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Thoughts on Creating an Audience

by Dana Blankenhorn
July 11, 2006
in Internet, journalism, Weblogs
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Doc_searls_3
Due to some misundstandings with Hylton Joliffe at Corante, I launched this blog a few months ago and no notice was given my Corante audience.

Thus, I started from ground zero.

The result has been an interesting experiment. I have had to rebuild my audience literally from scratch.

It has not been easy. It is much tougher to get attention with a blog in 2006 than it was in 2002, when I started.

In the interests of "science" let me state I have some assets not all bloggers have. I have a newsletter, A-Clue.Com. I belong to some mailing lists which sometimes republish my stuff, and to which many important people belong.

But it’s still tough. As of 4 PM today, for instance, I had 120 site visits. Sounds pitiful, but I’ve gone through days where I posted three-or-four stories I thought were first class, and had just 19. Half of them were me.

Typepad lets you check referrer logs, and see where your users come from, as a standard part of their package (which, at under $12/month, is dirt-cheap). What I have found is most come from Google, from searches. And nearly everyone comes in to a specific item, not to my "home page." This, too, is an important lesson.

More such lessons are to come, no doubt.

Meanwhile, let me offer some lessons I exchanged recently with the great Doc Searls, whose blog is considered among the most popular and erudite in cyberspace. Without quoting from what was a private e-mail correspondence, let me state that Doc responded to a note I sent by stating that his blog is the best-known thing he has ever done, yet he has done many things which drew far more readers.

Following is my reply:

I think you’re on to something here that is of vital importance
to our understanding of Internet Values.

It’s an individual multiplier effect.

You know how economic investments are often explained in terms of their
"multiplier effect." If we put $1 into this we’ll get $10 back.

What I think you’re saying is that, because of its general connectivity, the
multiplier effect of an Internet blog posting is theoretically immense.

What would an equation look like describing this?

AxQxC=IM

A (audience) x Q (quality of audience) x C (credibility with that audience =
IM (Internet Multiplier)

Feel free to use this. You have more credibility than I do. <g>

Or we could conduct an experiment. I could post this and we could wait a
week. Then you post it and we see what happens.

Isn’t science fun?

Comments on this are appreciated.

Tags: blog audienceblog marketingbloggingblogging businessbuilding blogbuilding blog audienceDoc SearlsInternet marketingmarketing blogs
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 7

  1. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    I found this blog by Googling “Dana Blankenhorn” after Moore’s Lore had gone about a month without an update. Unlike many, I have yet to embrace RSS. As such I read my blogs from their homepages and am maybe more sensitive to lack of updates than most — especially since I only read 2 blogs on a greater than weekly basis.

    Reply
  2. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    I found this blog by Googling “Dana Blankenhorn” after Moore’s Lore had gone about a month without an update. Unlike many, I have yet to embrace RSS. As such I read my blogs from their homepages and am maybe more sensitive to lack of updates than most — especially since I only read 2 blogs on a greater than weekly basis.

    Reply
  3. Jameson says:
    19 years ago

    I got here through at link at Tech PR Gems. I was completely lost by all the scientific equations that just got thrown at me…. BUT I can understand your frustrations with building an audience.
    While I’m not looking to get a huge audience from my blog, http://www.jamesonbull.com/blog, it is a huge issue. I suggest looking for similar blogs and engage in some conversations with them, commment on their posts and build links to eachother’s material.
    Links are powerful. Hey.. they brought ME here, and I dont think i would have gotten here any other way…

    Reply
  4. Jameson says:
    19 years ago

    I got here through at link at Tech PR Gems. I was completely lost by all the scientific equations that just got thrown at me…. BUT I can understand your frustrations with building an audience.
    While I’m not looking to get a huge audience from my blog, http://www.jamesonbull.com/blog, it is a huge issue. I suggest looking for similar blogs and engage in some conversations with them, commment on their posts and build links to eachother’s material.
    Links are powerful. Hey.. they brought ME here, and I dont think i would have gotten here any other way…

    Reply
  5. DougH says:
    19 years ago

    I am the source of Jameson’s link (Tech PR Gems), and a regular reader— one thought that came to mind is in reference to your finding that people don’t go to your homepage, but straight to articles. I am constantly guilty of that by virtue of my use of RSS feeds– they lead me straight to articles and never to the home page.
    I hope you’re not hiding any goodies on the home page– I suppose I should look– but alas, that’s an extra click.

    Reply
  6. DougH says:
    19 years ago

    I am the source of Jameson’s link (Tech PR Gems), and a regular reader— one thought that came to mind is in reference to your finding that people don’t go to your homepage, but straight to articles. I am constantly guilty of that by virtue of my use of RSS feeds– they lead me straight to articles and never to the home page.
    I hope you’re not hiding any goodies on the home page– I suppose I should look– but alas, that’s an extra click.

    Reply
  7. Tech PR Gems says:
    19 years ago

    SONY does it again!

    It amazes me how often major corporations screw-up in terms of their marketing efforts. Last November, SONY was found to have been sending out its music CD’s with a DRM Trojan which collected user data for marketing purposes. Fortunately, several ant…

    Reply

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