Archive for September, 2008

Sep 21 2008

Wardman Wire Reader Survey Week

Published by admin under Announcements, Political Blogging

I’ll keep this short, sweet and straightforward.

Over the last 12 months the Wardman Wire blog audience has grown reasonably quickly by about 6-7 times, and I’m thinking where to take it over the next year. The actual numbers are open to dispute depending on how you count them; but the comparison is consistent.

reader-survey

We’ve experimented with lots of things including daily papers’ reviews and writing content for different niches (politics, technology related to politics, MSM bashing - which is fun but depressingly easy, news, web statistics, cartoons, campaigns, local government and various others).

I need some decent information about who is reading the site to inform my thinking (and - hopefully - help convince advertisers) rather than my own wibblings, so please could you help by filling in the reader survey.

q-donkey-carrot-stickI would have had a prize draw a la Iain Dale, but since I’ve asked for basic demographic information (age bands 0 0-18, 19-34 etc.) and income information information (0->15k, 15k->30k) etc. I thought that it was unreasonable to obtain email addresses that could potentially be correlated against individual details (even though I wouldn’t do it).

So I’ll be doing a sort of “collective reward” instead.

If I get more than 100 responses, I’ll run a prize draw for anyone who wants to enter. Prizes will (inevitably) include a £25 Amazon token first prize and a promotional button spot for 6 months on the Wardman Wire home page shared among about 6-8 runners up.

I will also be publishing an analysis.

Fill in the survey here. Thanks for your help.

No responses yet

Sep 20 2008

Is Order-Order.com worth £1m? A tangential question - in the short term

I didn’t get into the arguments about whether leading blogs were worth £1m after Labour Home was sold for £50k.

20070405-GuidoAs a note to those on the Blogger platform - the question is tangential in the short term since the 2 key leading blogs (Dale, Fawkes) are on Blogger, and the Blogger terms of use include this clause:

7. No Resale of the Service. Unless expressly authorised in writing by Google, you agree not to reproduce, duplicate, copy, sell, trade, resell or exploit for any commercial purposes (a) any portion of the Service, (b) use of the Service or (c) access to the Service.

Clearly they aren’t so stringent as to go after people with advertising, however I don’t think people will get away with selling anything as an asset.

The solution to that is to move it to Wordpress and take the short term (usually 3-6 month) hit in traffic and profile. That can be very painful, as Unity can testify (and many others).

And that is all a very good reason why being on Blogger is a bad long term idea, unless you are aware of the tradeoffs (and Guido is on the ball enough that he probably is).

I suppose that blog revenues can be securitised - maybe they will be part of the flight to safety.

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Sep 08 2008

O-blog-a-tory: Notes on Conservative Party Blog Strategy

Published by admin under Announcements, Political Blogging

q-logo-conservative-partyIain Dale posted last weekend that the Conservative Party were planning to launch a big new group blog.

This post is the first of several reflecting on blog strategy for political parties, using the new Conservative project as a thought experiment. In this first article I look at the pros and cons of launching a single group blog, and whether a more diverse strategy may be a better option as a way of encouraging multiple conversation points between the Conservatives and the public.

Is a Single Blog the right approach?

Iain comments:

The blog, as yet unnamed, will have blogposts from people across the party, from Shadow Cabinet, to candidates, CF members and ordinary activists, as well as guest blogs from non party members. The intention is for there to be 5-10 blogposts a day to make it as dynamic as possible. It won’t be full of boring party press releases but instead they want it to have colour, be anecdotal as well as a forum to discuss policy. Anyone can leave comments, and I am told there will “no Stalinist approach to moderation”.

My first thought is to ask whether this is actually too cautious. Will five to ten posts a day on one site be sufficient to communicate everything that needs to be put across? It may even result in another highly centralised, but informal, channel - rather than one that will give a wide range of voices engaging in conversation on a wide range of topics. If so, it won’t be centralised because of any “Stalinist” control - it will simply be that space on the site will be a scarce and precious resource and the Centre will inevitably win the competition for access.

Further, if it does take off, it could have the “Political Betting problem” - also as experienced by Nick Robinson now; up to 500 comments on a post may look like a sign of success, but it can be daunting to those on the fringe. And surely those on (or beyond) the fringe are precisely one constituency who need to be targeted via the informality of blogs - they are people who have proved to be beyond traditional “media-managed” political communication.

