A blog is like a garden

Matthew Hurst at Data_Mining coins my latest favourite blogging similie of the month while bemoaning the problems with Google and Feedburner which has seen:

While this issue is personally frustrating (a blog is like a garden you are nurturing but for which you can only watch through a telescope – now you find that the telescope isn’t working!)….

I completely agree. I’d often thought about this as my wife is a keen (when she ccan get out there) gardener and I’ve noticed parallels in the two pastimes: lots of tinkering, tending, regular big pushes of activity and delight in the aggregate results for all your efforts.

: : On the Feedburner issue, I’m glad it’s not just me with subscriber figures in turmoil. The service showed a freefall in my subscriber numbers over the past week – I thought I’d simply offended a huge amount of people with my thoughts about Digg :-)

It is worrying that there can be this much turbulence in the data though, especially as Feedburner is going to be used increasingly in corporate work. As Matthew points out: “it points to a larger problem with the blogosphere: there are no market pressures to make monitoring of this type accountable.”

 

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4 responses to “A blog is like a garden”

  1. Like the similie. I like the thought that ‘a blog is like a garden’. We actually used something quite similar in a presenation recently, though it was more about brands who want to build online communities. Like a garden, it takes lots of time and effort to make a community grow.

  2. Thank god. Me too. 10% drop in the last few days according to Feedburner. I had no idea it was “them” and not “me”. Ever wonder about how much you actually DO follow the slow upward tick of these numbers? Very sad.

  3. Nicola: yep – it definitely works like thata – love it. I think i lot of brands are dealing with over-grown scrub-land that they need to clear and examine before they start trying to get plants to grow :-)

    David: it all speaks to our brains’ reward-systems. In a sense, I think one becomes literally addicted to them ;-)

  4. Not just blogs. We have been talking to clients about communities on Social Networking sites being like gardens – taking time, energy, effort (love?) to make things grow. Every client wants a “MySpace” presence, without realising that they have to understand what their role is and that you can’t just expect that you rock up and everyone wants to be your new friend!

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