The Prince Charles Cinema, London (still standing), featured on my London Cheapskate site (RIP) |
What is a blog?
Let's kick this post with the usual Wikipedia quote: A blog (a portmanteau of the term web log)
is a discussion or information site published on the World Wide Web consisting
of discrete entries ("posts") typically displayed in reverse
chronological order so the most recent post appears first. Until 2009 blogs
were usually the work of a single individual, occasionally of a small group,
and often were themed on a single subject. More recently "multi-author
blogs" (MABs) have developed...
I started
blogging in 2005 for professional rather than personal reasons. The internet was transforming the
magazine publishing industry and I needed online experience. It wasn’t my first
online writing experience as I had started a listing website called London
Cheapskate in 2001 to share my knowledge of free/cheap leisure and
entertainment in the capital. In its first year, it won a web award for its
content, despite being a very basic site (you guessed, I was the designer too). It’s still listed on some London sites, although it closed down in 2009 when Geocities was scrapped.
My first blog (of five and half, since having an account on Twitter is
classed as microblogging) was in the same vein and was originally called
London Cheapskate. It was still London Cheapskate when I moved to Rugby and it
changed to Cambridge Ecothrifter (we’re a bit posher and more eco friendly
around here) in 2009. I blogged about my interests and posted mini features
nobody would commission me to write. As I got enough digital writing experience
to switch to web copywriting/journalism, the blogs became a more personal
outlet, yet still a place for features nobody would commission me to write.
This is the case of my 1930s house blog, where I tackle interiors, gardening
and DIY. I haven’t got as many makeovers as I’d like there, but give me time... It's not my day job and it doesn't pay the mortgage.
Moving away
from the personal to the general, blogging is a different thing to different
people. It could be a personal diary to share with family and friends, a place
to showcase visual creativity (from hobbies through crafts to fine art), a
writer’s treasury (fiction, non fiction, journalism, random witty rants), an
activist weapon (campaigning, highlighting injustice, criticising the powers-that-be), an education instrument (edublogs) and a business/marketing tool.
The beauty of blogs is that they are
interactive as they allow readers to leave a comment. So it's not surprising to read in various ebooks that blogging is an effective form of social media and a strong promotion tool for
brands (big and small). Plus, it's seotastic: ask any SEO practitioner and they will tell you that having a blog helps to
achieve good ranking for your website.
A blog works its magic even if it's light on words: it can be just images, a curated list of web links, music/audio files (think
mp3 and podcast) and even videos (in which case you can call it a vlog). A blog
can showcase expertise and talent in a powerful way so it's a great inexpensive marketing gimmick for any budding artist. You can embed those youtube videos, show pictures of your art, post a poem or two.
Businesswise, a blog is an inexpensive way to achieve online authority, if you can write, that is. If you can't write, you can outsource to a professional writer and if you can't edit it yourself, do hire a copyeditor. Using cheap talent to run a business blog is a bad idea, a blog is like your business card, you wouldn't design it yourself and print it on photocopy paper using an inkjet printer, would you? Yet some businesses head for peanutsforhour (thanks Sookio for that moniker) and hope to find the hidden gem (a poorly paid genius writer). Good luck and goodbye, we don't champion cheap labour here.
Blogging in numbers
I can imagine the bean counters are now thinking: "Hey, less
rambling and more figures, please." According to Royal Pingdom, here is a snapshot of blogging in numbers:
· 39 million – The number of Tumblr blogs by the end of 2011.
· 70 million – Total number of WordPress blogs by the end of 2011
??million
– total number of Blogger blogs (no idea, they are not mentioned). If you know, feel free to leave a comment and enlighten me.
Last but not least, Wikipedia
states that by February 2011 “there were over 156 million public blogs in existence”.
Have a mull
and leave a comment if you wish. If you are interested in some blogging
infographics for 2012, visit Jeff Bullas's blog. I will talk about blogging in future posts. At present I'm getting my head round a public talk I'm giving about the weird and wonderful (and useful) world of the web.
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