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	<title>Creative Agency Secrets &#187; Jason Calacanis</title>
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	<description>Business Development. Marketing. Sales</description>
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		<title>When &#8216;giving up blogging&#8217; makes a headline</title>
		<link>http://creativeagencysecrets.com/when-giving-up-blogging-makes-a-headline/</link>
		<comments>http://creativeagencysecrets.com/when-giving-up-blogging-makes-a-headline/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2008 10:23:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rebecca Caroe</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2 Marketing Communications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[4 Profile Raising]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blogging]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Social Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blogs for business development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jason Calacanis]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Jason Calacanis is was a top line blogger.&#160; An A-Lister. And he announced his retirement from blogging because the pressure was too great.&#160; Specifically he cites: it lacks the intimacy that drew me to it Pressure &#8211; keeping the blog big and impersonal Vitriol &#8211; online trolls and &#39;haters&#39; But if this marks the end [...]		    <div addthis:url='http://creativeagencysecrets.com/when-giving-up-blogging-makes-a-headline/' addthis:title='When &#8216;giving up blogging&#8217; makes a headline ' class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style addthis_16x16_style">
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Jason Calacanis <strike>is </strike>was a top line blogger.&nbsp; An A-Lister.
</p>
<p>
And he announced his retirement from blogging because the pressure was too great.&nbsp; Specifically he cites:
</p>
<ul>
<li>it lacks the intimacy that drew me to it</li>
<li>Pressure &#8211; keeping the blog big and impersonal</li>
<li>Vitriol &#8211; online trolls and &#39;haters&#39;</li>
</ul>
<p>
But if this marks the end of the &#39;revolution&#39; stage of blogging, ti certainly marks the move to the mainstream and the middle of the bell-curve.&nbsp; How companies get messages out to market has broadened and widened and Jason no longer feels &#39;special&#39; and I, for one, am glad of it.&nbsp; The ease and ubiquity of blogging software, methods means that including it in business development strategy should be normal and deserves to be widespread.
</p>
<p>
Now lets get people reading / consuming blog content in the mobile space as well.&nbsp; Oh, you can still follow<a href="http://twitter.com/jasoncalacanis"> </a> <a href="www.twitter.com/jasoncalacanis">Jason </a> on Twitter which, as a micro-blog, he is comfortably still on the leading edge and feels he can get the fame quotient without the pressures.
</p>
<p>
PS.&nbsp; <a href="http://creativeagencysecrets.com/2007/06/16/interview-with-jason-calacanis/">I met Jason</a>  once.&nbsp;
</p>
<p>
[Since the Economist is a subscription only website, I haven&#39;t linked to the article, but reproduce it below in full.]
</p>
<p>
<span id="more-462"></span><font face="verdana, geneva, arial, sans serif"><strong>Oh, grow up </strong><br />
</font><br />
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif" color="#999999"></p>
<div>
Nov 6th 2008 | SAN FRANCISCO<br />
From The Economist print edition
</div>
<p></font></p>
<p><font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif"><strong>Blogging is no longer what it was, because it has entered the mainstream</strong></font><br />
<!--back-->
</p>
<p>
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif">IN<br />
THE anthropologically isolated subculture of elite bloggers, it was the<br />
equivalent of a watershed, and certainly a tear-shed. With &ldquo;a heavy<br />
heart, and much consideration&rdquo;, Jason Calacanis this summer announced<br />
his &ldquo;retirement from blogging&rdquo;, which he believed was &ldquo;the right<br />
decision for me and my family&rdquo;. Mr Calacanis, a founder of <a href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/" target="_blank">Weblogs, Inc.</a>,<br />
a blog network that he later sold to AOL, an internet portal, had been<br />
a member of the &ldquo;A-list&rdquo;&mdash;those bloggers with the most incoming links<br />
and the highest &ldquo;authority&rdquo; on blog-search engines such as <a href="http://technorati.com/" target="_blank">Technorati</a>.<br />
With the bathos of Napoleon departing for Elba or Michael Jordan<br />
