Friday 17 October 2008

Blogging Becomes Mainstream

In a Technorati-sponsored survey of bloggers (by Decipher) conducted between July and August 2008, results revealed a 2-to-1 male/female ratio among bloggers worldwide. Technorati openly admits that the gender skew could be at least partially attributed to “the type of people that come to Technorati and register.”

It also looks like the lines between blogging and the mainstream media have disappeared. That’s another key-finding of this survey. “Blogs are now mainstream media,” said Richard Jalichandra, CEO of Technorati, “We’ve certainly seen that with the number of professional, semiprofessional and passion/enthusiast bloggers who are creating real media experiences. At the same time, you’re also seeing mainstream media come the other direction to add blog content.” Source: eMarketer.

Friday 26 September 2008

Google : 10 million to help our world

In celebration of its 10th birthday, Google has announced its newest pet project, bankrolling the improvement and betterment of people’s lives. The project, which is known as Project 10^100, will invoke a panel of judges and choose up to five ideas.

People are encouraged to submit their ideas, in any of 25 languages, at www.project10tothe100.com through October 20. Entrants must briefly describe their idea and answer six questions, including, “If your idea were to become a reality, who would benefit the most and how?”

Thursday 7 August 2008

50 Online Applications and Sites to Consider

Great post on Chris Brogan’s blog. Chris is the cofounder of the PodCamp new media conference series and a social media veteran. In this post “50 Online Applications and Sites to Consider” he created a list of 50 websites and online applications that people itching to experiment or move deeper into social media need to know about.

The list includes everything from the obvious to the obscure and encompasses a diversity of categories, from blogging and microblogging sites to a variety of social networking, bookmarking, and news sites.

Friday 25 July 2008

Google launches Knol – a wiki with bylines

Google’s newly launched social-informational site, Knol, is described as being very similar to Wikipedia’s community intelligence model, but with one major twist: Knol articles are given bylines. The articles, are single-topic, stand alone entries and are not updated chronologically as in the Wikipedia model.

Knol has also publishing tools similar to single blog pages. But unlike blogs, Knol encourages writers to reduce what they know about a topic to a single page that is not chronologically updated.

Google plans to implement a ranking system for articles written on similar topics, which will push relevant articles to the top and encourage competition.

Sunday 29 June 2008

BlogWorld & New Media Expo

The 2008 BlogWorld & New Media Expo will take place September 20-21 at the Las Vegas Convention Center, with the exclusive “Executive & Entrepreneur” conference beginning September 19th. BlogWorld is still a unique industry-wide tradeshow, conference, and media event dedicated to promoting the dynamic industry of blogging and new media.

In addition to the only industry-wide exhibition, BlogWorld features the largest blogging conference in the world including more than 50 seminars, panel discussions and keynotes from iconic personalities on the leading-edge of online technology and internet-savvy business. Read more »

Monday 23 June 2008

DutchCowgirls “Online is niet langer mannenwereld”

Sinds enkele minuten geleden is DutchCowgirls.nl live, het eerste Nederlandse marketing- en techblog gemaakt door vrouwen. En daar zijn we best trots op. De site gaat over merken, producten en marketingcampagnes en richt zich op mannen en vrouwen die bovenmatig geïnteresseerd zijn in internet, marketing, gadgets en alle andere mooie dingen.

Mede-oprichter van DutchCowgirls en al jaren bekend blogster op DutchCowboys, Marjolijn Kamphuis: “Af en toe lijkt het alsof de online wereld vooral het domein is van de man. Vrouwen zijn net zo goed geïnteresseerd in technische dingen die mooi en nieuw zijn, en kijken daar vaak net even anders tegenaan. Vandaar dat we meiden met deze interesses een eigen spreekbuis wilden geven die ruimte biedt aan die typische zaken die hen juist opvallen.

DutchCowgirls is niet zo maar een spin-off van DutchCowboys maar een bewuste keuze om in het veld van van marketing en communicatie blogs een nieuw en ander geluid te laten horen. Door het in het verlengde van DC te plaatsen krijgt het juist extra lading.

We geloven dat de som der delen sterker is dan het orgineel en dat is niet altijd zo.

dutchcowgirls

Read more »

Saturday 5 April 2008

And the winner is “DutchCowboys.nl”

We are all very excited by winning the NextWeb award for Best Weblog.

nextweb-award

The other winners in the Next Web Awards, (over 127,000 votes online for all categories) were:

Friday 4 April 2008

Robert Scoble is spending less time blogging

As people spend more time on a variety of social networking platforms, they are spending less time blogging, and it’s having an effect on the blogosphere. Social networks, according to Robert Scoble, are replacing a lot of the functions that blogs used to perform — and are doing them faster, better, and in a way that’s more targeted.

Scoble “Visit my FriendFeed and you’ll see why I’m blogging less (it shows you what I’ve been generating on other services). When I started this blog in 2000 there wasn’t Twitter. Wasn’t Upcoming.org. Wasn’t Google Reader. Wasn’t Flickr. Wasn’t YouTube. Wasn’t Seesmic“.

Robert did his keynote about this subject at the Next Web Conference in Amsterdam.

robert scoble is a dutchcowboy

Picture by Markies

Sunday 24 February 2008

Keyword research for Bloggers

Copyblogger writes : Keyword research can be the difference between a successful blog and one that goes nowhere, but it often seems as if many bloggers think it’s something that doesn’t apply to them, or is “only for SEO.” To the contrary, keyword research goes way beyond search engine optimization, and is all about discovering what real live people are actively interested in.

That means keyword research helps you choose profitable blog subjects, identify content topics that are in high demand, and spot monetization methods that work. With that in mind, Copyblogger associate editor Jonathan Morrow and I have put together a 5-part comprehensive guide to keyword research for bloggers that walks you though the entire process using real-life niche examples.

Wednesday 20 February 2008

10 Enterprise Blogging Trends for 2008

  1. ROI based on Search Engine Optimization (SEO): With organic search becoming a critical channel for customer acquisition, blogs are the perfect way to achieve high rankings on a broad range of targeted keywords. They play up factors that search engines take into consideration when determining how to rank a webpage.
  2. Widespread employee blogging: Search engines look for good, targeted content. For an SEO strategy to work, the organization needs to have a variety of search terms, topics, and voices. The easiest way to create an abundance of this kind of content is by empowering employees to write it.
  3. Control is OK: Despite what most “traditional” bloggers say, it is mandatory for organizations to have control over their content. As an organization, you have an obligation to control the content generated under your brand. Corporate blogging is not a free-for-all, and there are blogging platforms that help organizations find a balance between complete freedom and control. Read more »
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