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Nowadays, though, a link from twitter.com/mashable or twitter.com/garyvee can send thousands of readers. That's part of the reason why I moved from a blogging platform that can syndicate out and also bring back comments in from these same networks. So I agree, gravity has shifted. (leaving this on Frienfeed too under your post)
http://louisgray.com/live/2008/07/importance-of...
It is still important to be engaged with the community, but it just doesn't drive traffic. I used to think maybe it was because I had gotten more visible (like those who read Robert probably know who I am already), but it is true across the board. My top traffic sources are Google, followed by Friendfeed and Twitter.
Does anyone pay attention to how much the twitter nuts actually read?
In other words, not all clicks are created equal and I believe you will find when they find your blog while searching for it, they actually read the content.
It helps to find that slice of folks that really love to tune into your message. I don't mind 80%+ that bounce. I'm really grateful that 15-20% had a wonderful read and experience.
thehub of all activities as it's the only space you completely control.
Friendfeed may go away but your blog is forever.
"Also, Google doesn’t pay as much attention to Twitter and Friendfeed as it does to online sites. If you don’t exist on Google, you just don’t exist. It’s not surprising that Mr Scoble made this surprising u-turn."
Well we know this is not true, take a look at how long Google takes to index a Friendfeed or a twitter post.
Right now Google: "Blogging is back? ORLY" I see twitter.com as the first result and Friendfeed will follow shortly. FYI: I don't even see scobleizer.com in the results yet. LOL
Am I wrong to read this as at least a bit of a mixed message?
For my money I'd like to see you extend your experimental return to blogging to a month, rather than just a week, Robert. I don't think a week will really do this experiment justice.
So I get the point you are trying to make.
The way you think and write, it seems that FriendFeed is a better medium for you, as opposed to blogging all your thoughts, ideas, and pointers.
I think that hulk image of you really helps on FriendFeed.
Meanwhile, you have that little puny image in Disqus.
On further thought and review, I now believe your original point(s) are well taken.
I am a bit slow on the uptake, how did you turn your image into the Hulk Scoble (plus, I'm old in Internet years)?
Ok, I gotta get over to FriendFeed.
'
Everyone have a good day.
I love simple things and a blog is a fairly simple thing that already makes sense to hundreds of million people. Also I love the way how a blog is not realtime but totally asynchronous and I can read it whenever I have time.
So if you wanna reach Mainstreet and not Geekstreet than my advise is to restart blogging.
Alex
Blogs are great for putting together local thought gravity wells that are uninteruppted. Comments then fly in and a very friendfeed like conversation forms below a post. I'd prefer conversations be both under the post, and within social media. That's the glory of the friendfeed iframes, I can have my cake and eat it too (thanks Paul Buchheit and crew).
If we didn't have this - what would we tweet about? ;-)
It is always to some other service (Blip.tv, Twitter, FriendFeed) on which he, his employer, or audience can not confirm such a claim.
There are more important things to measure, by the way. Engagement. Twitter, for instance, shows that via @ replies and retweets and other mentions. FriendFeed shows that by number of comments per item and number of likes per item. Facebook is the same.
But Blip.tv shows traffic and there are ways to measure traffic on Twitter, too. Everyone using a URL shortener knows how many clickthroughs they have, for instance (if they care).
Finally, here the audience might have just been bots. On FriendFeed, Twitter, and Facebook you can see that I have about 150,000 followers. All of whom you can click on and see who they are and what level of engagement they have with me. You have FAR MORE INFORMATION about my audience on those services than you have on my blog (well, except the last few weeks I've added a Google Friend Connect widget so you can start to see the same thing on my blog).
You should, fragmentation is a killer, as any Business School case-study, from the past century could tell you. Your old Channel 9, in fact, consolidated 8 and 10 into 9, making it actually stronger and better, imho.