Blogging styles and traffic stats
We've been blogging just long enough (not quite a year now) to have spotted at least seven distinct types of traffic-generating blogging styles.
Just as there are different styles of investing, there are different approaches to traffic generation. Aside from the occasional, reclusive J.D.Salingers, most writers want to be read as widely as possible. Some bloggers literally will do anything to gain audience, others have defined boundaries. Site traffic is a subject close to bloggers' hearts, and is front-of-mind right now, thanks in part to the misadventures of Pajamas Media.
Not every blogger practicing these distinct styles gets as much traffic as they might like. However, each style has the potential to drive traffic. Other styles of blogging, such as the let's-discuss-what-I-ate-for-lunch style, aren't suited for driving traffic, unless of course you're talking about what Madonna had for lunch. As a rule, navel-gazing gains an audience of one.
Many blogs employ a combination of styles. As noted below, Mister Snitch! does this.
Blogging resembles investment in that the blogger invests time and energy in hopes of a return. Bloggers' return on investment is readers. Like most investors, most bloggers go belly-up. Here are the blogger types, as we see them, compared with different investment styles.
1) Meme-du-jour bloggers comment on the high-profile ideas of the moment. This requires more or less constant research, and results in posts that are often less than polished or complete (because they have to be composed quickly, and also because these stories are after all, developing). This type of blogger is usually focused on political issues.
High-traffic bloggers working in this style develop an entourage of lesser-trafficked bloggers. This forms an ecosystem: One big blog drives big traffic to many small blogs, and many small blogs return a modest traffic streams back to the source. Michelle Malkin is the epitome of this blogging style in its purest incarnation. This type of blogging reminds us of a hedge fund investor: At its best, it offers outsized, quick returns. However, it's not always in the best interests of the companies being bought and sold, nor is it necessarily good for the general public. Likewise, this style of blogging does not always serve the issues well. Posts in this style are too often long on POV, short on insight. This style also skews toward links to other high-trafficked bloggers at the expense of lesser bloggers offering more insight (although this is a problem with most bloggers in general).
(We do a certain amount of this style of blogging, as there are fleeting memes that interest us, and also because it is a way to introduce ourselves to new audiences. Most blogs are at least somewhat 'meme', keeping up with current events and fashions.)
2) Caterers determine what an audience segment wants to hear, and pursue that theme aggressively. This style is distinguished from our next group by a core cynicism, or at best a lack of real conviction. Caterers' content is determined by readers' tastes more than by a central guiding force. Most caterers play in the political sandbox, while many others offer porn or sensationalism. Fark offers the two latter, while Kos does very well with leftist political feelgood. (Kos's success also stems from his empowerment of others who don't wish to start their own blogs. That site, like Fark, is mainly a conglomeration of carefully chosen editors and submissions.)
The surest sign of catering is the demonization of some person or group outside their readership. Many leftist sites flagrantly demonize the center ('moderate'), libertarian, and right-wing constituencies (usually lumped together as "the right"). Some right-wing sites attack the left, as do some libertarian or centrist sites. Fark is an exception in that it does not demonize, but rather sets a high bar for submissions, which must top other posts in outrageousness to gain entry.
This style reminds us of Enron-style investment. Numbers dictate content. This is a bad long-term investment option. Likewise, it tends to produce disposable site content- sensationalistic and ephemeral, containing little profound or memorable.
(We are concerned about serving our readers, but we don't cater as such. Our philosophy is to write to suit ourselves, hoping to either attract like minds, or those willing to disagree yet return despite disagreeing. This approach requires patience to find an audience. Our focus is on content that we believe is compelling, or offers a POV as unique as we can hope to achieve - the antithesis of catering.)
3) Nichebloggers, aka localbloggers. We've posted on local blogging before. Local bloggers focus on their locality, but we also consider someone focused on any particular subject a "local" blogger (that subject being the 'locality'). The subject is usually something the writer is passionate about, or has special expertise in. Econbrowser is a great niche blogger, specializing in macroeconomics. Some 'niche' bloggers switch their 'locality' from time to time. Dan Riehl is an important 'local' blogger whose 'locality' for some time has been Natalee Holloway. When another story of size comes along, he may switch to a new 'locale'.
