46 Comments

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Pete Cashmore

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 at 11:52am

I tend to keep it quiet, but Mashable is in fact a British blog based out of Scotland.

–Pete

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Simon Collister

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 at 12:06pm

Hi Stephen

What’s Technorati?

I was concerned you’d been quiet for a while but this post make the silence worthwhile. Great - and I mean great - stuff!

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Stephen

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 at 12:06pm

Wow! There you go! One of my favourite blogs too.

Thanks Pete.

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Stephen

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 at 12:09pm

Hey Simon,

Thanks! But I’m sure you’re perfectly aware of Technorati! ;)

On a different note. I’ve heard there are a few North East PR agencies taking note of Green/you and are looking for social/new media practitioners.

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Ashley

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 at 5:01pm

Good to see that Tech Digest has made the list. For some reason we tend to slip under people’s radar as until today we were hosted in the US.

Interesting how most of those blogs have been around for 3/4 years - this makes Pete’s Mashable sucess even more impressive.

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Helen Keegan

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 at 9:41pm

Are you also measuring number of subscribers?

And what does ‘influence’ mean? Should this be by topic area? In which case, it does beg the question of how do you define the topics. Definitely worth exploring I’d have thought… I expect there’s some kind of formula you’ll be able to create like (x external links + no of subscribers)* ?? =influence - you get the idea!

Will keep an eye out for for further posts on the topic.

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The 50 most influential UK bloggers » The Cartoon Blog by Dave Walker

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 8:10am

[...] PR Blogger.com has put together a list of the 50 most influential blogs in the UK. See prblogger.com » Tracking the conversation globally and locally. The list is only available as a excel file so I’ve copied it below. [...]

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Stephen

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 8:17am

Ashley: TechDigest was one of the first to be added. It’s a great blog and one I know is very popular.

Helen: No we aren’t measuring subscribers since it’s impossible to do so at this time. I.e. Not everyone uses FeedBurner to track subscriptions.

We measured the number of inbound links from other blogs. This is T/rati’s way of measuring ‘authority’.

But I agree, if we could get a measure of subscribers, links, possibly traffic and mix them in a pot to come out with a solution it would be great.

I’ve received some great feedback in comments and by email so I’m quite inspired to look into it further. Would much prefer help from the UK b/sphere as opposed to doing it on my own. Anyone? :-)

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David

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 8:30am

What about Tall Skinny Kiwi, he may not have been born in the UK, but he has lived in Scotland for three years?;

http://technorati.com/blogs/http://tallskinnykiwi.typepad.com/

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Stephen

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 8:43am

Thanks David. I’ll add it now. Do you know of anymore to make the list better?

Thanks again.

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A great piece of work… « The last man in Europe…

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 9:16am

[...] Â So… that is why i’m particualarly impressed by the work that Stephen, Technorati and Edelman have been working on. Whilst Stephen admits that it is still a little ‘finger-in-the-air’ the work they’ve completed to date is great in identifying the top50 UK bloggers. [...]

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Justin

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 9:22am

Good to see you back blogging Stephen and this looks like a nice piece of work. I’ve often been asked by clients and colleagues to produce this type of information and as you know it’s a near impossible task and a real case of finger in the air stuff. It’s great to see people taking this up as an issue and it will be good to see the top 50 list grow and develop .

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David

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 1:04pm

Stephen, thanks for the reply. I can see how hard it is but there may be some top UK blogs on the BBC, as it has its own blog network now e.g.;

BBC NEWS Editors (1,061 links from 400 blogs)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/theeditors

more BBC blogs on;
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/

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Stephen

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 5:21pm

David,

We cut out all msm (mainstream media) blogs in all countries/languages. It was kept consistent throughout.

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mel starrs

Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 7:11pm

Nice list. I would make the following comment about Technorati’s method (and this is their foible not yours) but I would personally rate someone with 1152 links from 636 blogs higher than 1810 links from 502 blogs (your no’s 11 and 12). No. 11 is getting 3.6 links per blog, but No. 12 getting 1.8 links per blog. Is it not more ‘popular’ to get links from many blogs than many links from a few? Anyway, I’ve made this as clear as mud - what I’m trying to say is that a few reciprocating bloggers can beat the technorati system and move up the rankings by constantly loving up each others blogs. Or even one mad demented fan could push the rankings up. Alternatively, one excellent post which is uber popular could give the many links from many sources. *Sigh*. This measurement business is harder than it looks!

