Wednesday, March 17, 2010

So I gain credibility, then what? Web empire? Swimming in the mainstream?

Focused, strongly branded blogs can grow up to be web portals, like Beth Whitman's Wanderlust and Lipstick, which now boasts a handful of columnists. Mixing features and practical information, her site's part magazine, part guidebook, part all-singing, all-dancing multimedia extravaganza.

Early adopter Tom Brosnahan offers authors advice on transforming into publishers. His Writers Website Planner, though old-school design-wise, remains a great resource. ProPublica's "crowdsorcerer" also offers valuable tips, especially about involving readers in your endeavor.

Increasingly the line blurs between journalists and online authors, including bloggers. Pay, prestige and infrastructure no longer clearly divide the two tribes. Frequency and informality often are the only distinctions, along with publishing self-sufficiency: that net DIY ethos.

That said, many bloggers still set their cap on breaking into the mainstream media, like our class poster-girl Mardi Michels. Not only has she been a featured chef at the Foodbuzz Blogger Festival 2009, she's now freelancing for the Food Network Canada's website.

Should you take that route, I highly recommend a portfolio website, independent of your blog. Professional touches include a custom domain name and a homepage with your bio and perhaps links to key writing samples. Both Blogger and Wordpress offer static pages, making it easy to whip up a site via a familiar interface.

Include that site in your pitch (aka query) letters. Editors want to know three things first and foremost: why this article now by you. They're looking for:

  • A strong story angle
  • Timeliness
  • Expertise or unusual access

Other components that help:

  • Past publication credits, especially in similar publications
  • Familiarity with their outlet ("show don't tell" that by suggesting a department or theme issue)
  • Photos or multimedia available

Whenever possible, address your letter to a specific person. Look up an editor’s name in the masthead or a writer’s handbook. Or pick up the phone and ring the office: even the most harried secretary will pass along a name (get the correct spelling too). He or she also might be able to suggest the best department head to contact. If in doubt, aim high, but not for the editor-in-chief of a large publication (who is presumably monster-busy). Deputy and associate editors are a good bet.

Establish your credentials. Why are you qualified to write this piece? Toot your own horn. Stress any elements that build your authority: your location, occupation, hobby or ethnicity, etc.

Never undermine yourself with comments like: "I’m just a blogger" or "I always wanted to be a writer". Be bold and plucky. And remember the old maxim: if you haven’t anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. Really, it’s wiser to stay quiet if you have no publication credits or relevant experience: just let your phenomenal pitch speak for itself.

Editors often ask new authors to write "on speculation". It’s the writer’s equivalent of an audition: a chance to prove yourself. Just that. No promises. You’re only paid if the article is accepted and published.

Common spec candidates include anthology essays, short pieces (under 750 words) or funny ones (it’s hard to convey humor’s magic in a query). Some newspapers and magazines only examine finished product, like the Los Angeles Times travel section and the Christian Science Monitor's Home Front department. Always check writer’s guidelines to determine policy.

Speculation helps new talent. Here’s a chance to leapfrog over the old-boy’s or girl’s network, skip the name-dropping publication credits and dazzle them into a commission. Many experienced journalists refuse to play this game, potentially wasting precious time and effort. But hey, that helps emerging authors, who aren't pitching against veterans like Dave Barry, Bill Bryson and Susan Orlean. Less competition!

Research your market before pitching. This helps you strike the right tone, but also ensures a publication is worth your time. Legitimate outlets bloom online from Salon to Slate and MSNBC, certainly. But most offer lower rates than their comparable print cousins.

Beware sites that feed off authors' ambitions from micro-bid assignment sites to profit-sharing schemes like Examiner.com and Today.com, which feature a range of unedited bloggers under one banner. Once the companies have taken their cuts of Google Adsense and other advertising revenue, writers I've spoken to rarely see more than pennies. And clips from outlets like that can hinder more than help ... An emerging author is better off guest-blogging, posting on her own site or volunteering for a reputable webzine.

The point is to get into print, establish yourself as a professional writer and gain experience. Eventually the paid work will muscle out the freebies.

Such an apprenticeship isn't considered kosher universally. Some journalists believe it devalues the whole trade, undermining standard rates, which generally haven't risen in decades. I see the issues as separate: professional writers deserve professional wages. Beginners deserve the opportunity to experiment and expand. An editor willing to work with less polished prose deserves a discounted rate. Just don't underbid colleagues struggling to survive: give work away to worthy nonprofits or new, struggling outlets, not multinational corporations cheaping the editorial budget.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Newsletters role in the blogosphere. Poindexterish?

Ever popular as a marketing tool, newsletters have migrated to blogging. Personally I'm lukewarm on all this – my inbox is clogged enough. The only time I enthusiastically welcome any sort of newsletter is a listserv digest, which compresses a day's worth of posts into one, quickly scannable block.

But some folks here have businesses and charities, which benefit from a monthly or seasonal communiqué. In that case, I recommend this subscription widget. And tips by my travel- and new-media colleague Karen Kefauver, who explores good newsletter craftsmanship, including the KISS rule (Keep it Short, Simple). She also has savvy advice about Facebook and Twitter protocol for companies. Kefauver mainly teaches in California's Bay Area and via teleseminar: I recommend her highly (see her social-media class offerings).

