blog

Going beyond, “Yes, I’ve got a blog”

How do you measure the value of a blog or the return on investment?

This is something I’ve been thinking about for the past few days and while I think I have some answers, I know I don’t have them all.

First of all, what do you value most:

  • Page Views
  • Comments
  • Subscribers
  • Trackbacks/Pingbacks
  • Ratings
  • Or something else?

I think Comments and Trackbacks are most valuable since they require the most effort – and that effort translates directly into an action, emotion, or reaction that caused readers to either link to you or comment. Page views aren’t really all that interesting, in fact they are probably the least interesting metric of all because they are the easiest to create.

Another valuable but difficult measurement is: what action did you or your organization take because of a conversation with your readers. Did you make a fundamental change in your product, idea, or strategy, etc.?

In the end I think it boils down to a few key concepts:

  1. Influence – what level of influence do your posts have to cause readers to change behavior or interact
  2. Action – how can you measure the actions that took place (such as links or comments) because of a post

I researched this topic a lot for my Blogging for Business presentation as well as for this keynote I’m giving at the Software Association of Oregon event. But the only results I’ve found are more people like me searching for how to measure beyond page views.

Community Server 2007 Service Pack 3, Beta

Today we released a service pack for Community Server 2007. It was released as a beta because we decided to include more than just bug fixes and added in a slew of minor enhancements too. Technically speaking it’s more like Community Server 2007.1. We’ve run it for several weeks now on www.communityserver.org but we’ll burn it in for a few more weeks before we call it release quality.

More details (and download for) CS 2007 SP3 Beta

Some high level details on what is included:

  • Performance work. This service pack includes some of the performance work we’re doing for Community Server 2008. Mostly this is SQL and Cache updates and changes. For Community Server 2008 we have some larger plans which include forking the data provider and data layer for our Enterprise Edition to support more distributed scaling.
  • Email updates. We’ve done some clean-up and improvements to how emails are handled (both incoming and outgoing). This also includes better enforcement of options users can set for if they want emails sent through the site or not.
  • Services APIs. Updates to the blog metablog APIs to better support tools such as LiveWriter keywords as well as support for excerpts, read more, auto-discovery, and post names.
  • New Basic Theme. Added the new basic theme which is a really simple theme that can provide an easy starting place for people new to theming a Community Server site.
  • 75+ bug fixes. see the link above for a detailed list.

In a couple of weeks we’ll announce a beta of our new reporting framework for Community Server as well as another little something we’ve been working on.
 

Community Server Developer Conference

We are very happy to announce the first official Community Server Developers Conference (CSDC) will be held on the weekend of October 20th and 21st.

Over the next couple of weeks we will be working on the final agenda and session list, but you can expect topics to cover everything from tips and tricks on extending Community Server, the new web service API, and the newly announced Community Server 2008.

Registration is just $99 if you register before September 5th

If you have any particular session topics you are interested hearing, feel free to drop me a line at rhoward@telligent.com.

Roadmap for Community Server 2008

Today Scott published the roadmap for Community Server 2008. The current plan is to have a really strong beta in the fall and officially release Community Server 2008 in Q1 2008. 

We’re going to spend a lot more time on the social networking side of the application — a big goal of which is to help big communities feel smaller and more personal. This will include groups, friends and more to make it easier for people to connect. We want to enable scenarios on sites like www.asp.net to allow people to more easily explore, discover, and follow content that applies to them. Today, as with most sites, the responsibility is 100% on the person visiting the site to sort through all the data to figure out where they belong.

This release will also include a REST API for Community Server. We chose to build a REST API vs. a SOAP/ASMX style API for a variety of reasons. We have some challenges to work through still but we should have a pretty complete story this fall. We’re hoping these APIs will enable developers to more easily bring data from their community into other applications such as their SharePoint portal.

We’re also putting a lot of effort into re-thinking the tools for how you manage a community. People constantly tell us about how they view and manage their blogs and we’re making some great headway on getting the Control Panel re-worked (below is the latest screenshot):

 

Lastly, while we’re doing a lot of interesting things for the next version we fully plan on releasing several service packs for Community Server 2007 too.

I’ll try and post some more details each week on some of the progress we’re making (hopefully with some really cool screenshots too!) 

Read the full Community Server 2008 announcement… 

Announcing: Social Networking and Communities Group

Starting August 29th Telligent will host a monthly breakfast at our office in Dallas as an interest group for Social Networking and Communities.

What is it? 

It’s not going to be technical. Visual Studio won’t get opened. What it will be is a fun conversation with like-minded people about topics related to social networking and communities all centered around how these concepts and technologies can be applied successfully for organizations.

Where is it?

We’ll have the first meeting at our office in Dallas, TX, but we’re going to video-cast (not live) too. If it takes off we may even do a small road-show.

