Why Do I Blog?

To be honest the biggest reason I blog for a living is the freedom. Although I have quotas and deadlines, I also have choices on who I work for and when.


photo credit: antigone78

To be honest the biggest reason I blog for a living is the freedom. Although I have quotas and deadlines, I also have choices on who I work for and when.

This interesting article from David Evans specifies 7 other reasons which I would also include as my blogging motivations.

The article covers a lot of ground from these motivations to where blogs can go financially and socially as well as how popular blogs start and where big business comes in.

To ignite a catalytic reaction, a blog has to start with provocateurs. They must attract reactors and passives. If they don’t the provocateurs will have no one to influence or converse with and will lose interest in the blog. The blog is dead. If they attract enough reactors and passives not only will the provocateurs realize value from the blog, they will attract more provocateurs to the blog. As more provocateurs come on board and provide more material, more reactors and passives will join. Blogs don’t have to be enormous to stay viable: but they do have to reach critical mass of the three major groups to sustain the reaction.

Economics of the Blogosphere - [TheCatalystCode]

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, August 7th, 2007 at 6:28 pm and is filed under Long. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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