So, I can see at least two possible problems with this “single point” approach:

1 - The material, coverage and conversation may be limited in volume and number of contributors.
2 - A non-committed audience may be overwhelmed and give up.

I wonder if a more fragmented strategy may be more effective - on a front that is both broader and deeper, based around niche communication between more specialist interest groups within the Conservative Party and the relevant parts of the public. There could perhaps be a “News and Information” type blog, to give a broad “shop window”, but I don’t think a single site can fulfill the potential of blogs for the Tories.

Johnson and Redwood

If we take the examples of the two most senior Conservatives who have taken to blogging like ducks to water - in my view John Redwood and Boris Johnson - they have succeeded by having a strong and very particular style within their own area of interest. Boris Johnson’s blog has given me a strong sense of his personality, while John Redwood’s site has been a sustained policy seminar. Both communicate different aspects of the Conservative Party that appeal to different elements of society, but I’m not sure that either of these styles - which are essential - would work within a group blog.

The Example of the BBC

An interesting model is the BBC (which also has its faults!), where there have been steps over the last several years to open-up the organisation to give direct access to correspondents, but also to allow the interested public to talk to the people inside the BBC who are not correspondents.

They have gone beyond simply trying to use blogs as another, more informal, channel alongside the existing BBC1, 2 etc. The BBC have realised that blogs are a different kind of communication altogether.

On the BBC Blog Network there are several categories of blogs, for example:

(I’ve not turned these into links as they are all accessible from the network page linked above):

  • Blogs which give sit alongside the broadcasts giving the backstory and some related commentary (e.g., Nick Robinson, Test Match Special, Evan Davies, Betsan Powys, Mark Mardell on Europe).
  • Blogs which are fully integrated into the programmes to the extent of setting the agenda, exploring how “Broadcasting 2.0″ can develop (e.g., Pods and Blogs, iPM)
  • Blogs which give insight into the programme-making process and/or BBC policy (e.g., the Editors, Sports Editors).
  • Blogs which sit mainly alongside parts of the website (e.g., Ouch!).
  • Blogs which are related to BBC institutions not directly concerned with broadcasting (e.g., Scottish Symphony Orchestra).
  • Blogs which are related to issues or policy areas (e.g., Freedom of Information).
  • Blogs which are related to allowing the public to help develop the service and organisation (e.g., BBC Backstage, Radio Labs).

Implications for the Conservatives

I’m not suggesting that the Conservative Party need as broad a network as this, and in fact a single group blog is possibly a good place to start. Done professionally and without - as Iain puts it - Stalinist moderation, a group blog has potential to give a more open debate between the Tories and the public, and a more “human” approach.

However, I am suggesting that there is also very significant potential beyond the use of a single group blog - for example regional blogs, policy area blogs, campaigning blogs for work with parallel interest groups, blogs to reach out in areas where the party is relatively thin on the ground (e.g., Scotland, the North), and group blogs with companion parties in other countries on common concerns.

Wrapping Up

I’ll be writing more articles in this series looking at other related areas, including:

  • Some more specific ideas for a diversified strategy using blogs as a tool.
  • Implications for the Centre of such a strategy.
  • How to go about managing such an approach.

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Sep 04 2008

Brand New and Very Old Blog Articles Bring the Traffic: Blog Platform

One of the interesting ways that Google seems to work is that new websites (or new articles for that matter) have a “period in the sun” to see if they will become heavily linked; they then vanish and may come back to prominence later.

One corollary of that, and of the way the internet works, is that most traffic to blogs usually comes through two routes:

a) Brand new articles.
b) Old archived articles.

In the case of the Wardman Wire, perhaps 75-80% of our traffic comes via the archives, rather than via either the Magazine Front Page or the Traditional Blog version.

Study of Top Articles on the Wardman Wire

I did a study of traffic from a 30 day period in Jan-Feb this year, eight out the top ten most visited articles were more than 4 months old, and none were between one and three months old. I thought it worth reposting a part of the study, before I repeat the exercise in the autumn.

Here’s the summary:

These are the ages of the top 12 posts in months, from top to bottom:

* 5 months
* 10 months
* 4 months
* Two weeks
* 5 months
* 5 months
* 10 months
* 10 months
* 4 months
* 8 months
* Two weeks
* 6 months

i.e., posts take time to mature, and archives are very, very important. Go back to your blog and make your archives easily accessible for users and search engines - it matters to the gradual growth of your blog. Have a look at how many ways in to the archives there are on www.mattwardman.com.

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