Who is it for?

It’s for anyone that is interested in these topics. It’s going to be more about “how do I make this stuff work for me” and less about “how does the technology work”. For example, our first topic is going to be Blogging in your Business. We’ll talk about how tools such as blogs promote transparency and really open some news ways for you to talk to customers or employees.

What is the format?

8:00 – 8:30 – Light breakfast (coffee, bagels, etc.)

8:30 – 9:30 – Blogging in your business, Rob Howard

9:30 – 10:00 – Open discussion 

How do I register?

We have a limited amount of seating, but for now if you want to register just send me an email (rhoward@telligent.com) and we’ll put you on the RSVP list. 

Depending on how this goes we might start a technical group too that meets in the evenings.

How many more big communities will there be?

I just attended a breakfast here in Dallas where we talked about social networking and communities as they apply to businesses. The attendance for a non-technical conversation was pretty impressive. The talk focused primarily on the big mega-communities (Facebook, MySpace, Youtube, the list goes on…) and the speakers had some excellent examples from 2008 political campaigns to the Dove YouTube! videos

But for each of these wildly successful examples of how “community works” or “social media” (or whatever you call it) works, how many didn’t work? While I agree that the move to “individual addressibility”, i.e. content tailored to you, makes sense — how much of it just becomes more noise for me to sort through? So while the talking heads are pushing this move towards individualism and targeted marketing saying things like “traditional marketing doesn’t work” the market ends up creating more noise for those individuals to have to sort through. In other words, yes there is content that I’m interested in, but it’s getting a lot harder to find. So as individualism increases so does the amount of content that isn’t something I’m interested in. What a conundrum.

A move to micro-communities 

The trend that I’ve been watching more closely (mainly from our customers) is not the trend to more mega-communities (for lack of a better word) but a trend towards micro-communities. A community is after all a group of people with a common interest. There is a certain size that a community reaches after which the original highly personal “community” feel just gets lost. This is a theme we’re focusing on for Community Server 2008 (our next big release) but that’s off-topic for now.
 
I’ve been playing a lot with Facebook lately (profile here) what I really like is how they make it feel small. Instead of pushing millions of profiles and discussion on me they only focus on the people I’m interested in. I get that and I love it. It reminds me a little of the early days of building the ASP.NET developer community while I was at Microsoft. I’ve thought about the original ASP.NET community a lot lately and what really sticks for me isn’t that the technology was “cool” (although it was) … it was the people. It was the daily interaction between like-minded people that wanted to get together, discuss problems, find solutions, and generally just help each other. Out of that “community” was born a large number of friendships that I still have today.

Does social networking make you less social?

Mega-social networks help people connect (facebook and myspace.com actually do a pretty good job). But I don’t think they help make you more “social”. Scott Cate posted on my Facebook account, something akin to “… what is facebook, another popularity contest…”? He makes a good point. In some ways it does feed that competitive urge to win the most number of friends! But does it really help me become more social? What’s sad is I now know a lot more about my friends than I did before I started using these tools. But, I also spend less actual time with them. The relationships have become virtual too. In other words I’m time slicing so much that I’m now trying to manage my friendships asynchronously and offline too (like email). To me that just seems broken.

What we’re doing about it 

We’re on a mission at Telligent. We want to bring back the personal feel of the community. We’ve helped a lot of our customers build communities, but many are still too impersonal. Maybe the sign of a truly successfully community is one that exists outside of the browser too. For me, at least, that means that as a community gets bigger in some ways the original value starts decreasing! What’s worse is that the community and the sponsor of the community are typically at odds with one another; the business wants millions of members, while the original members want it to remain small and personal. I think there is a way to both build a thriving community and keep it feeling personal.

At Telligent we’re interested in building tools that enable communities to flourish. In the next year you are going to see us get laser focused on figuring out how to make the community around that tools (forums, blogs, profiles) work better, enable niche communities and groups, and feel more personal.

P.S., if you want to be part of this, we are hiring. Just drop me a note at rhoward@telligent.com.

Reorganizing the Community Server blogs control panel

We’ve been working on re-organizing the Control Panel for Community Server blogs and I thought I’d share some screen shots:

Dashboard

We’re updating the dashboard (main landing page) for bloggers to show more of what people have told us they are interested in. To being with we’ve added some new charts that break-down views to your blog posts and show then visually along with the ability to click-into a particular post and view daily views/stats:


 

Note, this chart looks better when there are more than 4 posts 🙂 

Post Page

We’re cleaning up the Write a Post page to better organize information and tasks around what people commonly do. We’ve also greatly improved the descriptions and details on the individual tabs:

 

Review Comments

We’ve also re-worked the review comments page to be much simpler and show better graphics to indicate status of published, unpublished, and possible SPAM comments:

We’ll unveil more of these updates in future blog posts…