Friday, September 3, 2010

34 Reasons to Start a Blog

34 Reasons to Start a Blog… repost. Good info!

We discussed how social media is like sharecropping -- you help build a network with your content and it  may decide to delete your account if it changes rules or there is a glitch. Both Flickr and Facebook have given us examples of that action. The effects of those actions have been devastating for the people who had put time and care into building a presence with their content.

That is one of the reasons why I have been and continue to be strongly in favor of blogs.

Starting a blog shows commitment to a topic, industry, group, project, brand, etc. It establishes you as someone who can stick with a regular appointment, and has something to say, teach, and learn. Indeed, I have found them all to be the case. There are many more benefits.

As I continue to receive many emails from students and young professionals about how to find opportunities and differentiate themselves, I thought it would be helpful to explore 34 reasons to start a blog.

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1. do your internship this way -- no reason to wait for someone to screen you first, or give them an easier way to screen you in rather than out by taking the initiative

2. hone your writing skills -- I can think of no better way to improve writing than doing it regularly

3. network online -- with your content all in one place, people will be able to learn about how you think more easily

4. develop your ideas -- fleshing them out with the help of the community can be a great accelerator to execution

5. find opportunities to do research -- you start a topic with what you know, and expand it into things that others know

6. discover opportunities to expand off line -- were it not for this blog, I would not have gone to many of the meet ups and conferences I've attended in the last couple of years, met great people, etc.

7. participate in worthy initiatives -- in the last couple of years, we helped promote awareness of worthy causes through Bloggers Unite and Blog Action Day each year. We talked about how social media is greening the planet, and poverty

8. build a business -- many have built businesses off blogs, Darren Rowse with ProBlogger, Brian Clark with Copyblogger, Joe Pulizzi with Junta 42 are a few examples

9. help your company become more human -- organizations that accept employees can be a passionate extension of the company's conversation continue to reap positive rewards

10. find mentors -- David Spinks had a wonderful series of blog posts about mentoring and finding a mentor on Mondays

11. build community -- by providing a regular appointment with information, you give the people who resonate with your content a reason to come back, meet each other, and deepen the conversation

12. create value by being who you are -- I'll be writing more about this in future posts. For now, know that there is incredible opportunity still on topics, cultures, and points of view that are still unexplored

13. curate the content of others -- say you're passionate about a topic and there is already quite a bit of great information online. You could become a useful filter and curator of that information, the de facto destination on that topic

14. share a fresh perspective -- we need more of those. When you look beyond the known groups, you find that there are amazing blogs for many fields of knowledge and specialties

15. find an outlet for your passion -- sometimes our day job doesn't quite align with what you're passionate about, or doesn't provide enough space to creativity or the pursuit of something you love

16. attract others who are passionate about a topic -- remove geographic constraints, put search in your corner, and you're likely to be surprised finding kindred thinkers

17. establish yourself as a go-to resource -- it used to be that you had to be well known or established in a field or a profession to publish. With a blog, you can begin today

18. give back to your profession -- there are many ways to do that by helping professional associations, of course. However, you may find that you can squeeze in time to contribute only in the wee hours of the night

19. learn how to edit content -- this is a skill that will come in handy in many jobs outside communications. Think about writing reports, proposals, presentation decks, love notes, etc.

20. tell your story -- a blog can be a great repository for the stories you share here and there. In fact, that's how blogs got their start, as live journals. Just make sure you back up your files

21. be helpful to your networks -- you may find as I did that you don't scale so well in one on one conversations. Authoring a blog gives you the opportunity to share information more broadly

22. undertake a project -- yes, many say that a blog is an open ended endeavor. I think it's perfectly fine to start one to support a project. Authors do that to provide companions for their books, for example 

23. showcase a less known brand on your product line -- not all products get equal marketing budgets and some may be better suited for the educational and informational approach blogs are suited for

24. complement or replace your resume -- when making hiring decisions, enlightened companies are starting to screen candidates by seeking evidence of their skills beyond a carefully written laundry list of things they have done

25. develop alternative career options -- it's no secret that the best way to find the ideal career is to create one for yourself. Plus, here are 50 ways to make limoncello when you've been laid off

26. start something new -- the best way to break through in an industry that is filled with insiders and is fossilized around the way things are done is to do something else and succeed at it

27. contribute your knowledge -- there are plenty of things we can still learn from each other and your contribution will help all of us

28. gain visibility -- by giving passionately and building on your domain expertise, or gaining one through blogging, you become more visible in the business community

29. mix it up -- by writing a blog, you open your ideas to the comments and perspectives of others, which end up enriching them

30. believe in yourself -- putting your content out there can be a scary proposition. What if nobody reads it or likes it? It's not as bad as you think, and in fact it can help you learn to trust yourself and your instincts more

31. document your travels -- I've enjoyed reading blogs written by professionals who were on sabbatical or took some time off to experience life in different parts of the world, for example

32. collect useful information -- maybe you're not researching for one specific project, yet you keep finding great resources you want to share with your network along with your comments

33. test drive your appetite for writing -- nothing wrong with giving it a shot, and the side benefit is improved writing skills

34. change the game on what a blog is -- there is plenty of room to reinvent the medium. Go ahead and do that, start something new and you'll be the first one to do it

All this is to say that you can use the tools at your disposal to make what you envision a reality -- a new job or career, practice, building community, networking, etc. Blogging is no substitute for doing. It is a complement to it.

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Bonus reading, why start a blog and 25 tips to make it work. Download the free eBook here.

Posted via email from Duane's Proposterous Posterous

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