Have I lost my “blog power”?

Anand M., in India, asks “has Scoble lost his blog power?” (I linked to him and he didn’t get many visits). My read? If I ever did have blog power, it’s gone now. Digg and TechMeme have all the power now.

I think Rageboy has the clue to what’s going on here (the yawning baby cracked Maryam up). I’m boring. Haven’t been linking to enough cool people and cool tech. Too much inbred inside-the-blogosphere, linking. Or, maybe, I’ve been doing too much linking and not enough first-hand-experience. Translation: not enough lists. Sorry. It’s hard to do good blogging when you’re busy all day long. Sigh.

But, Steve Gillmor has it right: this isn’t a game of traffic. It’s about sharing what you love. I love using tech and studying the product of geeks. Whether or not anyone is listening isn’t the reason I’m doing this (sometimes I forget that, yeah, but getting a link from Digg isn’t worth as much as everyone makes it seem). My passion? Trying out new stuff, finding new problems to solve. I haven’t been doing enough of that lately cause I’m just inside an email tidal storm that I can’t get off of me. Seriously, you have no idea how hard it is to keep up with email. I’m failing, and failing horribly. Sorry if I haven’t gotten back to you. Leave a comment instead of emailing.

The flow that’s happening in my life is simply incredible, especially when I compare it to what was going on in my life in 2002 when I worked at UserLand. Back then there were so few companies, very few interesting things going on. Today there’s SO much. I’m not surprised that it’s harder to get people to click on a link.

I was talking with Chris Messina and Tara Hunt on email tonight and said that just the number of events that’s happening in just the San Francisco area is stunning. I can’t keep up. It makes me just want to grab a bottle of wine and go sit on the beach out by the Ritz. Which is why I missed Barcamp this year. I just wanted a small, manageable conversation with a handful of geeks. It was SO enjoyable.

I’m thinking back on the last year and what I really remember and find special. That Swiss Chalet with a handful of geeks. That was it. Out of all the conferences (many expensive, like Mix06 where I had my own Las Vegas suite). All the PR. All the noise. All the events. Getting, what, five guys together in a Swiss Chalet for a weekend was the highlight of the year.

I wonder if we can have more of those types of experiences? I find I learn a lot more from conversations like that, and it helps me out cause then I have something interesting to say to you all.

The power of four people talking is something that’s just fascinated me all week.

Anyway, that’s enough of that. Everyone is getting bored, even me.

  • Christopher Coulter

    Best tip I ever heard about dealing with a flooded inbox: delete the lot.

    So if can’t handle, burn down the place? And that’s assuming the other “important people” aren’t super busy themselves, deleting is not a solution. Proper management of is…

    The answer to a busy schedule is time management not the elimination of all appointments.

  • Christopher Coulter

    Best tip I ever heard about dealing with a flooded inbox: delete the lot.

    So if can’t handle, burn down the place? And that’s assuming the other “important people” aren’t super busy themselves, deleting is not a solution. Proper management of is…

    The answer to a busy schedule is time management not the elimination of all appointments.

  • Brian

    You need to start ripping into your employer again. Those were entertaining days. I read anxiously each day to see if Scoble could get himself fired. :)

  • Brian

    You need to start ripping into your employer again. Those were entertaining days. I read anxiously each day to see if Scoble could get himself fired. :)

  • http://scobleizer.wordpress.com/ Robert Scoble

    LayZ: I have GTD. But it doesn’t work for someone with my flow level. At least not if I’m trying to do something else. What I probably need is to hire someone who’ll do nothing but do my email and calendar.

  • http://scobleizer.wordpress.com/ Robert Scoble

    LayZ: I have GTD. But it doesn’t work for someone with my flow level. At least not if I’m trying to do something else. What I probably need is to hire someone who’ll do nothing but do my email and calendar.

  • http://boogerblog.wordpress.com/ booger

    “What I probably need is to hire someone who’ll do nothing but do my email and calendar.”

    That’s just what a startup needs…. :)

    Booger

  • http://boogerblog.wordpress.com booger

    “What I probably need is to hire someone who’ll do nothing but do my email and calendar.”