Finally, consider cross-posting your content, noting the newsletter's release and key topics on sites like Twitter, Facebook and Linked-In.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Do I need a domain?

Blogging can channel traffic to a website wonderfully. But for a company, a "business.blogspot.com" web address can look a little ... well, cheap.  Registering a domain name is easy and inexpensive, but should you tackle that just yet?

For those on a tight budget or steep learning curve, we vote "no". Start with free services, then get fancier as your skills grow – and you know the blogging wasn't just a flash-in-the-pan enthusiasm like that Thighmaster or pet rock.

Think of the web as Madonna, an endless font of reinvention. As Mike stresses, "things don't have to be perfect to be published online, because it is easy to correct them as you move forward."

That said, following is some information for when it comes time to register a domain name.

Photo: Madonna at the premiere of "I Am Because We Are" at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival, courtesy of David Shankbone and Wikimedia Commons.

Know Your Frenemy

ICANN is a non-profit that oversees domain-names and charges $15/year for most. A higher price tag means that your registrar is padding the bill or that you're tapping a restricted top-level domain, like those ending in .jobs, .biz, .pro, .coop and a few others.

Many domain-name registrars lurk out there (accredited list here). We recommend GoDaddy.com with reservations: it baits in customers with the lowest rates, then tries to up-sell additional services they generally don't need. But it's a good option, if you have the gumption to wade through the sales pitches and find the "no, just let me pay you and get on with my life" button.

Google owns Blogger.com, so users can register a domain name from the administration interface. Select the "Settings" tab near the dashboard's top, then click on "Publishing" followed by "Custom Domain". Check the availability of a given domain name and register desired ones for $10/year each. Bargain! Google partners with both GoDaddy.com and eNom.com to provide this service.

Tread carefully, though. Companies that discount the $15/year ICANN rate hope to sell you lotsa stuff. Registration is their loss leader or "key value item": the peanut butter in the rat trap. So, be careful where you click.

Is ".com" DA bomb?

The ".com" top-level domain has been available for registration since 1984.  Unsurprisingly, many of the best names are sewed up.  So how does one establish an online brand?

Much depends on whether your brand already exists or not. New enterprises have an advantage here, since they can select a name with good online prospects. Still, the pickings are slim: most one-word domains have been taken, including such outliers as zwitterions.com (a chemical compound that carries a total net charge of zero) and quaesitum.com (Latin, a declaration by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith forbidding Catholics from joining Masonic organizations).

What to do?

  1. Follow in the footsteps of Flickr.com, Scribd.com and Blogr.com and rmove a lettr or two from a regulr word.  Just make sure the resulting domain name still makes sense.
  2. Copy Zazzle.com and Strobist.com and make up a new word or borrow from slang. (Strobist.com, by the way, is a good example of a custom domain name that does a simple redirect to a free blog).
  3. Be like PlentyOfFish.com and BrazenCareerist.com: deploy a phrase, which can be just as easy to remember as a single word.  For example, "ImOffToSeeTheWizard.com" is still available (as is "IAmOffToSeeTheWizard.com"). Remember, however, that the geeks of the world have long been hording domain names. So if the phrase was ever uttered in a Star Trek episode ("MakeItSo.com") or Highlander movie ("ThereCanBeOnlyOne.com"), it's probably long gone.
  4. Make a land grab. Offer to buy that perfect domain name, especially if it looks like this. Such hollow facades are "parked," which means the owner's either lazy or hoping for a sale. Register.com has a Whois Lookup to trace registrars and administrative contacts (also helpful if you're battling libel or copyright issues, but more on that later in the course).
  5. Stay flexible, because .com is not the only top-level domain available.  Consider .net, as well as newer options like .info and industry-specific ones like .travel. They don't offer the cachet of .com, granted, but sometimes they're better for branding purposes.

While easy and superficially impressive, registering the perfect domain name does far less for your site than writing compelling copy. Google or Yahoo or Microsoft Live Search don't care if you post at "TheMostAmazingBlog.com" or "MyTabbyOutweighsPreschoolers.blogspot.com". Good material draws readers in and keeps them returning: pure and simple.

Note: that mix of capital and lower case letters – often called "CamelCase" – avoids ambiguity in multiword web address. The host name portion (see Tips and Tricks) of a web address is case-insensitive, so a mix of capital and lower case letters can make a long address more readable. This is especially useful when referring to your web site in print, such as on flyers or a business card.

A former student experimented with the address http://youhadmeatbonjour.blogspot.com. Mike and I – plus several friends and family – all read that as "You Had Meat, Bonjour" rather than "You Had Me At Bonjour". CamelCasing clears up ambiguities like that.

Image: The advertisement for the 1953 film "The Robe" debuted CinemaScope, one of the earliest product trademarks to use medial capital, aka "Camelcasing".

