Thursday, April 14, 2005
A picture is worth a thousand links
Newsmap provides a visual layer, similar to some stock markets movements visualisation tools, over Google news and graphically shows the stories with the largest volume of coverage. You can even narrow down headlines per countries (covered by Google News only).
Both services are free.
Wednesday, April 13, 2005
Breakfast Bytes
Tuesday, April 12, 2005
Carat launches blogs service
Oh dear... looks like Captain Morgan will have many siblings soon.
Are we seeing the last days of blogs without pop-ups, sponsored links, banners and "near missed" contextual ads?
This is my opinion. Sponsored by...
Journalists support Apple bloggers
Friday, April 08, 2005
The blogger with no name.
Blogs are getting increasingly popular and it is now safe to assume that if you dish about your boss or colleagues on a blog, you will be found out.
Fortunately, the EEF is giving away tips on how to blog anonymously. A quick summary here:
- Use a Pseudonym and Don't Give Away Any Identifying Details
- Use Anonymising Technologies
- Limit Your Audience
- Don't Be Googleable
I wanted to find out if blogs were the ultimate catharsis for abused employees:
No.
Wednesday, April 06, 2005
Google to Start Video Blog
Tuesday, April 05, 2005
Trust MEdia: Edelman and Intelliseek categorise bloggers
Titled: “Trust MEdia: How Real People Are Finally Being Heard” , the paper is available in PDF for download from Intelliseek (you must register first) or from Edelman.
One of the highlight is a catalog of popular blogs organised by categories. The classification methodology is described but I would be curious to see the difference in popularity between bloggers within a same category. For example, if you use number of links as a criteria for "popularity" and check out some blogs using technorati, then rank them, you will find huge gaps in the number of links between them.
In consumer tech, Engadget has 10,534 links and is most linked blog. Using this technique, I found that the 3rd most popular is Doc Searls with 5,240 links (half the links within 3 ranks only). PDC bloggers would be the 7th most popular but has 170 links only. What a drop! It goes downhill from there.
I am curious to see whether this is a pattern across all categories where you will only have 3 to 4 star bloggers with loads of links then a huge drop in number of links for the others.
Overall, I must say that the report is a good read and provides compelling arguments for marketers to warm up to blogs.
Thursday, March 31, 2005
Should Captain Morgan Walk The Plank?
What amused me most is not the blog per say, it’s pretty dull but the string of conversations about this blog complaining how lame it is.
I think it is less bad that the Mazda experiment as at least it allows for comments, and there are regular postings. Although there are some speculations on how such new blog got so many comments so quickly. Gus thinks that Captain Morgan should thank the agency’s “assistants, interns, secretaries, college students, elance or maybe just one guy/gal with a strong pot of coffee and a really wild imagination.” I would agree with that.
Noah Brier comments that it’s not a blog as it has no RSS feed. It’s an interesting point. I read this survey from Blogads who polled over 30,000 bloggers and found that 72% of respondents never read blogs through RSS.
The lack of RSS didn’t bother me too much but I was irritated by three things:
- The Captain do not reply to comments on his blog. This is hardly surprising. Ad agencies are so used to shout loud about products that they became death and as such can’t hear what customers say anymore. I would think that DM and PR agencies do a better job at sustaining dialogs.
- To post a comment, you have to register and provide too many details. It’s like opening the floodgate to a tide of unwanted junk mails. The incentive to provide my home address needs to be stronger than a post on a blog.
- When you post a comment, you get a nice message saying: “Comment Posted! Since I'm busy with the Blog AND maintaining a full-time party schedule, your posting might not show up right away. So, cut me some slack and have a little patience... - The Captain”. That’s a nice way to say: wait until our moderator wakes up and he will see whether your comments are flattering enough to be included”. That’s lame.
So should Captain Morgan walk the plank? If you take it as a commercial blog and therefore have very low expectations, it is not too bad in its category. But ultimately time will decide. When the ad agency’s interns will cease to be incentivised to keep it alive, it will be up to the good decent Internet people to judge. The ones who don’t bother giving up their home address so they can have a discussion with a bottle of rum.
