Links & Comments: Another Badly Needed Application

I’ve already provided one roadmap to riches via my killer podcast application post.

But if you want to start on a slightly smaller scale, here’s another one.

Someone needs to build a cross platform, highly configurable online application that will pull recent inbound links from Technorati and Google blog search, weed out duplicates AND allow the user to select which ones appear in a list that can be easily added to a blog or other web page. It would be a centrally administered and more feature rich version of the list I manage this way. You could also do the same thing for a list of recent inbound comments (pulling the comments directly from the blog- not via a central location like coComment), and allow both lists to be administered from a single web page.

Why you say? Two reasons: spam and demand.

Almost every post of mine gets picked up by at least one spam blog and often 2-3 of them. Contrary to what Scott Karp says, Technorati is doing a ton better at weeding out spam links and keeping accurate link counts, but it is a full scale war, fought every day. Spam is like roaches, there is no way to keep them all out, and so you still have to rely partially on a kill them when you see them approach. That’s why Scott’s, mine and undoubtedly a ton of people’s link counts go up and down like the cast of the Gillmor Gang.

If I am having this problem, I am sure a lot of others are too. A quick survey of some other reasonably popular blogs confirms this.

If there was a way to validate the inbound links that show up in that list, sort of like you can do now with comments and trackbacks, it would allow people to weed out those links before they show up. And it would take away some of the incentive to spam.

People would flock to this program, and people would happily pay a few bucks a month for it. Look at all the great work done at Freshblog and other places trying to find a way to do things like this within the confines of various platform limitations. Give us one stop shopping, and we will give you money.

I’ll type my fingers off about it here, as would hordes of other appreciative bloggers.

Those of you lucky enough to be on WordPress may rightfully say that there are plugins that already do this for you, but there are plenty of people like me who are stuck in Hotel Blogger and elsewhere who would use it. Plus, we’re all about cross-platform, right? So if you build it well, we will come. From Blogger and from WordPress. From all over.

What are you waiting for. Go build it and I’ll get ready to send you my subscription fee every month.

Rumble in the Jungle 2.0

catboxingNow that Lee Gomes has taken the WBS (World Blogging Slugfest) belt away from Chris Anderson in convincing fashion (it’s really not about whether the book moved up the top seller list) we have another heavyweight bout brewing.

Mike Arrington, fresh from his all too brief stint as the blog rage eradicator, and having turned in his badge to rejoin the Gillmor Gang (hopefully with Nick Carr) at the behest of the most enraged of all bloggers (more on that below), takes on Nick Douglas of Valleywag fame over some emails Nick Douglas allegedly sent around inquiring if Mike is an investor in some startups, presumably to see if Mike has any secret investments in the companies he writes about.

I don’t know Mike, and I have been critical in the past of what I perceived at the time as a rock star attitude. But I have read enough of his posts to be very surprised if he invested in a company and then wrote about it without disclosing the investment. For one thing, Mike strikes me as an honest guy who, at least most of the time, can still remember what life was like before TechCrunch. I also know that Mike is an attorney – and I know that for him to do something like that would put his law license at risk. Whether he needs it to make a living or not, he probably isn’t keen on having it publicly jerked away from him.

So I would put the odds of Mike investing in a company and then writing about it without disclosing that fact at about zero.

And I suspect that Nick Douglas knows this as well. Which means that he either wrote these emails just to stir the pot a little (one of the many things to love about Valleywag is that it occasionally makes great fun of the so-called blogging elite) or for some other reason.

It’s the possibility of another reason that I find interesting.

Mike believes that Nick may be taking some preemptive shots in the face of greater competition from the TechCrunch family of blogs. Mike seems pretty angry about the whole thing and even tosses out the L-word (libel).

But there could be more to it. Nick told me tonight that Steve Gillmor called him and “advised” him to stop writing about Mike. Nick tells me that when he told Steve he was going to continue to look into these TechCrunch issues, Steve got huffy and ended the conversation by telling Nick he wouldn’t talk to him anymore.

Note to Mike: As stated, I don’t believe for a second that you secretly invested in any companies. But you can certainly find a better ambassador than your once and future podcast mate, Steve Gillmor.

This could get very interesting.

Update: Nick posts some thoughts at Valleywag.

Moore Wisdom

I really like this passage from Earl’s latest post:

“My ego hopes that the subjects I think are important or interesting are relevant to at least a few other people on this planet. When someone leaves me a comment or links to me I feel I’ve accomplished that. It may be part of my own sense of mortality. When posting I’m not concerned about popular opinion. People can love to read you even if they’re certain you’re dead wrong and bound to self-destruct. With different viewpoints comes opportunity for growth. I welcome this.”