Like a caterer, the niche blogger writes according to what his audience is coming to read. Unlike the caterer, the niche blogger pursues his/her chosen subject regardless of traffic stats. Generally, niche bloggers sacrifice quick stats in order to pursue their subject.
(We do a fair amount of local blogging in terms of writing about Hoboken and Jersey. We also nicheblog on favorite subjects, such as blogmarketing.)
This style of blogging reminds us of investors who specialize in finding opportunity within a particular industry.
4) Internet guides, such as Instapundit, create little original material. Their strength is that they are trusted link finders/filters. MetaFilter and BoingBoing are other Internet guides. This is not to say that these sites don't add value to the posts they link. Rather, it means that their posts are determined by the stories they link to (contrast with determining a concept and then researching material that supports that concept). This style of blogging reminds us of "star" stockpickers, such as the famed Peter Lynch.
(Many of our posts are of this style. In fact, often our links either were or will soon be on the larger Internet guides.)
5) The celebrity-blogger is someone whose site traffic comes from fame achieved outside of blogging. While some bloggers achieve notoriety because of blogging, that has not become much of a factor. We're referring to a Huffington blog, whose traffic came about because her name was already known. Other celebs, such as Barbra Streisand, are guaranteed site traffic to their blogs, even though they post on subjects well beyond their range of actual expertise (politics, in Ms. Streisand's case). Usually these blogs are ghost-written (and usually this is a poorly-kept secret).
This style of blogger reminds us of the investment gurus whose infomercials occasionally appear on wee-hours TV. We're inclined to keep channel-surfing when we see such commercials, and we likewise bypass celebrity blogs.
(Obviously, there's little or no celebrity-blogging being done here.)
6) The service blogger performs a service, often to the 'Meme' blogger (see 1). The Political Teen drives its high traffic numbers by providing video clips to 'Meme' bloggers. The Truth Laid Bear does well by providing at-a-glance traffic stats and other group services. Memeorandum shows how 'Meme' bloggers are clustering around currently popular topics. This style of blogging reminds us of Spyder funds, in which the strengths and weaknesses of many assets (blogs in this case) drive the conglomerate whole.
(Likewise, Mister Snitch does not fit into the service-blogging category.)
7) The long-tail blogger is the rarest of successful breeds. This style requires consistent blogging over a long period of time (hence the rarity in a fairly new medium). As we have noted in previous posts, blogging is heavily favored by search engines in the current Internet cultural environment. A classic long-tail blogger such as Dustbury gets a very respectable audience (currently approaching 1,000 unique visits a day) because the site has been commenting on popular culture, steadily and succinctly, for over nine and a half years. A look at Charles' site stats tells the story: Out of every 1,000 hits, about 70% come to the site's front page or a current post. The remainder are links that trickle in - one, two, three at a time - for archived posts. Charles rarely enters trackback festivals or Carnivals. (Although he was the very first person to send an entry to the very first Carnival of the Vanities, he now submits an entry about once every other week to Outside the Beltway or Wizbang.) His site gets found because the search engines reward authoritative blog posts - and longevity.
We haven't been doing this anywhere near as long as Charles. But it's encouraging to see that simply by writing decently and adding value to links, a blog can, over time, find its audience. Of all the blogging styles (and many blogs, like this one, are a melange of several styles), this seems to be the most natural and satisfying for blogger and reader alike. Fausta is another long-tail blogger whose traffic will grow as she continues to post. Charles, James Lileks (who has some 'outside celebrity' backing - see 5, above - but whose 9-year online background suggests he belongs in this category), and Fausta Weiss are the Warren Buffets of blogging.
This category is very much related to nicheblogging (3). Long-tail posts tend to drill deep into 'local' or 'niche' areas of expertise.
