Triune Designs Blog: Web Design, Development, & Marketing

Whose Blog Is It?

September 1st, 2009 by Leo Wurschmidt

A while ago I read a blog post by a well-known blogger who was irritated by people commenting that they were unsubscribing to his blog. The readers were unsubscribing because they felt he was getting off track from the blog’s main focus. His response to them? “See ya. I am better off without you.” While he was at it, he also pointed out that the blog was his and he could write whatever he wanted.

For me it raised an important question: whose blog is it?

His Blog
It should be noted that his blog is a semi-personal one and not a business blog like this. (However, since he makes part of his living through his blog I am counting it as part business/part personal.) With that said, though, the blogger is right. It is his blog. He can shut it down whenever he wants. He can decide to go in a completely different direction and start writing lemur-themed haiku posts. The same is true for this blog. If we decided to only write about the benefits of oscillating fans during the summer there is not much you could do about it. Or could you?

Your Blog
While the audience cannot completely control the website owner’s actions, the audience does have some power. They have a voice. As was mentioned above, their voices come in two primary forms: (1) commenting and (2) unsubscribing. Voicing displeasure on comments is a great way to provide feedback to the writer(s). In a blogging community (like a business blog should support), responding to feedback is vital to a blog’s health. If there is no response then that blog community moves on to step two: mass exodus. If large masses of people leave your blog then your revenue streams and/or marketing opportunities dry up. That is bad for business.

So, for me, the answer to my question of “whose blog is it?” is simple. The blog is both of theirs. That particular blogging community has part ownership with the final decision-making power lying in the hands of the writer himself.

And, if the blogger wants to go in a completely new direction. He will just have to understand that they might have to find a brand new audience.

Tags: , ,

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

Comments are closed.

Olark Livehelp