Posts Tagged ‘technorati’

State Of The Blogosphere 2008: A Technorati Report

This week Technorati released it’s annual blogging report: State of The Blogosphere 2008. Released over a five day period, the report looks at the trends and impact of blogging, split into 5 sections:

  1. Who are the bloggers?
  2. The what and why of blogging
  3. The how of blogging
  4. Blogging for profit
  5. Brands enter the blogosphere

The report is the result of a survey of a random survey of some 1.2million bloggers. Technorati defines it’s purpose as:

“…to go beyond the numbers to deliver insights into bloggers and the state of blogging today. Who are the bloggers, why and how do they do what they do, and what is the impact on their lives and work”

The insights into bloggers are interesting indeed, but the numbers look healthy too:

  • 77% of active Internet users read blogs.
  • 24,000 is the average monthly unique visitors for European bloggers.
  • “More than four in five bloggers post product or brand reviews, and blog about brands they love or hate.”
  • 54% of corporate bloggers say they are “… better known in the industry as a result of my blog”.
  • Only 4% of bloggers use paid forms of advertising to attract visitors, whereas…
  • 83% use Technorati listings, 77% comment on other blogs, and 73% list their blogs on Google.

And I couldn’t resist quoting some Seth Godin goodness, on where blogs are heading:

“The word blog is irrelevant, what’s important is that it is now common, and will soon be expected, that every intelligent person (and quite a few unintelligent ones) will have a media platform where they share what they care about with the world.”

- Seth Godin, Author, Tribes, sethgodin.typepad.com

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[what is...] Technorati

If you don’t really feel like searching over 112 million blogs to find out what your customers / competitors / industry leaders are talking about, why not let Technorati do it for you?

Technorati is a blog search engine, tracking over 112 million blogs to bring you all the hot stuff from the blogosphere. As well as looking at blog posts, Technorati also makes use of ‘tags’ to allow authors to categorise their own content, and tracks the relationships between blogs and authors (who’s linking to each other, leaving comments or responses) - this all adds up to a comprehensive, real-time look at whats happening in the world of blogs.

Technorati easily allows you or your business to track what bloggers are saying about topics that are important to you. It’s a great starting point for tuning into the conversation.

We have incorporated Technorati tags at the bottom of each of our blog posts to allow us to tell Technorati a little about the subject of the post, as well as helping to categorise where this blog post should be found. You can view our Technorati profile at http://technorati.com/blogs/www.bpodr.co.uk%2Fblog.

Graham has also placed a not-so-subtle technorati button to the right hand-side of this blog, so you can mark us a Technorati favourite. (he’s too good to you!)

In the (very-near) future, we’ll show you practical ways of using Technorati to tune in and stay tuned to the conversation that matters most to your business.

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No more interruptions (part 3): the vital listening skills

This is the final post in my short series on listening. In the previous two (here and here) I looked at why listening was so important for companies attempting to find new ways of connecting with their customers. This post is a practical look at some of the ways to make listening a conscious action.

Al Alvarez is a wonderful writer. He writes criticism, essays, non-fiction studies of subjects as diverse as poker, mountaineering, divorce, and working on oil rigs. He’s also a poet and a novelist and has written a superb autobiography called “Where Did It All Go Right?”. In a recent series of lectures - now published in book form as “The Writer’s Voice” - he introduces his subject like this:

“…in order to write well you must first learn how to listen. And that, in turn, is something writers have in common with their readers. Reading well means opening your ears to the presence behind the words and knowing which notes are true and which are false.”

There are two key points here. Firstly, that writers and readers share a common trait; and secondly, the ability to detect what’s authentic. But let’s leave the world of literature and apply these insights to social marketing. Traditional marketing ‘listened’ through surveys and opinion polls, market research and measuring media coverage. All, quite obviously, driven from ‘above’ and producing results that could easily be interpreted in whatever way best suited the marketers. There was no way to gauge what was authentic, in other words. Worse, the only voices heard were those both willing to be interrupted and to respond. Over time, this method almost guarantees that the marketers and the market are heading on separate paths.

Finding the conversation
To start listening, you need to find the conversation. You want to know what people are saying about your products and your company. Given the size of the internet and the vast numbers of people using it, this might seem an impossible task. Luckily, however, there are tools that make the task slightly less Herculean. Here are three simple methods of determining where you are being discussed:

  • Google alerts - anyone can set up an alert on Google and, whenever your search term (eg. “purple king-sized super widget”) is found by Google, you’ll receive an email pointing to the link.
  • del.icio.us - this takes a bit more work but if anyone has created a shared bookmark and tagged it with your company name or your product name, it will be here. You can widen your search to take in competitors and similar products, of course. The aim is to discover some of the authoratitive voices on the internet that may be discussing you.
  • technorati - at the time of writing this post technorati claims to be “Currently tracking 112.8 million blogs and over 250 million pieces of tagged social media.” One of its most useful features is that it clearly shows you how long ago a blog pot was written, so you can get a sense of when activity peaked on a certain conversation.

Passive listening (or tracking the conversation)
Once you’ve found the opinion makers and thought leaders or the forums where your type of products are discussed, it’s time to put in place a method for tracking the conversation.

The best way to keep track of blog conversations is via RSS. Adam put up a post here recently explaining what RSS is and what it does. Keeping track of your feeds is easy with a feed reader. I use Google’s reader but if you prefer an off-line version, give FeedDemon a try.

When conversations take place on forums, it can mean that you need to visit the forum regularly to keep up with the discussion. This is not necessarily a bad thing as it reinforces the listening habit. Remember why you’re doing this? It’s easy to lurk on a forum and just listen. Sometimes, forums have functionality to allow you to receive an email when a particular discussion is updated. Check the FAQ of any forum you join or visit to find out some of the ins and outs.

Active listening (or joining the conversation)
Lurking and eavesdropping are all very well for a while. But it can become a bit frustrating hearing only one side of the conversation. Now it’s time to let your voice be heard. If you’ve been paying attention in the forums and to the blog posts you’ve been reading, you should have a feel for the tone, topics, and limits for each conversation. Now’s the time to let them know you’re there.

One of the quickest wins comes from simply leaving a comment on a blog. If there’s a post that directly relates to you, your company, or one of its products, state your view. Let them know who you are and why you can talk with authority. If a post refers to a case of poor customer service, for instance, tell them you’ll look into it. Do that and report back your findings and you’ll find that immediately some of the bad press is diminished.

The next step is to start your own blog. Use it to ask questions and drive traffic to it by leaving comments on other blogs and forums. Make it a blog that matters to the audience you have been listening to.

Listening as call to action
As you establish your credibility, honesty, and authenticity through your blog and your willingness to listen, you’ll find that you can begin to shape the conversation. This is not about advertising: it’s about sharing news and information with an audience that is interested. They are reading your blog: you are not interrupting. Where before, this audience wanted to talk about your products and company but were limited to rumours and opinion, now they have a real-life horse’s mouth to get the facts from. You’ll stilled be called up on mistakes and bad judgement but the long-term ill effects will be minimal and be heavily outweighed by the positive effects.

Get listening today.

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