The ".com" top-level domain has been available for registration since 1984.  Unsurprisingly, many of the best names are sewed up.  So how does one establish an online brand?

Much depends on whether your brand already exists or not. New enterprises have an advantage here, since they can select a name with good online prospects. Still, the pickings are slim: most one-word domains have been taken, including such outliers as zwitterions.com (a chemical compound that carries a total net charge of zero) and quaesitum.com (Latin, a declaration by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith forbidding Catholics from joining Masonic organizations).

What to do?

  1. Follow in the footsteps of Flickr.com, Scribd.com and Blogr.com and rmove a lettr or two from a regulr word.  Just make sure the resulting domain name still makes sense.
  2. Copy Zazzle.com and Strobist.com and make up a new word or borrow from slang. (Strobist.com, by the way, is a good example of a custom domain name that does a simple redirect to a free blog).
  3. Be like PlentyOfFish.com and BrazenCareerist.com: deploy a phrase, which can be just as easy to remember as a single word.  For example, "ImOffToSeeTheWizard.com" is still available (as is "IAmOffToSeeTheWizard.com"). Remember, however, that the geeks of the world have long been hording domain names. So if the phrase was ever uttered in a Star Trek episode ("MakeItSo.com") or Highlander movie ("ThereCanBeOnlyOne.com"), it's probably long gone.
  4. Make a land grab. Offer to buy that perfect domain name, especially if it looks like this. Such hollow facades are "parked," which means the owner's either lazy or hoping for a sale. Register.com has a Whois Lookup to trace registrars and administrative contacts (also helpful if you're battling libel or copyright issues, but more on that later in the course).
  5. Stay flexible, because .com is not the only top-level domain available.  Consider .net, as well as newer options like .info and industry-specific ones like .travel. They don't offer the cachet of .com, granted, but sometimes they're better for branding purposes.

While easy and superficially impressive, registering the perfect domain name does far less for your site than writing compelling copy. Google or Yahoo or Microsoft Live Search don't care if you post at "TheMostAmazingBlog.com" or "MyTabbyOutweighsPreschoolers.blogspot.com". Good material draws readers in and keeps them returning: pure and simple.

Note: that mix of capital and lower case letters – often called "CamelCase" – avoids ambiguity in multiword web address. The host name portion (see Tips and Tricks) of a web address is case-insensitive, so a mix of capital and lower case letters can make a long address more readable. This is especially useful when referring to your web site in print, such as on flyers or a business card.

A former student experimented with the address http://youhadmeatbonjour.blogspot.com. Mike and I – plus several friends and family – all read that as "You Had Meat, Bonjour" rather than "You Had Me At Bonjour". CamelCasing clears up ambiguities like that.

Image: The advertisement for the 1953 film "The Robe" debuted CinemaScope, one of the earliest product trademarks to use medial capital, aka "Camelcasing".

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Sticky goodness – web content that inspires repeat readers

Sites that lure eyeballs back – and inspire readers to action – are known as "sticky" (finally: a fun and comprehensible bit of web jargon!). Pure talent helps, sure. But the Alfred A. Knopf publishing house rejected Jack Kerouac, George Orwell and Sylvia Plath, among others. Sometimes the mainstream media overlooks genius at first pass. Ditto online readers.

But you can woo them ... first and foremost by writing with their needs in mind. As tough-love web guru Vincent Flanders points out: "Nobody cares about you or your site. Really. What visitors care about is solving their problems. Now. Most people visit a web site to solve one or more of these four problems:

  1. They want/need information
  2. They want/need to make a purchase/donation.
  3. They want/need to be entertained.
  4. They want/need to be part of a community.

"Too many organizations believe that a web site is about opening a new marketing channel or getting donations or to promote a brand or to increase company sales by 15%. No. It’s about solving your customers’ problems. Have I said that phrase enough?"

(Read more in his snarky article Biggest Mistakes in Web Design 1995-2015.)

For those of you promoting a business, take heed of the 80/20 rule. Experts agree that readers respond best when only one blog post in five is a plug. Some grey area exists, certainly, such as writing in your field of expertise without explicitly pushing your brand. The same formula applies to Twitter and social network sites like Facebook and Linked In. No one likes a relentless hustler – in person or in cyberspace.

But it's not enough to interact with the community, you have to join it, as Web Consultant Mack Collier points out on The Viral Garden. So this week, we'll explore how to create original material that attracts and maintains an audience, while reaching out to other content-producers. And next week, we'll delve into the mechanics of search engines and how to deploy social media tools to build readership.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

More than the sound of one hand clapping

No device is more powerful in gaining – and maintaining – an audience than the comment fields: yours and others. People like to be heard and acknowledged. Engaging that spirit of conversation elsewhere brings readers home, via profile links and URLs. And it encourages those on your site

When a reader leaves a message on your site, respond to it promptly. A good tool here is the alert function: Blogger can issue an email for each new piece of feedback. Go to Settings --> Comments --> Comment notification email at the bottom. This page also controls who can sound off and how the comments appear (full page, pop up, embedded below post). Here too are the radio buttons for backlinks, which show other webpages linking to your post. This promotes "discussions" between blogs – a fine functionality. Bloggers with older or custom templates should look here for the install code.

