Building a Blog Kingdom for Profit - Blogging UnPlugged

 

 SuccessUnPlugged.com Presents…

BLOGGING UNPLUGGED

 Blogging UnPlugged - Building a Profitable Kingdom of Blogs for Profit

 “Building Profitable Kingdom of Blogs for Profit”

 

PART I:

AN INTRODUCTION TO BLOGS AND BLOGGING  

 

 

 
The New Media

 

In September of 2004, the CBS News program "60 Minutes II" ran a special on President George Bush's service in the Texas National Guard during the Vietnam War.  One of the pieces of data they displayed was a memo allegedly written by the late Lieutenant Colonel Jerry B. Killian.  As soon as the memo flashed across the screen, the New Media began an investigation that would lead to in the firing of three CBS News executives and the retirement of longtime anchor Dan Rather.

 

At issue was a simple question: was the memo authentic? CBS News assured the public it was, citing handwriting and document experts.  Within 24 hours, the New Media had shown that such was not the case, that the memos could not have been produced on any machine in the hands of the Texas Air National Guard during the Vietnam era.  The New Media quickly demonstrated that the proportional spacing of the memo and the superscripting of dates were nearly impossible to create on 1970s technology and that the layout of the memo was unlike anything produced at the time.  In short, they showed that the memo was not created on a Texas National Guard typewriter as CBS News had alleged, but was instead produced on a modern computer using Microsoft Word on its default settings and faxed or copied repeatedly to make it look old.  They showed, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the memo was a fake.

 

As word of the fraud spread across the Internet, additional data came to the fore, questioning the use of CBS news' acquisition and handling of the documents.  Within a week, other major news organizations began reporting on the controversy, within two weeks, CBS itself reported that they had been misled by their source concerning the origin of the memo.  Soon after, CBS brought in a former attorney general and a former president of the Associated Press to get to the bottom of the issue.  The result was a shakeup of the entire CBS news structure.

 

Who was this "New Media" that was knowledgeable enough about such arcane topics as superscripting and National Guard memo layouts to shake up one of the biggest news outfits in the world in a matter of weeks?  It was a network of independent Bloggers who posted their findings in real time, shared information, and tested ideas.  And their posts were followed closely by millions of readers, many of whom posted the findings on their own Blogs for their own readers. As those readers shared the information with friends and colleagues, interest in the New Media, and the habit of readers looking for their news from independent sources, accelerated a climb that began when Matt Drudge reported rumors of what became the Monica Lewinski scandal several months before the Old Media whispered a word publicly about it.

 

What a Blog is (and is Not)

 

A good working definition of a Blog is simply a journal or newsletter that is frequently updated and intended for the timely reading. It often provides opportunities for unfiltered and immediate feedback, sports an informal or even partisan attitude, and is written in a more personal style than traditional press outlets.

 

 

Blogs come in all shapes and subjects, from the maundering of troubled teen souls to displays of classical photography to breaking news and commentary. They can be online journals, locked with a password shared by a few trusted friends, or they can be page after page of source code, sharing useful and free computer programs with the world.   A Blog may be an online journal tangential to a company's main business, where users of a company's products give feedback and ask for help.  Blogs can be hosted by single individuals, shared by teams, or produced by entire companies. They may be hosted on a dedicated Blog server using fancy templates or lovingly handcrafted in HTML on a page that resembles a bulletin board.

 

Next->

  1. Blogging is the New Media
  2. Components of a Blog
  3. Blog Kingdom
  4. Reference Blogs
  5. Blog Foundation
  6. Blog Theme
  7. Branding Idea
  8. Your Reputation
  9. Blog Designing
  10. Blog Artwork
  11. Blog Fonts
  12. Blog Images

 

 
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Fast Blog Finder
 Blog Finder is designed to search for blog posts that rank in Google for a particular phrase and makes it easy to comment on them. Blog Finder searches for quality blogs that accept comments. It brings up blogs with both "dofollow" and "nofollow" tags. It also shows the Google PageRank for each domain and blog page post and has options that can be tweaked to filter by Domain PR, Page PR, link type, date and user note.

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