“How to Blog, Muppet Show-Style” plus 1 more |
How to Blog, Muppet Show-Style Posted: 07 Mar 2011 11:01 AM PST This guest post is by Marjorie Clayman of Clayman Advertising. There are a lot of things that shows like Friends didn't warn teens and twenty-somethings about. For example, you seldom saw, on any episode, scenes where the characters' bodies randomly decided to become overweight or broken down. Monica and Chandler never said, "Yippee! A Saturday! More time to do work!" They certainly didn't hint that sitting down to watch The Muppet Show for nostalgia's sake would inspire a blog post. Life is full of surprises! A lot of people, just like me, have been revisiting the original Muppet Show, which is available on DVD now. What is most interesting about checking back with Kermit, Miss Piggy, Fozzie, and the rest of the muppets is that you discover that the show has an entirely new but equally brilliant meaning when you watch it as an adult. Somehow, Jim Henson was able to create a show that works as well for toddlers as it does for adults. This kind of nuanced, multi-level storytelling can also convert a good blog into a great one. Here are some ideas on how to blog Muppet Show-style. Begin on the surfaceHow did The Muppet Show work for kids? Well, as a kid, how could you not fall in love with the-ultra cute Fozzie Bear and Rowlf the dog? How could you not admire Kermit's tiny flailing arms and Miss Piggy's penchant for punching everyone out? As a blogger, cuteness will probably not work for you unless your target audience is kids. However, what you can concentrate on is the group of people who pass by your blog by chance. They don't know you, they aren't connected with you on Twitter or Facebook, but they end up at your blog anyway. How can you entice these people to stick around? You could try:
Just as adults are not turned off by the cuteness of the muppets (I still melt when I see Kermit's nephew Robin), your regular readers will not be turned away by efforts like these. Be conscious of your audienceOne of the most masterful aspects of The Muppet Show is that Henson and his team were able to write jokes that were horrible, and then they made fun of their own jokes in their script. The horrible jokes probably are hilarious to kids, and adults appreciate the fact that the writers aren't huffing and puffing as if they’re sending out the best comedy sketches ever. When writing a blog, the challenge is not entertaining kids and adults; rather, it is making sure that people familiar and unfamiliar with your subject matter find your blog valuable. How can you accomplish this goal?
Create variations on a themeYou'll see a lot of advice about how to pick the mission of your blog. There is no doubt that this is essential. However, you also need to be able to venture into new ways of bringing those objectives into reality while maintaining your readership. The Muppet Show accomplished this primarily through the guests that they brought on every week. You'd be hard-pressed to find two people more dissimilar than Alice Cooper and Raquel Welch, but both were guests on the show. In both episodes, the show maintained its core integrity—The Muppet Show was still The Muppet Show. How did Henson do that? The infrastructure of the show didn't change. The main characters didn't change. Only the details were altered. How can you do this on your blog?
What stays the same is your tonality, your promise of quality, and your voice. But like The Muppet Show, the details can vary. What do you think? What other lessons can you learn from watching The Muppet Show? How else can you bring that nuanced storytelling to your blog? I'd love to talk about it with you in the comments. Marjorie Clayman is Director of Client Development at Clayman Advertising, a full service marketing communications firm located in Akron, OH. Post from: ProBlogger Blog Tips |
The 11 Definitive Rules of Blogging Posted: 07 Mar 2011 05:02 AM PST Today I thought I’d compile a definitive list of must follow rules for bloggers that all successful blogs follow: I was going to stop at ten, but 11 has a much nicer ring to it, don’t you think? Plus point number 11 brings them all together nicely. This post was inspired by a variety of comments, tweets, and blog posts of late that suggested I or other well-known blogging “experts” teach “rules” or “systems” of blogging. The reality is that there are no rules. While ProBlogger obviously contains a lot of teaching about blogging, I’d never want to suggest that all blogs need to subscribe to a single philosophy of blogging. Rather, this blog is a place where I hope to share what I do, as well as sharing what has and hasn’t work for me (and similarly, to let guest bloggers share their own experiences). The reason I take this approach is that of the numerous blogs that I’ve been involved with over the last nine years, no two blogs have been identical in terms of what has and hasn’t worked. There are some principles that have worked for me, but transfer those ideas to other blogs, and there are no guarantees of success. There are also a few strategies that I personally avoid in blogging that I’ve had little or no success with; however, they’ve worked for others. If anything, the only “rule” of blogging that I’d be brave enough to preach is: find your own way. Most of the successful blogs that I’ve come across have something unique about them. It might be the personality or voice of the blogger, the topic, the design, the fact that they were first, that they’re funny, that they’re comprehensive and thoughtful, that they post 100 times a day, or that they post once a month… But each of them is unique somehow. Successful bloggers tend to forge their own path. Many of them are aware of what works for others and learn by observing, but they also take what they learn, experiment with it for themselves, and let it evolve in a way that fits with them and their audience. Post from: ProBlogger Blog Tips |
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