    That’s just what a startup needs…. :)

    Booger

  • http://www.plexus2007.com/ Marie Germain

    Hi again Robert. It was helpful to hear your comments about your desires for a small campy get-together. Well.. you and I don’t know each other well–except for the fact that both you and Tara (and other folks you know) are speaking/performing at PLEXUS 2007 this coming May. I HEREBY commit Plexus to hosting such an event for like-minded folk during the evening of May 1 (Tuesday evening, which means everyone has to go to bed at a reasonable hour and under 3 mai tais, to perform well the next day). I will make you the Guest of Honor, and in fact, I ask you to guide the look, sound and feel and I/we will deliver–let’s call it Robert’s Camp at Plexus 2007. You see I can’t produce that during the day to a corporate audience–a scientific/geek audience yes, but not corporate. But I trust that our customers of the last 10 years CEOs, VPs, Directors of corporations including tech cos won’t acclimate to camp at this point. Surely some are closet campers. With the ambitious scope of this event I don’t feel like gambling with our day hours–although we aim to make it a different, sensory experience. Our site does not show what we are cooking yet (not frnaks and beans). But for the “wandering aimlessly”, let’s do it a la FooCamp, BarCamp–we can even pitch tents or lie around on the floor… Your call. I count myself among those lying around–will be somewhat liberating to shed a little social decorum for some authenticity, some truth or dare… So I await your comments back–I did not email you this since you are happy to share this way–true to blogging. Perhaps all campees could pitch in in creating this evening. I await you creative insights.

  • http://www.plexus2007.com Marie Germain

    Hi again Robert. It was helpful to hear your comments about your desires for a small campy get-together. Well.. you and I don’t know each other well–except for the fact that both you and Tara (and other folks you know) are speaking/performing at PLEXUS 2007 this coming May. I HEREBY commit Plexus to hosting such an event for like-minded folk during the evening of May 1 (Tuesday evening, which means everyone has to go to bed at a reasonable hour and under 3 mai tais, to perform well the next day). I will make you the Guest of Honor, and in fact, I ask you to guide the look, sound and feel and I/we will deliver–let’s call it Robert’s Camp at Plexus 2007. You see I can’t produce that during the day to a corporate audience–a scientific/geek audience yes, but not corporate. But I trust that our customers of the last 10 years CEOs, VPs, Directors of corporations including tech cos won’t acclimate to camp at this point. Surely some are closet campers. With the ambitious scope of this event I don’t feel like gambling with our day hours–although we aim to make it a different, sensory experience. Our site does not show what we are cooking yet (not frnaks and beans). But for the “wandering aimlessly”, let’s do it a la FooCamp, BarCamp–we can even pitch tents or lie around on the floor… Your call. I count myself among those lying around–will be somewhat liberating to shed a little social decorum for some authenticity, some truth or dare… So I await your comments back–I did not email you this since you are happy to share this way–true to blogging. Perhaps all campees could pitch in in creating this evening. I await you creative insights.

  • Pingback: Has RoSco lost his MoJo? « g-WH!Z

  • Rick

    Call me crazy, but I don’t think you need to blog as much as you do, particularly for someone so busy with work or who’s off to another party (sometimes they seem to be one and the same).

    Try adding up the number of words you’ve written in, say, the last two weeks. It’s a lot. Possibly too much.

  • Rick

    Call me crazy, but I don’t think you need to blog as much as you do, particularly for someone so busy with work or who’s off to another party (sometimes they seem to be one and the same).

    Try adding up the number of words you’ve written in, say, the last two weeks. It’s a lot. Possibly too much.

  • http://www.rageboy.com/blogger.html RB

    Thanks for the link, dood. This means EGR will *definitely* get over 100 hits this month!

    oh yeah, we’re Keepin’ it Real(tm) over here.

  • http://www.rageboy.com/blogger.html RB

    Thanks for the link, dood. This means EGR will *definitely* get over 100 hits this month!

    oh yeah, we’re Keepin’ it Real(tm) over here.

  • LayZ

    @28, Dude, I’m not talking about the Outlook add in. Agree that thing sucks for high volume mail. I’m talking about the GTD practices.

  • LayZ

    @28, Dude, I’m not talking about the Outlook add in. Agree that thing sucks for high volume mail. I’m talking about the GTD practices.

  • http://crueltobekind.org/ Nicole Simon

    It has to do a lot with the audience. And it depends on the topic.

    Haven gotten some links of you they all resultet in different clickbehaviour – some strong, some not.

  • http://crueltobekind.org Nicole Simon

    It has to do a lot with the audience. And it depends on the topic.

    Haven gotten some links of you they all resultet in different clickbehaviour – some strong, some not.

