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Rahul Desai


I like writing (read Typing) and here's my attempt to put up my opinion about non/important things and aspects of non/human issues.

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Blog and Blogging - explained in plain English

Posted by Rahul Desai
 
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Blogging these days is more of a style-statement than actually a habit, necessity or a need. While more and more people (including myself) are trying their hands, it’s Rahul Desai's Blogimportant we understand the fundamentals well.

Some humble soul aptly understood this need and has put this video on Blog, RSS Feed and the dynamics of Blogging.

So presenting to you, “Blogging - explained in plain English



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How (un)safe is Blogging!

Posted by Rahul Desai
 
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My definition: I feel like writing something and sharing it with the world, it’s a Blog.

As of Wikipedia, it’s something written in chronological order and displayed in reverse chronological order and bla-blah something. They have lots to say for that. Visit their page in your jobless hours: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blog.

However, this definition (of mine) of writing something (or anything) is fine if it was not being shared over the web for everyone to view. Though the constitution of Republic of India allows me to speak, write and bark; the world wide coverage of web works on its own rules. I must see whether my expressions of emotions aren’t hurting any freebee of this free world in any manner.

Do check “Blogging Consequences” section on Wikipedia.org to learn more. However, that is the reaction part. Here are some pro-active points one can consider while blogging (or in turn decide not to blog at all).

Following my wonderful track record, most portion of this article is ‘inspired’ from a recent article in Times of India (85% is pasted from the article, straight away). Greatly meaningful, this article talks about Do’s and Dont’s writing on pubic portals. Strongly recommended reading!



BLOGS are like personal telephone calls crossed with newspapers. If you’ve blogged about something controversial, say a bad co-worker, chances are you’d want to keep things as anonymous as possible. Here then are some techniques that will help you be the Artful Dodger by which you can endlessly rant against a faulty set up and not end up with an egg on your face.

Blog Carefully


Use a pseudonym and don’t give away any identifying details. When you write about your workplace (a popular choice), be sure not to give away telling details. These include things like where you are located, how many employees there are, and the specific sort of business you do. Even general details can give away a lot. If, for example, you write, ‘I work at an unnamed TV news channel in Mumbai’, it’s probably now clear that you work in one of a few places. Don’t post pictures of yourself. And, remember that almost any kind of personal information can give your identity away. Also, if you are concerned about your colleagues finding out about your blog, do not blog while you are at work. Period. You could get into trouble for using company resources like an Internet connection to maintain your blog.

Use Anonymising Technologies

There are a number of technical solutions for the blogger who wishes to remain anonymous. Invisiblog.com is a service that offers anonymous blog hosting for free. You may create a blog there with no real names attached. Even the people who run the service will not have access to your name. If you are worried that your blog-hosting service may be logging your unique IP address and thus tracking what computer you’re blogging from, you can route your Internet traffic through what’s called an ‘overlay network’ that hides your IP address. More importantly, this makes it difficult for snoops on the Internet to follow the path your data takes and trace it back to you. Anonymizer.com offers a free downloaded ‘Anonymous Surfing,’ which routes your Internet traffic through an anonymising server and can hide your IP address from the services hosting your blog.

Use Ping Servers


If you want to protect your privacy while getting news out quickly, try using ping servers to broadcast your blog entry for you. Pingomatic.com is a tool that allows you to do this. The program will send out a notice (a ‘ping’) about your blog entry to several blog search engines. Once those sites list your entry, which is usually within a few minutes, you can take the entry down. Thus the news gets out rapidly and its source can evaporate within half an hour. This protects the speaker while also helping the blog entry reach people fast.

Limit Your Audience

Many blogging services allow you to designate individual posts or your entire blog as available only to those who have the password, or to people whom you’ve designated as friends.

Register Your Domain Name Anonymously

Even if you don’t give your real name or personal information in your blog, people can look up the records for your domain name and find out who you are. If you don’t want anyone to do this, consider registering your domain name anonymously. The Online Policy Group (OPG) offers privacy-protective domain name registration at https://www.onlinepolicy.org/forms/ opg-domain-create.shtml

Blog Without Getting Fired

A handful of bloggers have recently discovered that their labors of love may lead to unemployment. By some estimates, dozens of people have been fired for blogging, and the numbers are growing every day. The bad news is that, in many cases, there is no legal means of redress if you have been fired for blogging. (An interesting and fairly famous read: My Blog Ate My Career)

Blog away!

