Is Blogging Broken? Is The Future of Blogging Paid Access?

Something is going on. It might be happening slowly, but I think it might be happening nonetheless.

… And I’m aware that this topic might potentially be upsetting to some people who love to see everything be free, or who believe in the power of giving and community (as I do).

It needs to be addressed, however. I like to think I’m smart enough to be looking forward on things and think outside the box. And, with today’s post, I’m going to go outside the box for a bit. In reality, I’m not alone in this line of thought.

Broken

Is Blogging Broken?

Last night, on my Facebook page, I asked about the future of blogging. Now, I posted it late on a Sunday night, so I didn’t expect much response. But, one of the responses I got was from Donovan, who said…

Everyone will have an audience of 1.

Blogging is a very saturated medium now. New bloggers can attest to the difficulty of building an audience today. You can do it, of course, but it is a lot of work.

But, then, once you have an audience, then what? I don’t care how much people praise the virtues of community and sharing… at the end of the day, money will become important to you because the ROI starts to become important with this stuff. So, where are you at with monetization options?

Well, you could go with ads and end up commoditizing yourself just like almost every other blog on the Internet, and make a few nickels in the process. Or you could begin selling things (as I recommend).

What you’ll find, however, is that sometimes a blog can feel like a big headwind when you’re trying to market products. Why is that?

  • Because there are so many blogs, most of your readers are simply scanning what you have to say (if they even notice at all). Therefore, you’re dealing with scattered attention units, at best. You’re not getting their full focus. I’m sure this varies from niche to niche, but I know I see this quite a bit.
  • On a related note, most blogs are schizophrenic in their design, with multiple calls to action pulling people in multiple directions. Combine that with multiple banner ad units (as most people do), and you just compound the problem.
  • Because of so many blogs inundating people with free info all the time, the reading audience becomes conditioned to expect everything to be free. So, you have a community of tire-kickers.

The Tire-Kicker Mentality

Now, I’m about to call a spade a spade because… well… that’s what I do. :) Please don’t get offended.

Most people who read this very blog are tire-kickers. What I mean by that is you guys act like you want to make money with your blog, when all you do is dabble with it. You read blogs like mine, but you’re not willing to invest much of anything to actually pull it off. In fact, when somebody like myself or another person in this business makes an offer that will legitimately help you pull it off, that offer often gets met with suspicion.

Now, I don’t BLAME you for that. Let’s look at the environment that we’re in here. Complete and TOTAL information saturation online. Which, of course, leads people to engage in louder and more audacious marketing tactics to cut through the noise. Which leads people to question the honesty of it. Which then comes full circle yet again. Rinse and repeat.

I think the saturation with free information out there is devaluing the information. It is coming at us all with such volume and quantity that we can’t make heads or tails of it.

And that makes tire-kickers… people who will lurk, read and occasionally comment… but in the end, will never pay you a dime. Because they think the answer is out there for free somewhere else and they’re too overwhelmed to notice good information when it hits them upside the head.

The Nobility Of Sharing

In making these observations, I don’t want anybody to conclude that I am against the idea of the free sharing of information. If I were, I would have never gotten into blogging in the first place. :)

Some of the most successful bloggers online have gotten to that point by sharing and providing value. I think it is EXTREMELY important and a very sound philosophy for any blogger.

So, where do we draw the line, then?

The harsh truth is that, as much as people say they value free info, they really don’t. You can put out the most fantastic blog post in the world and it is going to likely be forgotten in a week (the real-time nature of Twitter is only making this factor a lot worse). Yet we know that, when you get somebody to pay for something (even if it is a super-small amount), their level of participation and dedication is much higher.

You’ll have a smaller audience, but one which pays a lot more attention and will ultimately be a more tight-knit community.

If we look at many who are doing well in the internet marketing game, you’ll notice something:

  • They hardly ever post to their blog.
  • Their blogs are usually kinda crappy looking.
  • They barely mess around with Twitter at all.
  • They focus on email, and they market things to their email list.
  • They don’t willy-nilly, freely share everything they know. You have to pay them to “touch the robe”.

Many bloggers rip on people like that, while simultaneously trying to achieve what they’ve achieved. On the other hand, most bloggers do the exact opposite (give info away freely, spend a lot of time on blog design, spend hours on Twitter, etc.) and don’t make any money.

So, who’s right?

Is Apple Changing The Marketplace?

Apple has pretty much perfected the art of making money. Anybody who pays any attention at all realizes that Apple is one of the most brilliant marketing companies in the world.

One of the things that has made them so much money is, of course, the App Store. There’s a lot of stuff for free in there (in fact, most). But, there are also a lot of paid apps. Many of them are 99 cents. The audience in the App Store has been conditioned to think that $4.99 is expensive, which is hilarious. :)

But, look at what’s happening in there. The audience is being “trained” to make small little micro-purchases for what is, essentially, content.

Just recently, Apple launched the subscription-billing model for the App Store. Now, I think they screwed up some things with their rules for that, but there is still a STRONG model there. It also led Google to release the OnePass system which will allow publishers to charge small micro-payments for content on a recurring basis.