Comment moderation allows you to vet reader missives before they go live. This permits an author to filter out spam, trolls and sulky exes. But it slows down the dialogue considerably, so I keep this function turned off and rely on word verification – a type of CAPTCHA – to fight spambots (this requires readers to retype distorted text before posting a comment: only humans can manage this, not automated systems).

In several years of blogging, I've only deleted a dozen or so comments, so this system suits my needs. Then again, I don't court controversy. My buddy Candace Dempsey – another Writers.com instructor – landed a book deal: Murder in Italy: The Shocking Slaying of a British Student, the Accused American Girl, and an International Scandal. Her blog coverage of the tabloid-headliner case led to death threats and entire other blogs devoted to flaming Candace. After months struggling to moderate the tempest in a teapot – almost a full-time job – she often simply turned the comments off, so she could concentrate on writing. But, happy news: a Penguin imprint will publish the nonfiction book in late April, 2010!

Nightmares like that aside, comments generally build community in a more positive fashion. Remember to leave your calling card in return with observations on others' sites. Most allow you to post a URL, which can draw traffic to your blog. The best "bait" is generally a two-to-three line note offering some relevant insight, anecdote or even a question. While everyone appreciates fan mail, it's less likely to lure fresh eyes.

Week six we'll explore more traffic generating and multimedia tricks, including links (internal and external); page rankings; search engine optimization; keywords; stunts; Technorati and other portals; blog review sites; syndication (including RSS feeds); Twitter; social networking; developing a presence in the blogosphere.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Custom header primer

To round out week three, we'll take just a brief detour from authorial nerding to tech geekiness: how to make a snazzy header. This not only gives a strong first impression, it brands your blog, distinguishing it from the herd.

Here are three Blogger methods, each increasingly complex (WordPressers might want to check out this intro, as well as this article). All our samples employ art created by Amanda. You can source images from the web also, but make sure you have permission to reprint or repurpose them. We'll explore licensing in-depth later, but here's a quick Flickr primer about the Creative Commons. Sites like Header Spot offer royalty-free images, as well as custom graphics as low as $30.

As the header suggests, this post is a primer. We'll explore more intricate solutions and hacks for folks with custom domains next week.

Control color and font
Start on the Layout Page. Click "Fonts and Colors" on the beige nav bar. The lefthand panel contains options for Blog Title Color, Blog Description Color, then – lower down – Blog Title Font and Blog Description Font. Righthand click-boxes control bold and italics. Links adjust the size of text.

The preview box displays changes. In a few clicks, I managed to make the class blog's header quite hideous. Luckily Blogger includes a "clear edit" button, right beside the "save" one...

Upload a background image
In Layout, go to Page Elements. Click the "edit" button on the header box. In the Configure Header pop-up window, select Placement "behind title and description".

Here's the original image that I'm folding, mutilating and stapling:

Click "shrink to fit," otherwise you could wind up with a massive header like thus:

This pushes your fresh content down the page, forcing reader to scroll to engage with new material. Not ideal. So let's try "shrink to fit".

From bad to worse, eh? So, you'll need to size the image – and perhaps also crop – it in a photo editing program. Blogger will give you the width in freaky small text at the bottom of the Configure Header box.

  1. First adjust the width of the photo. That's 660 in the case of my Minima-template test blog.
  2. Then crop its height. Around 150-170 pixels makes for a nice, shallow header. It adds color and character, but doesn't upstage the blog's content: the reason people are there.
  3. Layout>Page Elements> Edit Header>Configure Header. Click "shrink to fit".

**

Upload a custom header

For maximum control of the look and feel, design your entire header – blending the text and image – in a photo-editing program.

  1. Open a new file sized to fit your template. On Amanda's test blog, that's 660 x 155.
  2. Go to Layout>Page Elements> Edit Header>Configure Header. This time, be a devil and click Placement>Instead of title and description.
  3. I stuck with "shrink to fit" and it overhung the border a little. Most annoying. So I went into Layout>Fonts and Colors, then changed the Border Color to match the white background.

We can't cover all the intricacies of photo editing software in this class: there simply isn't time enough. But a few elements to play with, if you know (or are learning) a program:

  1. Novelty fonts
  2. Alignment (left, right or centered)
  3. Collages
  4. Drop shadows (Photoshop tutorial here)
  5. Intensity of the image. Here I dropped the background opacity to 90%, so the darker parts of the photo didn't overwhelm the schmancy Papyrus font (which wouldn't bold).

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Target audience

The first week's assignment asked you to consider your readers – and nutshell your demographic in 25 words or less (a la elevator pitch). As the course continues, keep refining that concept. Whom are you talking to? Are you venting and pondering at friends? Showing peers how to savor life and explore new horizons? Sharing advice on a specific medical condition? Exciting customers about a business?