  • http://raincoaster.wordpress.com/ raincoaster

    You’ve been very mobile recently, both geographically and topically, and I think that’s definitely had an effect. When you were “off the grid” only the people who were interested in that experience were making you a must-see. And you can definitely own that space in time, but a week later you’re doing something completely different, and blogging about that, so you’ll lose those people. You’ve got to start over again from scratch building an audience.

    I’m stating it extremely, but that’s in effect what’s happening. When you were at Microsoft you were blogging about Microsoft and things that affected it as well as about your life. That didn’t change and so over time you came to own that blogspace. You were the default for that category. Now you’re blogging about some main thing which switches every week or so at least, because what you’re actually doing switches. That means you start to gain people in that field, but then you start to lose them when you switch to another field.

    The only solution to this is to be Robert Scoble, not the brand, the blogger, the individual. It’s the writing and the thinking that you do that will bring back the people you pick up in your bloggy travels. You’ve got it; have faith in it and use it.

    Gawd knows I am the farthest thing from a techie. It took me THREE YEARS to learn how to paste a picture into a forum. But I read you because you think and discuss the larger issues of the blogosphere, like this one, and you do it with humility, openness, and intelligence. I don’t always agree with you, but I always respect you.

    What’s juice, and does it matter? It’s not heart, and heart is worth more in the long run. Remember “Love is the Killer App?” Well it is.

  • http://raincoaster.wordpress.com/ raincoaster

    You’ve been very mobile recently, both geographically and topically, and I think that’s definitely had an effect. When you were “off the grid” only the people who were interested in that experience were making you a must-see. And you can definitely own that space in time, but a week later you’re doing something completely different, and blogging about that, so you’ll lose those people. You’ve got to start over again from scratch building an audience.

    I’m stating it extremely, but that’s in effect what’s happening. When you were at Microsoft you were blogging about Microsoft and things that affected it as well as about your life. That didn’t change and so over time you came to own that blogspace. You were the default for that category. Now you’re blogging about some main thing which switches every week or so at least, because what you’re actually doing switches. That means you start to gain people in that field, but then you start to lose them when you switch to another field.

    The only solution to this is to be Robert Scoble, not the brand, the blogger, the individual. It’s the writing and the thinking that you do that will bring back the people you pick up in your bloggy travels. You’ve got it; have faith in it and use it.

    Gawd knows I am the farthest thing from a techie. It took me THREE YEARS to learn how to paste a picture into a forum. But I read you because you think and discuss the larger issues of the blogosphere, like this one, and you do it with humility, openness, and intelligence. I don’t always agree with you, but I always respect you.

    What’s juice, and does it matter? It’s not heart, and heart is worth more in the long run. Remember “Love is the Killer App?” Well it is.

  • http://raincoaster.wordpress.com/ raincoaster

    I should perhaps add that today, if you look over your shoulder in the English language Top Blogs, I’m right there at #2. And I won’t be next week. I know this. I caught a meme as it was rising and got lucky. I am the biggest famewhore you’ll ever meet, but even I don’t take this seriously; it’s a discontinuity in the blog-time continuum.

    If my blog is good, I may retain a fraction of those new readers. A TINY fraction. The quality of any individual post is almost meaningless to a blog in terms of retaining readers. It’s the topics explored over time and the quality of that exploration that will bring people back.

    If I may overanalyze, I think there’s been some unsteadiness in your tone recently; nothing I can put my finger on, but it seems like we never know what we’re going to get recently, in terms of tone or subject matter. Once your life settles down a bit more, it seems natural that your self-expression in the blog will as well, and that will bring them back. I’m sure you’ll see a spike soon enough.

  • http://raincoaster.wordpress.com/ raincoaster

    I should perhaps add that today, if you look over your shoulder in the English language Top Blogs, I’m right there at #2. And I won’t be next week. I know this. I caught a meme as it was rising and got lucky. I am the biggest famewhore you’ll ever meet, but even I don’t take this seriously; it’s a discontinuity in the blog-time continuum.

    If my blog is good, I may retain a fraction of those new readers. A TINY fraction. The quality of any individual post is almost meaningless to a blog in terms of retaining readers. It’s the topics explored over time and the quality of that exploration that will bring people back.

    If I may overanalyze, I think there’s been some unsteadiness in your tone recently; nothing I can put my finger on, but it seems like we never know what we’re going to get recently, in terms of tone or subject matter. Once your life settles down a bit more, it seems natural that your self-expression in the blog will as well, and that will bring them back. I’m sure you’ll see a spike soon enough.

