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Between Bloggers

Blogger Burnout

Friday, January 25th, 2008

A long time ago, the previous author of this site wrote about 5 Ways to Avoid Blogger Blindness. Why would he tackle the subject of blogger’s burnout and blindness so early on, even before he started talking about the craft of writing for blogs and promoting them in-depth?

Less Burnout = Better Blogger

Your capability to maintain mental clarity and stability is directly related to your success as a blogger.
Is this true? I mean, do you have to be mentally clear and stable to post a good subject and write logicially enough so that the reader understands you?
It means great content more frequently rather than too much filler content followed by long periods of nothing.

It means more visitors because you write attractive content more often and promote it more steadily.

It means more money if you monetize your blog.

It means stability.

Getting a handle on why blogger burnout occurs and how to prevent it is essential, so I’m covering it now before I cover the process of blogging in a great deal of depth.

It all comes back to your decisions and your sense of passion for blogging. The more passion you are about blogging about the topics that you like, the more the readers will see it in the blog. Of course, it is nothing physically, but it can be seen between the lines.

Of course, your passion for blogging has to relate to how much time you are willing to spend not only to post on your blog, but also to promote it.

If you only post on your blog (without promotion) then you have to strive on the fact that people will randomly get to your blog via google. But heck, if you sign up with technorati, claim your blog via google analytics, and join forums that allow blog promotion, then you are not only promoting your blog, but you are also getting new ideas to post on.

This exchange will definitely show up when you write your posts, simply because of the fact that you are writing about what all other people are writing about and, also taking your own perspective on things.

So, just keep in mind that only posting is not the best way to blog on your blog.

Refs:

http://performancing.com/node/1340

http://www.wired.com/culture/lifestyle/news/2004/07/64088

http://blogcritics.org/archives/2006/02/06/144501.php

Boing Boing - Still one of those role model blogs

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

Boing Boing is a great blog. If you don’t read it, you should.
boingboing logo
It’s one of those role model blogs, a success story, that everybody looks up to and admires.

Truth is, it’s also one of those success stories that seems overnight, but wasn’t quite - they’ve been at it for many more years than blogs have been around, beginning life as a paper zine. Remember paper?

Michael Martine has just written a fantastic post called What You Can Learn about Blogging from Boing Boing that covers some of the lessons you can glean from this most mighty of blogs. It brought a smile to my face to learn that Michael’s article was inspired by one of mine.

Cory Doctorow once said you should pretend you’re a news wire writer when you write your headlines; simple and to-the-point. The key to remember is that if you’re writing a blog that isn’t quite as newsy as Boing Boing is to use that principle… but only for the headline.

It differs for blogs that write anything other than news. Here’s how:

During your post, stick to some of those newswriting conventions - short paragraphs (1 sentence per paragraph for news but 2-3 will do for blogs), aggressive removal of tautologies and redundant words - and even paragraphs if you’re that kind of writer - and remaining on topic at all times.

That said, create a voice for yourself and use it. Show your personality when you write. Don’t make it self-obsessed, and watch out for the overuse of the word “I” - the key is to develop a personality, not talk about yours.

One trap that many writers following this advice fall into is adding in useless “I think” or “I reckon” or - you get the point. You’re writing the piece. It’s obvious that it’s about what you think, and you don’t have to point it out. If you do, it just makes you look uncertain.

So visit Michael’s blog and learn the lessons of blogging that Boing Boing offers.

But remember, if you don’t write a Boing Boing style blog, don’t try to write as if it is one.

Between Bloggers: Copyblogger and Away With Words

Monday, August 13th, 2007

Note: this is the debut entry in a new category called “Between Bloggers” - all about relationships between bloggers, how we communicate and how we treat each other.

It started with a joke - or an attempt at one.

In “Three Ways To Spice Up Any Blog Post,” Brian Clark at Copyblogger gave an example of his exhortation to use sensuous language (i.e., language that appeals to the senses):

The crackling flames danced manically upon the charring husk of the car, illuminating the starless night sky as I stood and watched helplessly. Warm canyon winds pushed the pungent smoke into my face and nostrils, and I tasted my own salty tears at the thought of the laptop in the back seat. All I could think was, how am I going to blog this?

The comments he got in response to this post revealed a rift in perception - some people got the joke, some didn’t. (Do you? Just from this quote, can you discern Brian’s intent? Of course not - you need context. Go read the whole post. We’ll wait for you.)

Nancy Friedman at Away With Words had more to say, though, and responded to Brian’s post in “Very Bad Writing Advice“:

All I could think was, “Get me rewrite!” This passage is the antithesis of “vigorous language.” It doesn’t appeal to the senses; it calls attention to its own overwrought construction. Vigorous language employs nouns and verbs, not flabby modifiers and clichés like “crackling flames.” Granted, Clark is overdoing it for effect (see his Point #3, “Be entertaining”), but even one of his phrases would be too much.

Her comments, in turn, quickly turned to whether Brian had been serious or ‘tongue-in cheek’, and Nancy replied she “got” that it was an attempt at humor, but opined further:

“Quite why” is indeed the question. I think most of his readers will take him literally.

Brian popped in:

I’ll let you know *why* in an upcoming post. And don’t try to set your self apart from the “literal” crowd, Nancy… you’ve demonstrated that you are far less than acutely perceptive, and yet more than willing to step up and let everyone know it.

And explain he did, with this post, “The Dangers of Humor.” After a brief discussion of humor and its risks in copywriting, he takes note of Friedman’s post:

Sure enough, one reader ridiculed me for my “purple prose,” while another actually chastised me. An especially self-important blogger named Nancy Friedman even wasted 963 words of her life equating me to the end of good writing as we know it. Nancy doesn’t get a link, because trolling for links via attack post is so 2005.