When people talk back, or comment, or link it is evidence that we’re all in this together- and by this I mean the universe as well as the blogosphere.

It’s not about money, or fame. It’s about belonging.

That’s why I write, that’s why I read and that’s why I link.

Tales from the Underground

Steve Rubel writes a very interesting and timely post today about the underground blogosphere- the scads of emails that bloggers send to each other every day.

He describes the underground blogosphere thustly:

“The Underground Blogosphere is an intricate web of hundreds of thousands of emails that bloggers send to each other every day. In essence, they are “pitching” their latest posts in hopes of getting a link. Sometimes, bloggers are genuinely looking for good feedback, but more often than not all they are just looking for traffic.”

As you might imagine, I have a few thoughts about the underground blogosphere.

First, as I mentioned the other day, I have historically been very hesitant to email other bloggers about posts of mine. After thinking about it a bit, I think the reason is that it can easily (and often correctly) be interpreted as taking advantage of a contact or relationship. Putting it in songwriting terms, as I often do because of the similarities I see between blogging and songwriting, it’s sort of like asking another artist who writes his own material to cover your song. Bold, yes. Fruitful, not very.

Steve is one of my blogging mentors, and has been very kind to me as I grow my blog. About the time I was starting to make some progress up blogger’s hill, he wrote a post suggesting that emailing the top bloggers in a quest for links was not the way to go. While I questioned the way he said it, I agreed then on this blog and I agree now that emailing wildly is not the way to go. I also know that if you want people to help you, you have to play be their rules. By trying to be considerate and fair, I was able to (maybe, sort of) prove myself wrong, with much help from Steve, Scoble and other mega-bloggers.

As I mentioned the other day, however, like everything else blogging is different than it appears once you get into it, and as a now somewhat established blogger I am always appreciative of emails and Delicious links suggesting topics and posts to write about.

But I still go easy on emailing others about my posts. So how should emailing and the underground blogosphere work as far as blog growth goes?

I’ll suggest 5 rules for emailing another blogger about your post.

1) Develop a relationship with the blogger before you email. Link to him. Comment on her blog. Bloggers notice who links to them and who comments on their blogs. When I see someone linking and commenting here, I almost always subscribe to their blog and look for opportunities to create cross-blog conversations. Human nature dictates that you return a favor- no matter how big your linkcount is. Let this work in your favor.

2) Don’t just start sending indiscriminate emails to people who don’t know you and expect to get link love in return. Broad emailing looks more like spam than information, and it will be treated as such.

3) Be brief, kind and appreciative. Here’s the relevant portion of an email I wrote Scoble about my killer podcast application post: “I thought you might be interested in a post I did today about expanding the reach of podcasts.” I know Scoble cares about podcasts- I would never email him about a post about something unrelated to his blog and interests.

4) State why the post might be of interest to the recipient. Don’t make the recipient read the post just to see if it might be relevant- tell her why it is. Briefly. And remember, you’re not trying to sell her anything- you’re just giving information.

5) Be patient. I have a mental list of 3-4 newish bloggers I want to link to right now, and I am just waiting until I see an interesting post within a reasonable time after it is posted. I am sure other bloggers have similar lists in their head. It may not seem like it at first, but people will respond if you approach them the right way.

Obviously, these rules don’t apply to email for other purposes, or to emails between people who are friends- in that case, email away. We all do that- and that’s a large part of the underground blogosphere that Steve wonders about exposing.

Exposing it is a good idea, and I’ll have more on that angle later.

Round 2 to Gomes

catboxingContinuing the long tail discussion that I posted about yesterday, Lee Gomes writes an email to Nick Carr clarifying his position and responding to some things Chris Anderson wrote in response to Lee’s Wall Street Journal article that began this little brouhaha.

Lee begins by clarifying his point about the effect of the long tail- basically that there may be a shift towards online shopping, but not to the extent Chris claims in his book. Then he takes direct issue with a few of the things Chris wrote yesterday:

“While I am at it, I’d like to correct an extremely serious misrepresentation Chris made at the end of his blog posting, to the effect that Anita Elberse of Harvard “urged” me not to characterize her work the way I did. This is manifestly false.”