Pulitzer-winner and famed author-coach Jacqui Banaszynski stresses: "Writing is personal. Direct. It needs to be from me to you." She elaborated at the National Writers Workshop in 2007: "When I'm writing a story, I'm really writing a letter I'm getting in [readers'] heads and thinking, 'what do they need to know to understand this, what education do they need to understand the moment of emotion?'" .

As a newspaper reporter, Banaszynski went down to the circulation department and picked up a handful of reader profiles. "I matched them to people in my life. I put pictures of them in my cubicle. My five people kept me honest, when I got too involved with my sources or too in love with my own prose."

Blogging is no different. Anyone may stumble across your open letters to the world, but they will only resonate for some. Make them sing, shimmy and play jazz for that cohort.

Know your readers. Maybe even befriend them – or at least interact via comments. Make your blog a conversation, not a monologue, and its chance of success will soar.

Keep the home court advantage

"Write what you know" is the oldest advice in the trade – for a reason. Your unique life experiences will always illuminate your prose: more so when you’re enjoying the home court advantage. Try to pick topics that exploit your expertise. For example, when I wrote a piece on driving a moped in Rome, where I lived for two years, I didn’t just bemoan the manic Mediterranean traffic: I introduced the Italian concept – menefreghismo, the "state of not caring" – that fuels some of their wild driving habits. Such wealth of detail is hard to come by without being there, saturating in your subject, living it.

Writers bring much of themselves to any text. An advertising executive in Taiwan has quite a different perspective from a Denver mountaineer or a French homemaker. Even if all three blogged the same topic, their responses would be diverse. And that's the beauty of the web, really. With great ease, we can explore others' experiences and reactions ... satisfying that primal human urge to rubberneck. Dangerous as that can be, we're hardwired to learn through observation. Happily the information highway is a safer place to looky-loo.

Don’t parrot or “echo chamber,” as the blogosphere calls it. Jeff Atwood sagely points out: “we have the whole of human history to talk about, and most people can't get past what happened today. If I wanted news, I'd visit one of the hundreds of news sites that do nothing but news every day. Putting yourself in the news business is a thankless, unending grind. Don't do it.”

Who was that masked blogger?

As we discussed on the class forum, a blog can be private (invite-only) or public (indexed by Google and other search engines).

Even folks who blog for glory and riches often maintain a hidden test site. A scratch pad lets you tinker and perfect projects before launching 'em. In Blogger, go to Settings>Permissions>Blog Readers. Click the radio button "only people I choose". Then include your list of emails, separated by commas.

Many blogs, like Boing Boing, cram a lot of cooks into the kitchen (yet somehow serve great broth). Should you decide upon a group-authored site, head to that same Settings>Permissions page. Enter up to 100 collaborators' email addresses into the top Blog Authors panel. (See Mike's Tips & Tricks: Blogger Settings Explained for a wild romp through the entire dashboard panel. We'll discuss further options in depth as they arise.)

Bios: should you claim that blog?

Blogs are a more intimate, subjective media experience than traditional journalism. Readers are curious who's speaking – and often why. Even if you decide to conceal your real identity like Superman, give some context in the "About This Site" section. Possible elements to include:

  • Name or nome de plume
  • Location or at least region
  • Expertise (if applicable)
  • Motivation

Some folks link the visible text to their Blogger profiles – as Mike and I have done here – which can contain vast amounts of info, including favorite books, movies, astrological sign, age, etc. Ours are both pretty minimal, because we maintain personal websites. But fleshed-out ones can help readers connect.

I would recommend a picture of some sorts, as these icons (aka "avatars") appear on comments threads. Visually, they make the conversation easier to follow, even when someone's just represented by a snapshot of a poodle or a snowflake.

Many bloggers prefer a nome de plume, like Mimi Smartypants, another superstar who made the leap from pixels to print. Being anonymous can permit more frank chat, certainly … but are you prepared to be outed? Employers now tap into MySpace profiles, for example, and already applicants have lost job offers to that duct-tape fetish or underage drunken snapshot.

(Mimi, in fact, was quasi-exposed when she agreed to a New York Times interview under her real name. But she continues to write under her "handle" – a decision perhaps influenced by security for her young daughter Nora. As you can see from this photo, which ran on Road Remedies, I am conservative about kid pix, though not a parent. I'd lucked into a stunning shot of the gorilla girl sans mask and in panda ears. But I censored it for her safety and privacy. We'll talk more about these issues in week eight.)

Heather B. Armstrong is the poster-child of big-mouth bloggers. She explains: "I started this website in February 2001. A year later I was fired from my job for this website because I had written stories that included people in my workplace. My advice to you is BE YE NOT SO STUPID. Never write about work on the Internet unless your boss knows and sanctions the fact that YOU ARE WRITING ABOUT WORK ON THE INTERNET If you are the boss, however, you should be aware that when you order Prada online and then talk about it out loud that you are making it very hard for those around you to take you seriously."

Her site's name even inspired a new word, "dooced," meaning to be sacked for indiscreet web chatter.

