Author Archive for Dock

Beating the Tyranny of the Blank Page - Part 2

In my last post, I promised to provide some measure of methodology to help a blogger create good posts whenever necessary, whether inspired or not. But before I do that, I want to take a half-step back and emphasize that these ideas are not intended to help generate empty, vapid posts just to fill up a page (although you certainly could). It’s not about being a “hack,” it’s about creating a methodology that points your nose in the right direction when you need to write, but can’t muster the traction to do so. It’s hard to be prolific if you demand 100% inspiration of yourself, all the time. Even such visionaries as Thomas Edison and Salvador Dali had methodologies for generating new ideas - and though they have certainly been called many things over the years, I don’t think “hack” would be a fair assessment.

I’d mentioned the tyranny of the blank page - basically the overwhelming feeling you can get when standing on the brink of a task; an existential nausea of a sort, the paralyzing darkness staring back at you. It’s the the inertia of the eternal, and it has serious mass. But, you really can sidestep it if you have a method.

Certainly less famous than Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s “God is in the details” quote, would be Professor Wayne Taylor’s “constraints give you freedom” quote - one that I found puzzling and quite counterintuitive as a 19-year-old design undergrad. It sounds like scary doublethink, perhaps some kind of creeping fascism, at first blush. This really isn’t the case - Wayne was right as far as design goes, and I’ll show you why.

The most prolific songwriter I know said “when I set a goal for myself of writing 300 songs in a year, there were days when I just had nothing. But I’d write a song anyway. It could be a song about frogs - about anything at all. I’d just be sure I wrote a song. I didn’t expect all the songs to be good, that wasn’t the point.” So if you’d like, you can simply sidestep the problem in this way - the “better done than good” approach. I think we can shoot for quality here too - but we’ll need a methodology to get us there.
Narrow your topic, create a ruleset

Realize that the first step to constraining yourself lies within your topic focus. Yes, you can write about anything. But should you? In my experience, things come easier when you know what your focus is - which can in some cases be refined by determining what your focus is not. If your blog has a chosen topic focus, you’ve already accomplished this critical step, whether you realize it or not. In design terms, you’re “defining the design problem” - as a blogger, you’re laying out the boundaries on your mental map - a topical topographic, perhaps. “I write about politics” or “I write about motorcycles” will work, as will “I don’t write about Bretton Woods monetary policy” or “Modern supersport bikes are for the birds” when you’re trying to ratchet down tightly on your focus area.

Chess has a set of rules - you play on an 8 x 8 checkerboard, and all possible movement is predefined - but the outcomes are not. The classic arcade game “Asteroids” had a very simple ruleset and a defined screen area, yet allowed for infinite movement (if you go off the screen, you reappear on the other side) in a finite space. You can create a ruleset for your topic focus, yet retain a rich set of possibilities, in the same way. Think about your favorite blogs. What is their ruleset? What would their defining characteristics be? You can define them easily by what they focus on, and rather wholly by what they do not focus on.

Now ask yourself, “what is my ruleset?” And get to writing it down.

Research your topic area

Now that we’ve defined the territory (or “tightened the palette” for you art folks) it’s time to go deep. Do some research on your chosen topic area. Yes, I know, that sounds like work. And… it is. But it is also fun, and will literally drop ideas off at your mental doorstep. This will also help your blog become more authoritative, a characteristic fast becoming critical for larger success in the blogosphere.

Also, it’s a good idea to know what ideas currently exist in “your” space. Historically, rivals were well aware of each other’s work - Newton versus Leibniz over “the calculus,” The Beatles and the Beach Boys working on their respective 1967 master works, the teams of Werner Von Braun and Sergei Korolev racing each other to be the first to the Moon… you get the idea. You too can stand on the shoulders of giants - and with such tools as Wikis and search engines to use, the world is your oyster. What are others saying about your chosen topic? Do you agree? Do you disagree? Does it lead you to consider a different opinion, or approach? What do you like about what you’ve discovered? What do you dislike? Already, we’ve chased away the tyranny of the blank page and replaced it with a world of focused possibilities.

