So where did all these blogs come from? How did
they get from an underground geek toy to a mainstream tool that has
revolutionized politics, journalism, marketing and the media?
I always find that when I learn about a new technology or way of doing
something online, the geeks have already been there (and I say the word
'geek' with complete affection - I'm one too!). Before business became
inseparable from the computer, email or the internet, the academics and
tinkerers were there first, kicking the tires and playing with the
technology. Blogging was no exception.
Many of the earliest internet geeks wrote online journals detailing
interesting links and points of view. As this was before programs like
FrontPage and Dreamweaver, everything was done by hand - and that was a
huge hassle. Each time you updated the site, you ran the risk of
breaking links inside the website and leaving your readers stranded
with the dreaded 'page not found' error. Eventually, the computer
programmers and web designers became fed up with all of this manual
work and created their own software to automate the process of updating
their journal websites. Thus the weblog was born.
In 1999, a website called Blogger (http://www.blogger.com/)
launched, offering free blogs to anybody and everybody that wanted
them. Blogger provided the blog tool for free as well as the hosting
space to host a blog. Millions of people from all over the world logged
on and start creating their own weblogs.
The largest conversation in the world had begun. Blogs have changed the
way academics do research, journalists write, families connect and
politicians fundraise. It was only a matter of time before businesses
woke up and realized the power of blogging for marketing online.
Blogging provides a way for companies and customers to meet on common
ground to talk about what excites them and makes them tick. It also
allows them to closely track where and under what circumstances their
products are being talked about online.
Today, blogging continues to grow at a swift pace with more than
400,000 posts added per day and 12,000 new blogs being created every
day. Millions of people look to blogs for a good laugh, a great idea, a
fantastic tip or an instant analysis. The blogosphere doubles in size
every 5 months, allowing anyone, anywhere, in any language, to make
their mark in the world to share their ideas, passion and products.
'Blog' was the word of the year for 2004 according to Merriam-Webster,
the famous dictionary publisher. The year 2004 marked a turning point
for blogs as a sought after media format. Now it was seen as a venue
for gathering large audiences of devoted readers who used blogs to
supplement, compliment and fact-check their nightly news.
My favorite milestone for blogging was when 'Blogs' appeared as a
category on the Jeopardy game show. I'll take blogging for one
thousand, Alex!
Copyright © 2005 Andy Wibbels
About Andy: Andy Wibbels is a blogging evangelist
and creator of the Easy Bake Weblogs seminar that has helped hundreds
of small businesses all over the world leverage blogs and RSS news
feeds to increase profits and save time. You can download his free
special report on business and blogs at http://easybakeweblogs.com/.