skwpspace yan pritzker’s home on the web

skwpspace is Yan Pritzker's home on the web

Blog :: Photography :: About Me

TwitterCounter for @skwp

Get the news feed
Get updates by email
Follow me on twitter

hello, i'm yan

This blog is about startups, blogging, Ruby On Rails, virtualization and cloud computing, photography, customer service, marketing, ux and design, git, and lots more.

Top Posts

planypus

I'm the founder of Planypus, the place to share your plans!

cohesiveft

Accessible, manageable, virtualized application stacks ready to download or deploy to the cloud!

flickr

it's hailing in san franciscojessatianalyndaBird in the handkerimodeldanielle pettee and models-4449

Archives

Contact

Reach me at yan at pritzker.ws

Posted
10 March 2008 @ 8pm

Tagged
blogging, thoughts

5 reasons you should blog

This article is for the naysayers out there who still think blogging is a joke or for people with too much time on their hands. It’s also for those people on the fence who are thinking of blogging but don’t know what to say or how to start. Here’s some motivation…some things I have personally gained from having a blog.

So here we go..

I got a job

Being a software developer and entrepreneur, keeping a blog and sharing with the world things I discover, create, or enjoy helps me gain exposure. Before you’re hired for your next job, you will be Googled. Your blog shows your prospective employers how you think, work, and play.

My blog was at least partially responsible in my employer’s decision to hire me. Making a hiring decision is easier when you feel you ‘know’ what the person is like, and it’s much easier to get a feeling about whether a person will be a good employee when you read their blog, than if you have nothing to go on at all.

Putting your work and thoughts out there correlate with several qualities: ability to take criticism, communication skills, and valuing the sharing of knowledge. Not having a blog or other outlet for your work therefore implies that you are lacking in at least one of those departments. If your new employer is choosing between two people, don’t you want to be the one with the blog? Think about it.

I gained a voice as a consumer

When big companies try to screw you over, you have very little recourse. The better business bureau is a largely powerless to do anything, customer service reps tend to be powerless to help, etc. Blogs are a powerful way to stand up to companies who do something bad, and actually be heard.

When I ran into some problems with Comcast service, I turned to my blog as a publishing platform to give me a voice. In under 24 hours Comcast called me and put me in touch with high level account reps that were able to solve my problem - they had read my blog! To really have an effect you want to have readership like Scoble, but even a small blog like mine gets some search engine exposure and thus has the power to be a publishing source.

Not only can you voice your opinion but you can draw a crowd and build momentum. When I first got my Helio Ocean I discovered many things good and bad about it. Because I was a pretty early adopter, my blog about the Ocean’s shortcomings became a good place for people who didn’t have a blog to join in and voice their opinion. To this day I get the occasional comment trickling in there. Not only did I get to voice my opinion, but I gave an open forum to like-minded others.

And if you’re a business out there who doesn’t subscribe and read blogs relevant to your market - you better get with the program. If you don’t connect with your market and understand their needs and wants, you can lose business in the blink of an eye. You don’t want your company name to come up first on some popular blog that rants about the terrible customer service you have. Get subscribed to the most relevant thing to your market - blogs, del.icio.us, yelp, google alerts, etc, and be on top of customer feedback before it bites you.

I created traffic for my business

Whether you’re writing articles related to your business or simply writing things that people like to read, you are creating fans that will follow your work. Writing on diverse topics helps because it attracts people from different spheres. Sometimes your readers become your customers. Other times they become your friends or colleagues. Either way - your blog is a great place to promote your work and business. It goes without saying that any type of consulting business should blog consistently to show work they are doing. A static portfolio website is a good start, but you really need to be writing to get that Google juice flowing and get those customers to come to you from searches.

I got practice writing

Remember how your high school English teacher would say that creative writing is important? Well it turns out they weren’t half wrong. Even if you don’t write as part of your job, having writing skills helps you communicate your ideas. Being very knowledgeable and skilled technically is great but having the ability to communicate, share, and work with others is developed through more writing.

I helped others

You know it actually does feel good to help. When someone writes to me and says they found a tip I published helpful, or that they read my article and it changed their mind on something, or that I’ve praised a product or service of theirs, or simply that I’ve said something they agree with and now they have a place to speak up, that’s really a great feeling.

Did you really read the whole article?

If you’ve read all the way to the bottom, you probably have enough time to start a blog. Blogging takes up about one hour a week for me on average, and I consider it time very well spent. If you think you’re too busy to blog, consider the points I’ve made above and think about the value you will derive from more exposure, customers, feedback, and friends. If that’s not worth an hour of your time, I don’t know what is.

Happy blogging!


11 Comments

Posted by
mai-ling
10 March 2008 @ 9pm

it was a great article.

the part about comcast was interesting.
i never knew that companies have people
who do searches on issues.


Posted by
yan
10 March 2008 @ 9pm

Apparently they do! Maybe it was a google alert. It’s very smart of them to do and I hope more companies start doing it. I was really amazed and it obviously radically changed my opinion on comcast


Posted by
mai-ling
10 March 2008 @ 9pm

i complain but i usually keep it
friends only. next time i have
an issue i’ll be public about it.

BTW…i can’t find the feedburner
widget anywhere! where are they at?!?


Posted by
yan
10 March 2008 @ 9pm

What do you mean? On my site? The feedburner is right under my name and picture. Or you can click the rss in the browser it should subscribe to feedburned feed as well.


Posted by
Dmitriy
11 March 2008 @ 2pm

Great post! I’ve got another one - blog as a central index of one’s activities in social Internet. Read more at http://somic-org.homelinux.org/blog/2008/03/11/yans-5-reasons-to-have-a-blog/


Posted by
mai-ling
12 March 2008 @ 2pm

the widget that shows how many readers you get.
i would like to add one to my blog.


Posted by
yan
12 March 2008 @ 4pm

mail-ling: go to feedburner account under the Publicize tab, the option is called FeedCount


[...] really enjoyed Seth’s Blog on resumes, a well timed complement to my own blog on why you should blog. I didn’t go so far as Seth to suggest throwing out your resume (few employers are [...]


Posted by
friarminor
18 March 2008 @ 8am

Nice thing about the internet is that it facilitates communication between people having similar (or maybe, even radically different) interests. And blogs are great tools of self-expression which allows persons who are truly interested in other people and their ideas to find them and indeed connect. And so we do.

Keep up with the posts, Yan.

Best.
alain


Posted by
mai-ling
18 March 2008 @ 4pm

got it!
Thanks so much Yan.


[...] whiny thoughts) are once again entirely missing the value of this tool. Everything I wrote about why you should be blogging applies to twitter, except with a higher sense of [...]


Leave a Comment

The Future of Virtualization Elastic Server - Try it with no signup!