Archive for the ‘Professional Development’ Category

One side effect of this challenge is that I’m pummeling you, my dearest reader, with posts that are not “on topic.” I wonder what your thoughts are on that. Is this a totally self-indulgent exercise? Is the quantity and frequency of posting driving you crazy? Do you wish I’d not sink all my energy into this challenge, so that I’d have some energy for writing more topical posts? Regardless of your perspective, I’m so dangerously close to being only a day behind, I’m plodding onward.

The day 18 challenge involves further analysis of commenting patterns on your blog. Because I’ve lost my entire comment history from the Movable Type days, I have a pretty limited set of posts from which to draw data.

* Which of your posts have generated the most comments?

Well, the one where I went fishing for comments on Twitter received 30 comments.

The launch of video commenting drew 21 comments.

My Thoughts on Managing My Social Network post garnered 18 comments.

The big winner though is my Stepping Into Marketing post, which generated 38 comments.

* Which has generated the best conversation? (The last question is about quantity; this one is about quality.)

I think the marketing post clearly had the most mojo and generated the best conversation between commenters. One of the commenters took the conversation over to his blog, where I continued the discussion with him at considerable length. The video commenting also introduced some nice back and forth between commenters, which I enjoyed immensely.

As an aside, if you haven’t tried out the Seesmic video commenting plugin on this blog and have the technology to do so, please do give it a go. So much fun.

* Are there any patterns to the commenting on your own blog? Do certain types of posts generate more comments than others?

I think the posts where I ask/ponder the types of questions that people are already asking themselves and each other draw the best comments. How do we manage our social networks? Why do I use Twitter so fervently?

But really, it’s just plain hard to predict what people will talk about, as Walt Crawford observed during the first comment audit. For example, only two people commented on my comments on librarian rock-stardom, but Walt picked it up for the latest Cites and Insights. Never know who will respond to something you’ve written. But you gotta put it out there and see what sticks.

* If you do see a pattern or commonality between posts that generate good comments, what can you do to increase those qualities in other posts?

I don’t believe that the primary purpose of this blog is to generate comments, so I’m not sure that I want to bring that mentality to every post I write. Sometimes I just want to share.

19
May

Comment Challenge Day 17 - Comment Spree

   Posted by: Greg Schwartz   in Bloggery, Professional Development

Only two days behind now! It’s time for a comment spree. Five comments in five minutes.

I’m started by exploring blogs and podcasts of other registrants to Podcamp Ohio, for which I recently registered. (My first podcamp. So excited!)

One of the registrants is co-founder of Social Media Club Louisville, which I had no idea existed. So comment 1 is on the SMC Louisville blog. I also tried to comment here at another Louisvillian podcamper’s blog, but something is broken in the commenting, so I sent the author an email instead. I’m counting it.

I wanted to comment on this blog, but the author explicitly said “the best way to interact with me for now is on Twitter.” I commented anyway.

I then switched gears and commented on a submission for this week’s Uncontrolled Vocabulary. And finally, I commented on a post related to an attempted one-off revival of the Carnival of the Infosciences.

This took much, much longer than five minutes. It took hours. I’m not cut out for speed commenting. It doesn’t suit me in any fashion. Now I know.

19
May

Comment Challenge Day 15/16 - Awards Day

   Posted by: Greg Schwartz   in Bloggery, Professional Development

So here it is, the 19th day of the month, and I’m all the way back on Day 15’s challenge. Pathetic. But not altogether surprising. Today, I’m supposed to present awards to the fantastic commenters on my blog.

Here’s the thing: If you comment on this blog (in a non-spammy way), you’re fantastic. All award-winners in my book. I don’t think there’s any one person who has risen above the others to be the premier commenter on this blog. I’m also hesitant to commit errors of omission by not including people in a list of best commenters. I want you all to know that every single comment, no matter how long or short, is valued by this blog’s author.

And so it gives me great pleasure to award this shiny medal to everyone who’s ever left a non-spammy comment on this blog. Thank you for being part of the Open Stacks community.

