12 Comments

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shel israel

Thursday, July 12, 2007 at 2:37am

Since you linked to my post, I assume you are saying that I am an A-Lister who is full of crap. The problem is that at no point did I say that blogging was dead. Nor did I talk about who or how many people were my facebook friends. I also never said that PR was dead, although I have been highly critical of how some people practice it. Your taking what I said and spinning it to create a pseudo polar position is an example of why some PR practitioners have serious credibility problems.

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Jonny Rosemont

Thursday, July 12, 2007 at 8:32am

It is indeed foolish, you only have to see the uptake by media organisations such as the Telegraph and Guardian to realise it isn’t dead. The people that say blogging is dead are full-time bloggers who feel under pressure to continually say something. Blogging isn’t dead, but decent blogging might be if we continue to say such sill things.

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Stephen

Thursday, July 12, 2007 at 8:37am

Hi Shel,

Nope, not insinuating anything about you. I’m particularly not saying you’re full of crap either but I linked to your blog post because it is relevant to my argument.

You did question if blogging was passé and did say that “once something about blogging is declared by Scoble and MacLeod, it is very likely to become conventional wisdom in a very short time” which I don’t necessarily agree with.

I do believe, however, that the whole notion of Facebook, Twitter, Pounce and whatever the next ‘big thing’ is, is going to destroy the whole blogging concept is a load of crap.

Which, by the way, I’m not saying that you have said.

Again, I didn’t say that you said PR was dead and I do not doubt your PR credentials. I merely referenced a theme that was fairly predominant a couple of years ago and compared it with what we’re hearing today.

Not really sure what you mean by a “pseudo polar position” but I’m not spinning anything. I’m just calling it how I see it.

Isn’t that one of the great things about blogs?

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Nicky Davis

Thursday, July 12, 2007 at 10:53am

I agree with what you say here, Stephen. The “Keystone Cops” approach to emerging channels is probably not a strategy for long-term success.

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Philip Young

Friday, July 13, 2007 at 4:23pm

If you look at the dates on the posts I think you will find PR has been dead for three years!

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Alex

Wednesday, July 25, 2007 at 9:43pm

Are you rating Myspace above Facebook for PR purposes, or as an all-round communications tool?

Myspace is certainly more accessible from a PR perspective, but I personally feel the imitimate nature of Facebook means the right idea, however difficult to execute, achieves more significant results in Facebook. Good recent examples certainly include the Monopoly board competition.

I certainly agree with your reservations about A list pronouncements equalling definitive proof of fact. Equally, having thousands [literally] of friends doesn’t really constitute using Facebook as most people understand it.

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Stephen

Thursday, July 26, 2007 at 11:07am

Hi Alex,

Simply for PR purposes. There have been considerably more campaigns that have ran on MySpace than Facebook because, as you say, it’s much easier and there’s a lot more scope for ideas.

I agree though, if anyone can produce some sort of campaign on Facebook then they’re onto a winner - as long as it’s done properly, of course. I haven’t heard of the Monopoly board campaign you mentioned. Just tried a quick Google search too but didn’t find anything. It was only quick though.

It’s just me chuckle actually. MySpace has campaigns involving music, cars, deodorant etc and Facebook has board games. ::lol::

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jdid

Wednesday, August 15, 2007 at 2:13pm

I think that blogging has taken a hit in the face of these social network sites though, but maybe its a survival of the fitess, weaning out the sheep from the goats issue. Social networking and blogging are quite different on some levels.

I mean if you just want to post what happened to you today for your friends to read well maybe facebook is a better medium than using blogger. but if you’re really trying to express opinions or get across info I”ll take blogging every time.

Also you hit a great point about meeting new folk via blogging.

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Giles

Monday, November 26, 2007 at 7:43pm

Facebook have put this on our feeds today!

“Your favorite bands, businesses, and products are coming to Facebook. Check out Dave Matthews Band, become a fan of (RED), or search for your favorite brands. You can also find out about what your friends like through the new “Fan of…” box on their profiles.

We’ve also updated our terms of use, including a new section about Facebook Pages. Learn more.”

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Giles

Monday, November 26, 2007 at 7:44pm

Missed the head line bit off - Sorry

“Your favorite musicians and businesses are here.”

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Blogging is dead

Thursday, February 7, 2008 at 3:26pm

[...] To get another perspective on whether blogging is dead, you can also check out my English, blog pal Stephen Davies. [...]

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UK internet users increasingly heart blogs | PRBLOGGER.COM - PR blog

Monday, September 1, 2008 at 2:55pm

[...] data illustrates that blogs have a long way to go in terms of growth and readership. Some predicted their demise when Facebook hit the mainstream, and now that Twitter’s the social media darling similar [...]

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