Should You Abandon Your Blog For Twitter?

Analysts have correctly noted that the internet has disturbed traditional media to the point where old ways of communicating are dying while new media is thriving. One of the newest forms of media communication is blogging with the blogosphere itself only finding sure footing around the turn of the millennium.

Emerging Blogosphere

Print media is dying, but blogging is thriving. Unless, of course, you fall for the hype where some are calling people to abandon their blogs.

Print media is dying, but blogging is thriving. Unless, of course, you fall for the hype where some are calling people to abandon their blogs.

Since then, blogging platforms such as WordPress, Movable Type and Typepad have matured making it easier for millions of people around the world to create their own sites and, in many cases, allow relatively unknown citizenry to emerge as authoritative voices in their respective niches. Blogging is a great equalizer, giving the person who works at home in her jammies just as much of a chance at succeeding as a beat reporter, perhaps even more.

Oddly, the blogosphere is already being threatened by external sources including social media sites which have been established to pull web users together under one roof. Friendster and MySpace were two of the earlier sites of this kind, but have since been eclipsed by Facebook and Twitter, if not so much in the number of users but in rapidity of growth.

Abandon Blogging?

And it is that growth which is making some bloggers wonder if their blogging is all for naught. After all, if everyone you are communicating with is on Twitter, Facebook, StumbleUpon, et al, maybe you should abandon your own blog? It can be very tempting to do so when you soon realize how valuable and powerful your tweets are, bringing instant responses from other Twitter users, some of whom might even pay you to tweet on their behalf.

Honestly, I would hate to see capable bloggers move away from controlling their own web presence to allowing a third party — social media — do that for them. After all, once you tweet, leave a message on a wall or post a comment to a stumble, you really don’t have full control over what becomes of your message.

Hold Fast

Consider these three points if you’re tempted to sink your blog:

Your influence – Inasmuch as your tweet gets attention and “everyone” is reading your wall, neither step impacts your personal authority apart from these sites. Google hasn’t yet figured out a way to value tweets and 140-character messages have only so much of an impact while a carefully crafted and intelligently written 400- or 500-word article gives your customers more information and gets your page indexed and ranked.

Your marketing – Twitter can and should be a wonderful tool for you to market your products, connect with like minded people and to extend your brand. Your Twitter profile should be an extension of your blog, providing a link back to your site with helpful information to draw people over. Brand your Twitter presence by adding in a customized Twitter background page.

Your knowledge – I’ve found some very helpful tweets that have made a difference for my business. But it wasn’t the tweet alone which did that for me, rather it was the link provided to the blog article which explained in detail that person’s marketing strategy, business tools, or imparted some other valuable information. Consider Twitter to be the public square, but people still need to come to your house (blog) for a full reception.

Juiced Up

I shared mostly about Twitter in this article but much of what I have said can be applied to other social media sites. Blogging alone or tweeting alone provides only half of the juice you need to connect with people. Do both, and you’ll get the full benefit of what the internet has to offer to you today.

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  • By TwistedSifter, November 2, 2009 @ 6:27 pm

    Totally concur Matt. I love Twitter and Facebook for different reasons but I’m on someone else’s property. My blog is all mine and it’s my little space on the net that I will always cherish and preserve :)
    TwistedSifter´s last blog ..The Largest Cruise Ship in the World is Five Times the Size of the Titanic My ComLuv Profile

  • By LD Jackson, November 2, 2009 @ 9:36 pm

    I can not fathom the time when I would abandon Political Realities for Twitter. The only reason I use Twitter is to promote my blog articles, not the other way around.
    LD Jackson´s last blog ..Hyatt Hotels’ Housekeepers Histrionics My ComLuv Profile

  • By Dominique, November 4, 2009 @ 11:36 pm

    Matt – Great article. As I have not upped the ante by getting my own domain, I can’t imagine moving to FB or Twitter. There is a pride in having your piece of the web and watching it transform day by day.

    I also agree with twistedsifter in that FB and Twitter offer different social interactions. Actually so does SU and others. I don’t think there is one social network that can meet all those needs in one space because that would be come too overwhelming and cumbersome.

    I also agree with Larry. I use twitter to build my niche(s), interact, gets source material and tweet my articles not the other way around.

    Hope all is well with you!

    P.S.

    I don’t know if you have seen this video but I just watched it after reading your post and I just shook my head.

    Here is the url

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ILQrUrEWe8
    Dominique´s last blog ..homework AND responsibility…Aussie style! My ComLuv Profile

  • By Alicia Mergo, November 12, 2009 @ 4:43 am

    To be honest I was thinking about that move few times. Twitter gives a lot of possibilities but then I wondered: but what about the very essence of blogging? What happened to that? Sometimes I think that such social networking services as Facebook or Twitter are killing real bloggers.

  • By Matthew C. Keegan, November 12, 2009 @ 4:57 am

    Exactly Alicia. The more time spent on Facebook and Twitter, the less time people have for blogging.

    Twitter and Facebook connects people, but they do siphon off traffic from other sites. I believe finding a right balance is important, but in no way do I want to “work” for social media at my expense.

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