Contact Us Forum Rules Search Archive
WebProWorld Part of WebProNews.com
Page One Link To Us Edit Profile Private Messages Archives FAQ RSS Feeds  
 

Go Back   WebProWorld > Marketing > Marketing Strategies Discussion Forum
Subscribe to the Newsletter FREE!


Register FAQ Members List Calendar Arcade Chatbox Mark Forums Read

Marketing Strategies Discussion Forum Discuss your marketing ideas, concepts and strategies here. What's working? What isn't?

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 07-19-2005, 09:50 AM
WebProWorld MVP
WebProWorld MVP
 

Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: KCMO
Posts: 1,110
Chris RepRank 4Chris RepRank 4Chris RepRank 4
Default How Do We Make Blogs More User-Friendly?

The following was written by Paul Chaney

Have you read the Catalyst Group study about blog usability call Net Rage? (PDF) If not, you should. Those of us who spend inordinate amounts of time using these things, evangelizing, and otherwise doting over them seem to forget (at least I do) that most people still don’t have a clue as to what a blog is or how they should react to it. In fact, most people probably could care less. They just want information.

David Coursey has written an oped about the study and provides an executive summary of the findings. I won’t take time to outline the bullet points here. Read his article to see them. Nevertheless, it’s apparent, despite the small sample the Catalyst Group used, that there is a vast chasm between the initiated and the uninitiated. It makes us sound almost like a cult!

My point in this post is to ask the question, how can we make blogs more user-friendly? Better yet, how can we initiate the uninitiated to a point where we create an environment in which blogs have ubiquity? Should we even try?

Months ago, when doing a series on the future of blogging, Doc Searls told me blogs are “not mainstream, and most people aren’t reading blogs yet. But race car driving, farming and espressos aren’t mainstream either, and all matter to our culture.”

If what Doc says still holds true, and the Catalyst Group report seems to indicate that it does, how can we change that perception? Do we even need to? Let me proffer a couple of ideas…

First, we could go on a massive educational campaign to teach people what blogs are, what purpose they seek to serve, and how to understand the nomenclature. (I even know some bloggers who haven’t a clue what a trackback is!) That’s one of the things I try to do at Allbusiness.com with my Why Blog? blog.

Another tack might be to let knowledge about them propogate on its own. The new internet is becoming much more peer-to-peer and it stands to reason that even the most nascent of internet users will eventually come around. After all, according to Technorati, more blogs are being created each day - some 80,000 - than even existed a couple of years ago.

However, I tend to agree with a conjecture made in another of Coursey’s columns where he intones that blogs (along with RSS and podcasts) will become so melded into the warf and woof of the internet these odd sounding names won’t really be of consequence. Though the names lose their ubiquity, the technology won’t. Blogs become just another form of content publishing, albeit one with a certain “style” and set of unique features. RSS becomes simply a way to subscribe to content and organize the web. Podcasts become a way to transmit audio/video.

Speaking from a purely technological standpoint, that’s what they already do. It’s just that we’ve become our own worst enemies by putting so much emphasis on the nomenclature, we’ve ostracized ourselves from the average internet user. (Maybe we ARE a cult!)

Coursey intimates that the term RSS will be replaced with the word “subscribe.” Blog “posts” will be called “articles” and so on. It is the technology that’s important, and how well it serves mankind, not what you call it.

This goes back to my assertion that we early adopters get very giddy about new tech toys, and things like blogs, RSS, podcasts and wikis certainly fire our jets. But to the “common man” the real issue is not what you call these tools, but how well they serve to scratch their itch in providing needed information.

Thanks to the likes of Yahoo! and MSN, the technology is becoming accessible and recognizable. So, maybe I’m fretting over nothing. It takes time for transition to occur. But, that transition won’t be so much in the direction of people adapting themselves to the technology as the technology adapting itself to people. (Does that make sense?)

One of the best examples of this is what I see happening with the new blog “channels.” Take for example Allbusiness.com. They have a well-established, highly-trafficked website that provides great value to readers, and has for years without the presence of blogs. Now, they’ve incorporated a blog channel into the overall architecture of the site and brought on a team of experts to, in blog-style, provide more useful information. Visitors to the site see the term “blogs” incorporated into the main navigation, so they gain some familiarity with it.

But, I bet if you ask the average Allbusiness.com reader, they really don’t care what you call the things. The real issue is not the form but the function, that being providing even more valuable content to an already content-rich website. I guarantee you most of the users of that site don’t know that we call our entries “posts.” They probably think of them as articles or columns. Essentially, that’s what they are, just written in a more punchy, concise, personalable style.