Day 16 of this challenge was meant to be a day of rest and catching up, an opportunity I meant to take advantage of and failed.

In an attempt to catch up a bit, let’s tackle the next challenge. The task is simple. Ask a compelling question and let you, the reader, comment and thus have the compelling story be told in the comments and not in the post itself.

Here’s my question(s): Those of you who use Twitter, what do you think makes it so compelling and sticky (i.e., challenging to walk away from)? Those of you who don’t use Twitter, have you tried it and walked away or are you avoiding it altogether? Either way, why?

I know a number of you have answered this question in one context or another, but I’d like to see a nice long list of responses that might help someone looking at Twitter for the first time see many sides of the Twitter discussion. Give me three words. Or give me three paragraphs. Fire away.

As happens with so many endeavors in my life, my initial zest and enthusiasm for the comment challenge has waned somewhat. It’s not that I’m not still interested, just that I’m tired and blogging on a daily basis is not my MO. This particular challenge asks me to elevate a discussion that’s taking place in my comments to the next level by turning it into a post.

I was fairly disinclined to complete this task for what I thought was a pretty obvious reason: If I’d thought a comment or set of comments was worth a new blog post, I’d have already written one. But in the spirit of participation, I do want to touch on one point that was raised by multiple people in my post on Stepping into Marketing.

What I learned is that I’m being pretty fast and loose with my use of the word marketing. Stephen Kellat points out, in espousing the need for data and demographic info, that “Marketing is okay, I suppose, if seen merely as a synonym for promotion.” Tim Keneipp, who begins his thoughts in the comments, but ultimately takes the conversation over to his blog, had this to say: “I think what Greg and some of the others are really talking about is librarians becoming active public relations ambassadors and not really marketing.” If I remember correctly, Tim has a marketing background, so he certainly would know better than I would. The back and forth between him and me on his blog post is worth reading.

Of course, I’ve since spent a little time digging into the term marketing and getting a better grip on the broader processes that the term indicates. I’m not so sure that I won’t still be using it as my catch-all term for activities that, for example, are geared toward elevating the presence and position of librarians within the context of social media. But at least I’ll now be better aware of my bastardization of the term.

What I want to stress though is my awareness that I have no idea what I’m talking about. My thoughts on marketing, promotion, public relations, etc., are nascent at best. That’s why I toss them out here, bandy them about with y’all and see what sticks. Your comments are profoundly helpful in forcing me to better articulate my ideas and wrap my head around things. So keep challenging me. (I welcome agreement too!)

I’m a little behind on the challenge and it’s likely to get worse before it gets better. Day 12’s challenge has us assessing how easy or difficult we make it for people to comment.

I won’t belabor the assessment with too much detail here. I moderate first-time commenters and that’s enough to keep out the spam. I don’t want to make moderation a consistent nuisance for people who visit regularly.

I’ve added a Live Comment Preview plugin at Steve Lawson’s suggestion to reduce anxiety about a comment not appearing with the format that the commenter intended. I don’t have captchas or anything like that. I do have it set to require a name and email address, although you could fake that easily enough, I suppose. Maybe I’ll remove that requirement, but I’m not really interested in anonymous commenting. Thoughts on that? Is there something you see that I should be doing differently? I’m open to suggestions.

12
May

Comment Challenge Day 11 - Comment policy

   Posted by: Greg Schwartz   in Bloggery, Professional Development

After a packed Mother’s Day weekend, I find myself a day behind in the challenge. It’s time to lay out a comment policy. I think I can do this fairly succinctly.

Everyone is invited to comment, but you’ll need to provide a name and email address. Commenting in both text and video form are available on every blog post. If you don’t want your comments displayed publicly, you can use the contact form to communicate with me. If you’ve never commented here before (or your comment has three or more links in it), your comment will be added to my moderation queue and I’ll need to approve it before it appears. This is primarily for anti-spam purposes. If I seem to be taking a long time moderating your comment, drop me a line.

