Looking for a 3D speaker, trainer, motivator or engine? Call 630.207.7530.

Posts tagged: BlogWorld

BlogWord08 | State of the Blogosphere | Twitter Updates

technorati-keynote

Interested in what happened at BlogWorld? During the sessions, I sent out what amounted to a 15 page Word document, which added up to over 300 updates. This post covers the state of the blogosphere address & opening keynote with Chris Alden, Anil Dash and Richard Jalichandra who previewed Technorati’s State of the Blogosphere report. You’ll find all of my BlogWorld08 twoverage [tweet +coverage] here.

Thanks to those of you who asked me to share these updates, including Lynn Terry who writes the ClickNewz blog.

Reader’s Guide: Each line represents a live update made on @wiredprworks on twitter.com. Reporting is in reverse order; so start at the end and read your way up. Note that this is exactly what I typed during the session, misspellings and all. When you see @name, this means that the person who was talking may be found on twitter.com/name. Apologies in advance for any inaccuracies.

Did you go to BlogWorld? Please share your resources in the comments section.

BlogWorld08 Technorati and Typepad Keynote Twitter Transcription by Barbara Rozgonyi @wiredprworks

blogit – new tool to post to blogs #bwe08

leaving soon to meet up with Chicago bloggers-and anyone else who wants to stop by-will be in the concessions area, wearing turquoise #bwe08

ccarfi: @wiredprworks #bwe08 mobile guide here, too: http://ventana.cerado.com/blogworld too. Tweets, peeps and agenda.

we have the power to make the giants jump – and we’ve already done it, talking about open id #bwe08

@ruthdfw #bew08 = BlogWorld Expo 08 www.blogworldexpo.com, watch all tweets at: http://search.twitter.com/search?q=bwe08

branches of social media = blogging, social networking, social publishing – trend will continue #bwe08

ruthdfw: @wiredprworks what does #bwe08 mean?

blogging is about power to the people – #bwe08

blogging is becoming an industry, 2007 majority of internet users reading blogs #bwe08

huge part of the iceberg is under the water in internal communications blogs #bwe08

blogging ranges from personal to political, what matters is what the media is achieving #bwe08

anil dash talking about blogging history #bwe08

six apart’s name comes from founder’s birthdays – six days apart #bwe08

note to my followers tweets with #bwe08 coming from sessions/experiences at BlogWorld Expo in Las Vegas www.blogworldexpo.com

@marismith – good to connect with you, too! your comment on being heard versus being memorable = great start to today! #bwe08

tough question to answer, the line between media and blogs is already gone #bwe08

where is the line between what is a media site and what is a blog @emom’s question #bwe08

marismith: @wiredprworks Yay, Barbara!!! Awesome to connect with you F2F at #BWE08. Whew, what an *amazing* event!!

technorati survey profiles top 10% of earners, mean income $19,000 year #bwe08

blogosphere is the new long tail, even w/a small audience, they’re incredibly loyal to the blogger and what they have to say #bwe08

average top blogger operated 3.5 blogs, get help if you need to #bwe08

on 9/22 technorati is publishing part 1/5 in a series, see the results at www.technorati.com #bwe08

about 1/2 have online or in person events – top 10% bloggers #bwe08

61% most influenced by other blogs, whole blogosphere can erupt on one topic #bwe08

90% blog about brands, 80% customer care, 60% 1/3 approached by brand to be an advocate, didn’t expect it to be that hight #bwe08

avg bogger spent $1000 on their business last year, top 10% earners use many tools and write 81 posts/mo #bwe08

bloggers everywhere in social media and in advertising, 1/4 use 3+ad mechanisms #bwe08

bloggers active web 2.0 consumers, avg. bloggers uses 5 web 2.0 utilities, #bwe08

diverse topics, other =43% that didn’t fit in 20 categories. expertise/experience top reasons to blog – #bwe08

technorati – #bwe08, 2/3 male, 50% 18-34, 52% outside of US, 72% publish in English, spread throughout US

76,000 blogs have technorati authority of 50+ #BWE08

95% of top 100 newspapers have blogs – technorati #bwe08

technorati – blogs=information and influence blogs are media, 77% of ppl on internet read blogs, #bwe08

sitting with @emom in front of @marismith in keynote #bwe08

in opening keynote about 1/2 full starts in about 5 minutes #BWE08

Cool Tool |Better Blog Composer | Live Writer

coolblogtoolTed, an audio consultant/aspiring professional chef/home improvement wizard, has a special tool for every job.