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Stephen

Thursday, October 12, 2006 at 9:32am

Hah! Thanks Mel,

Definitely food for thought. Good luck with the MBA by the way. :)

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Al Carlton

Friday, October 13, 2006 at 10:26am

The’s a nice list and there are some great blogs (thanks for giving me something to do at work this Friday afternoon :))

I woudln’t call myself a prominent UK blogger but my Technorati stats seem right up there
Rank: 1,554 (4,402 links from 942 blogs)

Is there anything I can do automagically to indicate the blog is run from the UK?

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Stephen

Friday, October 13, 2006 at 10:39am

Thanks for that Al. The guys from Shiny Shiny already passed on your url so it’s already added.

I don’t think there is anything you can do actually… hence my manual list.

Thanks for stopping by…

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diamond geezer

Friday, October 13, 2006 at 7:57pm

Are you hoping to keep this list updated?

Your Technorati data seems to date from the end of August, and I should be a lot lower down your UK50 by now…

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Burst Blog » The Sun Never Sets on the British Blogosphere

Friday, October 13, 2006 at 10:25pm

[...] Previously, we have discussed a number of our esteemed overseas members, and I thought I might take the opportunity to highlight a few of our British friends. The timing also seems appropriate since Technorati and Edelman have just released preliminary findings from a study they are performing on the European blogosphere. [...]

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Armin

Saturday, October 14, 2006 at 9:43am

Looking at the companies you mention on your local vs multinational comparison, is that really such a surprise?

Geeks and people generally interested in technology are probably still vastly overrepresented among the bloggers and in particular in your Top 50. Meaning they are much more likely to blog about their latest annoyance with Microsoft/Dell/Samsung/add as appropriate (i.e. tech companies, mostly US based MNCs) than having bought their milk at the Tesco/Sainsbury/Co-op/add as appropriate (i.e. local supermarket).

I would guess if you were to review all UK blogs (if you were able to find them…) the picture would start to change as you start including teenagers and grandmothers blogging about what impacts their daily life. On second thoughts, may be not, considering how influenced we are by American and worldwide brands…

And to add to your list: I’m not entirely sure, but isn’t Nick Denton a Brit? http://www.nickdenton.org/ You’ve got Tim Worstall (living in Spain afaik), so technically you should include Nick assuming he’s a Brit.

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Stephen

Saturday, October 14, 2006 at 1:32pm

DG: Yes I’m planning on keeping it updated. Obviously it will have to be done manually so it can’t be up-to-date every day. The data was gathered toward the end of September.

Armin: I wouldn’t say it is a suprise per se but I do think the data is interesting.

Re: Nick Denton. Good question. He is a Brit but he’s living in the US and has a US company. Maybe if I link to him a few times he might tell us if he classes his blog UK based or US based?

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Armin

Saturday, October 14, 2006 at 6:55pm

Stephen,

I guess that’s the problem with the internet and our mobile society: How do you class things when we transcend borders?

I’m an “expat” myself, from Germany originally, but have lived in England for most of my working life. I blog in English, mainly about topics from my life here and my visits to Scotland. I would classify my blog as a UK blog.

A German friend of mine living in London makes this more interesting: While he’s writing in German (well, most of the time, you’ll find the odd English sentence) his focus is London and living in London (in case anyone is interested, it’s London Leben, London Living). Hardly any mention of Germany there. So from the language point of view (and most of the readership) definitely a German blog, but the content I would classify as UK content.

This question will probably apply to most “expats”, in particular those living in countries with a different language than their own, e.g. all the Americans blogging from Germany. Unless us lot get a special category ;-)

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Stephen

Saturday, October 14, 2006 at 7:07pm

Hey Armin,

You’re right. I guess deciding where a blog is based isn’t all plain sailing and let’s not forget, the internet knows no boundaries. However, I think nine times out of ten you could probably make a reasonable judgement.

For me personally, I would say your blog is a British blog. But for your friend’s I would say it is more catered to a German audience. Almost like he’s writing about his experiences of living in London to his friends in Germany.

