Posts Tagged ‘bloggers’

The #interestingOPMLexperiment (stage 1)

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Interesting OPML experiment

A couple of weeks ago, I asked a bunch of people to send me their OPML files (for those of you who aren’t aware, an OPML file is what tells your RSS reader what feeds you’ve subscribed to — it can act as a way of moving your subscriptions between readers.) Some of the more trusting among them agreed, and that gave me the raw material for the first bit of my experiment.

Some red herrings

Along the way I uncovered a couple of things that were interesting but not (entirely) relevant to the experiment.

  1. Some people are cagey about sharing their list of feeds: whether they consider it intellectual property, or whether they think that it may be too revealing, I don’t know.
  2. Lots of people said things like “oh — my RSS reader? Haven’t looked at that in a while. I get all my news off Twitter these days.”

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Posted in influence, networks, research | 4 Comments »

Creating blog seed lists for research

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Colleagues and regular readers will know that we’ve been working on an “online influencer mapping” tool called Rufus. Those of you who’ve had a chance to use Rufus will know that it requires a seed list of URLs to get started. Creating this seed list can be automated in one or two ways, but one of the fastest, most effective, and most sensible ways to build a seed list is still to do it by hand.

We’ve got one or two other processes that also require us to build a seed list. No doubt other people do too — lots of web research is quite data hungry. So — because I’ve found myself telling a few of my Porter Novelli colleagues how we go about the process, I thought I’d share it here, in the interests of:

  1. having somewhere to point people in future,
  2. general good-heartedness: I’ve learned a lot from people in the past, and I like to give stuff back, and
  3. getting feedback and tips from people about how they might go about the same process.

Oh – and while these methods should work in any language, please bear in mind that I tend to think and work in English. I’d appreciate feedback on how best to localize these methods.

Building a seed list: 5 easy methods

With all these methods, there’s no substitute for checking out the blog. I don’t ask people to read the blog (that comes at a different stage of the process altogether) but you should at least click through and see what you’re dealing with. In fact, method 3 rather relies on you visiting the blogs you’re researching.

1. Look for someone who has already done your research for you

Start by being optimistic. Generally you’ll find that someone else has created a list of the “top ten” (or however many) blogs in the niche that interests you. Take a look at Brendan’s regularly updated PR Friendly Index for example. If you’re searching for English language blogs then you could do worse than start by looking at Guy Kawasaki’s Alltop. But simply Googling for lists of blogs or blog charts should get you a long way.

This is generally a source of fairly high-quality data. One thing to watch out for, though, are search engine spamming link farms, and shady “Make Money Online” (MMO) directories. You’ll learn to recognize these soon enough, but as long as you’re visiting all the blogs you’re putting on your seed list you should be alright.

2. Do a tag search on delicious

I picked up this technique from Anthony Mayfield, who showed me that by searching on the delicious social bookmarking site for the tags “xxx” and “cool” and/or “inspiration” you could find sites about “xxx” that people thought were cool. Knowing what your digital trendsetters think is cool is one hell of an insight.

For our purposes though, we’re looking for cool blogs. So (1) click the “Explore Tags” tab on the home page, and then (2) type your keyword and the word “blog” into the search box. Couldn’t be simpler?

Use the 'Explore' tab in delicious to find blogs for your seed list

Well — actually it could be simpler. You can query the delicious database when you type the URL into the address bar of your browser like this:

http://delicious.com/tag/blog+keyword

Where “keyword” is the word you’re looking for.

When you get the results, check the ones that (a) have the right kind of title (if you’re looking for French blogs, look for French titles for example), (b) have the right kind of tags and description and (c) have been bookmarked most often

If there’s a better local language social bookmarking site, I’d use that whenever possible. For example, Mister Wong is a good one for German language sites.

A quick note: social news sites like Digg and Reddit, and “serendipity browsers” like StumbleUpon tend not to work so well in my experience.

This method also owes a lot to Marshall Kirkpatrick. You might like to try out the Yahoo! Pipe that I built based on the process that Marshall documents.

3. Look for blog rolls

On every blog you visit during the research process, look for the blog roll — and check the likely-looking links. See if they’re useful or useless. Quite often you’ll find that someone who has an interest in widgets will also read and link to blogs that cover widgets. That, after all, is the principle on which Rufus works wrote small. So we reckon it’s a pretty good approach.

4. Ask your Twitter followers

Seriously — this works. Well — it worked for me and my team from around +100 followers onwards. I’d be interested in others’ experience.

5. Call someone

Get hold of someone who knows about the subject and phone them up or get them on IM. Category experts are an excellent source of low-volume but high-quality information. It’s time consuming, but can work well if you have the right contacts. Journalist friends might be a great source of blog lists.

I’ve purposefully left this one till last; I think it’s a good rule of thumb to do your desk research before picking up the phone. That way you can ask intelligent questions instead of damn fool ones.

Using a text editor

I try to keep two lists running all the time that I’m working; a scratchpad list of blogs I have yet to visit and the seed list itself. Because I’m on a Mac, I use the excellent BBEdit (there’s a free version called TextWrangler which will be just as good for most people.) If — as is more probable — you’re on a Windows machine, you might like to try the very powerful but slightly less pretty Notepad++. But if you just want to use Excel, though, that’s fine, too.

