Saturday 19 July 2008

Professional Blogging - using, overuse and neglect

One of the big issues with professional blogging is ensuring that you post often enough to remind people you exist. If you're running a professional blog the chances are you're doing this to increase your profile, boost your market share and generally convince people that they're doing themselves a huge disservice if they don't attend to what you've got to offer.  What is unlikely is that a) you're paid for your blogging time and b)that you don't have a busy life outside the blog.

It's all a matter of balance. I've known (and still know) writers, who will talk  rather like literary fishermen over several pints of beer of their magnus opus, the one great story that will make their fortune and fame. Over the years, I've become far too intimate with some of these stories, most of which had yet to take form in a single inked word. A blog can become rather like this. It can be a place where you indulge in a little trumpet blowing or even innocently spend all your time declaiming your plans. 

There's a lot to be said for putting you intention out into the world. If it's done with serious thought and for-planning then blogging about a project is as much for yourself as it is for your audience. You can use a blog to drawn your line in the sand and say I will do this - ever aware that if your blog is becoming in the least bit popular you'll look a right idiot if you don't do it.

But we all have lives beyond blogging. I've been quiet the last couple of days as I wrestle with a tricky family matter where the old guard have asked me -as one of the young 'uns (they're all in their eighties) - to sort out a difficult family matter. I've had re-allocate my already precious time to cope with this new demand.

In particular I had to choose between returning to this blog and finishing a proposal for a new (and I think) very exciting project. I chose the to finish the proposal. 

It's not a straightforward choice. If a blog is inactive for a few days, especially early on, it is likely to dropped by readers, who assume it has gone the way of other ether musings and faded into disuse. But then if I don't put the work first I'm blogging about blogging - in which case this ceases to be a professional blog and becomes more of a personal journal.

A professional blog is for life not just for Christmas, but it must always be run in parallel, and as a support, to your profession. 

3 comments:

Fiona Glass said...

I find it hard to find the right balance too, between waffling every day or not updating it for weeks! I would always rather be writing than blogging (hey, I get *paid* for the writing... *g*) but it's not too difficult to find a few minutes here and there to update my blog. The real difficulty is when you have umpteen blogs, Myspace pages, web pages, groups and forums and have to update them *all*. ::headdesk::

Unknown said...

Hi Caroline,
I'm sorry to pop in on your blog like this, but the email address I have for you no longer works. Will you please contact me: annestuessy@sniplits.com
Thanks

Caroline Dunford said...

Hi Fiona,

I know you're caught up with life at present, but I meant to reply to your comment and say yes, I keep different blogs. I count this as my professional one and have more personal ones elsewhere. It does tend to eat up time.