  • http://divedi.blogspot.com/ Dimitar Vesselinov

    Robert, I think you, John Furrier, Michael Arrington, Om Malik, Tom Foremski, Matt Marshall, Rafat Ali and Danny Sullivan should work together. Make an alliance. Coordinate your efforts. Build the next media empire.

    My Dream Media Team
    http://divedi.blogspot.com/2005/12/my-dream-media-team.html

  • http://divedi.blogspot.com/ Dimitar Vesselinov

    Robert, I think you, John Furrier, Michael Arrington, Om Malik, Tom Foremski, Matt Marshall, Rafat Ali and Danny Sullivan should work together. Make an alliance. Coordinate your efforts. Build the next media empire.

    My Dream Media Team
    http://divedi.blogspot.com/2005/12/my-dream-media-team.html

  • LayZ

    How does one lose something they don’t have? That’s what I can’t figure out.

  • LayZ

    How does one lose something they don’t have? That’s what I can’t figure out.

  • LayZ

    How does one lose something they don’t have? That’s what I can’t figure out.

  • LayZ

    How does one lose something they don’t have? That’s what I can’t figure out.

  • jsaltz

    An abomination.

  • jsaltz

    An abomination.

  • Pingback: Scripting News for 8/31/2006 « Scripting News Annex

  • Pingback: Have I lost my “blog power”? « Scobleizer - Tech Geek Blogger at blackrimglasses.com

  • http://joeduck.wordpress.com/ joeduck

    You just need more Paris Hilton stories….

  • http://joeduck.wordpress.com/ joeduck

    You just need more Paris Hilton stories….

  • http://lagesse.org/ Rob La Gesse

    Robert – I don’t think so. Since you linked to my blog earlier this week I have had thousands of visitors I would not have had – from all corners of the earth. 1300 hits from Redmond alone :)

    Rob

  • http://lagesse.org Rob La Gesse

    Robert – I don’t think so. Since you linked to my blog earlier this week I have had thousands of visitors I would not have had – from all corners of the earth. 1300 hits from Redmond alone :)

    Rob

  • http://corpblawg.ynada.com/ Cornelius

    1. Write about stuff that’s relevant to you.
    Don’t blog about blogging, or bloggers or anything else terribly meta. Just pretend there’s absolutely nothing new, exciting or unusual about the process of blogging. Instead, write like you’re telling your friend about something cool you’ve found (50%), or like you’re having a nice chat with yourself (50%).
    That includes not worrying about what you listeners think – they’re your friends after all, right?

    2. Figuring out what’s relevant means getting rid of everything that isn’t.
    This may well include 70-80% of your email, though I suspect you get more interesting stuff than me.

    3. Focus.
    Talking about something coherently means not talking about a million other things. Tough luck. It’s called the blogosphere for a reason, those other guys want to come up with something interesting too from time to time.

    4. Don’t burn out.
    Sit back and take a deep breath. If you went hiking in the Rockies now for a week, web 2.0, the blogosphere and the tech industry would still be there once you came back. Provided that you still felt like writing and talking about that stuff, nothing at all would have changed.

    It’s that simple.

  • http://corpblawg.ynada.com/ Cornelius

    1. Write about stuff that’s relevant to you.
    Don’t blog about blogging, or bloggers or anything else terribly meta. Just pretend there’s absolutely nothing new, exciting or unusual about the process of blogging. Instead, write like you’re telling your friend about something cool you’ve found (50%), or like you’re having a nice chat with yourself (50%).
    That includes not worrying about what you listeners think – they’re your friends after all, right?

    2. Figuring out what’s relevant means getting rid of everything that isn’t.
    This may well include 70-80% of your email, though I suspect you get more interesting stuff than me.

    3. Focus.
    Talking about something coherently means not talking about a million other things. Tough luck. It’s called the blogosphere for a reason, those other guys want to come up with something interesting too from time to time.

    4. Don’t burn out.
    Sit back and take a deep breath. If you went hiking in the Rockies now for a week, web 2.0, the blogosphere and the tech industry would still be there once you came back. Provided that you still felt like writing and talking about that stuff, nothing at all would have changed.

    It’s that simple.

  • http://gautamghosh.wordpress.com/ gautamghosh

    The long tail has hit the blogosphere itself I guess

    And people are using more aggregators and keeping track of blogs that interest them

    Now there are a lot more journalists, sales guys, PR folks apart from techies who are blogging. In fact in the list of most linked Indian bloggers the technoloogy bloggers are probably less than 10%.