(Our overall approach to blogging is most closely aligned with the long-tail style. The majority of our daily traffic comes from 'older' posts. It stands to reason that any blog that has, for example, 800 posts capable of generating a single 'hit' every other day, is guaranteed 400 hits per day with no promotion or new work on posts. The challenge, of course, is in creating those 'evergreen' posts which become authoritative and rank high in 'net searches on a particular subject. Here's an example of one such 'evergreen' post on our own site.)
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Shortly before we posted this piece, ProBlogger posted "20 Types of Blog Posts - Battling Bloggers Block". It's in a related category to this post, which is why we're including it here. Also semi-related: How to create a blogging network (and hang on to your pajamas), and types of postings (three) by Joi Ito.
Shortly after we posted this piece, we were linked by Instapundit. When we get linked by a mega-blogger such as Prof. Reynolds, our 'long-tail' site stats (understandably) go out the window for a few days.
Also shortly after we posted, we began hearing suggestions of other distinct blogging styles. (We did say "at least" seven, not precluding the possibility of more.) One that occurred to us is the "relationship blogger" who builds tight relationships with other blogs. (We're not that familiar with the mechanics of the style, but we have seen some blogs which seem to fit into this category. We suspect it works better in dense urban areas such as New York City.) Charles at Dustbury alluded to (but did not detail) other possible styles. Therefore, we may develop a followup to this post, based on reader feedback.
Brian's NOTES combined this post and ProBlogger's "20 types of posts" in a way that confused the message of these two different (but not contradictory) posts. We left a couple of comments which hopefully makes clear the relationship of these posts.
Science and Politics points to this series of questions one might ask to gain self-awareness. (In other words: What type of blogger are you - a singer, a ringer, a stringer, a finger, a winger, or just a flinger?)
The Long Tail blog, by Wired magazine editor-in-chief and author Chris Anderson, recently posted standing out in the commodity crowd. The post speaks to the subject of how any blog stands out in a crowd - and blogging clearly is a crowded field. The blogs the Long-tail author reads stand out in at least one of three main ways - they: (1) Add value with a unique perspective or analysis. (2) Add value with unique information. (3) Add value by providing a unique filter/lens on content available elsewhere. Here are the blogs which fit this criteria for this author.
Ed Brenegar extends the Long Tail conversation.
Elvira at Worker Bees Blog contemplates this post.
Scobelizer, written by a man who knows more than a little about where 'net traffic comes from. shares some insights. (Be sure to read the comments for more.)
"21 Tactics to Increase Blog Traffic" offers some sound practical advice.
UPDATE: As far as we know, this much-linked post was the first usage of the term "relationship blogging". Some of the other categories may have originated with this post as well, while others ("celebrity bloggers") most likely already existed.
Here's a more recent post about developing traffic by frequenting the Digg front page.
Labels: blogosphere, how+to+do+it+yourself








42 Comments:
Damn fine analysis.
Very good post, but I think there are other categories.
One I can think of would be the "Community Blog" where a site has such a dedicated following that it becomes a virtual community where fascinating conversations occur virtually in real time. Dean's World is the best example that I can think of. Some of his comment threads are more fascinating than entire blogs.
I wasn't able to place my own blog in one of the categories that you listed, but perhaps that's just denial. ;-)
I agree with lawhawk (as I often do).
I think I'm going to be interested to see which hybrids of these types will be the most successful long-term. While I have exactly zero supporting evidence, I think that a hybird might be able to attrack more of audience long term than single-style blogging.
I of course reserve the right to be brutally wrong.
Yeah, but I still can't figure out what I am. I hope I'm one of those seven.
Working on becoming a "long tail blogger" myself.
Thanks for breaking this down so well.
Thanks for the linkage.
I think there is another kind of blogger who can fit in either the niche or long-tail, and that is the blogger who writes only for him or herself. I've heard from several bloggers since I've been blogging (18 months) that all they are interested in is using blogging as a platform to think more clearly, articulate their ideas better and become a better writer. I vouch for this from my experience.
