Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Axioms of Blogging

Mark Hasty blogged The Five Axioms of Blogging are:

  1. A blogger will regret any post he or she ever makes about any figure caught up in a sex scandal.
    The Joyner Corollary to Hasty’s First Axiom is "There are also certain names which a blogger is better off not invoking at all, scandal or not."
  2. There is no topic so controversial and interesting that the blogosphere can’t make people thoroughly sick of it within five days.
  3. The quality of your most recent post and the likelihood of a catastrophic server failure are directly related.
  4. When you have no new ideas, try changing your color scheme.
  5. As the number of blogs increases, the number of comments on any particular blog decreases. Furthermore, as the number of comments declines, so does the number of trackbacks, as traffic-hungry bloggers eventually decide to link only to articles at the biggest blogs. The future of blogging, then, will entail millions of bloggers linking solely to whichever happens to be the largest and most prominent blog with trackbacks turned on. Whichever blogger this is will displace Howard Stern as the King (or Queen) of All Media.
OTB blogged Despite the explosion in the number of blogs out there (Sue McDonald says BlogPulse now tracks 10 million of them), overall readership continues to swell at a sufficient rate to more than make up for the dispersion of sites competing for eyeballs. My current traffic levels, which barely put me in the top 50 overall, would have been the envy of all but the top five or six blogs when I started two years ago.

Commenting some sites remains massive, although it's true that commenting hasn't kept up with traffic levels. My comments have probably doubled in the last year while my traffic has more than quintupled. Whether that's a function of changing reader trends, more search engine referrals, or what I can't can't.


I get very few comments or TrackBacks, yet I have had over 7,000 visitors since March 1, 2005

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