Whether he’s laying bamboo flooring, carving holiday roasts or installing the Dinosphere’s sound system, he’s convinced that the job gets done faster, smarter and better with the proper equipment.

In 2008, I’m premiering a Cool Tool feature that gives you ways to improve your productivity. Today’s feature, Microsoft Live Writer, is a Cool Tool that makes you a better blog composer.

Challenge

Blogging platform interface is clunky, limited and uninspiring

Solution

Windows Live Writer

Screenwriters use Final Draft to format and publish screen plays.

What do bloggers use to format and publish posts?

In my case, I started composing and formatting within a TypePad or WordPress window. I like having all the tools I need all on my screen at once, but I found both interfaces to be clunky, limited and uninspiring.

Beginning in Word and shifting over was a bit clumsy, but allowed me to save a copy to my hard drive. Saving content was an all-important lesson I learned when my blog mysteriously vanished – twice – overnight.

Writing in the small composition screen felt too cramped and if I left the screen up, the content didn’t get saved. While most of my posts run at less than 1,000 words, I didn’t lose a masterwork, but I often lost almost finished articles and starting over was never the same.

Thanks to Scott Allen’s Virtual Handshake blog post about his encounter with the Microsoft Live Writer team at BlogWorld [I completely missed their booth and thought I'd seen everything], I started testing Live Writer back in November.

Now, every post I write begins here. Here’s what you get . . .

- Slick WYSIWYG composition interface with a large window

- Auto-save options and a permanent home for all of your posts and drafts; even if you change blogging platforms you can take your posts and your images with you – comments stay behind, though

- Easy way to insert links, pictures and more . . .

inserttools

- Plug-in special features to customize your Live Writer experience

- Free Live Writer download walks you through how to set up your interface

- Familiar Word-type interface standardizes your blogging across platforms

- User-friendly interface manages all of your blogs in one place; making switching back and forth and composing on line effortless

Product Background

Searching back to August 2006, I found this article from ZDNet.com that talks about Microsoft’s first Live killer app.

Neosmart reports on this cool tool’s place in the .NET framework:

“But what most don’t know about Windows Live Writer is more what it represents than what it does: Windows Live Writer is the first full-scale consumer product to ship out of Microsoft’s camp built on the .NET Framework.”

Cool Tool Extras

Rick Strahl from West Wind technology tells how to extend Live Writer

Find out how to create Live Writer plug-ins and customization

Click on this image to see the interface . . .

windows-live-writer

Cool Tool Overall Rating: A

What cool tools help you get the job done better, faster and smarter?

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

BlogWorld|Leo LaPorte |Future OF New Media Publishing

BlogWord Expo’s Friday opening keynote speaker, Leo Laporte covered the future of new media publishing tools.

This post is dedicated to Robyn Tippens [link with photo of Robyn Tippens presenting Leo Laporte with his Weblog Best Podcast Award] of MyBlogLog, whose enthusiasm for this presentation motivated me to get up, get going and get started early on Friday.

Read Leo Laporte’s BlogWorld recap

Anil Dash of Six Apart introduced Leo La Porte, host of The Tech Guy radio show, as a person who combines the voice of authority and the voice of approachability. He’s somebody who gets it and also cares that other people get it, too.

Notes from Leo’s presentation . . .

For the last few years, his audiences have been full of technology people, now they’re full of real people. He opened with Bob Dylan’s lyrics.

Something’s happening here but you don’t know what it is, do you Mister Jones? Bob Dylan

We don’t really know what’s going on here. The other Mr. Jones is the rest of the world, the vast majority of the world who doesn’t know what new media is. Those are the people we want to bring into the fold with blogging, podcasting and video. In the new medium of the Internet, radio/audio/twittering/, the thing that’s constant is the Internet itself.

Leo’s blogged for 6 years. He loves blogging, but he’s not a great blogger [that's what he says]. What he really is is a podcaster, which is not a great word. The name is dead. The medium is vital and alive.

As a mainstream broadcaster, he does a TV show and has since 1992. Since 1991, he’s talked about technology exclusively. We’re changing the world.

He started putting his radio show on the Internet in 2001, doing Internet and chat rooms. Leo started putting audio on in 2004 when a 14-year-old kid called and told him about podcasting.

“This Week in Tech” came out in 2004 – a roundtable of people talking about technology. What’s new, what’s different, what’s exciting, really the premise for it. Now he does a dozen different podcasts.