Your analysis has to do with the audience's preferences, and it is fascinating. I'd say I fit into the niche area. I appreciate you analysis. I'll RSS you in my reader.
Hi Ed. Well, the post primarily concerns blogging styles that drive traffic. The blogger who does so primarily to develop writing skills obviously falls outside this category. However, it certainly would be worth hearing more about and from such bloggers.
Cosmic: We certainly do not preclude the possiblity (likelihood, actually) of additional categories. Dean's World is an unusual blog, we're familiar with it. It's so unusual, in fact, that we could not see it as a category - because it's the only one we knew of. (Of course, even if only one blog exists in a category, does not mean it's not a valid category...)
I've argued for years that I write only for myself, but no one believes me.
OK, everyone stop reading Dustbury. Happy now, Charles?
I am not sure where I fit in, but nice analysis.
Hi Will. Well, you have very well-defined blogging characteristics. Anyone familiar with your blog knows its self-assurance. You are, pretty exclusively, a long-tail nicheblogger.
You're definitely long-tail, judging by your site stats - which show just 17% of your hits (at the minute I looked, anyway) coming to your front page. This is consistent with the unusual amount of original material you produce. While you deal with current topics, you're not a meme-du-jour type. Nor are you a caterer by any means. You nicheblog (follow a subject into detail). You're not generally an Internet guide, though such posts may crop up now and again. You're not a celebrity blogger (although you're certainly celebrated AS a blogger), nor do you fit into the narrow service blogger category.
Regarding the new "relationship blogger" category we tagged on at the end (also suggested by a commenter mentioning Dean's World), I think that, while you certainly have a following, you are not a true "relationship blogger" as far as I know.
That's my take, anyway.
Very interesting analysis. I found this post before Instapundit did. You will get a lot more links from him than me but I like to think that my choice in blogs I visit are not always link driven...just interest driven. Mr. Snitch always has something interesting.
Marry me, Laura. No need to leave the hubbie and kids, we'll all move to Utah and while away the days racing on the salt flats. It'll be grand, I promise.
Arrrrgghhh!
Any thoughts on photoblogging? My own photoblog gets a steady trickle of hits from people using search engines looking for Freaknik photos, of which I have a PG-rated collection. I also have photos of a band that members of a now-prominent heavy metal band used to be in, so I get traffic from their fan sites. I get spurts of traffic on other posts, as I advertise them on usenet and such, but I could discontinue posting from now on, and I would still get much the same traffic from those two sources.
What he said.
I find myself both curious about what people think and self-conscious at the same time, like a twelve year old asking a girl to dance for the first time. It never gets any easier though.
BTW, knock off the Utah digs. Bigamy is as illegal here as anywhere else in the nation. Congress made it a condition of statehood. Otherwise we'd have our own quarter about now. Personally, I fail to see the advantage of serial polygamy over simultaneous polygamy. One of the conditions of the latter, as practiced by the Mormons in the 19th Century, was that they were expected to support all of your wives and children, and they did.
Great analysis! I think I know what combination I am, but I won't worry too much about it until I've hit higher traffic.
Careful, laura lee, it appears that Mr. Snitch turns out to be a relationship blogger after all.
I shall disagree.
Hits to particular posts are not "long tail" but short. You can argue that a 9-year-old post is long-tail but it is just old.
The goal is to have people main door you, rather than go to a particular post
Look at the blogs that draw the most hits. 90% plus of the hits are the main page (99.93% usually)
That said, I like the categories.
Righties should look not at the Malkin or Instapundit models, but at the Kos. He gets the most hits -- four times Insty. Why?
Hmm. Laura lee didn't exactly say NO...
AST: In my world, Utah men have multiple wives and Louis Prima is still playing in some dank Nevada basement/nightclub. Don't ruin it for me.
Sanity inspector: It would help my analysis if you had a site meter I could look at. But most photobloggers are niche/longtails. They also have aspects of service blogging, since other sites sometimes link to them for the photography. Depending on the photos, a photoblogger might also be 'meme' bloggers (i.e., if Katrina hit and you ran out to Louisiana to shoot, and you did that for every breaking event, you'd be a meme blogger).
