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Small b blogging

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source link: https://tomcritchlow.com/2018/02/23/small-b-blogging/
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Small b blogging

Network topology and the ghost of the digg homepage

February 23, 2018

There’s an idea that starting a blog is harder than it used to be. That there used to be a way to write a few words, slap it online and wait for the traffic to roll in.

I call BS. It’s not that it’s not true exactly - but that kind of thinking is living in the shadow of the Digg homepage.

I’d like to propose a new mental model for blogging - small b blogging. Let me show you what I mean.

Middle of last year I wrote one of my most widely read blog posts - the consultant’s grain. Checking analytics I see that it has 2500 lifetime pageviews. It’s not nothing but as one of my “biggest” posts it’s a small audience by anyone’s measure.

And yet. That single post has directly led to two podcast appearances, at least one client, several coffee meetings with other independent consultants and more interesting conversations than I can remember.

This post - f* yeah side projects - has 1,614 lifetime pageviews. But was included in two email newsletters from people I respect, created at least one interesting coffee meeting and, perhaps most importantly, is a story I re-tell often and use as a fable for folks asking for career and interview advice.

What’s going on here? I call it small b blogging. It’s a virtuous cycle of making interesting connections while also being a way to clarify and strengthen my own ideas. I’m not reaching a big audience by any measure but the direct impact and benefit is material.

Small b blogging is learning to write and think with the network. Small b blogging is writing content designed for small deliberate audiences and showing it to them. Small b blogging is deliberately chasing interesting ideas over pageviews and scale. An attempt at genuine connection vs the gloss and polish and mass market of most “content marketing”.

And remember that you are your own audience! Small b blogging is writing things that you link back to and reference time and time again. Ideas that can evolve and grow as your thinking and audience grows.

As Venkatesh says in the calculus of grit - release work often, reference your own thinking & rework the same ideas again and again. That’s the small b blogging model.

Blogging isn’t dead but the network topology has changed

How does small b blogging go against the traditional mental model of blogging?

Digg used to be the homepage of the internet (back when it was an aggregator, and before reddit became the new Digg). This was a time when there were a small number of entry points to the network that controlled a huge amount of influence. The Digg homepage, Hacker News, Slashdot, Metafilter.

Crucially, these entry points to the network were very big and very accessible. What do I mean by that? Well - in those early days they were very big in the sense that if you got your content on the Digg homepage a lot of people would see it (relative to the total size of the network at the time). And they were very accessible in the sense that it wasn’t that hard to get your content there! I recall having a bunch of Digg homepage hits and Hacker News homepage hits.

But - as the overall network has grown exponentially the network topology has changed. Digg, Reddit, Hacker News etc all still exist but the audience you can reach with a “homepage” hit there has become much smaller relative to the overall size of the network. And getting a homepage hit there is harder than ever because the volume of content has increased exponentially.

This causes the curious effect of people thinking it’s harder than ever to reach an audience online. “It’s not like it used to be”.

But! As the network grows and these large entry points to the network shrink in relative power, new entry points emerge - new ways to reach clusters of audience faster than ever before.

Want to reach an audience of marketers online? Hacker News used to be your best bet (despite the fact that it’s mostly engineers and startup junkies). Now you have inbound.org, growthhackers.net, Moz has a widely read newsletter, etc etc etc.

And many of these networks don’t rely on a common “homepage” format. Are.na for example has many networks overlapping design, design criticism, product design, content, art and more. Like the digital equivalent of zines these networks are almost intentionally small and don’t have aggregated entryways. But the audience there is large enough to create meaningful connections and audience for your work if you’re willing to spend the time.

Every community now has a fragmented number of communities, homepages, entry points, tinyletters, influencers and networks. They overlap in weird and wonderful ways - and it means that it’s harder than ever to feel like you got a “homepage” success on these networks. To create a moment that has the whole audience looking at the same thing at the same time.

Of course, the natural consequence of these fragmented audiences is that getting some traction with one or more of these smaller entry points is easier than it ever was.

So, getting a post read by “everyone” is harder than ever but reaching hundreds or low thousands of audience has never been easier.

The promise of audience is big B blogging

So what is big B blogging? I’d contend that too much of what you read on the web is written for large audiences. Too much content on the web is designed for scale, for sharing, for gloss and finish. It’s mass media, whether it’s made by a media company or an individual acting like one. So when people think of blogging their natural reference point is create something that looks like the mass media they’re consuming. Content designed for pageviews and scale.

