Blogging as signposting
Submitted Sat Jun 21 2008 23:49:00 GMT-0400 (EDT)I was talking with a friend the other day thinking of starting a blog of her own, and it got me trying to parse through the deliverable benefits you get from this sort of enterprise.
Community, active learning ... those things are great, and very real. But the one most quantifiable to a bottom-line-oriented boss is likely to be search.
Every post on a blog is a signpost that says, "here's a resource about X" -- for months or years afterwards when people punch the keywords into Google. It's an incredibly powerful, cheap and genuine search strategy and for any charity whose issue isn't solely indicated by incredibly crowded search environments like "Britney Spears panties". Every day, we see a steady trickle of traffic on topics we've covered here, both on-topic to our raison d'etre and off.
I got a weird but welcome example of that this week on my other blog. All of a sudden one day, I had huge traffic (by my paltry standards) coming to a single post -- but there was no identifiable link out there. It was all search. Out of nowhere, months after the publication, that post had its highest-traffic day ... and then, it dropped back into obscurity:
What the heck?
Turns out, it's a post about Strom Thurmond's romantic adventures with a condemned inmate ... and on June 19th, the day of the hit parade, Paul Begala referenced this affair on a front-page Huffington Post story whose (currently) 94 comments testify to the HuffPo's traffic footprint.
There's no link to little old me in the Begala story, more's the pity; but, just about anyone who searched it had a page of mine on the first page of results, and what with the salacious appeal of the lecherous old goat hooking up with a murderess on her way to the death house, it was searched a lot.
Not that I'm over there doing this specifically, but especially for an organization mulling a blog, or an existing blogger mulling what to post, one could do a lot worse than starting here:
I want this site to be found by everyone who goes online looking for _______
... and building posts around the various possible words and concepts that fill in that blank.
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Blogging and the Feminized Public Sphere
Submitted Fri Apr 11 2008 14:39:23 GMT-0400 (EDT)This Blog Is a Phish for the No-Fly List
Submitted Fri Feb 01 2008 16:06:19 GMT-0500 (EST)Blog | TSA | |
Structure | Networked, sharing | Top-down, secretive |
User's Alternatives | Goof off elsewhere | Hitchhike |
Characteristic discourse | Questioning, conversational | Pettily dictatorial |
Liquids allowed? | Downright encouraged | War on States of Matter continuing unabated |
Punitive Measures Available | Troll-rating | Extraordinary rendition |
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