Site stats aside, I can see that you are a heavy niche blogger. You cover events, such as the Korean Dance troupe in Atlanta from 1996 (currently your front page). You are not a meme blogger since this is not a current meme. There is an element of service blogging since most photo bloggers 'service' other sites by providing images, but that is not a primary traffic driver on your site (not at this time anyway). You will be a long-tail blogger (you will be found on search engines, and this will drive most of your traffic) if you post consistently and label your images clearly. In that respect, if you seriously want to build your site, you should look into qualifying as a Google News site. That and a lot more posts is what you need to drive site traffic.
I also see that you have other blogs. They are not that highly-trafficked, but if they were I might have to consider that you are employing some degree of relationship blogging. Some people do manage to maintain a number of blogs (usually group blogs) at a high level, and use them to drive traffic to one another. This is a less-common practice, and something I didn't think to explore for this piece, but it's a legitimate means of traffic generation.
In fact, relationship-blogging (along with "name" and celebrity bloggers) is pretty much what is expected to drive PJ media. The theory is that, bringing so many bloggers with established readerships into the same place would establish a 'sticky' site that readers would be less inclined to leave (or at least have more reasons to return to). This works to drive Huffington traffic (which leans more on 'celeb' bloggers' identity as a draw, rather than blogging 'names'). 'Relationship' factors of a different sort also work for a number of highly-social NYC blogs, which link each other because the bloggers either know each other, or are in the same business, frequent the same places, etc.
Great post. Don't forget blogs that drive traffic by gratuitously adding zero-value comments to multitudes of blogs with a link back to their site. (Like, say, this comment.)
Anonymous: Hits to old posts are long-tail according to the long tail theory (I refer anyone wanting to know more to visit that fine site). There is no "short tail" theory I can refer to, don't know what that means.
Some old posts age better than others. A "niche" or "local" post probably ages well (I gave an example from my own site of a post that has historical avlue and will probably always draw hits). A "meme" post can draw a quick response, but age poorly.
Kos is covered in section 2. He gets traffic by empowering and giving a platform to a number of bloggers who cater to a specific mindset. It's a group blog, which typically outperforms an individual blog in terms of traffic. If you're trying to make the point that Kos gets more traffic than Instapundit because that site's ideology is "better" - sorry. We aren't making any claims that "superior" ideologies drive site traffic. In fact, you could promote a really BAD ideology, market it well, and find a wide audience for it. (I could name such sites, but this post isn't about such stuff.)
"The goal is to have people main door you, rather than go to a particular post"
No. The goal here is to understand how blogging styles work, and what style or styles an individual blogger feels comfortable with. What local/niche blogger Dustbury and niche/group blog WIllisms do is long-tail stuff. A majority of their traffic goes directly to established, 'niche' posts found via links and search engines, and have attained traffic levels that most bloggers would envy.
Sam: You're referring to icky-icky comment spam (grin). That's a form of relationship blogging. And of course, you could simply advertise to attract readers, which seems to work for The Moderate Voice and Sister Toldjah.
Thanks for the lovely insight. Now I understand why my blog numbers are not high – I avoid blame, anger, and gossip, and I write about various topics from politics to poetry. And I avoid the linking-for-the-sake-of-linking carnival. Maybe in time, the idea of writing in a positive and wide-ranging way will take root. Maybe not.
Ronny: It is true that controversy, gossip, and innuendo are drivers of site traffic. That's why some sites (Kos is a good example) encourage comments. People come back to see who lands the next blow. The whole PJ Media naming-debacle was also a good example of this.
You'll notice that on my own site, although I prefer long-tail blogging, I have done a lot of work in other styles to get the jalopy started. This includes trackback parties and Carnivals. It's not realistic to expect anyone to simply 'discover' your site, you have to be pro-active.
