Here today; gone tomorrow? I have no clue what happened to the original post and the once dead link, but it did make me think about the importance of a blog archive.
One of the first things I noticed about BloodhoundBlog was the tremendous amount of useful information in the archives. It’s very possible that back then I spent more time poking through old stuff then keeping up with the first page, and still today, if I need to jump start my brain with an idea about marketing or I’m looking for an example of how to tackle a complex real estate issue, BHB is the first place I look because of it’s extensive archive.
TheBrickRanch archive is always in the back of my mind when I write for my blog. I want to build a complete real estate-pedia for the Dayton area on TBR, so I try to make the work there vital and useful enough to provide content for the future. I sit down and write with one person in mind, but I want to write for the person I don’t know; the person who will find this a year from now, or two or three years from now. Is the information timeless? I understand that not everything we write can be pertinent to the future, and sometimes I just want to have fun, but when someone uses the search box, please, I hope there is some there, there.
Blogs are an ever evolving medium- organic, fluctuating, there’s an ebb and flow to blogging that lends itself to change. I’ve changed a few things on TBR lately, and some of the posts I wrote last year needed to be updated accordingly. As I’ve grown, both as a blogger, and as a real estate agent, I’ve gone back into my archives and changed posts to make them stronger, added pingbacks from one post to another to make each post more relevant and provide more information. It’s general blog maintenance that encourages a more dynamic and beneficial use of the blog.
I want my posts to converse and link with each other, just like a conversation. When we talk with someone we’ve known for years, we reference old conversations- “remember when we talked about…?” That’s a natural flow to talking that works great in a blog. If I’ve written something one day, and later I can expand on it, a link goes up to the earlier post, I’ve got a pingback, and the thought process circles and grows, like this: I don’t like images in my posts, and it occurred to me while writing this that words can last much longer than stock images which tend toward the trendy- very similar, in my mind, to a fashion magazine. Why visually date my work before the reader even has a chance to plunge into the writing, which hopefully is still relevant? A compromise just came to mind- use the images for the first page, current content, and pitch them for the older material. I might could get myself on board with that one.
What if I’ve changed my mind about something? The natural flow of conversation would not be to delete that previous post. but to embrace the dynamic process that lead me to the change, and discuss it upfront: Here’s the reason I once thought that way but now think this, with links to sites that proved me wrong, and pingbacks to the previous posts, showing a logical progression of thought. Deleting posts creates frustration for your readers and leaves unanswered questions hanging in the air.
“See that fella over there? He’s 20 years old. In 10 years, he’s got a chance to be a star. Now that fella over there, he’s 20 years old, too. In 10 years he’s got a chance to be 30.” (Courtesy of Casey Stengal, I have made my first baseball analogy. Does that make me an honorary Bloodhound guy?) Blogging has benefits that dead tree publishing does not. Your marketing mailers are throw aways, the blog post should be a keeper. By writing with one eye on your archives using deep linking and the wiki-way you can make sure your content’s got a chance to be a star.
Eric Blackwell says:
Teri- You are not just honorary (grin). You ARE one of the guys…just cuter! 😉 Nice baseball analogy!
Great point about archives. BHB’s reads like a history book of the RE.net and it is amazing to see things evolve so quickly. And in so many quirky ways.
Even our mistakes and errors in judgment are valuable. In fact I think they get more valuable with time.
July 17, 2008 — 5:49 pm
Teri Lussier says:
Eric-
shucks. 🙂
I think discussing mistakes and errors and what we’ve learned from them, are what shows clients that we are capable of thinking and reasoning. It’s a smart way to handle what is going to happen to everyone.
Not only that, but screen shots and RSS feeds live on. d’oh!
July 17, 2008 — 6:04 pm
Teri Lussier says:
For example: That should have said ‘is’ what shows clients that we are capable of thinking and reasoning. 😀
Again I say, d’oh!
July 17, 2008 — 6:07 pm
Landflip says:
This was a great post…I do think it is important to reflect on previous post and acknowledge the errors in our thoughts. Just like life…it is important to learn from our mistakes and change our way of thinking.
July 17, 2008 — 6:46 pm
Teri Lussier says:
>This was a great post
Thanks!
Growing an archive can acknowledge our own growth from our mistakes, but I think more importantly it gives us an opportunity to expand on what we’ve written and continue to build.
One important skill I’ve tried to learn from Greg, and Brian as well- I’m better at it on TBR than here- is to use what I’ve already written and add to it. Use your listings post to discuss a neighborhood in general. Use a listing post to discuss marketing in another post. Use a post about a real estate issue and explain how it played out for a client. The constant back and forth between this post and that post adds a cohesiveness to the whole blog and cements our thoughts about real estate in a way that can make more sense for our readers today, but also for readers in the future.
July 17, 2008 — 7:12 pm
Thomas Johnson says:
“adds a cohesiveness to the whole blog and cements our thoughts about real estate”
Like the bricks and mortar in the walls of a stout Brick Ranch?
July 18, 2008 — 7:44 am
Teri Lussier says:
>Like the bricks and mortar in the walls of a stout Brick Ranch?
You’re on to me. 😉
July 18, 2008 — 8:25 am
Geno Petro says:
“I want my posts to converse and link with each other…”
And this is what makes a great local blog and a great local blogger. I sneak over to Dayton O-HI O every once and a while for a peek.
July 18, 2008 — 10:21 am
Bawldguy Talking says:
You keep amazin’ me.
You’ve always been one of the guys, as you’ve always thought like one. Duh.
What put you over the top with the baseball geeks is using a Casey Stengal quote.
Another one: ‘My kingdom for a baseball player.’ Said during stint as Mets’ manager in their first year ever.
July 18, 2008 — 11:46 am
Teri Lussier says:
Thanks Geno, and I enjoy an occassional cruise up to Chi-town, see what’s up.
July 18, 2008 — 1:42 pm
Teri Lussier says:
Hey there Jeff!
Found a great site- thought of you. Enjoy: http://www.davidbeckham.com/ 🙂
July 18, 2008 — 1:44 pm
Bawldguy Talking says:
That’s just mean, wench.
July 18, 2008 — 1:49 pm
Teri Lussier says:
Yeah, I’m mean:
Like all Bloodhounds, we are smart, frisky and fiercely independent. We are committed to an idea of excellence that will flush the bums, the con-men and the crybabies out of the real estate industry. If you yearn to have your failures excused, your moral lapses absolved or your boo-boos kissed, seek elsewhere.
Not just words, words to live by! 😀
OTOH, you will notice that I’m not quoting Beckham.
July 18, 2008 — 1:58 pm
Bawldguy Talking says:
There IS that. 🙂
July 18, 2008 — 2:04 pm
Mary Pope-Handy says:
Teri,
It’s nice to view the archives to “catch up” with favorite bloggers and see what they have been writing here on the BHB.
Something else about blog posts living on forever that has really hit home with me recently is that the cumulative efforts in all those posts have an ongoing benefit even if we later hit a patch when we cannot write as much. I was very busy with personal stuff much of this year but my blog kept bringing me contacts and leads – what a huge help it was!
July 19, 2008 — 9:32 am
Teri Lussier says:
Hi Mary-
Always nice to see you. 🙂
>the cumulative efforts in all those posts have an ongoing benefit even if we later hit a patch when we cannot write as much.
That’s a very good point! Substantial archives will continue to pull well with organic searches.
July 19, 2008 — 6:26 pm