05 Sep 2007 @ 6:01 AM 
 

Who do you Blog for?: Tips for Increasing the Conversation

 

If you blog then you know the feeling of sitting at your keyboard staring at an empty Word doc or WordPress page, thrumming your fingers on your coffee cup, and trying to decide what to write. Some days I have a hot topic in mind and I can’t wait to get to my desk. Other days I’m lost in thinking “What do people want to know about?” and I end up reading RSS feeds until I find inspiration.

I often coach businesses on how to blog for increased corporate transparency, better relationships with customers and business partners, and as a way to develop their vision in a larger conversation. For an individual it’s not that much different. A blog, whether for a CEO or a grad student, is a way to reach out to others to engage in dialogue. The concept of dialogue or conversation through blogging is important to me. It’s not a monologue I’m writing here. It’s not a soap box. It’s the opening volley of a conversation. “I think this. What do you think?” and then I wait eagerly for comments, rebuttals, additions etc. However, if I want those conversations then I have to keep in mind who is reading and write about things they’ll want to comment on, not just read and close. So we end up where we started, writing something that will please others rather than just expressing our own ideas. It’s not a bad place to start but it can stump you if you don’t know who is reading your blog.

Back when I was blogging on my Second Life Education Research blog I had huge traffic. It was a very niche blog with an observant, engaged audience but since I moved to Ubernoggin (a move I made because I’m not teaching this semester) I’ve struggled to reestablish a significant body of readers. I’ve watched the traffic in response to certain entries, kept up with link backs etc. to stay in the conversation, but it’s been a real experiment in practicing what I preach to other bloggers about how to build traffic and establish a steady readership.

So, after all this pontificating, I want to make a list of the ways I try to increase the number of readers who come to participate in the conversations I start here:

  • Be sure your blog is registered with search engines like Technorati, google, and Pubsub so people can find you.
  • Use categories in WordPress. Be sure the category tags are descriptive, specific, and popular with your desired audience.
  • Write often. The more you write, the more your page is updated and the higher your search rank. If you don’t have time to write often, write several entries at once and post date them to post later in the week.
  • Use headlines that are descriptive of the content not kitch or puns.
  • Let your network know you’ve written. Don’t spam your friends with your blog address but posting it as a Twitter message, a Facebook status update, or even a gmail status will let your friends know you’ve written something they might be interested in.
  • Link to other blogs you like and pay attention to your trackbacks. If someone references your blog go read what they have to say and participate in the conversation on their blog.
  • Include your blog address in your email signature and on all online profiles.

What would you add to this list? How do you drive traffic to your blog? How do you encourage conversation? (btw, ending with a question will encourage people to comment and engage in your conversation as well!)

Tags Categories: blog, blogging, business, web 2.0 Posted By: Intellagirl
Last Edit: 05 Sep 2007 @ 06 01 AM

EmailPermalink
 

Responses to this post » (8 Total)

 
  1. PaleFire says:

    I bookmarked this for future use!!!

  2. Gordon says:

    Comment on other blogs.

    I have one long standing, high traffic blog. The audience has been built up over a long time, largely by finding other similar blogs and commenting there.

    My new blog is struggling for visitors, so as well as employing your suggestions, I’m trying to be ‘more visible’ within that particular blog arena.

  3. Kathy says:

    I comment on blogs that I am interested in and I check out the sites of other people who are also commenting…I figure we must have something in common or we wouldn’t find ourselves commenting on the same blog. Probably 90% of my blog friends have been found in this way. Probably 10% are as a result of being registered at sites like BlogHer.

  4. Putting comments on other blogs (like this one).
    Using a blogroll.
    Posting to Stumbleupon
    Using pingoat.com, pingomatic.com and other pinging services (eg: Google Blog Ping).
    Having a MyBlogLog account.

    All of which may do me some good… but in all honesty, not much, since my traffic numbers won’t clog the internet. The vast majority of hits on my blog come via Google.

    I don’t use ads, either. I’m not that obsessed with driving traffic.

  5. Actually, I do love comments, but my posts are monologues. I do it to ensure that I’m writing daily, so the muscles don’t atrophy. Also, now that I’m narrating my posts, it kinda serves as a proof-of-concept for any voiceover work I might do.

    However, Vox doesn’t allow comments from people who aren’t Vox users! WTF? So if anyone can recommend a free service that lets me put up a photo and a soundfile alongside the text (as here: http://akelatalamasca.vox.com), I’d be obliged!

  6. I do wonder sometimes whether writing blogs becomes some sort of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. I know there are times (and more of them as time goes on) when I am doing posts for the sake of doing posts.

    It’s not like I get paid for it. I just do it.

  7. [...] Building a community is an important activity to help push through the frustration phase into a higher level of expectation. I look at it not as an end goal but as a buffer against inactivity: The more people paying attention, the more hooks to stay engaged. It helps, too, to reinvent your blog—visually—from time to time. With BlogSchmog, I missed my own August deadline to give the site a face lift (and in the process change the configuration a bit to better help promote our work). At some point, it might become vital to invest the time to read Nick Carroll’s Law of the Blog about the legal aspects of this medium. All that seems terribly formal and heavy, though, to the point of mutating the motivation to blog into something unnatural. [...]

  8. Jan Herder says:

    Hey, being new to blogging, the point is well taken. I don’t have any tips to offer. I’m not at all sure who it is I blog for at this point.
    I’m not even sure why I blog. As a member of SLED I’m just getting over being a newbie, especially as a digital immigrant with a really, really heavy accent. Somehow it comes back to my teaching and the paradigm shift occuring there. I found myself trying to leverage Facebook in order to find and engage my students. But then how was i to talk the web2.0 talk if i wasn’t walking the walk? Now that I’ve started everything is different –in the blogging–and i find my self on a self reflective journey. Oddly I don’t feel shy about saying what’s on my mind. If this is relevant or even appropriate for my teaching I have no idea–so I’m not linking it to my Facebook groups just yet.

Post a Comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

\/ More Options ...
Change Theme...
  • Users » 1
  • Posts/Pages » 178
  • Comments » 472
Change Theme...
  • VoidVoid « Default
  • LifeLife
  • EarthEarth
  • WindWind
  • WaterWater
  • FireFire
  • LightLight

Apps of Interest



    No Child Pages.