-
Website
http://www.scobleizer.com/ -
Original page
http://scobleizer.com/2007/07/08/is-the-a-list-dead-is-blogging-dying/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
danja
44 comments · 4 points
-
polizeros
52 comments · 1 points
-
AndyBeard
69 comments · 4 points
-
Zachary Adam Cohen
35 comments · 8 points
-
dbarefoot
40 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
1 day ago · 22 comments
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
1 week ago · 181 comments
-
2010: the year SEO isn’t important anymore
1 week ago · 67 comments
-
A new addition here: the Meebo bar
1 day ago · 7 comments
-
iPhone developers abandoning app model for HTML5?
1 week ago · 52 comments
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
Uuuuhhh...I know you guys/gals keep saying that, and it's a cute trick to tie it in and call it mini-blogging since blogging has grown so much but I still don't buy it. Sorry!
(1) How does subscribing to an RSS feed influnce reported traffic?
(2) It's summer in the norhthern hemisphere. Seems to me that even mobile people might have something better to do.
(3) I'm sure there is something of a bubble factor here. Sure, many of us (myself included) have been reading blogs since the very late 20th Century. But the masses? They probably heard their first mention of the term "blog" on something like MSNBC around the 2004 elections or later. It's just natural for things to taper off some after a couple of years.
You aren't much looking then, Om's a Web 2.0 hack, and a bad one at that. The video space is much more than just Joost copy-cats.
Technorati’s rankings are not as dynamic as one would hope.
You think? Welcome to the Common Sense Club, about time you showed up.
Here's a link: http://blog.streamingmedia.com/
Cutting to the chase, I am interested in what Robert Scoble says. I am not at all interested in what he does. His blog gives me the former, Twitter the latter.
I must disagree. Perhaps the reason for the downturn in blogging is that too many people are saying the same thing and not providing enough original insights. Twittering, which I love, can never replace blogging. It could replace the personal blog if the blog is about what you are doing (as billg suggests), but the depth of analysis provided by some of the better blogs out there are not going to be replaced by Twitter, Pownce or Facebook.
Of course, time is limited. Maybe people are spending too much time on Facebook and do not have time to peruse blogs as much as they used to.
I think those types of stats would rekindle the interest in professional bloggers.
Put some numbers behind the claims.
You would have to
A. Find out what kind of parameters define an A-List blogger
B. Measure them, or collect the data
C. Output the stats on a website using nice graphs and collect money from Adwords.
It would surely be a worth while project
I peaked around 100,000 uniques a month at this time last year, but have now slipped down to around 75,000.
However, I'm not sure if this is a general trend or if it is because of how badly I neglected my blog over the past year.
I guess bloggers who are not A-listers should hang it up and get their Facebook account lke the good little D-listers that they are because they are not saying anything important, like you and Om Malik (Yawn), other than telling their families what their new kid is doing. WOW!
I know you are suppose to be some kind of hotshot within the geekosphere, but I have not found anything that much different from any other site here. I actually came over here because of a crazy photo of you on the fake steve jobs site going crazy over an iphone.
Speaking to your point about why blog traffic is going down (f it is, your evidence sounds anecdotal to me) the reality is most blogs are neither interesting nor relevant and are roughly the equivalent of a dying man screaming in the desert. So, if your analysis is correct, that is probably the reason why. People just get tired of reading the same old rants about the same ole stuff...Maybe that is why the traffic at your non-A-Lister friends' sites are going down. The quality of the information is going down...