Posts Tagged "Bloggers We Love"

22
Jul 10

WordPress 3 + WordPress MU + BuddyPress = a Game Changer for Hyperlocal Blogs, says Spartanburg Spark

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(In an expansion of our Bloggers We Love series, the Outside.in blog will now feature occasional guest posts authored by Bloggers We Love. Why? It’s simple, really: these hyperlocal bloggers have knowledge and experience to share, and we’re thrilled to be able to bring more of their insights to our readership. This inaugural guest post comes from Steve Shanafelt, a Blogger We Love and the publisher of the Spartanburg Spark, a hyperlocal community site based in Spartanburg, SC. Steve can be reached at publisher@SpartanburgSpark.com or via Twitter: @TheSpark.)

One of the trickier things about building a community of readers on your blog or website is giving them some reason to stick around after they’ve read your most recent content, listened to your video or watched your latest vlog. For the vast majority of us, the best kind of reader interaction we have to look forward to on our own sites are comments, which are a mixed bag depending on how much of a troll-magnet your website’s niche tends to be.

What most of us don’t have the ability to create is something truly interactive, and something that can build a genuine user community where people actually invest their time, thought and personality into creating content — even personal content — on your site. In fact, if you use social networks to market your site or blog, you’ve probably noticed that your readers are just as likely to talk about your recent posts on Twitter or Facebook status updates than they are your actual site. When you’re trying to build a community — not to mention traffic — that can be infuriating.

But who can blame them? People like being able to express their individuality and connect to other people who share interests, and most blogs and websites simply don’t offer that kind of deep interconnection. After all, Facebook has spent untold tens of millions building their social networking system, and the coding skills needed to create even simple social networking is far beyond the abilities of most bloggers.

Or it was until last month.

That’s when the folks over at Automattic released the latest version of their ever-impressive WordPress blogging software. It’s the third version — WordPress 3, that is, nicknamed “Thelonious” — and it’s by far the smoothest, easiest-to-use version released thus far. The range of features and options is astonishing, even for WordPress, and it might just be the best standalone, open-source blogging platform ever built.

It might also be the start of a complete revolution social networking.

Why? Because of the easy, novice-friendly integration of two WordPress-related projects, WordPress MU and BuddyPress. Respectively, these allow a standard WordPress blog to act like a blog network, and that same blog network to act like a social network. While this integration is far from new — BuddyPress has been around since 2008 — what is new is the lack of technical expertise needed to bring all three elements together.

With a few clicks and some very basic file editing, practically anyone can create their own social network within moments on their own website or blog. Visitors to your site can start their own sub-blogs, create their own user profiles, private message each other, form their own social groups with their own forums and connect with each other in ways that were previously limited to dedicated social networking sites.

You may be saying: “So what? Why is this relevant when there already is a Facebook, a Ning, a MySpace? My little blog will never have that kind of user base, and my users will never create that depth of content.”

Maybe not, and if you run a personal blog where you are the star and there’s little motivation for other people to participate, you’re probably right. But for a project like the one I run, a hyperlocal community site at SpartanburgSpark.com, it’s a complete game changer. We’ve gone from a glorified blog — the lowest level of the media totem pole — to a proper DIY media outlet and local social networking site, all from a simple software upgrade.

And now that the users can talk to each other, they’re actually able to have discussions on our site that would have previously happened on Facebook. Our users can organize — or self-organize, really — in ways that were previously impossible when we were a standard blog. They can talk to each other about things that interest them without having to wait for us to post a relevant blog post about it. They can start their own groups and forums, directly message each other, create elaborate user profiles and do all manner of new and interesting things with each other, all while staying on our site.

We’ve only scratched the surface of what the software is capable of, and our page views and time-on-site stats are steadily rising, with almost no extra effort on our part.

What’s interesting isn’t our specific use of this software — we’re a very small fish in this whopping great internet ocean, and we’re using this technology in a completely off-the-shelf way — it’s that everyone now has the ability to start their media projects on this level. In fact, this will soon become the standard, in the same way that things like user commenting — a cutting-edge technology only a few years ago — is now so much a part of the culture that it seems weird when a blog or website doesn’t provide it.