Anybody who pays any attention to mobile at all knows just how FAST this segment is growing right now. Mobile is going through it’s own gold rush right now, similar to the internet boom of the late 90′s. Eventually, the space will mature. When the dust settles, though, I think we might be looking at a new reality… one where people are willing and almost prefer to make small micro-payments for content they value because they think it is worth it.

Paid Blogging?

… Which brings me back to blogging.

In the fairly recent past, I’ve seen many bloggers depart the world of blogging. My friend, Nathan Hangen, is no longer doing it. Jim Kukral isn’t doing it anymore. Darren Rowse has mostly guest bloggers now. Yaro Starak and Glen Allsopp are both moving to a magazine model where others will do a lot of their writing for them. Gary Vaynerchuk has been a little sparse lately, but even chimed in with a video in which he speculates about this same topic…

If we look at the IM world, Ryan Deiss recently came out, declared blogging to be broken, and decided to switch to an email-only setup and charge $10/month for it.

Things are changing. If it isn’t an outright paid model, you’re at least seeing bloggers try to move themselves out from the demands of writing for free all the time by hiring others.

Is this where we’re heading? I think, for some, the answer is yes. And, it isn’t a bad thing, because you’re likely going to find that the best information stays behind a pay-wall. Like it or not, reality is reality.

I’m Brainstorming My Future

I’m gonna be honest…. I’ve been thinking about this lately. I don’t completely know the answer, but I will tell you this, from a personal perspective…

I do have concerns about branding myself too closely to the medium of blogging.

Why? Because “blogging” has a shelf life. It won’t be here in the same form forever. Publishing will be here forever, but will we be doing things the same way as we are right now? Likely not. I’ve been in this business long enough to know how much has changed. And it will change to that degree (if not more) again as I stay in this business another 10 years.

So, I’ve been thinking about my branding, my blogging, my future. I have no doubt I’ll remain in the internet publishing business… I just don’t exactly know what that will look like. :)

Will I ponder a model of paid access? You bet I will. I’m not an idiot. I get mentally TIRED when people ask me dumb questions about blogging that I’ve answered a billion times already on my blog. Why is that happening? Because the blog is free, because they’re reading a TON of other stuff, too… and because they’re so damn overwhelmed that everything I say goes in one ear and out the other.

So, I haven’t quite figured it out yet. And, that’s why the title of today’s post ends with a question mark. :)

Because I’d like your opinion. I want you to post a comment and let me know your thoughts.

So, Here’s What I Want You To Do Next…

  • Post a comment below…. Do you think the culture of free is harming the blogosphere these days? Do you think there is merit to micro-payments as a form of paid access?
  • If you think this is an interesting post, then retweet it. :)

Stay awesome, my friends.

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  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    You’re right about that. Most people wouldn’t get away with it.

  • http://AllenJFuller.com/ Allen J Fuller

    I definitely see that. Which is why I brought up the subscriptions with a defined duration.

    People as a group have a really hard time valuing things, and we have all been burned by someone not letting us unsubscribe easily.

    It just seems to me the combination of $ and defined duration might help reduce friction and increase focus and attention. Agreeing to $1-10 a month for an undetermined period of time causes me to pause more than $100 a month for 6 months. I can value that money easier and see if the promised information and training is worth that value. A single life long subscription seems to general to me at least in non-news situations (news, movie reviews, tech news/ reviews would work). A defined duration product would increase specificity on the producer’s side and allow us to make a series of highly targeted courses.

    At least that is the theory I am throwing time and effort behind moving forward.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    It is all about the value proposition. There are many people who WOULD subscribe at $10/month to Ryan Deiss. The man knows what he’s doing… and you’re not going to find that kind of info in any magazine.

    It is all about the value. Usually, a paid setup offers better info… whereas an ad-driven setup is just designed to drive page views.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Yeah, seeing more people go that route.

    Makes me think about how this mode of thought could affect the future of my own “Inner Circle” program. :-) Hmmm….

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Agreed. What I meant was that, with current terminology, what we’re doing here is called “blogging”. So, from an SEO and “getting found” perspective, it is “blogging”.

    If one were searching for information on how to do this, they’d probably look at it as “blogging”.

    That’s my point… I think we have a thing here where the reality of what we’re doing as outgrown the word “blog”. Potentially.

  • Scott Aloha

    “Stay awesome” rings a bit fake. “BE awesome” can hit the mark, however.

    So, then…

    Be awesome, my friends.

  • http://website-in-a-weekend.net/ Dave Doolin

    I can’t even think of anyone. Most people I know who are successful seem to cycle between paying what takes to get to the next level, then absorbing that material, then repeating.

    I’ve never heard of anyone successful who didn’t spend at least a few years “sleeping under their desk.” Tim Ferriss writes about it, as does Erica Douglass. Painful. Apparently necessary.

  • Heather

    Oh definitely, not thinking of charging until the summer at least because of this application type thing I’m developing in college; its a long story.