You also need compelling posts. This post, I guess, had some compelling value. A few people linked to it, then Instapundit did, then others found it on that site and linked it. What makes a compelling post? That's another subject, but it's similar to what makes compelling music or film or whatever. As noted earlier, writing about what I had for lunch is probably NOT compelling for many people. Writing about what Madonna had for lunch is a different story.
(Having said that. I suppose a writer of sufficient mettle could turn that post about lunch into something riveting. There's a challenge.)
Or you could be a once-in-a-generation writer and simply be "discovered" by someone who's in a position to help you. I can't recommend that anyone count on that but hey, it could happen.
Mr. Snitch:
My sitemeter is at the bottom of the page. The stat figure is clickable. And thanks for the breakdown!
Sure 'nuff, how did I miss it. Your traffic is probably too low, and your site too new, to read these tea leaves with much certainty. But it does seem to act like a long-tail niche blog, with 37% of your traffic coming in the front door and the rest through general searches of your archives and referrals from more-specific search sources such as Photoblogs, which seems to be a prime traffic mover for you. My guess is that as your traffic expands, that percentage to your front door will shrink, with people coming to you via specific searches. If I were you, I would develop my presence at places like Photoblog where people come looking for images. For example, if you have not done so already, set up a Flickr account and link some of your images to your blog. I use images only occasionally and usually place links on them from Flickr. We get significant hits back to the site, and we are by no means a photoblog or any kind of image-driven blog.
Point being: Just because you are a long-tail blogger does not give you the right to sit around and wait to be discovered. More likely, you'll just get buried (and discouraged). There are sites that want to help you get found, if only you will help them! Be creative, keep your eyes open, help yourself, and you'll get help from unexpected sources. This certainly has been the case at Mister Snitch.
I responded by describing my own situation a little, how from an investment perspective I see my blog as being an ever-growing reference source that I add to every time I post on anything.
Reference for myself, that is. It's very easy to find old articles that I want to refer to again if I've linked to them at some point, because I can search within my blog from the "edit posts" section of my account.
I think you should have a whole new category for the mommy blogs.
Great Job Mr. Snitch. Now I know who I am. :-)
-- Bill
Good Article... but no mention of "splogs" (they suck)
thanks for the perspective...
just Google "Paisley Does Dallas"
Adam: The post concerns styles geared to drive traffic, and blogging for oneself doesn't fall into that category. However, blogging for oneself is a legitimate reason to blog. That's partly why Mister Snitch exists: it's a way for me to find those ideas and links I come across that would otherwise be lost. In a different (ideal?) world everyone would blog for their own edification, and would be more concerned with finding and promoting others' best ideas than promoting their own. Apparently that world is not on any map (Google or otherwise) that I am aware of.
Paisley: I don't care for 'splogs' either, and don't consider them a legitimate form of blogging (they're more like a cheap way to throw up a web site). Anyway, no one putting up a 'splog' needs or wants the advice in this post.
Punditguy: Bill, I never doubted that you were already as self-aware as anyone around.
Sid: I'm not that aware of the mommy blogs. Can anyone point one out? Sounds like the ultimate "niche" blog (for the grandparents), if it is what it sounds like. That's a point about niche blogs, I guess. If the niche is too small, it won't see many readers. Writing about junior's spittle or dustbunnies unuder the bed might qualify. But never say never, someone might take dustbunny blogging to a whole new level.
Thanks for the intellectual stimulation. I'd never thought of blogs in terms of investment types before. Great insight. What do you think of "character blogging" as another possible type? Personally, I think it's usually annoying. If the fictional character is geared toward kids or a specific useful purpose, that's okay by me - but if I visit a blog only to find that the resident blogger isn't real at all, but rather a marketing ploy incarnate, I scram for the exits.
Easton: I think "character blogging" speaks more to the site's content than its blogging "style". In other words, a niche blog is a niche blog whether it's about advances in plumbing supplies, photos of cats, or Manolo's Shoe Blog. Manolo, of course, is the ultimate "character", very entertaining and successful. But it's still a niche blog.
