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If a Blog Falls in the Forest…Will anyone give a care?
A while back, I was having one of my many daily email exchanges with Susan Cartier Liebel, who I have the utmost respect for. Her blog, Build a Solo Practice, LLC provides so much insight into working as a solo in any business or profession, that I don’t have the space here to even start to tell you why. While Susan’s is targeted to those “newly minted or well-seasoned” lawyers, it is just packed full of stuff anyone can use.
Susan sent me a link to a blog post which she wanted my opinion on. The post was called, “If a Blog falls in the forest with no one around, does it make a sound?”, published on bizsolutionsplus Featuring Solutions to Grow Your Business. Needless to say, the post title caught my attention. And while, Lewis makes some great points, I knew Susan gave me the link because she knew I would have to comment.
First, here are the points Lewis made in his post. What follows are my comments and take on it.
- Why do blogger audiences change? In traditional media, readers subscribe for decades. But I have noticed that most of our early readers return less and less frequently. And new readers take their place, showing a new passion and zeal for our written thoughts. If we are interesting, new readers should always emerge; but where do the other readers go and why?
- Does a blog have a natural life and what is it? One year? Two years? Three? When is it time to change the subject to something different? When should I, for example, stop writing about marketing and communications and start writing about something else?
- Do our voices become tiresome when we stay on the same subject too long? (This thought is related to the first two, as you can see.)
- What do our readers want us to write about and will they tell us if we ask? (You can begin sharing what you want to read starting now.)
- What blogs, if they went away, would be missed? And why?
Here are my responses to each of Lewis’ points, numbered as they are above:
However, I agree that we do loose some of our readers for whatever reason that may be. And yes, we get new readers daily. That is just how blogging works. But, I don’t agree that we see all of our old readers go by the wayside.
I truly believe the biggest reason a blog might fall in the forest with no one hearing it was because the blogger was not willing to listen to his/her audience and make any changes. Don’t let your ego get in the way of having a successful blog. It won’t hurt you to just “shut up and listen” to your audience to see if you need to make a change.
Good analysis. I also just did a redesign based on feedback from my original post. By the way: The post was meant precisely to create the kind of discussion here. Thanks!