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Posted in research | 4 Comments »

Automating Marshall Kirkpatrick’s “Social Media Cheatsheet” process with Yahoo! Pipes

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

Yahoo! Pipe for automating Marshall Kirkpatrick's Social Media CheatSheet process

Yahoo! Pipe for automating Marshall Kirkpatrick’s Social Media CheatSheet process

Marshall Kirkpatrick has published an excellent process for getting up to speed with what the big issues are in your market sector. Is there, he asks:

any way to ramp up your knowledge of these fields, fast, other than the “Google and wander” method?

He then outlines an almost perfect example of how to use social media to do this.

You should read his article before reading any further. It’s short and punchy and won’t take much time.

Read it? Good. Now you may have noticed in the comments section that the first commenter doubts that you can:

find one baker or candlestick maker that will go through all of that.

So I thought I’d see if I can automate the process. The short answer is that I can and I can’t. I can’t yet automate one or two really important bits and pieces, notably:

  1. ranking delicious bookmarks by popularity, not recency
  2. human editorial selection of bookmarks

Perhaps someone could help me with this.
But otherwise, I’ve published this Yahoo! Pipe, Automating Marshall Kirkpatrick’s Social Media Cheatsheet Process which automates 90% of the process, and may make it easier for the bakers and candlestickmakers.

All comments and — more importantly — suggestions and improvements gratefully received.

Monday, 12 Jan 2009 00:27: I’ve just added a bit to the pipe to list posts in descending order according to PostRank. Don’t know if this is useful

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Posted in hack, how to, pipes | 8 Comments »

Blogger typology: using IBM’s Many Eyes to build matrix charts

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

Thanks to IBM’s Many Eyes service it’s relatively simple to create complicated visualizations that my current version of Excel can’t handle. For example, this “matrix chart” that I built using Excel’s bubble chart function is clearly unacceptable. I can’t easily link statements or values to the X and Y axes, and there’s lots of overlapping that seems (after many attempts) to be impossible to fix.

Matrix chart built using Excel - not very satisfactory!

Matrix chart built using Excel


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Posted in blogger typology, research | 3 Comments »

Blogger typology: quantitative analysis step 1

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Propeller-Heads by Danz in Tokyo on Flickr

I’ve published the first dump of survey and “blog metrics” data from the blogger questionnaire as a spreadsheet on Google Docs. Many, many thanks to all of you who volunteered your information.

Please feel free to use this as you see fit for your own projects. I’ve anonymised this data (just because it’s best practice, not because I think any blogger would be mortally offended by having the world know what inspires them to blog!)
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Posted in blogger typology, measurement, research | 5 Comments »

A simple perl script to interrogate the Technorati API

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

Technorati API perl query in action

Sometimes (for instance when I’m doing the research for the blogger typology) you need to get a whole load of Technorati data for a whole load of blogs.

This research can (of course) be done by hand. And (of course) for a long list of blogs this would take a great deal of time. Handily, Technorati provides developers with an API that lets you automate those queries. An API (for those of you who don’t know) is an Application Programming Interface – a toolkit provided by a service or application (in this case by Technorati) that lets other computer applications ask it questions and use the answers for their own purposes. It may be helpful to think of APIs as being like the knobs on top of a Lego brick that let you stick other Lego on to it without in any way changing the nature of the brick itself. On the other hand it may not be so helpful after all.
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Posted in blogger typology, hack, how to | 8 Comments »

Your help needed to develop “blogger typology”

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

(NB: If you have both a blog and a short attention span, please skip the article, and go straight to this short survey. Many thanks!)

What is a blogger? Everyone seems to think they know, and yet the longer I work in this area, the more I realize I know nothing. And the less I know, the more suspicious I become of marketers who use vague terms like “conversation” (which has – after all – become little more than a Latinization of the ghastly “dialogue”.) I can just about understand what Technorati means when they talk about

The ecosystem of interconnected communities of bloggers and readers at the convergence of journalism and conversation.

(State of the Blogosphere 2008)

…but there are an awful lot of long words that could turn out to hide an awful lot. And that’s the carefully thought-out distillation of a bunch of experts. Most of us, most of the time fall back on lazy or confusing language. We talk about “social media” and never stop to think that — depending on who’s doing the talking (and what they have to sell) — what is meant by that apparently innocuous phrase shifts wildly from speaker to speaker.
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Posted in blogger typology, research | 12 Comments »

New Porter Novelli blogs and bloggers

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

Mat Snodgrass out of New York and Atheer Al-Salim out of London have joined the ranks of Porter Novelli bloggers. Welcome!

Matt has taken (and passed) the Greenfluencer test on yet another new PN blog: Greenfluencer.com. The Greenfluencer blog is the brainchild of David Zucker who believes that with the excellent pick up of last week’s report, the term is well on the way to being the next google, kleenex, or hoover (brand name becomes verb).

Colin Beavan over at No Impact Man says:

We’re the people who are willing to change our lives to decrease our ecological footprint. The people to whom everyone else turn for green advice. The people who are the moral arbiters of product consumption and who give the green yay or nay to your products and practices.

The comment stream, on the other hand goes off at the deep end slightly: the word “consumption” doesn’t seem to go down so well…

But the story (and the comment storm) got picked up by Arduous, and Arduous’s post got picked up Eco’burban, and her article got reposted on All Green Info so the story’s well on its way. Nothing like a little bit of controversy to get things started.

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Posted in porter novelli | Comments Off