Many professional authors rely on blogs as a branding tool – bait for editors and readers: an argument for transparency. Beth Whitman, the Wanderlust and Lipstick diva, is a good example of this. Her lovely face beams out at readers from the masthead. In her travel genre – like many others – personality sells, from Arthur Frommer to Bill Bryson. And that's why many readers are blogsurfing in the first place: they crave a more intimate, opinionated perspective. So think about how to create an authentic blogging persona, whether or not you slap your "meatspace street name" on it...

I'll sign off with a screed by cyber-pioneer Cameron Barrett, master and commander of Camworld, one of the longest-running blogs to date. In 1999, he declared the genre needed: "Less senseless hype. Less gratuitous linking. Less focus on the sensationalistic journalism that's crowding our brains and turning them into mush. More focus on the truly exceptional content out there on the web that only a few of us manage to dig up. More personal essays. More professional essays. And yes, even the occasional rant.

"You see, CamWorld is about me. It's about who I am, what I know, and what I think. And it's about my place in the New Media society. CamWorld is a peek into the subconsciousness that makes me tick. It's not about finding the most links, the fastest, automated archiving, or searchable personal websites. It's about educating those who have come to know me … about the increasingly complex world we live in, both online and off."

Kicky Bios and other profile tactics

To edit your bio section, go to Layout>Page Element. In the righthand column (sidebar) is a box titled "About this site". Click edit, then get writing. Either be straight-up informative or make with the funny. Or both.

Some faves:

Louche: Tall, slightly too well dressed and in command of some excellent brogues. I'm a fop, a dandy, a cad and a rake. Often tempted, rarely accused, never caught Occasionally I get accused of being a bit of a bounder but when faced with trouble I always ask myself 'What would Flashman do?’

Claire Woodward: London lady writer, GSOH, desperate for attention, seeks readers for friendship, comments, possibly more. Likes: staying in, going out, hovering hesitantly on the doorstep, records from the 10p basement, courtesy, frocks. Dislikes: pretty much everything else, otherwise I'd have nothing to write about, would I?

LC: Good in bed, shit at everything else.

Intro to blog design: template primer

Blog platforms are the stuff of awesome because they allow any computer-competent person to publish professional-looking sites without programming chops. A critical, early step in all this is selecting a look and feel apt for your topic. So dig into Blogger's chocolate-box of designs and see what suits.

A template controls the look of your blog via cascading style sheets (css): its width, number of columns, header style, and so forth. Some aspects – like colors and fonts – can be adjusted further via Blogger's control panels. But the first step is deciding what, roughly, your site should look like.

Under Layout is the link "pick a new template". Experiment here, if you're not committed to the design you chose when it launched.

You'll notice that Blogger, lamely, offers only two-column styles. Three-column ones exist, but you need to source the code from a reliable third-party, then customize your template. We'll talk about how to do this – and manage it safely – later in the course.

Once you've chosen a template, you can start modifying it. Click on Layout>Page Elements. A boxy schematic of your site will appear (a "wireframe" in jargonese).

Here you can "Add a Gadget," such as a sidebar text box, blogroll and widgets (which we discuss below in depth). You can also drag and drop items to rearrange them. The "Edit" buttons are pretty self-explanatory. The header one allows you to change the title and tagline, drop an image behind the text or upload a custom header (more on that later).

Make sure you hit the orange "save" button on the top right!

The next element to play with is Fonts and Colors, also in blue on the beige bar under Layout.

Scroll down that left-hand control panel. Weirdly, it has different options for items' color and their font, which can be hard for DTP-savvy people to grasp. But Blogger is a basic, free platform, so things are clunky on occasion.

OK, there's loads of fun stuff to goof around with here. A few tips:

  • Reversed-out text – light on a dark background – is considerably harder to read, especially on-screen. If you take that route, consider making the text larger and bolder.
  • Don't go crazy with the paintbox. A palette of five to six should suit all your needs, from background hue to sidebar text. Use color to direct the eye, not distract it. Ditto fonts.
  • Sans serif fonts – without the little "feet" – work best on-screen for body text. The class blog employs Arial, which is a little more narrow (and sophisticated) than the common Verdana. To maintain a consistent, not-distracting style, stick with 2-3 fonts and 2-3 font sizes.
  • Settle onto a template before you tinker here exhaustively. Color and font details will be lost if you switch. But it's easy to note the palette and recreate it... Each color has a hex code a six-character mix of numbers and letters.



  • Remember to save changes. Big ole orange button again.

The final Layout element is "Edit html". Here you can peek at the code and, if you're really brave, wade in and edit the css, after backing it up. That's pretty advanced stuff, so Mike will address it later in class – and coach ambitious folks on issues.

Feature context and original content high

Design-wise, think about how to showcase your fresh, unique material in the main text area. When a reader lands on your blog, does original content draw their eye? Or is half the page taken up by a header (a static element), followed by a headline and someone else's Flickr photo? Do the first 25 words – which also appear in search indexes, inviting traffic – convey excitement and the gist of the post, including as many specific details as possible?

You'll often hear the dead-tree media term "above the fold" in regards to this space. Like any first impression, you want to dazzle quickly. Some elements that aid this:

  1. A shallow header: the "masthead" box or image across the top. Most templates are between 660 pixels and 770 pixels wide, but the header will stretch in height to match the art you place there.