Network reach is 470,000 people per month. It’s a big network and he’s always made more by asking for donations – getting $10K per month. Two terabytes/day ad agency is Podtrac. Will do twice that this year. Grows 50% each year for awhile.

The whole thing is done by two people. He rents a room in an old cottage. This is literally a cottage business. Uses skype for phone calls. The agency takes 25%, 25% goes to operating expenses, when there is revenue, everyone on the call shares the revenue.

Having a community is really important. In fact, it’s everything.

Book suggestion – download/read: "The Wealth of Networks" by Benkler

Old media, industrial media, is the distinction he makes with new media. In the old days, if you wanted to have a voice, you had to have a lot of money. Today, the mainstream media isn’t good in describing what’s important. We’re now in a revolutionary state. All you need is a computer to have a voice. There are 1 million people worldwide, which has completely changed everything. One-fourth of Leo’s listeners are outside of the US. He takes 25% off of the numbers for advertisers who only want to pay for US listeners. It’s global, cheap to do, and everyone can have a voice. It’s no longer a one-way conversation.

Bloggers and podcasters know it’s about the 2-way conversation. If the greatest aspiration people have is to be on CNN – don’t follow the old model. We can do anything we want to do now.

Tumblogs – takes a generation or two, has to be people who grew up with the new media.

It’s really going to be something completely different and new. You could lifestream, you could have a camera on your head, the more we can try new forms, that’s really exciting.

It’s about interacting with the audience, we’re moving from monologue to dialogue. The best thing about coming to a conference like this is we’re with other like-minded people participating in this brand new thing.

We’re in the inner circle creating something new. We want to expand it and convert the world and undermine the old media. Think of new ways to use your blog. Comment on other people’s blogs. The opportunity is to try to mix the media.

Different kinds of media and what they’re good for. . .

The Video Grunt, teaches you how to do video on the Internet.

We’ll be talking about writing audio and video and what each does. If you can access the next level of technology, with Utterz and Ustream

Why should you do this?

Writing is very rational and very cerebral. Very frontal lobe and it’s a great way to structure your ideas.

Video is very monkey mind, in his opinion. TV needs to appeal to your monkey mind. It doesn’t need to be rational and cerebral. It’s about emotion. The French Maid’s podcast. [viewer discretion advised]. The more different emotions you can stimulate, the more successful you’ll be: terror, fear, joy, anger, etc.

Audio is intimate. You’re in their ear. This goes back to the primordial mind. Did people begin to believe in God, because primitive man heard voices in his head? Rational, cerebral and very good at abstract concepts, audio is about speaking to someone directly and it’s really good for conversation.

When you write a blog, you stimulate a conversation. Look at the comments on YouTube. They’re moronic. Most of them are actually dialogue.

Your personality is the forefront of the blog, the author takes a little bit of a backseat. In podcasting the personality comes to the forefront.

Put a face with a name, you know who that is. Probably on a scale. As a blogger, if you would like to promote who your are in the sense of who you are, do a little video and audio. Say, “I will be live chatting and talking with you Thursday at 9:00.”

There is value with all form of media and mixing them has value to you.

Podcasting is in the software slump. Hit the wall after three years. There’s a ceiling here somewhere. When you talk to a podcaster, they might inflate the numbers. Everybody seems to have topped out. Reached the limit of technology, we’re not getting to the next group.

Have to drop the podcast part. Think of yourself as creating content. Podcast confuses people. If bloggers created more content, that would help. Make it more accessible and easier. You don’t have to go to iTunes to get it. Microsoft has software to download.

Podcast and video is so great. There’s this huge range of content. There’s a different sense when you’re in a community. Somebody doing a podcast is right there with you. People stare at TV personalities because they’re used to seeing them in a box. When you meet someone who’s listened to you, they’ve made a connection with you.

Read the book, “Linked: The New Science of Networks.” The Long Tail turns out to be true in almost every network. Hollywood actors, the cell. Interesting thing – when we scale free networks and zoom in on a fractal – we are each our own solar system. Really valuable to remember that.

If you do a blog about woodworking, your goal is to be the hub for woodworking, not the woodworking guy on CNN. The truth is, we’re all hubs in our own little world. If you’re looking for a job and you ask all your best friends you have a 50% chance versus asking an acquaintance. We are in the network topology and we have connectors from hub to hub. If you want to be successful, you have to branch out. It comes back down to – and science proves it – it’s about not monologue, but dialogue.