Tuesday, March 29, 2005
Who Blogs? Bloggers Demographic Survey
A really interesting suvey from BlogAds who polled over 30,000 bloggers. Quite a few surprises:
- 75% of bloggers are male, over 30 years old.
- 43% have household revenue of over US$90,000.
- Only 4.7% of bloggers are under 20 years old…. That shoots down a marketing myth: “blogs, oh yeah… I heard about that… we’ll definitely look into it for our youth offer…”
- 1 out of 4 respondents claim to dedicate 20% of “media time » to blogs.
- Finally, only 27.6% of respondents use RSS… most will read blogs as they do websites.
Saturday, March 26, 2005
More politicians write blogs to bypass mainstream media
Tuesday, March 22, 2005
IBM, Spam and Spammers
EuroDisney Blog University Postponed
No reasons why on the official website. I was interested to attend and maybe contribute to the forum but unfortunately my email and phone calls to the organisers were left unanswered... could it be a communication problem?
Thursday, March 17, 2005
Yahoo jumps on the blogwagon
Wednesday, March 16, 2005
Blog, un’opportunità o una minaccia?
I just came back from a conference on blogging organised by our Italian colleagues of Digital PR in Milan. The event was well attended which shows that blogging is definitely top of mind for communication professional across Europe.
Program was as follow:
- Alberto Mari, the author of “Blog e Wiki” spoke about blogs, how they work and how they differ from websites or newsgroups.
- Vincenzo De Tommaso from Digital PR gave us an overview of blogging in the Italian market.
- I presented on corporate blogs, starting from why blogs are so successful to how corporations could use them. I will upload a copy of the presentation soon so stay tuned…
- Luca De Biase, a journalist and lecturer at the University of Padova talked about blogs impact in the media landscape.
Or at least, this is what I understood :-)
During the event, I also had the pleasure to meet with Paolo Valdemarin from evectors. They sell RSS feeds solutions, notably to the BBC.
There is a blog on the event but it is only available in Italian. See comments from one attendee (there is an automatic English translation available).
Tuesday, March 15, 2005
Apple 1, Bloggers 0.
Thursday, March 10, 2005
How do people read search engine results?
They found that the first 3 listings get 100% attention, sites ranked 6th gets 50% attention while sites ranked 8th get only 30% attention. Anything below that is almost ignored.
The sponsored links ranked 1st and 2nd get 50% and 40% attention respectively while anything after 4th is almost not seen by the user.
A screenshot of viewing patterns can be seen here.
Monday, March 07, 2005
RSS Ads
Friday, March 04, 2005
Bloggers are not journalists (at least in the US)
Is Blogging Good For The Brain?
I feel a lot better now.
Chicken or Egg?
My argument is that while it is difficult to have popular content without a network, it is even more difficult to build and sustain a network without popular content. I refer to “content” as articles, services, links or ongoing conversations. This extensive definition as opposed to articles alone could be the reason why our opinions appear to differ.
Blogging Planet uses the term “ecosystem” when referring to bloggers network. It is absolutely spot-on. One of the reason bloggers form networks is because they can extract value from their interactions. Members of such ecosystem play different roles and feed on each others. Some produce content, some comment upon others, some aggregate and relay information. The ecosystem works because they all contribute and benefit from it (traffic, recognition, dissemination of ideas, etc…).
I, like many others list NevOn in my blogroll because I think Neville writes thought provoking articles and because his blog often reference materials I like to read, thus saving me the hassle to find them elsewhere. On top of this, the comments I make on his articles allow me to get noticed, thus growing my own network and benefiting from the traffic to his blog. If the quality or frequency of NevOn’s articles were to drop, or if he suddenly shifted his focus to 15th century Norwegian poetry, I, like other members of his network could have less incentive to link to his blog as the interaction value will diminish. By loosing content he would loose his network too.
I therefore think that a content strategy is central to help reach the influencers and relays you need to build a network designed to fulfil your communication objectives. Content is what fuel your network and allows it to live and grow.
It’s an interesting academic discussion anyway: what comes first? Content or Network?