Lee quotes an email from Professor Elberse thanking him (Lee) for quoting her so accurately and mentions that she corrected Chris about a statement in his response, via a comment to his post. Here is that comment:

“You say “Nielsen VideoScan data (…) is almost entirely taken from bricks-and-mortar sources.” I don’t think this is entirely correct. The VideoScan data reflect both offline and online sales, and actually break them down by channel. The breakdown is not as detailed as one might wish in an ideal world, but they do allow one to track whether, say, the share of offline sales go down over time. Therefore, I do think the fact that my colleague and I only observe a “slight” shift is meaningful.”

While that correction is much more of a clarification than a smackdown, I have to give this round to Gomes. He lands a few blows, including this one:

“While Chris seems to have repealed the’98 Percent Rule’ in his interviews with me, he didn’t do as much in the book. This is how he begins the book, and any reader, after hearing the ‘Rule” described as “nearly universal,’ would, if nothing else, assume that it was true at all the examples the book describes. Chris defended the fact that it’s not by noting to me that his book wasn’t titled ‘The 98 Percent Rule;’ does this mean that any sentence without ‘Long Tail’ in [it] can’t be assumed to be accurate? He also complains in his blog comments that I didn’t mention the 95% play rates at Netflix. But I wasn’t trying to show the ‘Rule’ was NEVER true; he is the one who said it was ‘universal.'”

Again, I don’t know the exact degree to which consumers are moving from bricks and mortar to the computer, but logic, common sense and experience tells me it is happening. The bigger question, which Nick asked and I discussed yesterday, is how much they have moved and whether the trip is over or just starting.

For the reasons I mentioned yesterday, I am convinced the move online is just starting.

But the only thing we know for sure is that books are written for readers, newspaper articles are written for readers and only time will tell who is ultimately right.

Shaking the Tail, Dialing the Phone

How important is the long tail?

That’s the question being asked today by several writers and influential bloggers. It’s a question that goes straight to the heart and purpose of blogging, so let’s take a look.

It all starts with Chris Anderson’s new book The Long Tail, which argues that online sales has a great advantage through infinite “shelf space,” which traditional bricks and mortar stores do not have. The ability to market the items that sell less units, combined with the ability to sell to people who are not physically present, gives the online seller a big advantage. Think about it like this. If the slow selling stuff accounts for 30% of sales, that’s like having several extra “hot” items available all the time. Plus, that 30% has to come from somewhere, and if it’s not coming at the expense of the long tail items, it’s coming at the expense of the hot items- the head items, if you will.

I certainly buy into the concept Chris is espousing. It’s the very reason why 99% of my non-food purchases are made over the internet. Knowing that Amazon will have what I’m looking for is great incentive to start there first. That’s before you even consider the convenience and comparison benefits.

Lee Gomes at the Wall Street Journal writes in an article about Chris’s book:

“By Mr. Anderson’s calculation, 25% of Amazon’s sales are from its tail, as they involve books you can’t find at a traditional retailer. But using another analysis of those numbers — an analysis that Mr. Anderson argues isn’t meaningful — you can show that 2.7% of Amazon’s titles produce a whopping 75% of its revenues. Not quite as impressive.”

Lee goes on to cite examples of how the hot items are still accounting for the large majority of the action at such diverse places as online music, Netflix and Bloglines.

In sum, Lee doesn’t buy the long tail argument.

Chris responds on his blog, and rebuts what he describes as Lee’s haste to find flaws. He states the case for the long tail items to catching up to the hot items in the near future:

“Although I don’t discuss this in detail in the book, in the case of Rhapsody, the trend data suggests that the tail (as defined above) actually will equal the head within five years. Which is why the language Gomes cites from the book jacket is actually all phrased in the future conditional tense (‘What happens when the combined value of all the millions of items that may sell only a few copies equals or exceeds the value of a few items that sell millions each?’). I asked him to quote the jacket copy in full context, but it apparently wasn’t convenient to his thesis to do so, so he didn’t.”

Nick Carr takes a look at the arguments and concludes:

“I have no doubt that the Internet has created a Long Tail effect, making it easier for customers to find and buy rare or specialized products. Anderson’s book provides pretty compelling evidence that that’s true. And it’s important. But I’m still not quite sure if it’s really important or just mildly important.”

Nick goes on to make a very good point about the long tail- that it existed before the internet, just in a different form:

“To get a clear sense of the impact of the Net on the Long Tail, you’d need another statistic: Before the Internet came along, what percentage of total book sales lay outside the 100,000 titles stocked in a typical large bookstore? There have always been specialized bookstores, selling everything from religious and spiritual books to textbooks to foreign-language books to used and out-of-print books to poetry books (though their ranks have been pruned by Amazon and other online sellers). And there have always been small presses – literary, academic and technical – selling books directly, through the mail. And you’ve always been able to go to a bookstore and order a book that it didn’t carry on its shelves. How much of the Long Tail of books represents old demand moving through a new channel, and how much represents new demand?”