I expect that commenters will be civil and will attack ideas and not people. Further, I reserve the right to censor or delete anything on this blog at any time. That said, I’d be loathe to do so. You’d really have to violate my personal sensibilities somehow. In the unlikely event that I should be compelled to edit your comment, I will do so in as transparent a fashion as possible. So don’t worry about it too much. Speak your mind. The lines are open.

10
May

Comment Challenge Day 10 - Check yo self!

   Posted by: Greg Schwartz   in Bloggery, Professional Development

Today’s mission is to perform a comment audit on my blog. The idea is to check your blog against the Six Reasons People Aren’t Commenting on Your Blog.

So let’s do it.

1. You sound like a press release.

For the most part, no. I do like the plug the show occasionally, but I don’t think I do that in an impersonal way.

2. You sound like an infomercial.

I don’t think so.

3. You sound like a know-it-all.

I’m guessing that I’m occasionally guilty of this. I do have pretty strong opinions sometimes and that might dissuade some people from entering into a conversation about them. Hard to self-diagnose though.

4. You haven’t showed them how.

I could do a better job laying out my comment policy and walking people through the moderation structure in place. I suspect that I’ll have a chance to do this over the next 21 days.

5. You haven’t created the right atmosphere.

I think I do an OK job of employing a conversational tone on this blog. Walt Crawford described my blog as having “strong voice” (pdf), by which he means that you “hear” a lot of the author in the writing. I think of this as a good thing, in terms of welcoming conversation. But again, that strong voice might have the opposite effect sometimes (see answer 2).

6. You just don’t seem that into it.

I sure hope not. When I’m not that into it, I don’t write.

The number and quality of the comments I’ve received on recent non-Comment-Challenge-related posts indicates to me that I’m doing a fair job initiating conversations. You’d tell me if I was wrong, wouldn’t you?

OK, so I’m a little late with this item. Yesterday, we were tasked with considering this question: “should we be using the commenting capacity to generate conversations between bloggers, or should we be interacting through our blog posts?

I wasn’t even aware of a debate over this issue until I learned about Seth Godin’s lack of comments on his blog. There was some debate over whether you could even call it a blog if you don’t allow comments. And let me say with conviction that yes, you can have a blog without allowing comments.

But on to the question at hand. I’m sure it’s obvious to most readers that I believe in promoting conversations with whatever means are available: your blog, my blog, text comments, video, whatever. So I don’t really have a preference for commenting on the original blog or taking your thoughts back to your blog and expanding the conversation there. Do what feels right.

I suppose it depends on whether you want to draw your blog’s readership into the discussion or not. It might also depend on whether you genuinely have something new to say. I’m not sure I’d write a post just for the sake of saying “Yeah, what she said.” Length of the comment might also be a factor, but I’m not sure I’d make that the primary factor in any situation. I don’t think there’s a simple prescriptive approach to making the “correct” decision. I wouldn’t obsess about it either way. Again, do what feels right.

Today, we were encouraged to find a blog outside of our normal reading domains and comment. The instructions du jour suggested starting with the Technorati Blog Directory. Browsing the categories, I thought I’d check out the science blogs and see if I could find something worth commenting on.

There were a few good options, but i settled on a blog called EcoGeek, where I found a post listing six ways to save massive quantities of gasoline. I read through the comments and found a comment that added a seventh way that really resonated with me: telecommuting. My comment echoes that notion. I added my comment and it inexplicably disappeared on refresh. So I tried to add it again. Same effect. Maybe it’s a moderation thing, but I’m not sure I’ve left a comment at all. Confused.

There are plenty of comments on the post, most of an above average length. Not sure if that’s typical of the eco-science blog community or not. I’m guessing it is. But it doesn’t appear that the original blogger is participating in the ongoing conversation, which is disappointing. The topic itself is interesting and important, so it’s encouraging to see so much discussion surrounding it. I’d probably read more blogs in this topic area, but I’ve already hit my saturation point (and then some) on text feeds.