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About The Social
CNET News' Caroline McCarthy is a downtown Manhattanite who believes that, despite popular opinion, the Web can actually help your social life. She's happily addicted to fun social-media tools from Twitter to Yelp to Facebook, sends an inordinate number of text messages, and has a tendency to waste time at the office reading restaurant blogs. Here, she explores all facets of the Web's gregarious side, as well as the unique tech culture in her home city of New York. (Don't call it Silicon Alley.)
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Or maybe we forget that blogs are not a major part of the internet, but as people working in IT and media related industries we see some things, like blogs, more than most people???
You should always do your research after something is "buzzed" about on the Web. People are crazy and the Web gives them free reign to waste your time on a constant basis.
Interestingly, that question also came up a couple of years ago at a Word of Mouth Marketing Association symposium discussing ROI measurements. One of the presenters said that blogs weren't even figuring in to what people were reading on the Internet. Yet there was no distinction made, or question posed to the respondents, if they knew the difference between a blog or a website (I believe the figures also supported the marketing firm rep's assertion that websites were more important than blogs.)
So, if people surveyed do not know the difference, they are likely to say "website." It's what's most common.
I wonder about the social network recommendation though. Are the recommendations from a friend on a social network? That would then be similar to word of mouth marketing in a face to face environment. I don't think the social network in general (like those cheezy little ads on Facebook) carries that much credibility (at least it doesn't with me.) Further, people's skepticism when it comes to blog endorsements is probably well-founded. Who knows if those endorsements are paid for or not, esp. if the site is a product review site. I'm more inclined to see a product review site as one that is being paid to endorse certain products over others--unless they state that they do not get paid. And that whole thing--paid vs. unpaid and disclosure--is something marketing bloggers are always discussing.
Actually blogs are the web. Any webpage(s), that have a unique RSS feed, a dynamically created URL and cover a certain topic is a blog. Especially in Google's eyes.
Social bookmarking profiles, (they have a unique feed) , Twitters, Google Reader Shared items, FriendFeed, it's a blog. Or before I get flamed "mini micro blogging platform" to be correct. Think about Google blog search now with it's own RSS feeds for each search term. RSS and blogs are most of the Internet, most just do not realize it.
You can ask most people over forty if they ever read a blog and they will say "I don't go for junk like that." They think blogs are written by guys wearing X-files T-shirts and living in their mother's basement with a Kevin Rose poster over their bed.
Chris Lang
keywebdata.com
- by Harrison912 October 28, 2008 6:21 PM PDT
- There's lots of interesting information on blogs. I've picked up some very valuable material on how to socially market market my safety and security web site as well as raise awareness for the products. Most of them allow for comments which is a great way to interact with the author and expand the discussion. Bloggs are awesome!
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