I think if it is a British blog it would be written in English. Remember, the majority of Brits don’t speak a second language. **Ignorant I know!**

Anyway, that’s just my opinion. :)

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Gordon

Sunday, October 15, 2006 at 2:06pm

Ohhh another list, goody!

We can all, once again, start to ponder whether such lists are a good thing, promoting those that obviously don’t need promotion, or a bad thing, setting up exclusivity and barriers to those bloggers who whilst they aren’t linked as often may write better blogs?

And no, this isn’t sour grapes (I’m sure I’m 51st.. not) but this kind of top xx list has been done to death by some of the ‘top’ US bloggers and was, in part, responsible for the start of the BlogHer conferences.

Still, it’s all good interesting stuff, after all there is nothing us bloggers like talking about more than ourselves! right?

I guess the question is, ok, you’ve compiled a list, but what can it be used for?

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Stephen

Sunday, October 15, 2006 at 2:22pm

Hi Gordon,

In PR terms it could be used for a number of reasons. For example, traditional PR folks might look at the circulations/readership of publications they’re wishing to target. That way they have an idea of how many ‘hits’ they might get and the demographic reading it. We don’t have anything like that in the UK b/sphere.

Also, if a certain influential/popular UK blogger is writing about their detest for a particular organisation or brand then no doubt it will create a negative word-of-mouth effect through the high level of influence/popularity.

We’ve seen in a number of case studies that this can prove disastrous to a company and its reputation.

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Watching Them, Watching Us

Sunday, October 15, 2006 at 8:42pm

Another metric for getting an idea of the relative influence of a blog within “blogspace” or the so called “blogosphere” is to look at the number of Bloglines or other syndication feed aggregator subscriptions.

A blog with lots of links, i.e. a high Technorati rating, but with very few busy people actually bothering to keeping an hourly watch on the latest postings via a syndication feed, is not, perhaps, as influential as you might think.

See how a Bloglines ranking changes Iain Dale’s list of top UK political blogs, for example.

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Pickled Politics » Influential blogs

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 at 3:44am

[...] And Katy for pointing it out. Trackback link   |   Add to del.icio.us   |   Digg this   |   Filed under:Uncategorized [...]

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Footblogger

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 at 7:07am

I find Technorati very US-centric and not very reliable at tracking the popularity of UK sites. Most of the very popular football blogs (not including my own, I might add) fail to make much of an impact on Technorati, despite their enormous success.

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Footblogger

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 at 7:13am

Sorry to be annoying, but do you know the email and website fields in your Leave a Comment box are white text on a white background (in Firefox at least)… thus leading to the URL typo in the post above.

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Ham

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 at 7:32am

It was quite exciting to scrape in at no 50! Just an obseration - whatever the criteria for significance the Technorati uses (and I really wonder sometimes) it is self-perpetuating - because it identifies blogs as being influential, they become such to search engines etc.

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mike

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 at 1:17pm

I have a fatal fondness for these sorts of lists. I used to compile my own annual chart of most-linked UK blogs, but haven’t updated since May 2005 - so this is an interesting snapshot of how things have developed since then.

Sure, basing things on Technorati rankings is not without its flaws - but given the options available, I think it’s the most reliable method.

What always fascinates me about these lists is the variety - blogs are thrown together who are barely aware of each other’s presence. As such, it’s a salutary reminder that when most of us reference “the blogosphere”, we usually err towards meaning that part of the blogosphere which we inhabit and understand.

There also seems to be little correlation between a high Technorati ranking, and the avaerage number of comments received. Looking through some of the more unfamiliar (to me) sites, I was surprised to see how many posts attracted few (if any) commments.

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BurstBlog: Publisher Edition » The Sun Never Sets on the British Blogosphere

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 at 9:26pm

[...] Previously, we have discussed a number of our esteemed overseas members, and I thought I might take the opportunity to highlight a few of our British friends. The timing also seems appropriate since Technorati and Edelman have just released preliminary findings from a study they are performing on the European blogosphere. [...]

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Andrew Ian Dodge

Thursday, October 19, 2006 at 9:54am

If you want to know what Google thinks of you (ie Google Rank) I would recommend URL trends. It has the bits you to know about how important your blog really is…

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Paul Sutherland

Sunday, October 22, 2006 at 10:06am

I hope I am a prominent British blogger. Would like to be more prominent though! Mine is a space news blog and one that the Houston Chronicle picks up through Blogburst (I have this fantasy that all the guys at Nasa mission control are reading my posts!). In fact I’m a professional journalist who went freelance last year after many years in Fleet Street with the aim generally of bringing the excitement of space science to people through the popular media.