Old media is dead and dying. In 20 years, watching someone talk to you on TV will seem like a silent film. You’ve got to have a dialogue.

Leo launched a couple of new podcasts: parenting in the digital age and junk food. Most podcasts don’t have an arc: beginning, middle and end. Launching a reality show featuring Roz Savage. A rower, writer, speaker and blogger, Roz went across the Atlantic with a satellite phone and a PDA. The reality show will meet her and then they’ll talk to her as she rows across the Pacific. Get interested in trying different things within the podcast format.

Create new formats – and let’s reach out and talk to each other.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What’s your take?

Browse Wired PR Work’s BlogWorld Expo 2007 collection.

One in a series of lightly edited transcripts or comments by Barbara Rozgonyi.

BlogWord | PR Do’s and don’t's

In this session, the moderator guided the discussion among six panelists.

Top takeaways . . .

Good corporate blogs: Southwest, GM and Kodak.

“A press release has no real business in the blog world. It’s about community, ranking, participating. Until you’re engaged at the level, you really have no clue.” Brian Solis

Key Discussion Points

Take time to think before you act, good advice for any PR initiative.

Reach out with relevancy in a relationship.

Don’t leave pitches on Facebook, unless that’s the blogger’s preference.

Find out how the blogger prefers to be contacted: email, phone, blog

Commenting is a good way to begin your relationship

Engage each blogger in a way that matches their interests and their readers

Create social media releases only – in place of the traditional press release format

Specialize and focus

Treat bloggers with respect and ask permission to contact them

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What’s your PR do or don’t?

Browse Wired PR Work’s BlogWorld Expo 2007 collection.

One in a series of lightly edited transcripts or comments by Barbara Rozgonyi.

BlogWorld | Building an Online Community

Speakers

Wendy Piersall, Emomsathome

Matt Colebourne, CoComment

Dave Nalle, BlogCritics

Great session – please share your impressions or thoughts about building an online community.

The tone that Wendy sets in her posts is extremely personal. She stays appropriate and relevant. Because that tone is there, people are respectful. That personal aspect causes them to want to join the conversation more. People are touched emotionally. As much as you can do that. As passionate and personal as you can get, that’s what makes people want to share.

Any time you do see a new comment come in – shoot them an email, encouraging other new people – making your blog user-friendly for all levels. They might be too afraid to ask that publicly, put a little something in your side – beginners guide as a little welcome mat.

Wendy tries to let her readers know they come first. With that tone set, she suggest her readers work together and connects them via email. We need to push them to talk to each other. I don’t want it to be a one-way project. Tell me what you want and I’m going to have you guys work together. Within your own niche, there are ways to help readers work together. Put them in the spotlight. Really important, really simple and really easy to achieve. You need to answer that question every day: What’s in it for them?

Profitability on a blog is a wonderful dream, but unless you have something to sell, it’s a lot harder to make a profit on a blog. Find other creative ways to include ads. Find things to be related on that topic. It may take a very long time for a blog to take off. Go to blogger, click on next blog in random and you can click on dead blogs.

Wendy – the stickier that your blog is, the more that they’re invested in the content, the less they’re going to be interested in buying. What do you want? Clicks versus sticky? Sometimes they work against each other. Moneytize a sticky blog: sell your own products, direct.

Want to make good money? Join another group or create your own. You can get more attention. You can do deals and that pushes your monetization from a few cents to the $2-5/000 range.

Wendy realized that in order to grow her blog, she launched six more blogs on her site, but now she has six other people creating content for her site. Two of her readers are now writers. She went through a hiring process.

It’s important to advertise your blog as well. One way is to become associated with a larger site like BlogCritics with the goal of getting their name out there so the traffic will be driven from their site. Extends the community from your blog outside your blog. Community is everywhere. You need to be part of other communities as well.

IF your blog is sticky, your readers will come for the conversation. The number one way is to create ways to bring people into conversations.

Show people that there is a community, show some of the interaction so that new people realize that they are becoming part of something. A top commentator widget – with the number of comments next to the title encourages people to post. Be as open and as honest and as personal as you possibly can. The most comments out there come when people talk about life.

wendypiersall-barbararozgonyi

Updated 11.13.07 With Wendy Piersall at BlogWorld.

Browse Wired PR Work’s BlogWorld Expo 2007 collection.

One in a series of lightly edited transcripts or comments by Barbara Rozgonyi.