“Rory” commented:

I’m not sure Nancy Friedman deserved such an extreme mauling. “Self-important”, “wasted”, “trolling for links” are quite judgmental expressions. I only read an article which took issue with the examples you used. Granted, Friedman made some unnecessary comments, but on the whole it was only her point of view. I didn’t see anything that equated you with the “end if good writing as we know it.” Following her links reveals quite a background in writing. “Do try to keep up Nancy” comes across as being belittling, and sarcasm only stokes the fires. In my opinion, that outburst soured a helpful post. Surely it wasn’t necessary. Honestly, it sounded to me like the extreme reaction of someone in fear of being “found out”.

Not content to accept the drubbing, Brian replied:

Rory, let’s take a look at what poor Nancy Friedman dished out at me first, shall we? “Very Bad Writing Advice” “Brian Clark’s blog, Copyblogger, which *purports* to teach bloggers how to improve their writing skills…” “In a word, it’s rubbish.” “hackneyed…” “don’t bother with Copyblogger…” Frankly, Nancy made herself look like a complete fool. She tries to come across as sophisticated, and yet only establishes that she is anything but. Even if she didn’t think the joke was funny, she should at least have been perceptive enough to realize that I wasn’t being serious. It’s not like I was being subtle beyond the means of a smart gal like Nancy. No, Nancy just wanted to have a go at a bigger dog than she is in the hopes of getting some attention. I think I went easy on her given the nastiness of her post.

(Line breaks omitted.)

And there, we’re going to stop, while we explore the issues.

Using Humor: The First Copyblogger Post

In my opinion, where Clark fell down on the first post wasn’t in his use of humor. True, you’d have to be nigh unto psychic to get that the quoted paragraph was a noir take on Scoble, but that’s not the real point here, which is reflected in Clark’s second post with this line:

If the last line doesn’t give it away, the fact that no one has ever seen me write this way in a year-and-a-half might be another clue.

Clark presumes that everyone reading that first post knows him, knows his style well enough to know that he hasn’t written “this way in a year-and-a-half.” And that’s a dangerous presumption to make. Think about the message to a new reader implicit in such an assumption, and what that new reader is going to think upon reading that post, with that line, and its general sense of “everyone knows me.” Is the new reader more likely to think to him- or herself, “Oh, wow, I’m so grateful I found this blog that everyone else already knew about” or is the response more likely to be “Huh - he couldn’t be that famous if I haven’t heard of him before - what a loser, etc.”? Human nature being what it is, we’re more apt to think “nothing wrong with us - must be something wrong with the other.”

And that’s how blogs stop growing.

However, it’s a bit presumptuous, nothing much more. Although it makes the error of assuming an intimacy that may well not be there, I submit that it’s not the real problem in this exchange.

Friedman’s Post: Attacks on Big Dogs

Friedman’s choice to take Clark to task is an interesting one. I don’t know what sort of traffic she gets but I think it’s fair to say that Copyblogger gets more than Away With Words. So while Clark’s assessment of this exchange as Friedman taking on a “bigger dog” - as distasteful and conceited as it might be - is probably correct, at least factually. In traffic, at least, Copyblogger is the bigger dog.

Friedman’s post, or rather the tone of that post, is a little on the pompous side, as one of her commentators notes. But is it really an “attack”? In one sense, no - she’s merely expressing an opinion about the content in Clark’s post. But when she notes that writers who really want good writing advice shouldn’t “bother” with Copyblogger, she’s treading into attack territory. That’s a little personal. What happens in the comments is even more personal.

But is she, as Clark and some of his commentators note, really simply angling for traffic? That itself is also a dangerous assumption, and one that isn’t warranted by the mere fact that her blog gets less traffic than Clark’s does. Friedman obviously feels pretty passionately about her assessment of Clark’s advice, and apparently at least a few others agree with her.

However, that doesn’t mean the post wasn’t ill-advised. There is something in the tone of Friedman’s post that is self-contradictory, self-important - and I think that’s what set Clark and his supporters off. Friedman could have toned down the language and still made her point effectively.

Which brings us to . . .

Clark’s Last Post: Is It Funny If You Have To Explain It?

Some look at Clark’s post, inevitably, and see an after-the-fact attempt to justify a flop. That’s an opinion - nothing more. Others look at the same post and see a righteous defense to the losers who just don’t get it. That’s an opinion, and nothing more, as well.

Is it funny if you have to explain it? As Clark himself recognizes in that same post, the answer is clearly “no” - or at least “not so much.” But, again, whether the original passage is funny or not isn’t really the issue of this post - it’s how these two bloggers responded to each other, and how their respective readers responded to them in turn, that fascinates me. And here, Clark’s second post is rather disheartening - although not as much as the comment quoted above.

Refraining from any Rodney King homage, I will restrict myself to the effect of Clark’s approach on his readers - or, rather, on this reader. What I got out of this post and comment is an impression, however unfair it might be, that Clark sees himself as rather an untouchable phenomenon - an “A-plus-plus List Blogger”, if you will. I daresay that’s not really how Clark sees himself - but that’s the impression his unfortunate choice of words creates.

In the final analysis maybe that’s the lesson here - you have to take responsibility for your words, if you want to keep your status with your readers.

Final Score?

Everybody loses. Especially the readers.

About Blog News Watch

Blog News Watch is your source for all things bloggy - technical tips, "blogging 101" how-tos, open discussions on blogging and its place in Web 2.0, writing advice, and, yes, news and recent developments. If it's about blogs, it's at Blog News Watch.

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