Thanks to WordPress 3, fully enabled social networking will soon be the new starting point for every blogger, every website and every online media project. And as social networks in general start to become more interconnected thanks to better APIs, the ability to bring new members into our own website network is growing daily. To put it another way, WordPress 3 has started a trend where Facebook isn’t siphoning off your users and pageviews, but rather where your network can be a vital part of your users’ online social experience.

When everyone can — just by deciding to click a few options — start out with their own micro version of Facebook stitched into their website or blog, it fundamentally changes what it means to be a website or a blog. It’s a sea change for internet culture, and it’s definitely something to be aware of, to plan for, and to incorporate into your online strategy.

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15
Jul 10

Caroline’s Secrets of the Blogging Lifestyle (aka Bloggers We Love: Caroline on Crack)

BLOGGER: Caroline

FEATURED BLOG(S): Caroline on Crack

TWITTER: @CarolineOnCrack

FACEBOOK: Caroline on Crackheads

FLICKR: Caroline on Crack

YOUTUBE: Caroline on Crack

SERIOUS EATS: Caroline on Crack

FOOD BUZZ: Caroline on Crack

This week our ‘Bloggers We Love,’ series took us (via telephone) to fabulous, sunny Los Angeles, CA, where we spoke to the energetic and LA-savvy blogger Caroline of CarolineOnCrack.com.

A northern California transplant, Caroline is a lifestyle blogger who writes about food, cocktails and fun in and around LA. Having read her blog with some regularity, I was already impressed with her style, but after speaking with her, I was especially taken with her easy-going energy and affable nature. Her personality and blog embody what I imagine Californians to be: relaxed yet energetic, casual yet on-trend.

My conversation with Caroline got me thinking not only about lifestyle blogging but also the blogging lifestyle: is there something unique about lifestyle blogging that enables a blogger to keep it up over the long-term? Or, is there something special about Caroline’s lifestyle that that gives her staying power? What does it mean to really live the ‘blogging lifestyle’ day in and day out? Put simply: what is it that has enabled Caroline to blog nearly every day for five years and counting?

I’ve decided to investigate that question and answer it with some of the secrets of the blogging lifestyle that I learned from Caroline…

CAROLINE SAYS: SEEK THE BLOG/LIFE BALANCE

While Caroline writes about her daily adventures, she’s careful to maintain some modicum of privacy for herself. As a reader, you appreciate this: you feel like you know Caroline, but she doesn’t cross over into TMI territory like some bloggers. She certainly doesn’t make you feel like a voyeur.

“When I first started, I didn’t want everyone to know who I was: I have a day job, and I wanted to keep the blog separate,” Caroline says. “So, I would purposefully leave myself out of my posts. But then [I wrote a few posts of a more personal nature] and I let a little of myself in – and it seemed like people really responded to that.”

It’s a difficult balance to strike – being completely authentic and personable without being overly intimate – and Caroline nails it with remarkable skill and aplomb.

Striking such a balance could be useful for a blogger who’s in it for the long haul.  It allows the blogger to focus on their subject matter, without allowing their personality and personal life to overpower the piece. The post’s tone becomes relatable to a wider variety of readers, potentially garnering a larger audience for the blog.

Moreover, when a blogger keeps aspects of her identity somewhat cloaked, she can be candid about other aspects of her life. For instance, Caroline publishes her calendar of public social events (though personal evenings are marked on the calendar as “busy”). This doesn’t cause the uncomfortable, invasive encounters that one would predict. In fact, when she participates in these events, readers actually prefer to respect her privacy. She once judged a mixology contest and brought a friend along. Fans recognized the friend from photos on Caroline’s blog and asked her to tell Caroline that they’re huge fans but then shied away from meeting Caroline themselves. It’s almost as if fans don’t want to actually know who’s behind the voice they know and love.

CAROLINE SAYS: ‘RELAX’

“Try to write every day – just don’t pressure yourself,” Caroline advises. “I’m able to enjoy [blogging because I don’t pressure myself too much]. I used to actually write every day, but then I decided to take the weekends off.”

Caroline says she still feels strangely guilty if she misses a weekday post  – “It’s like I didn’t shower, or like I’m letting somebody down,” – but she doesn’t ruminate on that feeling:

“I try not to think about [my plans for the blog], because if I do I’ll psych myself out. I think that’s why I’ve been able to keep myself going [because I try not to take everything so seriously].”