And should you decide to incorporate serious research into your posts, be sure to properly attribute the research. It goes a long way to making everyone happy.

Broaden your subtopics - ideation

Now that we’ve tightened the overall focus, and have educated ourselves on the chosen subject matter, what more can we do? Well, we can allow our topic to grow with variation and color. This brings a new depth and multiple levels of interest to your writing, and is an ideation process of a sort. Ideation is simply the point at which you generate ideas, hopefully taking note of them along the way. This is the “sky’s the limit” portion of the process, where you can create a broad variety of iterations of your main topic. Regardless of your chosen topic, there are almost certainly other disciplines that have touched on your subject. You can celebrate them as a means of ideation. I’m referring to, in no particular order:

Songs
Photographs
Tapestries
Paintings
Plays
Movies
Operas
Art Installations
Sculpture
Conceptual products and art
Games
Books
Other Blogs

… having to do with your subject matter. These can also be used as the basis for your research. I’m sure that there are other subtopics that I haven’t considered, so part of your method can be listing additional subtopics for your topic area, using the above list as a healthy starting point. Go crazy! This is where you can shoot for the moon. If it touches (or opposes, or complements) your topic area, it’s fair game. If you choose you can even narrow that list, for an even tighter focus, or to save some material for a future date. Bringing us to…

Pace yourself

You wouldn’t expect (nor want) a novel or a film to give you everything in the first 5 minutes. Artistically, that’s not particularly interesting anyway - my brother (the theater major) would say that it “condescends to the audience participant,” and ends up falling flat, for lack of fostering any kind of intrigue. You have, potentially, a lifetime to explore your topic. There’s no reason that you can’t explore it at an easy pace, allowing you and your readers to know the topic inside and out. This also gives you a lot of breathing room, alleviating the feeling that you have burned through “all there is to say” too quickly.

This will also help remove some of the mental burden of trying to cram 100 gallons of information into a 5 gallon post. You can break it out over several posts - in fact, it’ll be easier on the reader that way. This works unless your chosen subject requires immediacy, in which case you might not have the luxury of too much ideation - for instance, if you focus on breaking news of whatever type.

But, for the majority of bloggers, the end result happens when you take the results from your wild ideation spree from the previous step, pick a subtopic and approach you like, and write.Certainly, don’t forget to take an editing pass. And finally, congratulations - the page is blank no more! You broke through.
Generating your own methodology

Certainly, the above steps are neither all inclusive, nor meant to be any kind of authoritative, rigorous standard that separates wheat from chaff. But, it is a methodology, whereas before you may have had none - and using it can get you through rough patches, or even take your blog to the next level. Certainly you can create your own process if you’d like, or you can simply recognize and refine any process that you are already using, whether it is a deliberate conscious process, or one that you use unknowingly.

The California Superbike School regularly improves riders by simply making them aware of the decisions they make while riding - as a writer, what are the decisions that you make when you choose to write? I think there’s value in simply recognizing and enumerating any unconscious decisions made - this exposes them to your conscious mind, at which point you can actively choose to alter or abolish those decisions, or add new ones. This becomes a fairly enlightening self-exploration if taken seriously enough - and could easily provide material for blogging in its own right.

Though it be madness, there is method in it

For the final installment of this series, I’ll examine some of the wilder methodologies employed by some of history’s most well-known creators and makers. Hopefully you’ll find it entertaining, and potentially inspiring!

Continue Reading Part 3

Beating the Tyranny of the Blank Page - Part 1

The tyranny of the blank page

Bloggers occupy an interesting position within the larger world of content creators. Neither fish nor fowl, a blogger is an interesting hybrid of opinionated editor mixed with junior journalist. Bloggers, generally, are free to shift their voices when it suits them, from table-banging invective to breaking news. Further freeing the hands of bloggers, there exists no credo of blogging standards (currently anyway), no ethos which constrains the direction a blogger can take. And bloggers have a large, low-cost distribution channel popularly called “The Internets” that stands to potentially be one of humankind’s transforming achievements - even if the traffic about the Spears family (Jamie Lynn too!) and Lauren Upton remains disproportionately high. It’s all about potential, after all.