    We'll talk about how to prep and place images later in this lecture. For now, just ponder photos much wider than they are tall. Ones cropped to "landscape" proportions work best. (Tip: Go to Dashboard -> Layout -> Page Elements and click the "Edit" link in the header area. Check the bottom of the dialogue box for the width of your template, measured in pixels.)
  2. An "about me" box, top right, giving context.
  3. Horizontal images at the top of posts, not vertical (those work best dotted into the text, drawing the eye down the page and breaking up large "grey" chunks of text).
  4. Body copy starting "above the fold".
  5. Datelines, placing the story geographically if your prose wanders. Associated Press style is most often used: a city name, entirely in capital letters, followed in most cases by the name of the state, county or territory, and country (if not immediately clear). These also help cue the searchbots and ad-generators into your topic.
  6. Specific headlines that highlight your original content.

We'll explore these concepts in more detail throughout the class, through feedback and lectures.

Matching design to content

While you're deep in the guts of your blog, take a moment to consider your layout. Some questions to guide your self-critique:

  1. Is the design clear, directing the eye smoothly, as opposed to cluttered?

  2. How readable is the content?

  3. How useful are the sidebars?

  4. How will readers discover your finest content? Would a "greatest hits" link box direct them to your best samples? To create one in the sidebar, go to Layout>Add Gadget>Link List, then insert the permalink URLs.

  5. How is the quality of design compared to other blogs and sites in the niche?

  6. Does the color scheme suit your subject? A whole psychology of hues exists out there (red, for example, conveys intensity, from passion to anger and excitement, while blue soothes). Also, remember that reversed out text (white on black) is challenging to read on-screen.

  7. Is the theme unique? Should you consider customizing the template for more distinctive branding?

  8. How quickly does the blog load?

  9. Does it quickly communicate to new visitors?

  10. How intrusive are any ads?

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Ponder your genre

Cyberspace contains a world of possibility. Three former PayPal employees followed a hunch in 2005. A year later, Google bought the video-sharing platform YouTube for US$1.65 billion. Not only did they tap the mix-tape pirate in us all, they gave expression to our secret karaoke dreams.

However, mere mortals can't all be the next Steve Chen, Chad Hurley or Jawed Karim (YouTube's founding triumvirate). If you're not burning with the Next Big Idea, consider the blogosphere's proven formulas and how your ambitions fit into 'em.

I encourage you to read (and readreadREAD) some of these links, even those not directly relevant to your topic. A sampling will cue you into what tones and tricks work where.

Advice – This genre extends from tips (CleanTech) to troubleshooting (NTHell) and talk about dating (Miss Information). Gluten-free Girl explains how she found a healthier diet ... and true love and a book deal! I am Fuel, You Are Friends reveals hip new music. And the hero of all journalism coaches – Roy Peter Clark – cheerleads authors with his Writing Tools. Tech-information clearing-houses like Slashdot and Gizmodo and their ilk also fall into this realm.

Entertainment – Just like it sounds, this type of blog aims to brighten readers' days. It's the online equivalent of the newspaper's Lifestyle section. Enjoy silliness from Jezebel's fashion and feminism to The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs (fake, but done so well Apple's maestro reads it). Boing Boing's another great example. You could survive without it, sure, but that curated collection of weird certainly amuses...

Dear diary – A journal-type blog opens a window on the writer's world – or some aspect of it, like Jess Thomson's recipe-a-day project for Hogwash. Tom Reynolds kept a blog of his life as an East London Emergency Medical Technician. He eventually landed a book, as did Mimi Smartypants, who relates her Chicago EL squabbles and pious-mom chat-room smackdowns brilliantly.

Gossip – Lean over the virtual back fence and swap tales. Postsecret is a user-generated art project, where readers submit revealing, anonymous, homemade postcards. On the opposite end of the spectrum is that vile, yet insanely successful, celebrity slasher Perez Hilton and offerings like Pittwatch.com. Sneer all you want (I certainly do), but then take a sobering look at Technorati's top search terms tonight: Jennifer Garner (4), Paris Hilton (8), Jennifer Aniston (9) and Vanessa Minnillo (10). Many newspapers and magazines process off-cuts, funny asides and spats with readers. Two examples from Seattle, where Mike and I live. The Slog and the P-I's Big Blog. Sites like these can provide rich pickings for other bloggers to comment upon, since the professional group-authored
sites draw upon a lot of talent. They're hard to compete with, however, for the same reason.

PoliticalThe Huffington Post is the hardest hitter with a stable of columnists, along with Daily Kos. But school-less fish swim in this sea too, like Wonkette and my friend Candace Dempsey. Her blog coverage of the Perugia murder trial led to a book deal with Berkley (a

Penguin imprint). She's also suffered death threats and smear campaigns for her original reporting. Dempsey's dealing with all the hassle that investigative reporters suffer without the support of a newsroom: legal, financial and emotional. Tough stuff.

