Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Pick a topic. Any topic, as long as it's toe-curling

Blogging can absorb a lot of time and energy. "Budget an hour a day, if you're really serious," recommends Marie Javins, who spun her blog No Hurry into her first travelogue book, Stalking the Wild Dik-Dik.

Food writer Jess Thomson spent 2007 creating, cooking and blogging a recipe a day for Hogwash. "Ultimately, writing a blog helped me discover my voice, and as a result find publications whose tones work best for me," she said. But she also acknowledged the downsides, late in her "year of". "Posting every day has sometimes threatened to strip me of my interest in food. Another f***ing recipe? I normally love to cook at home, but sometimes the temptation of take-out swirls around me simply because I've developed this heavy sense of duty around my blog that doesn't necessarily need to be there."

Thomson soldiered through to New Year's Eve, producing daily. And her efforts paid off. Her blog coverage of Alinea earned a spot in Best Food Writing 2008. She now averages two posts a week, a pace that's revived her enthusiasm.

So pick a subject you love: one you can live with for six months or six years. Darren Rowse of Problogger.net agrees: "While it might be tempting to start blogs based on what other people are interested in or what makes commercial sense, there is little logic in starting a blog on a topic that you have no interest in.

"Your readers will quickly discern if you are passionate about your topic or not. Blogs that are dry and passionless don't tend to grow."

Choose a blog host

Starting a blog takes just minutes, thanks to a plethora of host sites. These provide a web address, page templates and tools for posting.

Our class blog runs on Blogger – and most of the functionality examples will be drawn from it. We have Wordpress and LiveJournal accounts as well. We may not be able to answer specific questions about other hosters without screen grabs (aka captures) or access to your account. But really, we recommend Blogger, in part because you can tinker with the templates without suffering a fee.

Advanced "geeks" – no longer a derogatory term, thanks to Obama – can host blogs server-side: this requires, well, a server (a dedicated computer online constantly), and a domain name (www.myblog.com), both of which rack up yearly fees. Don't try this at home. At least, not on the first week of blog class, eh?

Most beginners prefer services like:

  • Blogger – a free blogging platform by Google, our recommendation for this class. It allows users to tinker with templates and other code without WordPress's additional fees...
  • LiveJournal – blogging tool by SixApart, which offers free basic packages, as well as premium paid ones (from $3/month). Popular for social networking tools.
  • Typepad – paid blogging tool by SixApart. After the free trial, prices start at $4.95/month.
  • Wordpress – A free and hugely popular hoster, quite simple to use, except for an irritating photo-upload. The platform allows static pages, making it easy to "fake" a static site (useful for authors and small companies often). Be warned, however: Wordpress charges for some services – like the ability to edit template code – free on Blogger and other platforms.
  • Xanga – popular among teens and young adults for easy networking (especiallly the guestbook). Free and paid premium services.

DO: Start bookmarking blogs you enjoy. Pay attention to the hosts, templates and features.

DON'T: Succumb to Myspace and Friendster. These are more social networking sites than proper blog tools. Best avoided by those old enough to drink legally.

SUPERHERO OPTION: Radio Userland – schmancy and expensive pro tool that incorporates security controls, an integrated news aggregator, multiple-author capabilities etc. Slick, but not a great starting point for the tech-inhibited.

SUPER FANCY: Server-side and self-hosted blogs. Audioblogs. Podcasting. Videoblogs (vlogs).

Anatomy of a blog

Let's put Patroclus – patron saint of blogging and the Po ly Styrene of the blogosphere – under the microscope:

  • Blogroll– list of links to other blogs in your sidebar.
  • Categories – A collection of topic-specific posts
  • Comments – enabling readers to leave their remarks
  • Navbar – a navigation bar usually seen on top of Blogger-hosted blogs.
  • Post, Entry – individual articles that comprise a blog
  • Sidebar – One or more columns along one or both sides of most blogs' main pages
  • Tags – keywords attached to similar posts
  • Trackback – A system that alerts another blogger that you've mentioned their article.

Taglines

We've already discussed blog names in some depth (search for "branding" labels). The next element to consider is the tagline, the explanatory blurb, secondary to the title (journalists would refer to this as the subdeck on the masthead). Some blogs skip this entirely, like Romenesko. Others – such as my Road Remedies or And I Am Not Lying – rely on images instead. More on that later. In the meantime, some samples. Yes! Samples!!! You missed them. I could tell.

AllAboutGeorge: One man’s life, it’s enough to make you URL

Bad Advice: The job requirements of an advice professional are practically nil. I should know. I am one.

Fight Against the Plutocrats: A punk music blog

Italian Woman at the Table: Let's dish about travel, food and true crime

Mighty Girl: Famous among dozens

Tenth-Muse.com: Fabulous since 1973, blogging since 2003, drinking since noon

And a very long example, that doesn't much rock my world. But, you know, it probably made someone happy...

Algonquin Outfitters web log: Welcome to the Algonquin Outfitters blog! We'll use this blog to post weather updates, ice out predictions, fall colours reports, fish stories, tall tales and anything else we think might be interesting to our customers and anyone else considering a visit to Algonquin Park. If you want to find out more about what we do, feel free to visit our web site at www.algonquinoutfitters.com.

But eek! How do I start?

Open a Blogger account (really, it's best).

 

Name your blog.


Get your style on.


Post, post, POST!


Be very proud...


OK, let's try another sample post, this time with some formatting. From the Dashboard, select the beige "Post" tab. This brings you to the "new post" page. The default mode is "Edit html," useful for bloggers who work offline in an authoring program like Dreamweaver.

But most beginners don't. So they should click the "Compose" tab, which offers a What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get (WYSIWYG) view.

Fill in the title field. Then type a few lines in the main text field. To bold or italicize, highlight the phrase, then click the "b" or "i" buttons on the beige bar above.



For those of you curious about html, here's how to accomplish the same with simple code.


Copy the formulas. Brag up that you've written html!


You rock!

The look and feel of your blog

A template controls how your site appears, via a cascading style sheet (css) written in html. Blogger prompts new members to select one, while creating a site.

One of the first considerations is how many columns you want and where they lie (left side vs right). Some bloggers prefer the wider text field of the two-column format. I've chosen that for Road Remedies, since its purpose is to showcase my writing. The right panel (sidebar) contains various text boxes (About Me, Links and the blogroll, named "Barrel of Monkeys"), as well as widgets. These plug-n-play mini-programs organize the blog's archives, insert ads from Google and Amazon, and so forth.

For the class blog, we've gone with a three-column layout, as we plan to demonstrate a lot of widgets. Blogger, unfortunately, doesn't have an off-the-shelf template for this. You gotta hack. Luckily Mike's done that heavy lifting and is happy to share his code. Interested students should let him know in week two's assignment.

For now, don't stress too much about the look – the "skin" –  at this point. You can always experiment with different options: go to Blogger>Dashboard>Layout>Pick New Template on the beige bar.

Click the orange "Save Template button" when you're finished.

Next week we'll explore Blogger's Dashboard in more depth and discuss how to craft certain styles and elements. Feel free to experiment in the meantime: remember that no change is permanent until you hit that orange "save" button.