At first blush, this whole blogging thing and its concomitant freedom sounds like a creative paradise. For creative people, though, this can sometimes create a syndrome known as “the tyranny of the blank page.” To wit - you can write anything you want! Now… what will that be? Fortunately, your particular muse comes through occasionally… letting your writing take flight. But what happens when the muse fails to report for duty? Do you have a process of any kind which allows you to generate good content when needed, outside of inspirational bursts?

If you don’t have any kind of process, but find yourself locked into a staring contest with a blank text field from time to time, I recommend that you create a process - one that will work for you. This week, I’ll be focusing in on the importance of laying out a process, and I’ll also share some creative methodologies that can be employed within just about any creative endeavor, and should be helpful when you find that the muse is long gone.

Why it matters

Unless you’re a “pro blogger” (in which case, you may well have your own methodologies, because you are likely under the gun yourselves) you may find that there are effectively no consequences for having a low or uneven posting frequency. After all, it’s your blog… what does it matter, aside from potentially disappointed readers? From within the framework of Blogburst, I can certainly say that if you have a higher posting frequency, it goes a long way toward your odds of successfully appearing on a publisher’s page. Our editors are looking for fresh content, twice daily if possible, for our our publishing partners. I know, for a stone-cold fact, that there are certain blogs that are successful in the eyes of the publishers because they provide constant, high-quality content. If you want to know how to get the attention of our publishers, having a posting frequency of twice daily (or more!) is as close to a golden ticket as you’re going to get. Believe me, it’s an enviable position to be in, and a strong regular posting frequency is a great way to get there.

nano_participant_icon_large.gif nablo07120x240.jpg

Outside of Blogburst, the memetic popularity of NaBloPoMo and NaNoWriMo has led many a blogger to try their hand at one or the other of these mini-marathons. I think any honest participant in one of these will tell you that there were times when the well ran dry - or at least threatened to. Of course, that’s all part of the fun of participating (pride in accomplishing a difficult objective) but it is somewhat frustrating if you don’t make the finish line. Having a creative process can make the difference between finishing or not.

With that, I’ll sling some juice to some of our fine bloggers, with links relevant to NaBloPoMo posts in particular - check it out:

Mommy Instinct’s take on NaBloPoMo

Crafter By Night crosses the finish line

Slackermama - not so slack!

Born Again Bird Watcher breaks the tape

Next post, I’ll start digging in to the ins and outs of generating your own creative process. Until then, feel free to comment away - do you have a creative process of your own that you’d like to share? Any great creative breakthroughs that helped you turn a corner? Let us know!

Continue Reading: Part 2

Skip to Part 3

Full Feed vs. Partial Feed

All the bloggers who have been accepted into the BlogBurst network are required to provide full feeds, if only to BlogBurst. However, there is some debate in the blogosphere about whether full or partial feeds are better - either for end user’s or for driving more individuals to your blog. Here’s one blog article that encourages those who offer full feeds to advertise it. Check out the comments in response to the post - therein lie some interesting points. Most of the bloggers who commented have themselves unsubscribed from blogs that don’t give them a full feed in the RSS feed.

 

Verifying Your Blog When You Join

When you add your blog into the BlogBurst network, you will to “verify” it to claim it as your own. We require this step to ensure that blogs submitted to the network are being added by their real owners.

When you reach this step during the set-up process, you will see two or three options, depending on the blogging platform you use:

Option 1 - Claim Your Blog - This option will only show if you have a blog platform that supports this option. If you choose to claim your blog this way, simply enter in your ID and password to access your blog platform (to make a post, for instance). We will not keep this ID and password. We only use it one time during this step to remotely touch your blogging platform and verify that the ID and password work as you entered them. This is a similar method to the one Technorati and some other sites use to verify your blog certification.

Option 2 - You can copy and paste a small BlogBurst network badge (containing an ID) into your blog somewhere, both to show your excitement for this new service and to identify this blog as your own. Once you have this badge in place, return to the BlogBurst blogger workbench and hit the Verify button. Our system will go back to your blog and look for the embedded ID to verify your blog’s ownership.