As Nick concludes, the long tail was there long before the internet. It’s probably a lot bigger now, since supply can and does affect demand. The real question, however, is whether the long tail is fully grown, or just a pup that will grow bigger over time, as Chris suggests.

Only time will tell. My guess is that it will get a whole lot bigger, since there will never again be a generation that isn’t completely comfortable with the computer and the internet. For our kids and their kids, computers are not newfangled and sometimes confusing technology. They are like telephones. They are implements to be used for a purpose.

I suspect the long tail will play out a lot like the state of communications did when telephones landed on everyone’s wall. There was communication before phones- but not nearly as much. It took longer and the hurdle was so high that the level of communication was kept in check. The effort required precluded it from growing.

I think a lot of the bricks and mortar stores are going to start feeling like letters over the next few years.

Taking a Stand

Mike Arrington does a good and just thing.

I’ve said before that blogs are like cars- they bring out the inner asshole in some folks. It’s nice to see an A-List blogger like Mike roll down the window and confront the finger waiver in a public forum.

Nick Carr posts his side of the story on his blog.

I have said this about Nick Carr recently on this blog:

“And then there are the pseudo-intellectuals like Andrew Keen (who is the blogosphere’s version of the party guest who can’t stop talking about how smart he is long enough to notice the PhD’s shaking their heads as they walk away). Or the Nick Carr types whose many thoughtful posts get lost in the flood of Mary, Mary posts made in the name of fame or traffic.”

And the other day I agreed with Nick’s Dell post and added my own thoughts.

So while I disagree with some of Nick’s tactics, I also appreciate much of his writing.

In sum, I think Nick is a smart and often thoughtful guy. But he’s no smarter than a lot of other bloggers who don’t have to put on the Andrew Keen act.

So here’s my advice to Nick. When you come to the crossroads of being like Andrew and being like Mike- be like Mike.

Of course Nick will never see this post because I suspect he feels I am not intellectually worthy of his time. It’s easy to act that way from the safety of a car…I mean a keyboard.

Lessons Learned on Blogger’s Hill

hardclimbI’ve been enjoying Darren Rowse’s series about what people would do differently if they were starting their blog now. It’s a brilliant series for so many reasons- Darren’s blog is well named and one of my long-time reads.

Here’s some stuff I’d do differently. Some serious, some in fun. Hopefully you’ll be able to tell which is which.

1) I’d do a lot more reading blogs before I started writing one. I read a few blogs before I started blogging, but I didn’t really understand the process. I thought blogging was just an easier way to manage content on a personal home page. It’s a lot more than that. If I had known what I was doing when I started, I think I would have been accepted by the old school bloggers a lot sooner.

2) I’d start traveling up the hill with other bloggers sooner. Starting a blog is still really hard. It’s so much easier when you’re doing it with some other folks. Once I starting blogging around with Mathew Ingram, Scott Karp, Phil Sim, Richard Querin and others, it got a lot easier and a lot more fun. If you know that 5-6 other bloggers are reading and linking to your blog from the get-go, you will be way ahead in the conversation building game.

3) I’d start out using WordPress instead of Blogger, since there is no sane and easy way to move from one to the other.

4) I might be anonymous (in a Thomas Hawk sort of way). I could tell some funny stories if everybody didn’t know who I am. And as hard as it may be to believe, I am even more opinionated than I seem. Being public, somewhat high-profile within your industry and employed in a non-tech profession really limits your ability to say certain things. I’m not sure I’d do it, but I might.

5) I’d have blown my vacation money on a few conferences so the people who currently link around my detailed analysis in favor of 10 word posts by their buddies would think I was one of their buddies and ignore other detailed analysis in favor of my 10 word posts.

6) I’d get over my hang-ups about emailing other bloggers about a relevant post of mine. Like newspapers and magazines, popular blogs are always looking for content. I love it when someone emails me about a post of theirs, an application to review or a potential topic for me to write on- it’s like they’re doing some of my work for me. I used to think emailing was an imposition and a unfair shortcut. That’s not true at all.

7) I’d start out assuming a position of authority instead of typing my fingers off and waiting for people to realize that I am an authority.

8) I’d become a cheerleader for Web 2.0 instead of a skeptic. I used to get a lot more free stuff than I do now.