“Sometimes I do keep an editorial calendar—especially if I get press release sent to me about an event that’s well into the future,” Caroline says. “I also have a to-do list of posts I want to write, like events that I went to and still need to blog about.”

So, it’s not all laissez-faire. It is useful to maintain some degree of regularity in your blogging. Living the blogging lifestyle means exactly that: integrating blogging into your lifestyle.

CAROLINE SAYS: HAVE A COCKTAIL!

'Birds & Bees,' with cherries, courtesy of Caroline on Crack

'Birds & Bees,' with cherries, photo courtesy of Caroline on Crack

The final secret to living the blogging lifestyle a la Caroline on Crack? Cocktails!

Caroline on Crack has come to be known as a go-to source for information about cocktails and mixology, even though Caroline wasn’t a passionate cocktail lover when she started the blog. It’s a love that’s evolved organically.

“I’m not a cocktail or spirit expert, I just enjoy it. I’ve learned a lot and I’d totally love to go to bartending school,” Caroline says.

The lesson? Be open to the ways your own interests may evolve and what that might mean for the evolution of your blog. And don’t forget to take the time to kick back and enjoy yourself with a well-deserved beverage of your choice. Try a Pegu Club with Bols Genever instead of gin – one of Caroline’s favorites.

P.S. Local bloggers, don’t forget to register your blog here. It’s quick, simple, and will help drive traffic to your blog.
P.P.S.: If you’d like to be featured in our ‘Bloggers We Love’ series (or you’d like to nominate your favorite local blogger(s) for inclusion), we’d love to hear from you! Simply send an email to esther@outside.in

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29
Jun 10

Bloggers We Love: Jill Harrison

BLOGGER: Jill Harrison

FEATURED BLOG(S): For the Love of Brooklyn

TWITTER: @LoveofBrooklyn

FACEBOOK: For the Love of Brooklyn

FLICKR: For the Love of Brooklyn

One thing I’ve learned by conducting our ‘Bloggers We Love,’ interviews is that a hyperlocal blog can be a powerful platform for community organizing – and not just in the political sense. What a hyperlocal or local blog can do especially well (better than a blog that’s not locally-oriented, in many cases) is create communities both online AND offline.

One blogger who is building a vibrant community of like-minded individuals via her blog is Jill Harrison of the inspirational photoblog For the Love of Brooklyn. Not only is For the Love of Brooklyn a great local photoblog chronicling the entire New York City borough of Brooklyn, it’s a collective, meaning the photographs showcased on the site are not just taken by Harrison and the seven other original organizers of the blog, but they’re submitted by an entire community of photographers, both professionals and amateurs alike. Submissions are then curated into photo essays by Harrison and her editorial team.

We could all learn a lot about community building from this collective of artists and enthusiasts who share the same subject: Brooklyn, in all its varied incarnations. With that in mind, I am pleased to present:

10 Ways to Build Community as a Hyperlocal Blogger

(or, what I learned from For the Love of Brooklyn)


10. Enroll Others

“About a year ago I realized that I had a lot of photographer friends and I basically polled some of my friends and asked if they were interested in starting [a blog for] more or less a collective of photographers [which is how For the Love of Brooklyn started.]“

9. Start Your Own Meetup

“In January, we started holding monthly Meetups. We go out into Brooklyn neighborhoods with our cameras and explore them – and invite whoever is interested into the group to come exploring with us. For instance, we went to Gowanus, right after the Gowanus [Canal] was declared a Superfund site – more than 35 people walked through Gowanus shooting [photographs]. It was great because I got to meet all these people that I correspond with on the internet.”

8. Reconsider Your ‘Target’ Audience

“[Our Meetups aren't just for photographers]. Several amateur historians come along and narrate [our exploratory forays into Brooklyn neighborhoods]. That’s one of my favorite parts about our Meetups – all kinds of people come along – from longtime Brooklyn residents to tourists from Europe who are just curious.”

7. Embrace Flickr

An example of iPhone photography using the Hipstamatic App - 'Coney Island Moon' by CootieGarage, a member of For The Love of Brooklyn's Flickr Pool

“Flickr – that was my gateway drug [to social media]. If you submit to our Flickr pool, your work could get featured [on For the Love of Brooklyn]. I always do a lot of due diligence, but overall the feedback has been really positive. People are totally PUMPED to have their work featured. Even with professional photographers I’ve had really good results. I’ve been really inspired by [the way the blog has shown me] how the old ways of thinking about art — ‘it’s MY intellectual property, it’s MY work,’ – are changing. You have to be very aware that this social networking creates ties instead of boundaries. People want their work re-blogged. Artistic boundaries are changing, and they seem to be changing really rapidly.”

