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Blogs

Read-Our-Blog-ButtonBlogs, or weblogs, are online journals. Over 394 million internet users read blogs in 2008, covering a wide range of topics from technology to politics to celebrity gossip. Blogs are an ideal way to share your thoughts and experiences with your customers. Build rapport with your clientele by giving them a behind-the-scenes look at your business.

At the same time, monitoring blogs can give you valuable insight into the minds of your customers. BusinessWeek explains the implication of the blogosphere for businesses:

If there’s no clear business model, why are the Internet giants so bent on getting a foothold in blogs? Look at it from their point of view. A vibrant community that has doubled in size in the past eight months is teeming with potential customers and has a mother lode of data to mine. “Blogs are what’s causing the Web to grow,” says Jason Goldman. He’s project manager at Google’s Blogger, the world’s biggest service to set people up as bloggers.

David Sifry Technorati is no longer the king of blog search, and Sifry was deposed as CEO in 2007. Google entered the industry in summer 2006. But more meaningful than its stand-alone blog search was its growing ability to incorporate blog posts with Web search. Google is helping to erase the distinction between blogs and the rest of the Web. In doing so, it extends its dominance. looks at it a bit differently. He’s a serial entrepreneur and founder of Technorati, the blog search engine.

For Sifry, it’s not the growth of the same Web, but an entirely new one. It’s wrapped up far more in people’s day-to-day lives. It’s connected to time. The way he describes it, the Web we’ve come to know is mostly a collection of documents. A library. These documents don’t change much. Try Googling Donald Trump, and you’re more likely to find his Web page than a discussion of his appearance last night on The Apprentice.

Blogs are different. They evolve with every posting, each one tied to a moment. So if a company can track millions of blogs simultaneously, it gets a heat map of what a growing part of the world is thinking about, minute by minute. E-mail has carried on billions of conversations over the past decade. But those exchanges were private. Most blogs are open to the world. As the bloggers read each other, comment, and link from one page to the next, they create a global conversation.

Picture the blog world as the biggest coffeehouse on Earth. Hunched over their laptops at one table sit six or seven experts in nanotechnology. Right across from them are teenage goths dressed in black and thoroughly pierced. Not too many links between those two tables. But the café goes on and on. Saudi women here, Labradoodle lovers there, a huge table of people fooling around with cell phones. Those are the mobile-photo crowd, busily sending camera-phone pictures up to their blogs.

The racket is deafening. But there’s loads of valuable information floating around this cafe. Technorati, PubSub, and others provide the tools to listen. While the traditional Web catalogs what we have learned, the blogs track what’s on our minds.

Why does this matter? Think of the implications for businesses of getting an up-to-the-minute read on what the world is thinking. Already, studios are using blogs to see which movies are generating buzz. Advertisers are tracking responses to their campaigns. “I’m amazed people don’t get it yet,” says Jeff Weiner, Yahoo’s senior vice-president who heads up search. “Never in the history of market research has there been a tool like this.”

New England Social Media can put together a blog for your company with photos and video, and integrate it with your social media accounts like Facebook and Twitter. We can also set up “listening campains” to help you monitor blogs. Email us to find out more.Email-Button

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