May 29, 2005

blogging and self-interest

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[UPDATE: Good news– Loic Lemeur has kindly agreed to also appear on the panel.]
I’ve been asked to hold a panel dis­cus­sion at Reboot 7.0.
Here’s the plan:
Robert Sco­ble, Doc Searls, Loic Lemeur and me will inter­view each other.
The main focus will be: What makes for suc­cess­ful blog­ging.
By “suc­cess­ful”, I mean, blog­ging in such a way that trans­forms your life and career in a posi­tive way. That could mean money, or job, or social sta­tus, or per­so­nal stuff.
I have some ques­tions I’d like to ask Doc and Robert on this sub­ject. And hope­fully they’ll have a few zin­gers to send my way.
I’d also like to bring up a few con­ten­tious issues. What land­mi­nes to avoid etc. Ethi­cal issues etc. The poli­tics inv­lo­ved with blogs and kee­ping other blog­gers’ good­will intact.
We’ll do this for a bit, get things rolling then open up the dis­cus­sion with ever­yone in the audience.
There’s a lot of peo­ple out there asking the ques­tion, “OK, I know blogs work. And I know blogs work very well for other peo­ple. But I haven’t figu­red out how to get it to work FOR ME yet. Not like how I’d want to. What do I have to do to make it hap­pen?”
I find “blog­ging and self-interest” an end­lessly fas­ci­na­ting sub­ject. I’d like to use the panel to help bring that con­ver­sa­tion more out into the open.
I’ll see you in Copenha­gen.
[UPDATE:] Sco­ble gives it a men­tion.
[RELATED:] From Ross May­field: “Fear and greed is dri­ving Social Software.”

10 Responses to “blogging and self-interest”

  1. I have the res­pon­ses of, as of now, 73 top blog­gers on what makes a blog suc­cess­ful, via an email sur­vey I con­duc­ted.
    What is funny to me is how dumb many CEOs and busi­ness peo­ple are.
    To even ask “how can I make a blog work for me?” shows a rather inex­pe­rien­ced and illo­gi­cal atti­tude.
    I’m afraid cor­po­rate bozos will only want to blog if it inc­rea­ses sales or helps PR for the com­pany.
    They will not be inte­res­ted in for­ming can­did con­ver­sa­tions with a tar­get audience, just for the sake of sha­ring wis­dom, get­ting feed­back from cus­to­mers and pros­pects, express­sing a warm human side of the orga­ni­za­tion, etc.
    Com­ments from blog rea­ders, if ena­bled, will be igno­red or dis­mis­sed, if even read at all. We all know a busi­ness blog, I won’t name here, that outsour­ces the rea­ding of com­ments. Sheesh.
    Lots of CEOs and busi­ness peo­ple have only one thing to say: “Buy my pro­duct.”
    And only one thing they want to hear from cus­to­mers: “Love your pro­duct.”
    Idiots.

  2. jim wilde says:

    Ste­ven: Man, I feel your pain! We’ve come across that atti­tude so often. In kee­ping with the idea of “What makes a suc­cess­ful blog” when dis­cus­sing busi­ness blogs, we’ve found it easier to sell CEO’s/businesses our enter­prise blog­ging sys­tem (inter­con­nec­ted, sca­la­ble) for use INTERNALLY. When we show them that what they are wri­ting will not be published outside the com­pany — at least at first, and pos­sibly not at all until they’re com­for­ta­ble with it — they relax a little. We stress the idea that blog­ging within the com­pany has a real pur­pose — to share know­ledge. To break down silos. To create dis­cus­sion. Now, for us, a suc­cess­ful blog does all of those things but it doesn’t neces­sa­rily have to have a catchy post title at all. And that makes it all much easier for a CEO to digest. Once they get that idea, they are less stres­sed about wri­ting to the public. We’re still wai­ting for them to open up to public blog­ging, but a few busi­nes­ses are nea­ring that level, I think. Of course we hear this kind of story once in a while too: http://www.advancinginsights.com/mybiz/?q=fear_greed_ignorance_liars_blogit

  3. Nicole says:

    Hm. I was just thin­king: if they have to ask how to make them wor­king for them, I am farely sure they will not get them wor­king for them at all. ;(
    This is like being able to paint. You either can or you can’t.

  4. hugh macleod says:

    Not sure if I agree, Nicole. I’ve done plenty asking over the years ;-)

  5. I feel like I’m too harsh and impa­tient, but a blog is so obviously about can­did con­ver­sa­tions with a tar­get audience.
    Why would a CEO have trou­ble gras­ping this, and how it can bene­fit his orga­ni­za­tion?
    Something is fishy here. Smell it?
    Wait. Are we sure they really want to get down and dirty on the shop floor and cus­to­mer ser­vice cen­ter and meet face to face (figu­ra­ti­vely) with cus­to­mers via blogs?
    Are we often opti­mis­ti­cally assu­ming too much?
    Are some busi­ness lea­ders loving their ivory towers too much to climb down?
    Do they seriously have nothing to say to customers…thus an exci­ting, easy, inte­rac­tive con­nec­tion is shun­ned coldly?

  6. Rendez-vous

    En fin de semaine, j’interviens

  7. reboot 7.0 this week looks really cool

    I will be spea­king at reboot 7.0 this week, the spea­kers and par­ti­ci­pants list is impres­sive. I will pre­pare a pre­sen­ta­tion on euro­pean blog­ging and pick cases around Europe as much as pos­si­ble. Howe­ver I have been focu­sing much

  8. Loic says:

    Hey Hugh thanks again for asking me to join your super panel ! Hope­fully this time we can have din­ner together unlike in Paris…
    Looks like my track­backs fai­led:
    http://www.loiclemeur.com/english/2005/06/reboot_70_this_.html
    and
    http://www.loiclemeur.com/france/2005/06/rendezvous_224_.html

  9. Heiko Hebig says:

    My ques­tion: Is suc­cess­ful blog­ging about avoi­ding land­mi­nes? Or is it about step­ping on them?