You can no longer safely assume that people in your offline life won’t find out about your blog, if you ever could. New RSS tools and services mean that it’s even easier than ever to search and aggregate blog entries. As long as you blog anonymously and in a work-safe way, what you say online is far less likely to come back to hurt you.




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Blogging for Money

Posted by Rahul Desai
 
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This certainly isn't the greatest article I've ever read. And frankly, it talks crap. Just that the other day I got to talk to our very own Ms Bhavana Musuluri and she somehow feels that blogging is the only thing I'm involved (engrossed?) into (and not my work or business or girls or any other more considerable things). May be she didn’t mean all the other stuff. However, here’s an article I came across a few days back, which has some relevance.

They say, some people have actually quit their greatly-paying jobs (and source of brown-bread and cheese-spread) for taking up full-time activity called Blogging. Topic’s of interest. At least it boosted me that the only thing I lack today is a quality content - something others might really consider worth ‘reading’. So, here you are, an article from ‘Business World’ March 13, 2006 issue, dedicated to our guest visiting home, Bhavana:



There's Money in it, Honey


Blogging is no longer just a time-consuming hobby. Many bloggers are discovering ways to profit from their passion.

For many, blogging is a means of sharing their experiences what they hear, read or feel strongly about. They spend hours on it, squeezing out time from their daily grind to do something they love. Still, most bloggers could never think of quitting their day job to blog full time.

But that's changing now. Many people are actually leaving their jobs to blog full time and they are making their blogs pay for their livelihood.

Thirty two-year-old Rajesh Barnwal quit his job as group head (content) at Webchutney.com about four months ago to run his own blog on information and communication technology (ICT). To earn his income, he is trying out direct sponsorship. His Web page, alootechie.com, has a cheekily worded post on the ad space rates he expects from well-funded enterprises. The response has been quite good. There are at least six-seven serious players, mostly in the IT and new media sector, who have contacted me to advertise on the page. It will be finalised in a few days' time, he says.

Barnwal is among the many people around the globe blogging for a living. Australian Darren Rowse is a full-time blogger. He publishes several blogs, including the popular Digital Photography Blog and Problogger, and says he earns a six-figure income doing so. Jason Kottke from the US quit his Web designing job last year to blog for a living. He put up a post on his website, kottke.org, asking for monetary support for his new venture. A lot of his readers thought it was a good idea, for his list of patrons runs into hundreds.

According to the Blogkits 2005 Blogging and Advertising Survey, 18 per cent of the respondents said they blogged for money. Another 28 per cent did it for fun, but said they wouldn’t mind earning from their blogs. That’s a whopping 46 per cent looking to profit from their passion!

If you think what you are saying on your blog is important and it has a regular readership, there are many ways you can make your content pay for you. The simplest way, of course, is by allowing advertising on your blog site.

Google Adsense is the most popular ad-hosting service for blog sites and has been around for a while. By signing up for an Adsense account, you allow Google to post advertisements on your Web page. For every reader who clicks on the ad, a certain amount will be credited to your account. Google owes its success to contextual ads, which means that only ads relevant to the content will be displayed. For instance, if you have blogged about a trip to Rajasthan, the ads displayed could be of a travel guide for sale, or for flight tickets to Rajasthan. Thus, the probability of readers clicking on the ads is increased.

“We determine how much to pay the publisher depending on various parameters like content, reach, traffic and quality, says Ashish Kashyap, country manager, India sales and operations, at Google. But Google does not disclose what percentage of the ad revenues it is paying the publisher. Thus, a blogger who is paid a certain amount for ads on his page does not know how much Google made from it.

And, depending on the content and traffic driven to the page, the sum paid per click could just be in cents. However, since Google sends a cheque only once you accumulate $100, it could be a long wait.

However, Adsense is no longer the only option. Over the last year or so, a variety of advertising services have been launched. So a blogger can choose from an array of options, each offering something different.

