Pingback to Technorati
I wonder what happens if I Pingback to the search results of my weblog on Technorati? Did I essentially create a watch list? I suppose this will only work if Technorati is using Pingback, which is doubtful, but interesting.
Small Business Blogging
A quote from Dan Bricklin’s post about Small Biz Blogging : “An area where blogs can really shine is in crisis management. In addition to internal communications like normal project management, a public blog can be a major way to conduct effective communication with the public and press. Remember the Tylenol package tampering years back? Frequent forthright communication from a senior executive was crucial for maintaining public trust — it is the “textbook” case.”
Blogs May Provide Valuable PR Opportunities
Quotes from an article title “Pitching Blogs” on the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) site:
“… blogs are rapidly becoming authoritative news sources. PR professionals should keep this new type of media on their radar screens”
“Publicists have long sought means for reaching highly targeted audiences, including media reps, in order to drive buzz about their clients. With the kind of traffic and targeting that any of the aforementioned sites generate, topic-specific blogs can fit the bill.”
How Weblogs Keep the Media Honest
Howard Kurtz, media critic for the Washington Post writes about how Weblogs are influencing big media organizations “It’s called influencing the debate, in real time.”
Safire on the origin of Blogs ;
From NY Times Magazine, William Safire traces the etymology of Blog.
Using Blogs in Business
OMG, I actually agree with Cam … a quote from a quote on Blogroots :
“Where I work, much of the company-wide memorandums and communication is done via e-mail, with some e-mails containing numerous attachments that sometimes weigh in at a hefty one-to-two megabytes. It’d be so much better if these e-mails only referenced documents somewhere on the intranet instead of including them as attachments. The intranet page for each department could be a regularly updated weblog of information currently being circulated. This would solve so many problems with disk space and deleted e-mails, it puzzles me that some corporate intranets haven’t adopted these simple concepts for the easy distribution of information. —Cameron Barrett”
Web journals could have business value
Quotes from an InformationWeek article on Blogging’s business value [Thanks John]:
“weblogging will be a grassroots movement in business in the same way that, say, instant messaging has been.”
“… there’s built-in motivation for people to participate in blogging: They get credit for their ideas. A blog is essentially a repository of a person’s intellectual capital–a record of their thoughts, observations, contributions. People may switch employers, but they’ll take with them electronic journals of their best ideas. Blogging is a way to protect the most important brand of all: yourself.”
Blogging hits the mainstream, for better or worse
Quote from an article in the SF Gate: “… the blogging world hope that blogging’s personal, collective, man-or-woman-on-the-street approach to newsgathering might breathe new life into stale mainstream media. Clearly, the hundreds of thousands creating their own blogs, as well as the collective millions who read the blogs, are looking for something they’re not getting in the daily paper.” [more here]