Today's Web has become fertile soil for personal publishing. Not only is it easy to get your voice out...
Here's an article from our blog. This is a "permalink" page, which just means it's not going anywhere, in case you want to bookmark it or link to it from another site.
posted by Jay on January 22nd, 2007
in on tech, blogging, blogs, content, social design
Jim Benson has some interesting comments about using social media for opaque marketing. Part of the context for what Jim is writing about is the idea (or ideal) that blogs and other social media are naturally oriented towards “open” conversation, vs. the significant signs to the contrary, especially as blogs get adopted by marketing-oriented organizations.
What follows are a couple comments I have in response to Jim’s post:
I think it’s fair to say that blogs are fundamentally a generic medium upon which a large range of human and machine (bot) expression is not only possible, but natural and healthy.
It’s natural that blogs get used to mislead people. It’s natural that blogs get used by bots for spam. It’s unfortunate, but it’s also a key part of why blog are a successful medium. If blogs were really, by nature, about “open and honest conversation among humans,” hardly anyone would blog as much as they do.
And, so with social media in general: to the degree that any site or service is designed to become an actual medium of human connection, the features that support the range of human connection also support not-open, disingenuous (or dishonest) monologues and faux conversations generated by disconnected individuals, organizations and/or their bots.
All that said, blogging is an interesting practice (IMO, that is independent of the blog medium). Blogging is wherever individuals create web pages, written in the first person, with attribution and a timestamp.
Blogging is a good practice that organizations with positive intentions can adopt to reach-out to their customers / audience. If you want to let people know that you are, in fact, there, that you are open to conversation and, at any particular time, you are interested in talking about particular subjects, blogging is a fine way to convey those intents.
With organizations that are interested in communicating via the web, I often ask: Can you (individuals in the organization) give simple, brief and timely firsthand accounts of what you’re actually up to?
Comments and pings are currently closed.
...but your voice is heard, acknowledged,
and in many cases, responded to by interested intelligent readers who have found your work most likely because they sought it out and are happy to have found it.
—Biz Stone
Blogging: Genius Strategies
for Instant Web Content