burn out. Like many I also work full time. So I let my readers know my blogging frequency was changing and they were cool. The interaction became stronger and more frequent if anything. They now carry on conversations on it without me needing to reply to every post as I used to. My only regret is that I don't have time to visit all the blogs of those who visit and comment on mine... another essential part of blogging.
I am also quite active on Facebook, and I haven't found it detracted from blogging at all. I use it very differently to blogging.
I am just about to try Twitter but for business stuff(time will tell if it's a good idea or not), and I am thinking of starting a new marketing related blog. But knowing the time commitment has made me delay because I know what it's going to involve. Twitter won't replace blogging... I look at it like my FB status updates.
There are some who advocate farming out your blog posts, but since blogging is a form of personal expression this won't work for my personal blog and I'm not too sure if it will for my business related one either. But it solves the issue of content frequency.
It would be a shame if blogs faded (personally don't think they are) because in many cases they are freedom from listening to the controlled media.
There is just so much content which isn't interesting, including tweets.
http://spatiallyrelevant.org/2008/07/14/nothing...
I realized I should stop contributing to the fluff.
http://spatiallyrelevant.org/2008/07/24/less-fl...
I also realized that I other people have good things to say, perhaps more so than me.
http://spatiallyrelevant.org/2008/08/03/great-i...
I've already posted 1 of them and have handful of other inquiries, so not sure where this comment is going, but while there may be a sea change underway for platforms, I think that is like the cool kid early adopter folk mainly.
Good post, sorry for the multiple links, but thought it would interesting to share my evolution towards a re-invigorated approach to my blog and ensuring sustained mediocrity.
~jon