(Thinking about this whole meme, it dawns on me that my role at Allbusiness is be serve as a blog evangelist and teacher, helping people understand what blogs are all about. Gulp!)

To sum up this already lengthy post (er, article…er, column), let me cite some of Coursey’s more salient points. He says:

-The whole RSS/XML thing is way too confusing, and it will need to be replaced by some other nomenclature if it is to become ubiquitous.

-I am expecting blogs (and Podcasts, for that matter) to be all the rage until some moment when, almost as though a switch had been flipped, they don’t seem so exciting anymore.

-Blogs and “traditional” media will share so much DNA that whatever differences once existed will no longer be apparent.

-What may end up differentiating blogs from traditional Web media won’t be technology as much as style.

-Successful blogs will be about something, just like successful magazines, newsletters, columns and other written media.

Don’t get me wrong, I love everything about blogs, their search-engine friendliness, their “shoot-from-the-hip” spontaneity, their world “live” web feel, and the ease with which they allow anyone to publish their thoughts and ideas instantly. However, thinking long-term it makes sense to think that blogs, RSS, and podcasts will become blended into the overall matrix of online content. Let’s keep the main thing the main thing and express a willingness to admit that the usefulness of the technology is what’s really important, not what we call it.
__________________
Former WebProWorld Admin
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 07-19-2005, 05:58 PM
WebProWorld 1,000+ Club
 

Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 1,070
Dcrux RepRank 1
Default

Blogs have largely focused on making it easier for the proximate user (the blogger or publisher). Another class of user is the reader.

Thermal Mapping of weblogs opens up the heretofore opaque blog archive. Key to making a case for coporate blogging is not letting archived content fall into a bottomless pit. Trackbacks could use a similar makeover.

Check out this expermental feed design, and Veen's Usability of Feeds.
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 07-19-2005, 08:32 PM
WebProWorld New Member
 

Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: AZ - USA
Posts: 1
dhollings RepRank 0
Default Multi-blogging can help achieve user friendliness...

One way to make blogs more user friendly is to personalize the content to a more defined target audience. Hang with me as I expound.

There was actually a time (way back in internet history) when people would send out emails to a list of people and every email would start off with something like: "Hello there folks," rather than merging data in to replace a variable and produce the more personalized message saying "Hello Bill" to Bill and "Hello Hillary" to Hillary. Today an opt-in email list with advanced personalization capabilities is commonplace (though still under utilized for personaliztion).

If we hope to make blogs more user friendly and more "personal" to the readership, there are many instances where a "like technology" could acheive this in blogging. I forsee this mostly in the area of multi-blogging where the publisher has a core message or content stream they wish to blog, but need to address their readership audience in a mort targeted or personalized manner.

I'll offer two solutions later, but first it may help to understand what drew my attention to this challenge. I write articles etc. about Internet Marketing and provide tips to help entrepreneurs improve their online marketing strategies. I consult with representatives from over 80 specific companies (all in the direct sales, network marketing, or party plan professions). In addition, I consult and train entrepreneurs, bloggers and webmasters that have similar needs.

For a while I ran one blog where I desparately tried to write in a 'one-size-fits-all' style that would (I hoped) appeal to all my target audiences. But ultimately, it was near impossible because webmasters don't want to read tips for network marketers and the ladies of party plan, don't think tips for marketing bloggers people in MLM applies to them. To make it worse, Avon reps certainly won't read a blog mention Quixtar marketing strategies and more than guy will read a blog on 'tips for woman in business.'

I wanted to help all these entrepreneurs and expand my business, but running 100 separate blogs manually seemed impossible. A solution was needed and I found two. The first approach I tried was a 'duck-tape' solution, but worked ok (it might work for others too), but all that duck-tape lead me to create a much better system in the end.

Today, you're starting to see people, businesses and even celebrities run more than one blog. Sometimes it is because they want to focus on very different topics for a varied audience; or maintain 'media type' blogs where one might for text/content blogging while another is for podcasting and a third might be for photo-blogging. Yet the variety of blogging that will likely appeal to most, is multi-blogging 'similar-topic' original content to multiple target audiences. This variety allows a content publisher or author to compose one content stream (like perhaps, weekly articles on a topic of broad interest) and then have a 'rules-based' software help target and personalize that content stream for many different niche audiences.