For instance, OneMonkey lets you fix your own price for selling ad space on your blogsite, and allows you to keep 80 per cent of the revenue. AdHearUs offers 18 different ad sizes for the publisher to choose from, and allows multiple ads. FastClick offers monthly payment options by cheque or through Paypal, instead of waiting for a cut-off amount to accumulate.

Chitika’s eminimalls offers online merchandising on your Web page. It is a product-oriented service, and readers see catalogues of products related to the blog site’s content. Since most product details are on the Web page itself, eminimalls works on the principle that users will click when they know the price is right. Cost per click (CPC) is the payment system here too, with Chitika paying the publisher 60 per cent of the ad revenues generated. Publishers can opt to make the ads contextual. For non-contextual ads, eminimalls can be used alongside Google Ads. MSN and Yahoo! are also planning to launch advertising services soon.

An estimated 10-15 per cent of the 100,000 India-centric blogs use Google Ads. That blog-advertising is picking up in India is evident from the fact that Indian companies are also entering the field. Chennai-based Sulekha.com will launch its ad-hosting services in late March for the 10,000-odd bloggers on its network. Interestingly, it will pay the publisher not only per click, but also based on the number of hits the Web page gets. In the CPM (Cost per M, or thousand) system, the publisher is paid a certain amount for every thousand hits on the Web page.

We have over 2,500 small and medium advertisers who are keen to reach the Indian audience this way, says Satya Prabhakar, CEO, Sulekha. He cites companies like property builders Jain Housing, online shoe seller Shoetells.com, and home décor and design dealer Housefullstuff.com, which have shown interest. The advertisers pay between Rs 25,000 to Rs 3 lakh per month, depending on the ad space.

Sulekha has also tied up with Fabmall to launch a scheme where bloggers will benefit simply from blogging. A blogger will get 100 points for every post, 20 points for a comment on his page, and 5 points every time someone reads his page. On accumulating 2,500 points, the blogger will win a gift certificate worth Rs 250 from Fabmall.

Along with blogs, ad services are also evolving. Vive Networks recently launched its video advertising service for blog sites. Here, by adding a few lines of HTML code, bloggers can host targeted video ads on their site. Sports, entertainment and automobiles are expected to be the key categories here.

Another way of blog advertising is through rich site summary (RSS) feeds, a format for syndicating news and the content of news-like sites and personal blogs. Subscribers to a feed can receive excerpts or full content of the blogs they have subscribed to, via email. So, now, besides the Web page, one can also advertise on feeds through services like Kanoodle and Pheedo. For companies, advertising through feeds is proving a popular alternative to sending group emails about their products as the former reaches a more targeted readership. A blogger can also join an affiliate network, like Amazon, Linkshare and Affiliate Programs, to drive more traffic to his or her page. These help the blogger to get targeted traffic towards his Web page through its network.

There are other ways to supplement blog revenue. One can write for a blogging network, where a number of bloggers write for a common network, like Weblogs Inc. or About.com. While it does not have the freedom of an individual blog, it may have more readership and work well in the long term.

Globally, corporate blogging is picking up. The conventional way is to get employees to blog about the company. For instance, Google has a blog by its engineers. And there are over 1,500 blogs run by Microsoft employees, who are encouraged to do so by the company. But now, many companies are hiring specialist bloggers to write for them.

For instance, Dale and Thomson Popcorn wants an online marketing co-ordinator to run a company blog on the love of popcorn to boost customer interaction. A keyword search of blog on the popular US online job search site Dice.com yields as many as 52 job advertisements over the last month. And the pay ranges between $40,000-$75,000 a year.

Another recent trend is of experienced bloggers selling their knowledge through e-courses or e-books. One of the best examples is Joel Comm, whose e-book, What Google Never Told You About Making Money With Adsense, became an online bestseller. Comm, who claims to make over $500 a day from Adsense, sells the e-book, which gives tips on how to get the most from Adsense, for $127 online. So, your blogging expertise can also pay rich dividends.

Today, blogging has gone beyond being an interesting trend or even just a disruptive medium. The coming days will see greater and more innovative ways of social e-commerce.



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