  • http://gautamghosh.wordpress.com/ gautamghosh

    The long tail has hit the blogosphere itself I guess

    And people are using more aggregators and keeping track of blogs that interest them

    Now there are a lot more journalists, sales guys, PR folks apart from techies who are blogging. In fact in the list of most linked Indian bloggers the technoloogy bloggers are probably less than 10%.

  • http://bloghud.com/ kosso

    step out of the echo chamber and back in to the fun park, Scoble! :)

  • http://bloghud.com kosso

    step out of the echo chamber and back in to the fun park, Scoble! :)

  • http://www.folknology.com/blog/1/1/ Al

    I think you need more focus, more filtering that gets you to the real dope.

    But you have a few issues because of the shear quantity hitiing your listening channels.

    Sounds like you have an itch to scratch, remember the open source adage scratch that itch for yourself.

    I would move away from the old school email as it is highly inefficient for these sort of quantities.

    I would also think about using your community to help create a social software that helps filter your (public) incoming information feeds. Create a companion site dedicated to this filtering have your community vote/rate on incoming streams based on categories, let the social effects move the interesting stuff to the top and then concetrate on those. A kind of social blog where the subject matter is decided by the adience/community.

    ‘Use the force Robert’

    good luck
    regards
    Al

  • http://www.folknology.com/blog/1/1/ Al

    I think you need more focus, more filtering that gets you to the real dope.

    But you have a few issues because of the shear quantity hitiing your listening channels.

    Sounds like you have an itch to scratch, remember the open source adage scratch that itch for yourself.

    I would move away from the old school email as it is highly inefficient for these sort of quantities.

    I would also think about using your community to help create a social software that helps filter your (public) incoming information feeds. Create a companion site dedicated to this filtering have your community vote/rate on incoming streams based on categories, let the social effects move the interesting stuff to the top and then concetrate on those. A kind of social blog where the subject matter is decided by the adience/community.

    ‘Use the force Robert’

    good luck
    regards
    Al

  • http://www.syntagmamedia.com/ John Evans (Syntagma)

    Robert, you’ve just hit what Gurdjieff called a “half interval in the octave” ;-) However, here’s proof of the pudding.

  • http://www.syntagmamedia.com/ John Evans (Syntagma)

    Robert, you’ve just hit what Gurdjieff called a “half interval in the octave” ;-) However, here’s proof of the pudding.

  • http://mickeleh.blogspot.com/ Michael Markman

    1. I think you already know what’s important for you to do right now. (Nike slogan goes here). Just in case you want more kibbitzing…
    2. I think LayZ has it nailed: GTD
    3. It’s not you, it’s the bubble. We’re close to (beyond?) saturation point with incremental me-too variations aimed at solving the same small number of problems. The payoff for your readers in checking them all out is diminishing. Point only to things that deliver exceptional new value.
    4. The audience for a “Tech Geek Blogger” might be a subset of the audience for a “Microsoft Geek Blogger.”– or it might be the same audience, but with diminished interest.
    5. You have a finite amount of you to invest–you’re going to need to allocate carefully between the thing you built (this blog) and the thing you’re building (your show and PodTech). Granted, there are synergies and the two things can nourish each other, but that only makes it easier to avoid making the required choices. As you say video takes a lot more time than text. Therefore…

  • http://mickeleh.blogspot.com Michael Markman

    1. I think you already know what’s important for you to do right now. (Nike slogan goes here). Just in case you want more kibbitzing…
    2. I think LayZ has it nailed: GTD
    3. It’s not you, it’s the bubble. We’re close to (beyond?) saturation point with incremental me-too variations aimed at solving the same small number of problems. The payoff for your readers in checking them all out is diminishing. Point only to things that deliver exceptional new value.
    4. The audience for a “Tech Geek Blogger” might be a subset of the audience for a “Microsoft Geek Blogger.”– or it might be the same audience, but with diminished interest.
    5. You have a finite amount of you to invest–you’re going to need to allocate carefully between the thing you built (this blog) and the thing you’re building (your show and PodTech). Granted, there are synergies and the two things can nourish each other, but that only makes it easier to avoid making the required choices. As you say video takes a lot more time than text. Therefore…

  • vanni

    you have a cool “dingy-thingy” at this url:
    http://scobleizer.wordpress.com/2006/08/30/have-i-lost-my-blog-power/
    that looks liek a happy face. i think this is interesting….cause it is so mysterious! look for it just under your header image just under the “Sc”. cheers
    PS as someone famous once said… “if you are worried about being boring well then darling you are….”