bidding adieu to basketball, Mr Calacanis bowed out, reverting to the<br />
ancient medium of e-mail to disseminate his opinions.</font>
</p>
<p>
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif">&ldquo;Blogging is<br />
simply too big, too impersonal, and lacks the intimacy that drew me to<br />
it,&rdquo; he offered by way of explanation. It was, he said, &ldquo;the pressure&rdquo;<br />
of staying on the A-list&mdash;ie, of keeping his blog so big and<br />
impersonal&mdash;that got him. Only a few years ago, so few people blogged<br />
that being a blogosphere celebrity required little more than showing<br />
up. Now it takes hard work. And vitriol. &ldquo;Today the blogosphere is so<br />
charged, so polarised, and so filled with haters hating that it&rsquo;s<br />
simply not worth it,&rdquo; Mr Calacanis lamented.</font>
</p>
<p>
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif">The rest of<br />
the world may well have missed the unfolding of his tragedy. Behind it,<br />
however, is a bigger trend. Blogging has entered the mainstream,<br />
which&mdash;as with every new medium in history&mdash;looks to its pioneers<br />
suspiciously like death. To the earliest practitioners, over a decade<br />
ago, blogging was the regular posting of text updates, and later photos<br />
and videos, about themselves and their thoughts to a few friends and<br />
family members. Today lots of internet users do this, only they may not<br />
think of it as blogging. Instead, they update their profile pages on<br />
Facebook, MySpace or other social networks. </font>
</p>
<p>
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif">They may also &ldquo;micro-blog&rdquo; on services such as <a href="http://twitter.com/" target="_blank">Twitter</a>,<br />
which recreate the raw, immediate and intimate feel of early blogs.<br />
Twitter messages, usually sent from mobile phones, are fewer than 140<br />
characters long and answer the question &ldquo;What are you doing?&rdquo;<br />
Tellingly, Evan Williams, the co-founder of <a href="https://www.blogger.com/start" target="_blank">Blogger</a>&mdash;an<br />
early blogging service that is now owned by Google, the Wal-Mart of the<br />
internet&mdash;now runs Twitter, which he regards as the future.</font>
</p>
<p>
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif">As for<br />
traditional (if that is the word) blog pages, these tend increasingly<br />
to belong to conventional media organisations. Nearly every newspaper,<br />
radio and television channel now runs blogs and updates them faster<br />
than any individual blogger ever could. Professional blogs such as <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/" target="_blank">HuffingtonPost.com</a> for liberals (with 4.5m visitors in September) or <a href="http://www.freerepublic.com/home.htm" target="_blank">FreeRepublic.com</a> for conservatives (with 1m visitors in that month) have played a big role in America&rsquo;s election season, according to <a href="http://www.comscore.com/" target="_blank">comScore</a>,<br />
an online-measurement firm. These &ldquo;new media&rdquo; firms are now suffering<br />
from the same advertising slowdown as their offline rivals. <a href="http://gawker.com/" target="_blank">Gawker</a>, a gossip-blog empire, has already begun laying off bloggers.</font>
</p>
<p>
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif">Simultaneously,<br />
companies far outside the media industry have embraced blogging as just<br />
another business tool. They are using blogs both to get corporate<br />
messages to the public and as an internal medium for staff. Companies<br />
like Six Apart, which provides Movable Type, TypePad and other blogging<br />
tools, see firms as their most promising market.</font>
</p>
<p>
<font face="verdana,geneva,arial,sans serif">Gone, in<br />
other words, is any sense that blogging as a technology is<br />
revolutionary, subversive or otherwise exalted, and this upsets some of<br />
its pioneers. Confirmed, however, is the idea that blogging is useful<br />
and versatile. In essence, it is a straightforward content-management<br />
system that posts updates in reverse-chronological order and allows<br />
comments and other social interactions. Viewed as such, blogging may<br />
&ldquo;die&rdquo; in much the same way that personal-digital assistants (PDAs) have<br />
died. A decade ago, PDAs were the preserve of digerati who liked using<br />
electronic address books and calendars. Now they are gone, but they are<br />
also ubiquitous, as features of almost every mobile phone. </font></p>
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