Option 3 - You can copy and paste a small, invisible BlogBurst JavaScript into a post or elsewhere on your blog. You can find this code in the workbench when your blog’s status is “pending,” just click on “verify this blog” and it will greet you there. Once you do this, follow the same process as above by returning to the blogger workbench and hitting the Verify button. You can remove this JavaScript from your blog once your blog is successfully verified by BlogBurst.

DO NOT FORGET TO HIT THE VERIFY BUTTON AFTER YOU COMPLETE THE OPTIONS ABOVE

Verification Q and A

Q: I put the verification script in the sidebar/header/main page but it says I’m not verified. Why?

A: There are lots of potential problems with this approach. Put the code in a blog entry instead, and if that doesn’t work, let us know.

Q: My site has frames — will this affect verification?

A: First the bad news: if your blog contains frames, you will not be able to verify a BlogBurst badge the normal way. The good news, however, is that you can contact our editorial team for guidance, OR try Option 3 above.

Add an Avatar to your Blog

When you create your user profile after being accepted into our network, you’ll be prompted to upload an avatar or image for your blog. An avatar can make your blog more attractive to publishers (and readers), increasing your chances of being picked up. A good avatar may also increase the chances that readers will click back to your originating blog.

If you don’t have an avatar (a photo or logo) associated with your blog, we provide a generic default image - but we’re sure you can come up with something much more creative that accurately represents your blog. (Remember - the blog image is different than your blogger image, although you can certainly use the same one.)

bb-avatars.gif

The second avatar above is generic, for a blogger who didn’t have their own

You can add a personal image for your blog in a few easy steps. BlogBurst avatars are 60×60 pixels, so it’s best to create an image that looks best at that size (and that looks good square).

Here’s how to add one:

1) Save the .jpg, .gif or .png picture (that you want to use for your blog) onto your desktop so that you’ll know where it is for a later step.

2) Log into your BlogBurst account by going to http://www.blogburst.com and clicking on the ‘Workbench’ tab at the top right corner of the screen.

3) When you log in, you’ll see your blog listed under Summary. Click Edit Blog Profile for the blog in question. Then you’ll be taken to the Edit Blog page.

4) On the Edit Blog page, you will see a Blog Image section with a Browse button beside it. Click the Browse button.

5) Next, you’ll be taken to a File Upload pop-up window that has an icon for Desktop somewhere, probably in a column on the left-hand side. Click the Desktop icon.

6) You should now be able to see everything on your desktop, including the picture you want to use. (if not, make sure ‘files of type’ says ‘all files.’) Click on the name of the image you want to use, then click Open in the lower right.

7) This will send you back to the Edit Blog page. Scroll down the page and click Save, and you’ll be in your Blog Profile.

8) If you don’t see the image you selected beside your blog, hit the F5 button on the top row of your keyboard to refresh the page, and it should display.

Some of our favorite BlogBurst images:

The Final Sprint

Earth & Sky

/Film - Blogging the Reel World

Hedonia

Darla Mack

Vagablogging

Understanding Who’s Reading Your Blog

Now that your blog is being syndicated through the BlogBurst network, you want to know where your posts are showing up, don’t you? (We thought so!)

Here’s how to see where you’re getting play:

Log into your account on BlogBurst and look for the “Reports” link at the left of your workbench. The default “All BlogBurst Activity” report shows you headline impressions collected from all BlogBurst publisher sites.

The “My Activity” report allows you to slice and dice your headline impressions, post views and unique visitor counts from across the network (more on what those terms mean at bottom).

  • If you click on “My Activity” you can see the headline impressions your blog has generated.
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    The drop-down menu on the right allows you to change the time span

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  • The “Posts and Publishers” link identifies your top ten posts by headline, date posted, the number of times the post was viewed, and how many people clicked through to your blogburstblog4.gif
  • The “Post Placement” link allows you to sort by publisher your post placement. You can also view how the post looked on an individual publisher’s site
    burstblog2.gif

Blog Placement Reports Q&A

Q: What the heck is a Headline Impression?

