Date: 2010-06-12 01:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairmen.livejournal.com
Slightly confused by your "put off" comment, though - surely any time you string together a series of insults directed at a group it's pretty obvious you don't really intend to start a reasoned debate?

Date: 2010-06-12 01:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairmen.livejournal.com
OK, fair enough. If I'd seen a disclaimer like that I wouldn't have posted.

I think you'll surprise a number of people - it's a bit formal for LJ. Seems a bit "LJ are srs bizness".

Have you considered starting a seperate blog? You seem to get a lot of exposure, and the kind of conversation control and exposure you're talking about seems to fit better with the blog model as it's seen these days.

Date: 2010-06-12 01:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairmen.livejournal.com
Hmm. I'd suspect that, given trackbacks, Discus, and better SEO, not to mention how much more seriously a blog is taken than an LJ, you'd probably pass that number pretty quickly.

As for retaining readers, I'd just suggest repeatedly pointing out that your entries are now on your blog, and NOT re-posting most of them to LJ. Let's face it, do many of your current readers not have some kind of RSS?

Date: 2010-06-12 03:22 pm (UTC)
matgb: Artwork of 19th century upper class anarchist, text: MatGB (Default)
From: [personal profile] matgb
An LJ is a blog. By any sane definition of what a blog is, LJ is included.

A lot, but not all, of the snobbery surrounding LJ as a platform has gone now, it's now seen as just as valid as Blogger or Wordpress.com.

There's definite merit in self hosting, or at the very least having a domain name for the blog, but there's also no reason why an LJ can't be taken seriously.

Specifically, before we both decamped to Dreamwidth for our primary hosts, [livejournal.com profile] miss_s_b and I were both in the top 100 Wikio blogs, she was frequently in the top 50 for [livejournal.com profile] theyorkshergob.

That was, partially, because I knew how to game the system a little bit, but it was also because many of the top blogs linked to her regularly. That was when she was using an LJ community for her 'blogging'.

Trackbacks are deprecated, most of the top blogs in the UK turn them off, PITA and full of spam. Discus is meh, I prefer LJ commenting, LJ needs to revamp the OpenID UI, but that's a specific problem that a paid user could overcome if they wanted. SEO is an issue, but LJs can have good SEO and pagerank, not as good as a blog using proper permalinks, but judicious use of tagging can be effective.

And definitely disagree re crossposting; turn comments off, yes, perhaps exerpts only, but abandoning existing casual readers'll piss them off.

Especially those of us that use LD/DW as our RSS readers of choice.

@Andrew.

300-500 readers per day is actually pretty good for a mid range unpromoted blog.

Date: 2010-06-12 03:33 pm (UTC)
matgb: Artwork of 19th century upper class anarchist, text: MatGB (Default)
From: [personal profile] matgb
Also; some LJs are serious; not sure you actually need a disclaimer for comments, then your ead everything, I tend to only come back for replies &c.

TBH these days, unless you have a specific niche, building up a personal blog is a PITA that's possibly not worth doing.

Much better to join/setup a group blog for people of similar inclination and topic areas, then you get a pooled share of link, shared readership and if one of you is unable/unwilling/not int he mood to post for a bit, you don't necessarily lose readers.

You're right about RSS takeup; most readers will come via a bookmark, the addressbar, searching directly or a link. Ergo, if you're offline for two weeks, people stop coming back and the blog loses a lot of traffic, etc.

I keep meaning to write a "how to blog for serious attention" post or 5, but, y'know, me and posting are occasional friends currently. The group blog model is useful though; I can post to LibCon whenever I like, so if I need something to get said, I have a massive audience (including half the BBC political team). And I got asked this morning to post something to Politicalbetting.

There's a definite market out there for a blog doing the sort of stuff you mostly do, but to really impact, I reckon you'd need more than just you doing it.

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