Blogging’s not dead, but it’s pretty damn unrewarding

gateway_arch2 In the last two years, I’ve seen more and more people in my social circle starting blogs. Most of which were focussed on a micro-topic, including travelling to South America, to Japan, having a baby, self-help topics, and team-dynamics. All of them with merit, but about 80% of them ran out after a while. What is the problem? How about: finding the inspiration, not getting (m)any comments, balancing it with your actual job, etc. etc. Also, the baby eventually grows up, you eventually return from your trip, and there’s only so much to say about self-help (in my opinion).

But while our perception of blogging has changed over the years, particularly if you listen to early adopters, you could say that in a way blogging has become a mainstream phenomenon. Mainstream not meaning that everyone does it, but that everyone can do it. And the reason for that is I think the popularity of Facebook and Twitter, which is a gateway onto other services (incidentally, not many Facebookers I know that started a Facebook-only blog).

Sure, many companies have entered the game, several blogs have become companies, and many personal blogs have been closed or abandoned.  Consolidation and commercialisation often means that there is no more space for the little guy. But, who cares right? You could still set up 10 blogs in the next hour and nobody would stop you. It’s just, nobody would probably read you, unless you write a really good blog + advertise it a bit. But while traffic is clearly a currency of blogging, as are comments, it does not seem to be driving the adoption of blogs in the short-term.

Looking at the current blogging landscape, I can only conclude that blogging is far from dead. But is is perhaps best to be aware that every blog is not the same. Just take a look at the following categories that I have identified, which I am sure is not a complete selection. There’s:

  • The micro-topic blogs, which get started every so now and then, run out after a while, but don’t discourage others from starting their own.
  • The small business blogs, for professionals and SMEs seeking to differentiate themselves. Whether these blogs can continue to exist, I think, all depends on whether they can reconcile their short-term profit goals (and needs) with the long term benefits  of blogging, which are far from clear (please don’t take 37 Signals as an example that all SMEs should blog).
  • The small media-blog, which is what the Techmeme 100 is all about and which will never go away, as it’s a low-cost competitive approach towards battling/replacing big media.
  • The big media-blog, which is really a hybrid of journalism and opinion, neither of which will ever go away.
  • The corporate blog, which, similar to the small business blogs, still needs to find a raison d’être for itself. Exceptions are companies that already work on the web, like Google, IBM, Microsoft, O’Reilly.
  • The small and large (web-)celebrity blog, which for some is just ego-stroking and for others is an artistic outlet, both of which are justifiable, not only to the people who write them, but I think is also a big driver for the new blood in the blogosphere.

Clearly, no matter what people may say about the rise of micro-blogging and social networks, the blogosphere has become a complex beast, one that continues to attract attention, whether it’s in the form of traffic, comments (those 2 aren’t correlated on Tech IT Easy), or perhaps simple hype.

Blogging is dead, yay, now let’s get blogging!

Vincent

P.S. This marks the 5th anniversary of my blogging, which started in the Summery of 2004. How the time flies by. :)
P.P.S. Picture is of the St. Louis Gateway Arch, and is meant to be symbolic.

Related posts:

  1. The Poor Man’s Business Model—How Out-of-the-Box thinking can generate tremendous value for customers
  2. Vincent van Wylick joining as a guest blogger
  3. Social media is dead (not a post about social media)
  4. Thoughts about Tech IT Easy, inspired by my time in Paris
  5. Catching up on software and entrepreneurship books

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2 Responses to “Blogging’s not dead, but it’s pretty damn unrewarding”

  1. John says:

    Blogs are yet another tool of many in the social internet toolbox. An online presence for any brand or person can have tentacles reaching into vast nooks and crannies of the global mindscape.

    The power is in using the blog to support your overall purpose of being. For some, a simple blog will suffice. For some, a blog is complemented by tweets, social network profiles, presence in forums, youtube creations, and means of interaction of all sort.

    Just as cellular systems are shared from bacteria to barnacle to human, yet often tweaked for different purposes, blogs will continue to diversify in form and function while remaining a part of the social repertoire for some time to come.

    For how much time to come?

    Well, humans may be finding themselves in new immortal nano-nifty consciousness containers pretty soon, turning the old flesh-and-bone into antique. As such, the blog will eventually run it’s course, while the nature, or essence, of the blog will too find a new vehicle in the eternal iteration of the fluid balance of all possibility.

    I’d guess blogging lives to the tail-end of 2012, at the very least… maybe a decade more. The term “blog” may be replaced, but the song remains the same. I suspect there’s an infinite line of equivalent creations for all novel creations… so then one wonders, is anything truly novel? Perhaps there is nothing but non-novel novelty. The ultimate paradox.

    We want the immediacy of a tweet and the depth and richness of the view from atop a mountain.

    We’ll be downloading kung-fu, and uploading dream scenes pretty soon. Everything will be Now, our experience of existence will be extremely self-tailored… which is not to say self-tailoring won’t include desirable amounts of randomness and simplicity.

    Art, poetry, and The Dance will be, and already are the main inspiration and aspiration of Being.

    • Have I really written that terribly a blog post that you need to punish me with such a comment? I had to stop reading at “immortal nano-nifty consciousness containers,” sorry. It’s very philosophical, which I absolutely don’t think blogging is.

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