Archive for the ‘My Thoughts’ Category

Why?

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Why write a blog?

Why?

I have written a few blogs in my time, both personal and corporate, the most successful being Project 183. Blogs are a great platform to put your ideas and thoughts on whatever you want into a public arena. And can be very rewarding for the mind.

This particular blog you are reading, I have only just started.

And I made a fatal error before I started – I didn’t decide why I needed this blog.

The key to any great blog is to have a central theme, that you are passionate about not just today, but tomorrow as well.

Many blogs start out in a blaze of glory, posting every day for a couple of weeks, before that initial enthusiasm dies out, and the continual effort to find something to write about, then actually writing about it, becomes more than can be bared.

On top of that, lots of bloggers lose interest because they don’t receive any/many comments on their posts.

So, before starting a blog, ask yourself these questions:

1. What is the ONE central theme behind this blog?
Don’t try to cover everything. Focus on one thing, and one thing only.

2. Are you passionate enough to write about this topic to write about it for more than a year?
Blogs are long-term investments. If you don’t think you can give yourself at least a year at it, don’t bother. Stick to joining forums or Facebook groups where you can discuss your topic of interest with similarily-minded people.

3. How often will you post?
Great blogs are consistent in their quantities of blog posts. If you only post once a week, or twice an hour, or once a day, that’s fine. Just be consistent. Your readers will thank you for it.

4. Do you care whether anyone reads your blog?
Are you writing this blog for you, or for others? Getting a comment from a reader is like a little bit of validation to you that the post was not only worth reading, but worth talking about.

But remember, there are hundreds of millions of blogs out there already. So decide if you would abandon the blog if you didn’t immediately get comments on your posts. If you would, then probably don’t bother starting.

5. Would you market your blog?
If you answered yes to question 4, and you do care if people read your blog or not, then you need to be willing to promote your blog.

How?

Visit other blogs with similar interests, and comment on their posts. Write a blog post about another blog you like, and link to them. Add other blogs to your blogroll.

Links and comments are the currency of bloggers. The more you give out, the more you get back. And eventually, but not straight away, more people will start coming to your blog.

Of course, if you are not fussed if anyone ever reads your blog, you can skip this. But if you want people to hear what you have to say, you have to get out into the blogosphere and make yourself known.

For me, I did not ask myself these five questions properly before I started this blog. And until I do, this is the last post you will read here.

Until the next posting,
Heath

Strategy

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

“I don’t agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.”

This quote from Voltaire has a connection to Ryanair, in my eyes.

Here’s how.

I hate Ryanair

To start with, let me just say that I hate Ryanair.

They fly from, and to, obscure airports, their customer service is horrendous, they charge ridiculous prices for things like paying online with a debit card (unless you are one of the three people with a Visa Electron card), and frankly, their website is an eyesore.

Despite all of this, I can’t help but admire one thing about Ryanair – their strategy.

Not so much the actual strategy, but the fact that they have one. A clearly defined one. Because without a clearly defined strategy and vision, it is like sailing around the world without a compass.

Their strategy is low cost, no frills flights – and everything they do shows evidence of this strategy. All standard costs are stripped out, and made to be ‘extras’ that you can avoid paying (i.e. getting a Visa Electron card). They regularly do £5 flight deals. They don’t do refunds – ever.

They show no evidence of spending money on big flashy TV campaigns, or a nice website, thus giving the impression that every spare penny they make goes into continuing to fund cheap flights.

And it is a strategy that must be working, with customer numbers expected to increase by nearly 20% in 2009 compared to 2008. It is like we are all masochists, willing to go through Ryanair hell to save a few pounds.

To connect this back to the quote at the top of the page, here is my Voltaire-esque quote:

“I don’t agree with your strategy, but I will defend to the death your right to have one.”

Well, maybe not to the death – but I will blog positively about it at the very least!

If you want to read more into the Ryanair strategy, check out this interview with their CEO, Michael O’Leary.

First

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

“Every oak tree started out as a couple of nuts who decided to stand their ground”

With that anonymous quote I would like to welcome you to my place, where some nutty, random ravings about all matter of subjects will hopefully grow into something resembling an oak tree.

Not actually resembling an oak tree. That would be strange. But you get the point.

Heath’s my name. Nice to meet you. Thanks for visiting.

As I sat down to write this first post, I thought:-

“Should the post be just an intro, saying hello and telling people what the blog will be about OR should the writer skip an intro post, and just start normal postings?”

To find out, I chose 25 blogs, most of which I have in my RSS feed, and looked at what they did for their first post.

One method definitely came out on top. Care to guess? Here are the 25 blogs I chose, after which the answer is revealed.

Ad Contrarian

Adspace Pioneers

The Art of Nonconformity

Ben & James

Bill Riddell

Brand DNA – one of my favourite blogs

Chris Brogan

Crack Unit

Creative Maverick – my namesake

Dan Germain

F*^! You, Penguin – great if you hate cute animals

Good URL, Bad URL

Hundred Pennies – these guys do a great podcast

I don’t know, do I? – funny, quite random musings

Logic + Emotion

LOVE Creative – one of the few company blogs I read

The Oyster Project

Pigs Don’t Fly

Project 183 – my other blog

Scamp – ceased recently, but well worth a visit through the archives

Sean Ogle

Seth’s Blog – a must read. Full stop.

Small Bears and Bogeymen

stuff and junk

that canadian girl

The result; 15 jumped straight into their first post with no intro, nine had an intro post, and one spent the first post inviting people to be guest bloggers.

A surprise? It was for me.

Interestingly, none of the first posts covered everything.

Those that introduced their blog did not use that same blog post to start blogging about their topic of interest.

Those that jumped straight in also jumped straight past introducing themselves, or the point of the blog (although for some of the blogs, there is a chance that they simply deleted their intro post for whatever reason).

Also of interest is that a large number of blogs started in 2007, indicating that 2007 is the year when blogging became ‘mainstream’. So anyone who blogged prior to 2007, you are a trendsetter – well done.

In my quest for the ultimate first post, I also came across some tips other people have given for writing a first post, including tips for corporate blogs, and blogs about horses (yes, horses).

According to these sources, a good first post must include an intro of some sort, providing some detail of who you are, what you plan to write about, and all of those boring things.

Well, after looking at other blogs, looking at all the tips, and scratching my head a little bit, here is what I think makes a great first post:

Keep it to one sentence.

There is not much point writing a big long first post, as no-one will probably read it anyway. By the time visitors start coming to the blog, there will be several more posts out there, pushing the first post further and further down.

So a quick hello and a couple of words about what you plan for the blog should be all you need.

But don’t take my word as gospel – just look how long this first post ended up being!