Nov 15 2008

Bloggers And Blogging

Published by Ron at 11:58 pm under Blog Business, Randumb Thoughts

I’ve been thinking a lot about bloggers and blogging.  I read something somewhere about how our little writing hobby is becoming Serious Business for companies, and I know personally some of the folks I’ve worked with have had the goal of turning blogs into cash via social media and the like.  That’s all well and good, and I think everyone’s entitled to make a buck off of whatever they do and however they do it, but I think for a lot of bloggers it all goes back to one simple fact.

Bloggers are vain.

Maybe we’re not physically vain, though I know some bloggers are.  What we are is emotionally vain.  Not to generalize or anything (he says right before launching into a series of broad generalizations), but we’re a lot of misfits.  Basically, there’s no such thing as a normal blogger who doesn’t do it for pay alone.  Hell, even those that do it for pay are probably weird, too.  We’re overworked young professionals.  We’re mothers stuck indoors with the kids all day who need to speak to someone on an adult level.  We’re geeks, dorks, and dweebs who hide behind websites or nom de blog or the general anonymity of the Internet to reach out to other people in a safe manner without all the fear that comes with meeting someone face to face.

It’s a lot easier to relax and be yourself online (or be a totally fake person, but if you try that kind of thing you’ll generally get found out one way or another).  You don’t have to worry about the fact that you need a shave, or that you’ve got popcorn husks in your teeth, or that you’re a 450lb albino balding midget.  Nobody’s judging you for how you look, or how you’re dressed, or how much money you make.  It’s all about how well you write, the links you find, and the connections you make with other bloggers with your personality.

Deep inside, and I think this is probably true for everyone (it is for me) one of the big reasons you blog is because you like approval from other people.  Bloggers eat up comments like fat people eat up cake.  Every blog in history has some kind of hit counter on it, and I guarantee you that your average blogger checks it more often than they’d care to admit to.  I generally check my hit counter every couple of days because I don’t get a lot of hits.  On the sites I work at where I do get a lot of hits, I check those hit counters daily, sometimes several times a day.

Why is that?

It’s easier to write if you know someone’s going to read it.  Nobody’s going to write 500 words for 3 people, no matter how awesome they might be.

Awhile back, Holly and I wrote two similar posts talking about how we both struggle with what may or may not be undiagnosed ADHD.  She said I won, because I used a Fight Club reference, but I knew she’d won when Chez Bez shared her post.  It’s not like it’s a popularity contest (it’s not completely), or that her post wasn’t better than mine (it is), but in a way, readership and shares and links are all we have to keep us going (if you don’t get paid, that is… and if you want to keep getting paid, you’ll bust your ass to rack up the readership, shares, and links).

Increasingly, as companies leap onto everything that bloggers do and start to corrupt it (as I already have done with my shameless self promotion of everything I do, though I really share those things in the hopes that you, my reading friends, would be further interested in reading that stuff too), the only thing we’ve got is the opinions of other bloggers to make us feel like we’re being read by actual people, not Googlebots and marketers.

That’s all we’ve got.

10 responses so far

10 Responses to “Bloggers And Blogging”

  1. chez bezon 16 Nov 2008 at 1:43 am

    I read this because my name was in it. :)

    Your points are good. I gave up dreams of doing this for money a long time ago. What keeps me doing it? Measured parts vanity and the sense of community. I’m too introverted for my own good and this community of bloggers reading other bloggers is a pretty cool way of feeling like a part of the mix, any mix.

  2. Lady Jayeon 16 Nov 2008 at 1:46 am

    You’re exactly right about all of this. I mean let’s be honest. If it were’t for blogging I really probably wouldn’t have anyone else to talk to. It’s good when people read the stuff I write. No matter how unimportant it is. It’s nice to know that I’m not alone in this.

  3. Taveyon 16 Nov 2008 at 2:50 am

    *hugs*

    Because it sounds like you need one.

    So the next question is, are you a nerd, geek, dweeb or the balding midget? because enquiring minds want to know… and giggle with you about it all being such a farce.

  4. Ronon 16 Nov 2008 at 3:51 am

    Bez: Yeah, there’s the sense of community aspect, especially in Nashville. I don’t really have a blogging community, per se. I just kind of randomly leech off of Nashville’s blogosphere. :)

    LJ: Yeah, a common thread among bloggers it that we’re all either introverts in real life or we work weird hours (or keep weird hours voluntarily).

    Tavey: *hugs* Actually, I’m good, but I’ll usually take a hug when offered. I’m not the balding midget; that’s way too awesome to be me. I’m more a geek mixed with a generous helping of hermit, I think (I remain fuzzy on the definitions of geek, dork, and dweeb).

  5. hollyon 16 Nov 2008 at 9:52 am

    But you’re a lovable geek/hermit, and that’s what matters. Great post. And not just because you linked me. :)

  6. [...] is a great writer. He’s on about a kajillion blogs right now and he waxes philosophical on this beat of blogging. Bloggers are [...]

  7. Ronon 16 Nov 2008 at 11:00 am

    Holly: Aww, that’s sweet, thank you, and you’re wecome, respectively. :D Let me know how you like my Flogging Molly selections, if you get them.

  8. [...] like Ron said in his post about Bloggers and Blogging yesterday, “It’s a lot easier to relax and be [...]

  9. kateanonon 17 Nov 2008 at 4:15 am

    How did you find out I was the balding midget? Who told?

    If it weren’t for this little community of Nashville bloggers, well, I hate to think where I’d be right now.

    Profound post.

  10. Ronon 17 Nov 2008 at 6:49 pm

    Thanks, Kate. I’m glad it was full of profundity. As for who told me you were the balding midget, I refuse to reveal my sources. As an official journalist with two magazine articles under my belt, I have to protect my sources.

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