6. Get Out There (Yes, You)!

“I’ve been trying to personally attend more events this year – more networking events and more events that interest me, personally – just to meet people who are doing similar things. We have quite a few photographers who have had gallery openings as well – so when we visit gallery openings we’re evangelizing the blog: a little word of mouth [marketing].”

5. Organize Events to Celebrate & Promote Your Community Members

“Yes! [We are] definitely [going to organize a show]. Last fall we had several photographers exhibit in the the D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival. We’re also hoping to do some limited run installations – hopefully some of them in my new house [that I just brought in Crown Heights]!”

4. Delegate Responsibility to Community Members

“I often ask people for submissions – it’s a great way to build both leadership and a follower base [on a collaborative blog]. It’s a great way to do things – I’ve literally never had anybody say ‘No.’”

3. Take the Time to Learn About & Spotlight Your Community Members

“I do interviews with the photographers we feature [on For the Love of Brooklyn]. Some of my favorites are the ones I did with with Brooklyn photographers Claire Voelkel and Lyouba Assadourova. Another favorite was with my good friend Anna Gordon from The Good Batch at the Brooklyn Flea – she turned her hobby into a fairly booming business. It’s really turned into a this big thing, built by sheer hard work and by the support she’s gotten from the Brooklyn community.”

2. Teach & Learn

“A lot of teaching and learning occurs informally at our Meetups. We don’t have any formal lessons or Master Classes at the moment, but that’s something that I think is missing from Brooklyn. I’d love to organize volunteer-based art instruction. Someday!”

1. Be Open to the Ways Your Blog & Its Community Will Change YOU

“I get inspired by other people and hopefully I can inspire other people with what I’m doing, too. For instance, [because of the need to create content for the blog, I have to] constantly challenge myself to get out with my camera to create photo essays. Also, through these interviews I’m conducting and [my increased] exposure to other artists in the borough, I’ve refined my perspective about photography and how I propose the genre. Over the last 6 months I’ve actually almost fully become a film photographer – it forces me to identify my perspective before I shoot – and because I’m more careful about how I’m shooting, when I’m creating photo essays I have a tighter narrative.”

P. S. More examples of lo-fi photography using the iPhone are here! You can also see an example of higher-end photography using a medium-format film (Hasselblad) here, or high-end digital Nikon gear here.
P.P.S. Local bloggers, don’t forget to register your blog here. It’s quick, simple, and will help drive traffic to your blog.
P.P. S.: If you’d like to be featured in our ‘Bloggers We Love’ series (or you’d like to nominate your favorite local blogger(s) for inclusion), we’d love to hear from you! Simply send an email to esther@outside.in

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16
Jun 10

Bloggers We Love: Adelle McElveen

BLOGGER: Adelle McElveen

FEATURED BLOG(S): Fashionista Lab

TWITTER: @FashionistaLab

FACEBOOK: Fashionista Lab

Full disclosure: I’ve known Adelle McElveen, the woman behind the San Francisco-based blog ‘Fashionista Lab,’ for well over a decade now. In fact, it was actually Adelle who suggested I apply for the open Community Manager position at Outside.in, a job I am now lucky enough to call my own (good call, Adelle!).

Still, those are not the only reasons Adelle is a ‘Blogger We Love.’ What I find most inspiring about Adelle and her blog (besides the drool-worthy fashion photos she posts, obviously!) is that her blog exemplifies the idea that a local blog can take many different forms. By spotlighting her, I hope to diversify our ideas about what a local blog could or should be – and just maybe inspire a person or two out there to join the conversation by launching a ‘local’ blog of their own.

So, without further ado, I give you…

The Top 10 Things I Learned from Fashionista Lab

1. Trust Your Instincts

“I had a personal blog for years – and basically it functioned as a travel blog. Then one day I blogged about tank tops and how much I loved them – and I thought to myself: maybe it’s time I just blogged about fashion, because I realized I had a lot more to to say about fashion. I knew I wanted a different audience, so I started the fashion blog.”

