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Till then all I can say is that somehow, the thought of my life documented online like your cousin mentioned seems a tad scary to old fashioned me
1. To influence a person?
2. to influence google rankings?
3. to influence a group of people?
4. to influence someone to make a internal employees?
5. to influence competitors.
Or, as many blogs, are to influence yourself to keep writing and sharing..
I would say there are a huge amount of differences in approach to those listed…. anyone?
REACH and ACCESS become important to that kind of model. He needs new people to find his product over and over to make the continued experience that he needs.
In my case, my blog's goal is to influence the conversation, extend ideas, and synthesize change. On another level, I want my blog to point out that I'm clever, so that nice people ask me to speak at good events.
Influence is definitely an important measure, but the question becomes how it ties back into something that can be valued.
IMNSHO. : )
One recent self-analysis I did based on Avinash Kaushik's interesting idea is on my blog - this is just one way to measure 'influence'
http://moneypowerwisdom.com/is-this-blog-succes...
All success
Dr.Mani
There does seem to be a connection between how many people are reading your blog and your level of influence. The more people reading your blog > the more people linking to your blog and reading your feed > and the greater the chance that people will find you via Google and other blogs and sites. As your audience grows, it also gives you increased credibility so that when those "important" people you are referring to find you, they'll take you seriously when they see your impressive numbers.
This doesn't mean that you have to publish every day. But publishing consistently and on a high level will naturally lead to a wider reading community. Against your will, your subscribers and visits will grow and include "important" and "not-so-important" (i.e. me), and there ain't nothing you can do about that.
Give me your huddled masses, baby!
As Miriam points out many times and to many people numbers=credibility. The systems social networks put in place all promote the notion that numbers matter. How many contacts you have on Facebook or LinkedIn becomes a testament to how valuable you are. In many cases it's not unlike our physical lives, people are measured by the number of friends not the quality of relationships. Me, I measure a person's community by how full the refrigerator is after a crisis. If people are constantly bringing you food so you don't have to worry about cooking to the point that your fridge is overflowing that is the sign of a healthy community;).
But until we find other ways of measuring the health and vitality of an online community I fear that numbers will drive the show.
One simple example of influence is drying out a social network if you are a leader or has an influence on a leader to switch.
A measure could be the ratio between first degree to second degree. For instance if I have 5 contact that each is having 100 contact each I have more reach than someone with 10 contact having 10 contact each. I have a bigger leverage.
I agree that the measures are related to the objective. I claim that they can be discovered and monitored by looking at the blogger activity.
Keren
Chris - let's take your own example - so for you success is based on the amount of speaking opportunity you receive? I can relate to that, as I think that at least some of the bloggers are using their blogs in order to show thought leadership. If you are writing for a specific community or target audience, and when you go to the room of this community people are shaking your hand with respect - your blog is influential.
I think that what Keren's post brings to the table is the concept that blogging is one aspect of the activity of a person, and his influence should not be taken of his blog only, but on a wider scale. I am a true believer in the importance of offline/online activities - so this view fits well with mine :)
The begginer - first, he is not my cousin :), and second - no one is saying that you should expose MORE of your life, just that one should look at the blogger's over all activity.
Kathryn- LOVE YOUR NEW PIC! and I think you are right. However, for business bloggers it is not enough :)
I agree we need to tailor the success measure to the way we measure influence - just as Chris H said. It is definitely a still uncharted land...
Also - their is no such thing as *a* blogger today - I use the phone am I a "phoner"? There are mommy bloggers and journalists, tabloid writers and academics - a blog is a tool.
Just my .02
However - not sure about the last part. Yes, there are many types of bloggers - but not sure if you can't look at them as a group in a sense.