Paul

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Stephen

Monday, October 23, 2006 at 9:23am

Hi Paul,

Thanks for the comment. Unfortunately your blog doesn’t make it on to the list. I’ve just ran it through Technorati. You can see here.

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Blogosphere: Best of Blogs » London Blogging…

Thursday, October 26, 2006 at 9:43pm

[...] Anyway, there’s a pr bloke in the UK, probably based in London, who is working on some tech client’s behalf for some paper or conference or paper conference about online media in the UK. I could be wrong. I think he’s just part of Technorati’s world domination army. Anyway, he’s posted a list of the 10 most influential blogs in the UK. How exciting. [...]

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Roger

Tuesday, October 31, 2006 at 12:17pm

You can track the local British conversation on British Blogs - see “The Buzz” section on the RHS.

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davidvogt

Saturday, February 3, 2007 at 3:32pm

Your article is very informative and helped me further.

Thanks, David

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Alternative Energy Blog

Friday, April 6, 2007 at 12:09pm

After receiving a flattering solicitation today describing me as an A-list blogger (which I’m definitely not) and wondering how the PR agents of large corporations are finding my blog I googled “list of top bloggers” & “most influential bloggers” thus ending up here. As a UK blogger (albeit with a global viewpoint) with five digit feed subscribers and listed on Bloglines’ “Top Blogs”, might I qualify for the UK top 50??

James
Alternative Energy Blog

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Stephen

Friday, April 6, 2007 at 1:05pm

Hi James,

The list (which is quite outdated now) was based on Technorati rankings. I’ve just done a check to see if your blog would be included but your ranking is over 18,000. If I remember correctly, the least ranked blog is around the 15,000 mark.

Thanks

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Alternative Energy Blog

Friday, April 6, 2007 at 6:28pm

Stephen thanks for your reply.

I think this is where the limitations of Technorati are apparent. If we take the blog ranked 50 on the list (a Deeper Look Weblog) it has according to Yahoo 16,911 backlinks vs. 65,618 for the Alternative Energy Blog. According to the sitemeter counter on its page, a Deeper Look has 69 daily visitors, while the Alternative Energy Blog receives many times that. I couldn’t find any figures for RSS subscribers but I doubt its approaching the 5 figures the alt-e blog receives. So in terms of backlinks, site visitors and RSS subscribers the Alternative Energy Blog ranks higher than the number 50 blog on the list. (I haven’t gone into Google keyword ranking as I’m not sure which keywords are relevant to “A Deeper Look”.

I stopped using Technorati awhile ago and I’m not the only one:
http://kottke.org/05/08/so-long-technorati

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Who is ‘The World’s Leading?’ « The last man in Europe…

Wednesday, June 20, 2007 at 1:37pm

[...] 20th, 2007 · No Comments More importantly who is Theo Worlds-Leading? Well you can find out via Facebook. Facebook has tobe the fastest growing thing on the planet right now, even TWL is giving it a bash. I have to be honest with you I’m ever so slightly addicted to it myself. Channel 4 eat your heart out… I’ll also take this opportunity to flag a great piece of work by my colleague Johnny Bentwood. We’ve had the top 50 PR Bloggers, we’ve even had the top 50 UK bloggers we now have the Top 50 analyst bloggers (RedMonk take the top 3 positions!) - nice work. [...]

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PRBLOGGER.COM » Yesterday’s Edelman/Technorati conference

Thursday, March 13, 2008 at 10:13pm

[...] held a conference about the partnership I touched on in my last post. I wanted to concentrate yesterday’s post more on what I had been up to as opposed to the whole event. I received some great responses in both the [...]

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UK100 bloggers | PRBLOGGER.COM - PR blog

Sunday, June 8, 2008 at 3:32pm

[...] posting a list of 50 UK influential (according to Technorati) bloggers last week I received some great feedback both in the comments and via email. So much so I’ve decided to [...]

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renaissance chambara | Ged Carroll - Links for 2006-10-13 [My Web 2.0]

Friday, June 27, 2008 at 5:32pm

[...] Tracking the conversation globally and locally [...]

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