2. Give in to Your Creative Impulse

“One of the biggest benefits of blogging is just starting the blog and acknowledging that creative desire and giving in to it — and then, once you give in to it, it just opens you up to so many other things.”

3. Don’t Sweat the Blog Stuff (‘Cause It’s All Small Stuff)

“There’s always this tension [between work and blogging], because I [blog] for fun, but it’s really what I love — and I’ve networked with a number of other fashion bloggers who do it and do it well and have big audiences… and I want that, too. But then it’s like, OK, they’re students, and they have all this free time – or they work in the fashion industry and it’s part of their job. My job takes up most of my time — but sometimes I feel myself naturally competing and trying to achieve what they’re achieving, and sometimes it gets stressful and I have to realize: OK, this isn’t my job. My job is my job. This is my hobby – I should do it and do it well, but at the same time, I can’t let myself get stressed out about it.”

4. You Don’t Have to Be an SEO Guru to Get Started

“Oh, um… I don’t know how to optimize.”

5. Blog What You Know

“The original Fashionista Lab [was a blog] run by a friend of mine and I when I lived in Tokyo. It was called Fashionista Lab because it was for ideas. We decided: we don’t want to tell you what’s ‘HOT’ or what’s ‘NEW,’ or to compete with that area because it’s already saturated. [Instead, we're] going to tell you our unique perspective on Tokyo fashion: this is what we see, living in Tokyo. I just kept the name because [the blog's purpose is the same] in San Francisco. It’s a lab – it’s for ideas.”

6. You Can Start with a Simple Blog Design or Platform

“I use WordPress.com. I’m slowly building it. Like: I have my own domain now. Eventually, I want to have my own custom WordPress.org blog so I can change themes and add widgets and stuff – those are all things I want to do. I have so many aspirations for the blog – but my time-line is just a lot slower.”

7. You Have to Be Your Own Biggest Fan

“I was featured a month and a half ago on this site called Independent Fashion Bloggers. It’s a really great fashion blogger resource – they did a conference during Fashion Week in New York, for example – and every week they have something called ‘Links à la Mode,’ which is like 10-15 of the best fashion blog posts from the world’s fashion blogger community that past week. I look at their links every week, and I’ve submitted blog posts for consideration like three times, and finally, the fourth time, they chose one of my posts – and that was really exciting.”

8. Shorter = Better

“I volunteered at a benefit fashion show in San Francisco recently – part of it was this silent auction and live auction. The live auction was really exhilarating and really crazy, and I wrote this really long post and I thought it was really engaging, and then one of my friends read it and talked to me about it, and I realized she hadn’t finished it. It was just too long. Short things are better. That was a post I could have easily broken down into two parts.”

9. To Be a Good Blogger, You Have to Be a Good Reader

“Once I started the blog and realized how much I had to say, I really started to pay more attention to other people who were saying things, and seeing what they were doing and where they were going and where they were getting their information – and that was just the beginning [of the evolution of my blog and blogger network].”

10. San Francisco is Home to Unique, Edgy Fashion

“It is really creative. As I was telling a friend in New York: New York women are really chic, especially in Manhattan, but I’ve noticed that San Francisco is a little bit rougher, you know? It’s not as put-together, per se – but there’s just lots of creativity and lots of different outfits that you see. It’s not just ‘hipsters,’ either. It’s temperate all year round, so you can play more with jackets and layering tops and leggings. I never understood the appeal of those open-toe booties, but then I got a pedicure in January and I was like: this is perfect! I can cover my foot and have my toes showing!”

There you have it: you don’t have to only write ‘hard news’ to be a ‘local’ blogger, nor do you have to make your blog into your life’s work (though both of those things are totally awesome things to do!). As it turns out, a local blog can also be comprised of fashion-related musings (some of them locally-oriented, some of them not).

So, would-be ‘local bloggers,’ please know: as far as we’re concerned, blogging more casually doesn’t make the contributions you do make to the local content pool any less valuable than the contributions of a more ‘professional,’ blogger. It’s OK to blog without an agenda.

P. S. Local bloggers, don’t forget to register your blog here. It’s quick, simple, and will help drive traffic to your blog.

P.P. S.: If you’d like to be featured in our ‘Bloggers We Love’ series (or you’d like to nominate your favorite local blogger(s) for inclusion), we’d love to hear from you! Simply send an email to esther@outside.in

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