Posts FromAugust, 2007

20
Aug 07

Why Boston is Bloggiest

When outside.in released its list of the Ten Bloggiest Neighborhoods in April, the USA Today got interested in the story, but instead of neighborhoods, they wanted to know what the bloggiest cities in the U.S. were. Phillip Lamplugh and Hillary Byrum, our resident Blogiology Experts, ran the numbers on the sixty cities we’ve been tracking and came up with a list, which USA Today then turned it into one of their most excellent graphical snapshots:

bloggiest.jpg

And there you have it – Boston is now officially the ‘bloggiest’ city in the U.S., with Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington and Portland coming in on its heels.

Immediately the press wanted to know: why Boston? What makes it so bloggy? Why isn’t San Francisco on this list? And what about New York City?

Well, the figures represent the total number of place-based blog posts in March and April per 100,000 residents in the cities’ metro areas. So to arrive at this list we just took the total number of place-based blog posts in a city’s metro area, and divided by the number of people living in that area.

As far as why Boston and not NYC or SF, we see two possible factors influencing the list:

1. The demographics of a city’s metro area strongly shape its blogginess quotient. Cities like New York may have areas, like Brooklyn, that are very blog-dense, but if they also have big areas where blogs are sparse (like the Bronx), that will lower their overall post-to-resident ratio, making them less-bloggy cities. Chicago, Los Angeles and New York all scored lower on the list for this reason – they had lots and lots of local blog posts, but the sheer number of people living in those areas blew that number away. If your metro area has 19 million people in it, you’ve got to do a lot of blogging to get on the bloggiest cities list.

2. Blogginess in a city is reflective of growth, civic activism, and a writerly population. Boston, as the bloggiest city, has a hot economy, is notorious for local political activism, and has a university every other block, which all combine to push it’s post-to-resident ratio up-up-up.

When you factor these two things together, you get a list of mid-to-large-sized cities with neighborhoods in flux, active local political scenes, and residents with the inclination to write about these things. The result is the bloggiest cities in America list. Here’s the full top ten:

1. Boston
2. Philadelphia
3. Pittsburgh
4. Washington, D.C.
5. Portland, OR
6. New York
7. San Francisco
8. Seattle
9. Chicago
10. Los Angeles

It’s also important to note that this is all in fun, and while it does represent an honest effort to answer questions about blogging around the nation, it doesn’t approach anything on the level of scientific inquiry. That’s for 2008.

2
Aug 07

outside.in: Not Just For Placebloggers Anymore

Ever since our original alpha launch last fall, the content at outside.in has been primarily made up of two sources: links to blog posts from regular placebloggers writing about their local communities, and links to other local news submitted to the site directly by users or freelancers on our payroll. But we’ve always known that there was an important group we were missing with this system: bloggers who write occasionally about places around them, but not exclusively. We’re currently tracking over 2,000 regular placebloggers around the U.S., but the number of bloggers who have posted, from time to time, locally-relevant information is probably orders of magnitude larger.

It’s true that you have always been able to submit an individual blog post as a suggested link, and so some of that part-time placeblogger content has appeared on outside.in in the past. But today we’re making it far easier for those bloggers to share their location-based posts with the outside.in community. All you have to do is submit your blog URL using this form (assuming you’re a registered neighbor), and then tag your posts with any of the four supported geo-tags described here: GMAP links, zipcode categories, the “Where” tag, or GeoRSS.

I’ve been using this system with my own blog for the past few weeks and it really works great. This post from earlier this week about Coney Island included a GMAP link to Coney Island’s address in the body of the post. After an hour or two, it automatically showed up on outside.in, as a recent link for Brooklyn, for the Coney Island zip code, for the Coney Island neighborhood page, and even on the Place page for Coney Island itself. The end result is that my thoughts about Coney Island get introduced to a wider audience, and get captured in a geocoded format that will make them relevant months from now anytime someone is looking for information about that part of the world. And if you write about specific locations, you’ll see your posts encoded on one of our cool new maps — showing not only the places you’ve blogged about, but also the surrounding conversation (from elsewhere in the blogosphere or traditional media) about each of those places.

So if you’ve got a blog and got something to say about the world around you, sign up and start sharing. We can’t wait to hear from you….


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