Entries Tagged as 'Blogger rant'

You are lucky you don’t blog from Thailand

Thank your lucky stars you don’t live in Thailand. In the past, the entire blogger and blogspot domains have been blocked by the Thai Ministry of Information and Communications Technology. Although the block was eventually lifted, you can see why censorship is such a problem in this country.

Today I received an email from a high-profile Thailand blogger saying that the entire Wordpress domain has been blocked. Such situations make us bloggers in Thailand feel like we are banging out heads against brick walls. It’s unclear whether this was intentional or whether the MICT and ISP responsible just messed up.

It makes me want to scream!

The great guest-blogging debate

Today I’ve been weighing up the pros and cons of guest blogging. Almost all of the blogs I’ve read over the past few months have had at least one post saying something along the lines of, “Guest blogging is good”. The argument is that guest blogging is a good way to get traffic, get links and build up your reputation. If you’re guest blogging on a decent blog then it stands to reason that you will benefit somehow, but to achieve success it’s crucial that you write something out of the ordinary while still being on topic.

I personally find reading guest bloggers rather tedious. For whatever reason, guest bloggers often feel the need to assert themselves in a condescending, patronizing tone, as if talking to a bunch of primary school children. I assessed my own blog-reading habits and it turns out that I purposely overlook guest bloggers’ posts. I couldn’t work out why, but I think it’s just that I don’t care what another voice has to say on somebody’s blog.

When you get familiar with a person’s blog, if other people start posting then there is the temptation to ignore the new poster (by me, anyway). Look at John Cow as an example. Over the past couple of weeks there have been a multitude of posts by random people, and I can’t remember any of them.

I wrote my own guest post on John Cow, but I had no intention of writing a formulaic blog post about “the top five whatevers” or “the dos and don’ts of this and that”. I made up five stories about cows and posted it, and you know what; it didn’t do me much good. I’m of the disposition that until my blog is pulling in huge numbers, I’m not going to give my top content away to anybody.

This would mean that anything I write as a guest blogger would be substandard garbage and, as a professional writer, I’m not prepared to do that. Kumiko recently said that all guest bloggers must die. Her argument is that guest blogging is good only for the guest blogger and the blog owner, and I have to agree with this. From my perspective as a reader, guest blogging is like an advert in a magazine that doesn’t catch my eye.

Darren Rowse said this week that when he handed over his blog to guest bloggers in April last year, his traffic soared. That seems like a freak event. John Cow’s line on the Alexa Traffic Graph has dipped a bit in the past few days, but a similar thing has happened to Pro Blogger, John Chow and Cash Quests.

Alexa Graph

By Kumiko’s logic, guest blogging is still a good idea for the guest blogger. I think her decision to kill all guest bloggers is a bit extreme, but I know where she’s coming from.

The million dollar waste of time

Am I the only person who isn’t excited about the Million Dollar Wiki? It’s one of those annoying things in the blogosphere that is going to make a select few people (John Chow and the guy behind the wiki) a lot of money while everybody else chases their tails trying to jump on the bandwagon.

Stop! The million dollar wiki is not worth your time and effort.

The way the Million Dollar Wiki works is that a bright spark named Graham Langdon created a wiki and started selling pages on it for $100. There are 10,000 pages available so Graham stands to make $1,000,000. Throw in a few sob stories about Graham having student debts to pay off and you’ve got people hooked. While nobody could say that Graham was making a mistake, perhaps people splashing out on the wiki pages are.

It’s only $100

If you think like that then you don’t belong in this game. Only $100 could be used on any number of things, including higher ranking links than the Million Dollar Wiki will ever get you. Heck, you can get yourself reviewed on Cash Quests for $70 and have $30 left over for pizza.

The content of the wiki is abysmal. From a reader’s perspective, which is how I approached it when I first logged on, there is very little of value there. There is no logic or method to how the pages are arranged. You can either view a random page or else view the pages in a list of popularity. What good is that to anybody?

There are 265 pages sold so far. Most of those pages have less than 100 page views and will probably get buried beneath even more pages. John Chow, smart as ever, promoted the Million Dollar Wiki on his blog through a paid review. He made a point to say that he had bought a page which inspired 70 of his readers to shell out for pages themselves. Now he has teamed up with Graham and is running a contest for people who buy a page or write a review of the contest.

The majority of pages on the Million Dollar Wiki are nothing more than adverts. I’d be wary about purchasing a page just because John Chow told you to.