A: Headline impressions represent the number of times one of your blog’s headlines display on any publisher site. See the SFGate.com travel section as an example of how BlogBurst blog headlines are displayed. In this case, SFGate.com shows 4 headlines from a collection of selected blogs in their BlogBurst travel channel. Any time your blog’s headline(s) shows up on a publisher page like this, we capture every pageview and count it as a headline impression for the post and roll up all headline impressions for your My Activity report.

Q: So then what is a Post View?

A: Post views represent that number of times someone clicked on a headline displayed on a publisher site to read the entire blog post.

Q: Why don’t I see any reporting data?

A: For many BlogBurst bloggers in the network, your “My Activity” report will be blank. This simply means that your blog has not been picked up yet.

One final note: If you change the parameters of the “My Activity” report (headlines vs post views for example) in the pull down menus, don’t forget to click on the “Draw!” button to re-render the report with these new settings.

Setting Your Feed To Work With BlogBurst

The way that BlogBurst sucks your blog into our system and then syndicates it out to the best newspapers and media sites in the land is a technology called “RSS” (see Wikipedia’s RSS entry).

You don’t need to know much about this technology to be a BlogBurst member, you just need to make sure that your feed is set to show “full posts.” We’ll tell you how to do this in the most popular blogging systems.

Full vs. Partial Posts

Most bloggers use a ready-made platform like Wordpress or Blogger, and the good news is that these systems automatically create RSS feeds for you. Those feeds are set to share either full or partial posts. Partial posts will show the first section of each post and then link to the full post back at your blog.

Publishers using the BlogBurst network require all feeds to display the full blog post (but don’t worry, all posts syndicated through us also link back to your blog). Setting your blog’s feed to show partial posts not only prevents your content from being used, but could also result in suspension from the system.

In broad terms, you’ll usually have an “Atom feed” and an “RSS feed” available to choose from, and in some cases even more. When you submit your blog to BlogBurst, you’ll see these choices in the drop-down menu during the sign-up process — either one will work fine.

We recommend that you choose the latest version of your RSS feed, which will usually be RSS 2.0 or Atom 1.0.

The Hows

Note that it sometimes takes 24 hours for your feed to update after you change the settings.

There are too many platforms to list all the instructions, but here are a few of the most common examples:

MySpace Blogs

Unfortunately, MySpace does not offer the kind of feed that we need, so we don’t allow MySpace blogs at this time.

Feedburner

Feedburner is a separate free service that allows you to channel an already existing feed, creating a new RSS feed. It’s easy, it’s free, and if you are having trouble with your feed doing odd things, Feedburner is a good choice for you. (Feedburner can turn full feeds into partial feeds, but it cannot turn partial feeds into full feeds.)

Wordpress

Go into your Wordpress dashboard and click the ‘Options’ menu tab. Under that click the ‘Reading’ subtab and you should see a place to change your settings for each article to show “full text” as opposed to “summary.” Click on Update Options to save.

[show screenshot]

For Wordpress users that just can’t get enough of the “read more” link (which turns an entry into a partial post), you can install the CompleteRSS plug-in to fix the problem. Your RSS will display the full feed and you will retain control over the way posts appear on your site.

BlogSpot / Blogger

  1. Go to Blogger.com and sign into your blog to see the dashboard
  2. Click on the Settings tab and then on Site Feed in the sub menu underneath that tab
  3. Make sure to click on the Save Settings button at the bottom of that page to save the changes
  4. Sometimes, a useful next step is to go ahead and republish the blog
  5. ALSO, as a workaround - If you’re using an atom feed as your feed URL (http://blahblah/atom.xml) I’d change it to RSS 2.0 (http://blahblah/rss.xml) as these seem to work a lot better within the framework of Blogger

Changing your BlogBurst feed in our system

If you find that you need to change the feed altogether (for instance, moving to a newer version of your feed) you should be able to do so in BlogBurst by logging in, choosing “Edit Blog Profile” under “My Blogs”, then choose “Update URL” and change the feed URL.

If All Else Fails

If you can’t figure out how to get your feed working correctly, please contact our editors at blogburst-editors@pluck.com and we’ll get you all set!