This is why it’s appealing to people writing on the web to get it in a prestigious publication, or place it somewhere with an in-built audience. i.e. Medium, Inc, Entrepreneur, Fast Company etc.

It’s so alluring to want to write something there because you’ll get more page views than if you put it on your own site and you’ll get the prestige of saying you were published in Fast Company (or, or, etc).

But what is lost by following big B blogging? By chasing audience we lose the ability to be ourselves. By writing for everyone we write for no one. Too often I read things otherwise smart people have written for places like Fast Company and my eyes glaze over. Personal identity is necessarily watered down. Yes those places have large audiences but they’re shallow audiences. They don’t care about you at all. Your writing washes through their feeds like water.

Instead - I think most people would be better served by subscribing to small b blogging. What you want is something with YOUR personality. Writing and ideas that are addressable (i.e. you can find and link to them easily in the future) and archived (i.e. you have a list of things you’ve written all in one place rather than spread across publications and URLs) and memorable (i.e. has your own design, logo or style). Writing that can live and breathe in small networks. Scale be damned.

When you write for someone else’s publication your writing becomes disparate and UN-networked. By chasing scale and pageviews you lose identity and the ability to create meaningful, memorable connections within the network.

Go forth and small b blog

So I challenge you to think clearly about the many disparate networks you’re part of and think about the ideas you might want to offer those networks that you don’t want to get lost in the feed. Ideas you might want to return to. Think about how writing with and for the network might enable you to start blogging. Forget the big B blogging model. Forget Medium’s promise of page views and claps. Forget the guest post on Inc, Forbes and Entrepreneur. Forget Fast Company. Forget fast content.

Come join the network. Bring a blog.

Deep thanks to the many folks who read an early draft of this post and gave feedback including Brian Dell, Mark Johnstone, Paul Millerd, Toby Shorin, Brendan Schlagel & Dan Leatherman


This blog is written by Tom Critchlow, an independent strategy consultant living and working in Brooklyn, NY. If you like what you read please leave a comment below in disqus or sign up for my Tinyletter.

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Owen Scott III
0 points
3 years ago

A creative artist friend recommended your article. I like this line of thought, valuing productive intimacy over becoming a celebrity and making big bucks. It occurs to me I approach good old Facebook in a similar manner, within the limits of it's short message format. The gestalt is to connect meaningfully, develop and sustain substantive relationships with people who are pursuing the good, to coordinate cooperative activity, and to plant constructive ideas (as opposed to gossiping, ranting, reposting simplistic memes etc.) I do post longer notes excerpted from my actual blog (see below) and cute cat pix. In this way, I've impacted and been impacted by people I like and respect. I also have a blog that hides in plain sight on one of those old favorite pages- I write it like a traditional personal journal and I've told few people of its existence, so that one would have to discover it. But it's there as a valuable resource and reference point for me and, perhaps, whoever stumbles upon it. One day I may decide to make it more visible.

Tom Critchlow
0 points
3 years ago

Thanks Owen. It's certainly possible to use the "BigSocial" platforms in lots of weird and wonderful ways. One way in which I personally dislike Facebook (or Twitter) for bigger thinking and writing is that the flow of information makes it hard to reference and link to previous posts so there's no archive or body of work that accumulates. But you can certainly form some intimate connections there. Thanks for stopping by!

Dorian Benkoil
0 points
3 years ago

You know, sometimes you don't even really know the audience, but want to say something. And, yet, an audience finds you. Curious to know if you agree.

Tom Critchlow
0 points
3 years ago

Yeah absolutely - I think in those cases it's about trying to be as genuine as possible and seeing where it takes you. I don't think it's true that good content will always find an audience but sometimes when you're not sure who the audience is you just try and write with a voice, seed it to some interesting places and see where it goes.

A good example from me was this post from a few years back: http://tomcritchlow.com/201... I wasn't really sure when I wrote it who I might find but I saw that quite a few people deliberately FW it to their network and it really helped me expand my connections.

Chris O'Donnell
0 points
3 years ago

Yep. I wrote a blog post late last year for a very specific audience (users of a specific insulin pump) and last time I looked I was over 2000 views, and I've received at least a dozen emails thanking me for helping them get past a technical issue they had been struggling with for months in some cases. My blog post has had a material impact on the health and happiness of at least a dozen people. My blog used to get 50,000 views a month back in peak blog in 2005, but I doubt it ever had as much impact as that blog post from December.