Freakonomics tackles money matters and "the hidden side of everything". Gary Becker,

the Nobel-winning economist, teams up with Richard Posner, the prominent US judge and legal theorist, to pontificate here. Heavy hitters like Newsweek also weigh in to the political debate online, often supplying material not found in the print magazine.

Promotional – Blogs can draw awareness to a brand, both by creating a community (and buzz), as well as placing fresh content on a corporate site. This helps improve search engine results (SEO). Marketing bods are in a feeding frenzy over fresh content recently and how to capture the new blog/social networking zeitgeist.

Amazon (predictably) gets the tempo right. But with a fleet of talented editors on hand and some

of the best market intel, is that so surprising? General Motors tries hard, but often draws fire for unhip blunders like censoring its comments during controversies. Here's a small British fabrication shop making it work. It's tone is cheeky, like this post, beginning: "Three minutes away you were from having the pleasure of me videoing myself doing a naked umbaba round my back garden in the snow." It's appealing precisely because the author isn't being all starchy and spinning PR puff.

Literary – Blogs can serve as a promotional platform for existing or future books (nothing persuades a publisher like a guaranteed rapt audience). Fellow blog instructor

Rebecca Agiewich scored her first novel deal, Breakup Babe, after chronicling her dating life online. She retired breakupbabe.blogspot.com when she realized the confessional wasn't helping said dating life. Now she keeps a less revealing diary at Sparkly, Sparkly.

Working the other end of the spectrum, Michelle Goodman's blog complements and promotes her books The Anti 9-to-5 Guide and My So-Called Freelance Life. She also taught me the admirable trick of "cheating" a book website in WordPress (its templates allow for those

nifty header-bar navigation tabs: they look less bloggy to my eye...). In a few hours, I whipped ones up for anthologies to which I contributed: Single State of the Union and Greece A Love Story.

I paid Wordpress $15 for one year's worth of domain-name goodness (http://greecealovestory.com) in spring 2007. I only received my second (ignored) renewal notice a few months back: yet the site functions. We'll see if my luck holds...

Venting – Everyone loves a good rant – and the Internet thrives on this. Rat and Mouse allows unhappy home owners to vent their spleens. WalMart Watch takes on the megastore chain for "selling Nazi t-shirts" and other offenses. One complaint from new media watchdog Jim Jarvis was enough to persuade Dell to review its customer service policy. Sometimes the squeaky wheel really does get the oil...

Did I leave any genres out? Oh yeah, porn and cats. I'll give Icanhascheezburger.com a nod and leave it at that.

































Cartoon by Shannon Wheeler, author of Too Much Coffee Man

 

Naming and branding your blog

Make the title memorable – and something you can suffer on a T-shirt or a book spine. "What would you rather read: A Blog About Books or Bookslut?" asks Jonathan Yang, author of The Rough Guide to Blogging (2006).

What's in a name?

Online marketing expert Chris Garrett advises the following criteria in his article on Better Blog Branding:

  1. Readable
  2. Pronounceable
  3. Spellable
  4. Memorable
  5. Concise
  6. Unique

Heavy-rotation terms

  1. blog - 9.986%
  2. life - 2.619%
  3. weblog - 1.841%
  4. world - 1.296%
  5. from - 1.226%
  6. journal - 1.139%
  7. news - 1.087%
  8. thoughts - 1.039%
  9. with - 0.670%
  10. daily - 0.660%

– research by Elliott C Black

The author said: "This leads me to conclude that any blog named, 'My blog/journal/weblog with daily world news and thoughts from life! will be a smash hit. "

Um.

No.

The hit list

Technorati – the Internet search engine for searching blogs – notes these terms receive heavy traffic:

  1. modblog
  2. daily
  3. girls
  4. suicidegirls
  5. nikki
  6. weblog
  7. media
  8. from
  9. page
  10. boing

Yet more examples

Catchy and clear

Attack of the Redneck Mommy – http://www.theredneckmommy.com
Breakup Babe – http://breakupbabe.blogspot.com
Japing Ape – http://japingape.blogspot.com
Gizmodo, the Gadget Guide – http://gizmodo.com
Gluten-Free Girl – http://glutenfreegirl.blogspot.com
Lifehacker – http://lifehacker.com
Postsecret – http://postsecret.blogspot.com

Just plain catchy

Boing Boing – http//boingboing.net
Daily KOs – http://www.dailykos.com/
Jen & Tonic – http://www.jenandtonic.ca
Miss Information – http://www.nerve.com/regulars/missinformation
Mimi Smartypants – http://smartypants.diaryland.com
Slashdot – http://slashdot.org/
Toffeewomble– http://toffeewomble.blogspot.com

Breaking the rules

Anti 9-to-5 Guide – http://www.anti9to5guide.com
Craig Duff Blogs – http://craigduff.wordpress.com
Icanhascheezburger.com– http://icanhascheezburger.com
I am Fuel, You Are Friends – http://fuelfriends.blogspot.com
I’m Not Gay – http://notagay.blogspot.com
Perez Hilton – http://perezhilton.com
Road Remedies – http://roadremedies.blogspot.com
The Huffington Post – http://huffingtonpost.com