If it sounds complicated, here is an interesting way to 'blogging ala newsletter style.' We all are familiar with newsletter programs that allow the author/publisher to generate one newsletter (perhaps weekly) and as the newsletter goes out each week, the software personalizes the content to each subscribing reader. Most newsletter software programs can do much more personalization and targeting than the publisher employs, yet even in it's most common usage, you have a publisher writing ONE content stream and that content is targeted to its readership.

Here's what I figured out for successful multi-blogging...

If any of the above made sense to you, you're likely thinking now... what software will do this for the potential multi-blogger? I know of only two ways to achieve this at the moment and below are my recommendations:

1) You can set-up multiple blogs at most major blog providers. For example, Blogger.com allows (according to their FAQ) "unlimited blogs." Most blog providers also provide the ability to email posts into their system for instant blog entry. For example, Blogger.com gives you a unique personal email address (for each blog) that a blogger can email content to. With this in mind, a multi-blogger could use any newsletter emailing program that has HTML sending capabilities and allows for 'variable' substitutions (you know, where you can do things like: Dear %%fname%% %%lname%%, and have the newsletter software substitute targeted content for the %%variables%%).

This approach is a bit limiting and cumbersome, but it works well. You can now enter all your unique blog emails into the newsletter program (as if they were subscribers) and set up targeted variables associated with each of your multiple blogs. Now, each week (or whenever you post) you enter your original blog content (like it were a newsletter) into the program, set-up variables to personalize each email and click the send button.

Amazing but true, all your 'subscribers' (that is, all your blogs) get personalized emails with you blog content ready to post. In fact, most blogs will post this instantly and you're off to the multi-blogging races.

2) The better method for those wanting more control and less 'jerryrigging' is to use software built specifically for multi-blogging. Currently, I only know of one such software. It's called Blog-zilla, and can be found at, www.Blog-zilla.com There is a news story on this software here:
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/7/prweb260055.php

3) How do the results look? Judge for yourself. Here is a TagCloud summarizing my 100 blogs: http://www.tagcloud.com/tag-zilla A comparison of content reveals a range on commonality in the area of 40 to 60% when one blog is put upside any other (which is good). But that's not the issue, it's the personalization to each audience that counts. 100 blogs in 100 minutes? You bet.

Some feel the promotional style used in marketing this software attracts the wrong type (content thieves, plagiarist, and cheats), but without question, it is NOT for those type, quite the contrary. In fact, subscribers to this web-based multi-blogging software are screened, trained and monitored. Blog-zilla eats spammers for lunch :-)

For those wondering how I know so much about all this multi-blogging. Well, let's put it this way... my challenge to make my blogs more user friendly lead me to become 'the man in the rubberized suit' behind Blog-zilla!
__________________
Dan Hollings
"The Man in the Rubberized Suite" behind Blog-zilla
http://www.Blog-zilla.com
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 07-20-2005, 02:15 AM
WebProWorld Pro
 

Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: South Africa
Posts: 269
espectations RepRank 0
Default

I have been running blogs on all my sites and those of my clients for more than a year now. As far as I understood the RSS and blog thing is that you post according to your specific field of interest or speciality.

People looking for into regarding that field of interest or speciality will then find your blog and subscribe to your RSS feed so that they then get the latest update.

The only snag still is that you do not know who is signing up for your RSS feed as none of the software tracks the subscribers. This way, you do not invade anybody's privacy as "they come to you" and in some cases and articles I read that RSS will replace e-mail marketing.

What I found in the real world is not that people do not understand it. To explain the concept is pretty easy.

The problem with most clients is to update the blog - I have a rule of once a week at least. The actual steps of posting to a blog is easy but getting them to do it is another story.

I think most clients still want a magic solution where they could have web sites and do nothing about it and become Mark Shuttleworth after a year.

Regarding RSS - yes, I agree with the article - very few people understand what it is all about. There is a huge education process that awaits us consultants.

Re. getting customers to post to blogs - yes, no posts to any of my or my customers' blogs yet but in my stats I see that it is the top viewed page.

So my conclusion? Well I do think people read it and they respond to the blog via normal channels of enquiry. I just once had a direct enquiry from one of my blogs which made me very excited as most of the time I update without knowing for sure if anybody bothers to read it.

I think adoption will be slow but once people grasp the concept it will explode.....
Reply With Quote
Reply

  WebProWorld > Marketing > Marketing Strategies Discussion Forum
Tags: ,



Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.2.0