December 2, 2005

london geek dinner with robert scoble, december 10th

zzzzzz7654200.jpg
The Lon­don Geek Din­ner with Robert Sco­ble is just one week away– Satur­day, the 10th of Decem­ber.
Please sign up if you haven’t already etc.
I’ve also heard a rumor that cer­tain mem­bers of the press are going to be there. Geek Din­ners? News­worthy? What?
[ALSO:] I’m won­de­ring if the wee “blog­ver­ti­sing” thin­gie just below could be used as a stan­dard, unob­tru­sive form of adver­ti­sing media. Thoughts?
[BLOGVERTISING:] “English Cut. The blog of Tho­mas Mahon, Savile Row tai­lor, London.”

3 Responses to “london geek dinner with robert scoble, december 10th”

  1. frosty says:

    Re: blog­ver­ti­sing…
    It’s pretty unob­tru­sive (except that the tag is too long) but if it were something other than EC there might be the “huh?” fac­tor.
    How would you sell something like this? How would you sell it that’s dif­fe­rent than just selling a link (something Goo­gle frowns on)?
    Come to think of it, you might as well do rel=nofollow from the start, because G is likely to down­grade all your links other­wise… so maybe this doesn’t work for any SEO effect but does work for direct traf­fic.
    I could ima­gine a sales pitch something like:
    “For $x per click, I’ll put up a blog­ver­ti­sing link to your site whe­ne­ver I think it’s rele­vant.”
    You pro­bably couldn’t have a full AdSense style bro­ke­rage for that (too easy to cheat) but it might work with someone like blo­gads, where there’s a direct matchup bet­ween adver­ti­ser and blog. CPC is tricky though because you have to deal with the fraud angle.
    On the other hand, if you don’t think of this as a blog­ver­ti­sing revo­lu­tion but rather as something limi­ted to high-traffic blogs of good repu­ta­tion (GV and so on) then you might not need a bro­ker at all. First because not many par­ties are invol­ved, second because in case of con­trac­tual pro­blems the blog­ging party has something just as power­ful as the other side’s abi­lity to withhold pay­ment: you can berate them on your blog.

  2. hugh macleod says:

    Yeah, Frosty, the idea is only hours old and I already hate it ;-)

  3. eSearing says:

    Hugh, On your style of blog adver­ti­se­ments. I have fewer than 100 uni­que visi­tors per day. So, I have taken your model and expan­ded the num­ber of ads for seve­ral small busi­nes­ses in order to help them and to help search engi­nes find me. Since I have a small follo­wing I can not obtain high value spon­sors and have to rely on G, other affi­liate income streams, and sma­ller spon­sorship values. Thanks for the ins­pi­ra­tion.
    There is argu­ment over whether my word­Press entries can truly be clas­si­fied as a blog, but it is an expe­ri­ment which may some­day define how blog adver­ti­sing for small busi­ness is done. (I can dream can’t I). I think of it more as a Con­ver­sa­tion with small busi­ness owners, entre­pre­neurs, and those that pro­vide tools or ser­vi­ces to them. Keep up the great work and know that you do ins­pire us nobodys out there.