The Manolo is a good example of how you can carve out your own niche. Why fit someone else's definition of your niche? Who said fashion can't be ironic, funny, goofy, and eccentric - and still sell? Maybe a dating site can be hosted by Larry the Lounge Lizard. Maybe a home improvement site can be hosted by an all-thumbs doofus (oh wait, that was a TV show).
I think character blogs are here to stay. Some will be more annoying than others, of course. The Manolo is generally well-liked. It's a tricky business.
I don't think I would try to define all the possible types of content. One could lose one's mind trying to herd an infinite number of cats. But blogging styles, that seems manageable.
As I said elsewhere, I think the "style" not explored is relationship blogging. All successful blogs have relationships with other blogs, but some blogs could not get out of bed in the morning without them. We spoke with Lucille Goldberg, of Lucille.com the other day. She swears the blog would shrivel up and die without her Drudge link. She may be overly modest (I don't know that she is a "relationship blog"), but I have seen blogs that are pretty much all-relationship, all the time. These are blogs (you've seen them no doubt) where posts read "I drank too much last night and skipped work" and all the buds come around to comment. Some relationships are more formal. Business Week and C/net both have blogs that are fed traffic from the Mother Ship site.
I see your point, but I think that my style can still be explained from your investment standpoint.
Since I'm investing my time in order to make as much information accessible to me as possible, the more active readers I have the more it pays off to be blogging, as they will comment and share information with me.
But I guess that, looking back over your post, I probably most resemble the "Long Tail" approach.
Anyway, an excellent post.
Oh, and as for your "relationship blog" question: I'd say that any and all Livejournals are the best examples of that. Even has the built in "friend" feature. When critics of blogs say that most of them are teenage relationship angst, I usually think of LJs.
stupid code - lets try this again.
Ugh, I am having an identity crisis and will have to go to many hours of counseling because I don't "fit in." Help me wise one! How about "potluck" or "anything goes?"
Gee, Greta, I'd have thought your experience in the Armed Services would have gotten you acclimated to that whole "fitting in" thing. Or maybe you have enough of that to do in "real" life, who needs it in "virtual" life, eh?
SInce you are probably within arms reach of live ammunition and not in the best of moods (noticing as I am the "trackback or die" labels on your blog), I'll cut to the chase and offer you carte blanche to adopt "stream of consciousness" (or any other type of stream that comes to mind) as your blogging style.
If we were inclined to march in formation, we'd probably find that you are a "niche" blogger (said niche: life of a military wife) mixed in with some "meme". Seriously, I think the "military wife" niche is your true calling - it's certainly something I can't speak to from any stretch of personal experience. Therefore you have something unique to share, even if it's being in a bad mood. Hey, if you're in a bad mood, write about it. If it happens often enough, you can relaunch as the Bad Mood Blog. It might be liberating to beat up the blogosphere and be sugar and sunshine for everyone else.
Your life situation, and how you feel about it, is your niche. Look, here's a fellow who owns and operates a hospice. His life is markedly different from most, dealing day by day with patients getting ready to die. That's the unique niche he inhabits. He doesn't need to do anything else to be interesting. If he keeps at it the world will find him. Newspapers will call to find out what it's like to live in that world. Book deals. TV shows and movies yearning for authenticity will seek his (paid) advice.
When they go looking for the military wife who's mad as hell and not gonna take it anymore, A Jew surrounded by Southern Baptists with a nun thrown in for comic relief (just reading the profile here) I'm pretty sure they'll come looking for you, Greta. For God's sake, whatever you do, don't look any farther afield for material - you got it all! So keep smiling. Or at least keep a pleasant-looking grimace going. Hoo-ah!
Thanks for an insightful post loaded with good reference links. Sending visitors your way from http://www.WebLoggers.Org
Regards,
Keith
Interesting.
I found your addendum more useful and captivating than the post.
I guess that may be similar to how we can amplify a post script in a letter.
nice site
http://www.voip-world.us/
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