I’ve heard many successful bloggers tell business people interested in blogging to “just jump in and start.” At first glance these experts don’t appear to be taking a careful and reasoned approach. Shouldn’t they be advising people to gather data, research the arena, establish goals, and plan their execution? Isn’t promoting the “jump in and start posting” philosophy a bit impulsive and perhaps even irresponsible?
It can certainly seem odd that experts will on the one hand promote the blogosphere as a sophisticated and powerful new medium (with the power to “destroy brands and wreck lives” according to the cover of Forbes) yet on the other hand appear to be saying “don’t plan, just execute.”
The advice to “start blogging now” is really quite consistent with a carefully thought-out and competently executed business blogging strategy. The experience gained from launching, designing, and posting to a simple “starter” blog is a critical component in the obligatory “data gathering” phase of developing an informed business blogging strategy.
The individuals involved in determining how a company may or may not blog should at least set up their own small-scale blogs and get a feel for what the process is like, and how the tools work.
In other words, you can’t effectively plan until you have some relevant direct experience. Your company doesn’t need to have an “official” blog yet, but key decision makers should at least open accounts and start posting about whatever strikes their fancy; their pets, favorite restaurants, or great business books they’ve read. These blogs don’t even need to be publicly accessible at first. Many blog services allow for password-protected sites that even the search engines don’t visit.
Learning to be a successful blogger is not unlike learning to be a good swimmer. Reading and listening to experts will only take you so far. You have to get into the pool, and the sooner the better! Once you splash around for a while in the shallow end and get a feel for things, then you can better understand how to swim in the deep end and keep your head above water. Eventually you can head out into the ocean and ride the waves.
The “just start blogging” strategy can seem like a major risk to most businesses. But from a person with experience, my advice to you would be to “just jump in and get started”.












Bob Younce | March 18th, 2008 at 8:38 am #
True enough.
The danger, I think, of just jumping in is often disappointment. A new blogger will hop into a topic and cover ground that is years old and no longer part of the meta-talk. This isn’t bad in itself, as old ideas need attention from time to time, but I think it winds up being disappointing to the blogger to figure out that her greatest post was written two years ago by a guy in Topeka.
Axel | March 18th, 2008 at 1:15 pm #
Well, I am not so sure about this. Jumping in might be the right solution for some businesses, but I guess there are still a lot where a jump start is not the best solution for corporate blogging. For special interest blogs jumpstarting seems to be a good choice.
Tom Lindstrom | March 18th, 2008 at 2:25 pm #
It´s easy to start blogging.All you need is a niche that you know a lot about, it is easier to come up with new and interesting blog posts.