Tom Critchlow
0 points
3 years ago

That's great. Makes me feel bad that I'm just blogging about blogging over here but what you said is the real power of the distributed independent web!

Ģirts Raģelis
0 points
3 years ago

Thanks for great writing! Inspires and brings ideas how to write better.

Teodora Petkova
0 points
3 years ago

Hey, Tom! I just wanted to take a moment and tell you that I loved your post. As in all good writing (and thinking) I felt very much at home with your idea of writing as connecting. Your text also reminded me of a wonderful post by Sir Tim Berners-Lee: Blogging is great (available now via the Internet Archive: https://web.archive.org/web...)
Again, happy to read you and let's keep making relationships, not content. :)

Tom Critchlow
0 points
3 years ago

Thanks! Glad you enjoyed. I'm gonna check out that post from Tim now

Amber Krowiarz
0 points
21 months ago

I thought you were dead! You and all my old "small b" blogging friends. You (and Paul Jarvis, who referenced your post and helped me find it) inspired me to crank up my old small-time blog again. Both your posts helped me realign with the type of business I want to run, too, so thanks for that. (Really.)

Tom Critchlow
0 points
21 months ago

Yes! Not dead :) hanging on somehow.

Thanks for stopping by. Added your RSS to my reader so we're basically old friends now.

Amber Krowiarz
0 points
21 months ago

And now that I know another small b blogger exists, I'll be following along here, too.

0 points
3 years ago

I agree that the topology has changed and I applaud the push for small b blogging. I have a small b blog and its tough to find that network of a few hundred that you talked about. That small deliberate audience is hidden in communities I have yet to find. In that sense, blogging has become a lot more marketing and research than the previous topology.

Tom Critchlow
0 points
3 years ago

It can certainly take time - for me I built some small networks myself via emailing folks, joining slack communities and twitter.

BobWP
0 points
3 years ago

I love this article because it shows the transformation of blogging and the different directions we are taking it. Essentially a lot of my posts I do on my site are for larger audiences, but I have even seen this evolution as many posts, including my podcasts are often created more for a smaller audience and I don't sweat over the numbers of views or listens. As you said, there is a lot of power in those smaller groups and you never know what new direction it will take you or how your post might affect specific individuals. Thanks for the post!

Tom Critchlow
0 points
3 years ago

Thanks Bob! Good to remember that all our metrics are poor proxies for real connection :)

0 points
3 years ago

Your comments about sorting out your own thoughts through a blog hit home for me. I find that one of the main benefits. If others want to come along for the ride, great!! The more the merrier.

Paolo Amoroso
0 points
17 months ago

Thank you for framing this approach to blogging. I ended up doing small b blogging as a reaction to the hamster wheel of SEO and the viral lottery of the algorithms of social platforms. I blog what I'd like to read, SEO be damned.

Cameron Plommer
0 points
3 years ago
E. Christopher Clark
0 points
3 years ago

Great points here. I really dig the idea of building smaller audiences, rather than chasing larger ones. It's something I'm doing with my books, and something I'm going to start trying with my blog.

Ron Rapp
0 points
3 years ago

Loved your post and ideas, Tom. I've been blogging on my site (rapp.org) since 1995 and it's been fascinating to see the changes in the landscape. I'm blogging in a much different field -- general aviation -- but nevertheless, I am a huge believer in the addressable/archived/memorable mantra.

For one thing, it just makes sense. If you're going to write on the web, why not make it easy to access your content? I've been writing for a variety of other sites, magazines, and publications over the past few years, but I always keep copies of what I've written on my own site.

Regarding the site statistics, I think they can be a little misleading. Posts are aggregated and distributed differently today than they were five or ten years ago. I've noticed a steady drop in my overall stats over time, even as the number of subscribers and my own profile in the GA industry has risen. I think that's because subscribers don't visit the site since they receive the content via email or other means. I know the reach is still high because I get a lot of email feedback from the posts, a high number of comments relative to the WP site stats, and every now and then I'll get a spike of several thousand hits on a post.

Anyway, the mantra "content is king" is and always will be the driving force in the success of any blog. I've got no ads, and don't want them. I don't even fish for subscribers. I'd rather have a smaller, more dedicated set of readers. Twenty three years on, that philosophy is still one I'm happy with.

Itay Dreyfus
0 points
11 months ago

A great useful and actionable piece.

Webmention stuff


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