  • http://marktzk.com/ Mark Tosczak

    I do wonder if we’ll get to the point where most solo operators, amateurs and part-timers simply can’t compete because it’ll be big blogs with full-time staffs turning out really high quality content that get the lion’s share of the traffic. But we’ll see – maybe there’s something else around the corner that none of us are anticipating. The good thing is I think there is more willingness to pay for information online, thanks to iTunes, Kindle and others.

    Good topic to blog on, too.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Yeah, that just comes down to basic marketing and split testing to determine what they want.

  • http://nathanhangen.com/blog Nathan Hangen

    Do you know why people don’t get it? Because many bloggers aren’t being honest with their readers, that’s why.

    Do what they do, and ignore what they say IMO – and that includes their blog “advice.”

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    So, I guess you aren’t awesome then? ;-)

  • http://erica.biz ericabiz

    Great post, Dave. It’s inspired me to write something similar (about a different but related topic.) I do tend to go through cycles of educate->create->educate->create. And I, too, find I’ve built a fairly large list of mostly “tire kickers”. I subscribe to the Doberman Dan newsletter and a few months ago, he stopped blogging for similar reasons.

    I gotta go write. Watch for my post this Thursday. ;)

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Look forward to it. :-)

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Seems that blogging might be a gateway drug. ;-)

  • Julie

    My two cents as a non-popular blogger: as one who writes a blog purely for an outlet of my own ups, downs and learnings as a human and who believes that most of what I have to share is universal and if one person reads it and is led towards the proverbial “light”-then I am satisfied. This area only gets murky when one either is a) trying to make a living via their blog and/or b) truly believes they should be paid for their writing. These areas aren’t wrong or bad, but if they are a truth for you and it’s not working out as you would like or wish, then your blogging experience is “broken”. And furthermore, I am currently paying $20/month to recieve a “blog post” in my inbox from a writer who’s insights I value. Content is king.

  • http://www.informationhighwaycardandgiftshop.com Lou Barba

    Hi David,

    I’ve tried to create a blog that resembles coming into a store with a lot of things going on besides selling stuff. If I picture myself gooing to the mall, I’d probably avoid the stores that I had to pay admission to get in. Maybe I’m old fashioned, or weird, but I feel the same way about the internet. I’d have to advertise somewhere to let me people know how good my content is so that they would pay to come in. I guess my blog will be for free, for now anyhow.

    Lou Barba

  • http://tonyclingan.com Tony Clingan

    Hi David

    It’s interesting that you raise this just a few days after Ryan’s post on The Death Of Blogging, I had thought his motive was more about moving his big and I would suggest unresponsive mailing list, he has gone more into the newbie trap market in 2010 into a smaller paying audience

    Looking at it through your eyes I can see that there is a clear point of putting clear water between those who want everything for free and those who expect to pay for products

    You raise the point of people treating offers with suspicion, is that a surprise given the sort of stuff that flooded out of Clickbank in 2010? we want good products we want to be better at what we do but it’s an issue of trust, not in you personally but in the way the market is going, in any other industry people behaving that way would be drummed out, online there seems to be a ho hum boys will be boys attitude, until it is dealt with trust will not return

    So with respect David most of us are not trye kickers we just want and expect something better, I’m just not sure it’s going to happen

    Thanks for sharing Tony

  • http://website-in-a-weekend.net/ Dave Doolin

    Beware blogging… a gateway drug to marketing…

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Yeah, the suspicion thing has been fostered by the environment… Clickbank products among them. So, no, it isn’t a surprise and I don’t take it personally at all. I just choose not to go down that path, and if that resonates with people, that’s awesome.

    However, I’ll also say this…. it has never been easier to tell the crap from the good stuff these days, as long as you’re willing to be an informed consumer. These days, if a product is crap, somebody will talk about it. :-)

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Well, retail is a pretty different animal than what we’re talking about here, really.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Well, retail is a pretty different animal than what we’re talking about here, really.

  • Anonymous

    I think the culture of free has created a bunch of skeptical people who now look at every free offer with suspicion expecting that there will be something else coming down the road that they will be hit with. I think they all now expect that things will have a fee no matter how small and have just accepted it to be. Whether it is right or not that is just the way it is. A combination of excessive junk coming in the inbox and information overload. Great article.

  • http://twitter.com/kaiaustinn Kai Austin

    Yeah. You should definitely have to pay for good content. I’m just getting my blog off the ground and already I’ve been thinking about ways to not be so tied to it having to post something EVERY week. I guess it’s because I’ve been doing my work for a while offline that switching to an online model is taking some getting used to. We’ll see.

  • http://www.siteuncle.com Girish Anand

    I totally agree with you , but answer in your reply as well, my issue is not full blog in paid access. i have no objection for paid products like ebooks and like you have in Blog Master Club. But why you are supporting 90% content into paid access?

  • Odilon Correa

    Paid access? It can be a clever solution. But only if not too expensive. I mean, this way you’ll have almost the same number of readers.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    I’m not, necessarily. The ratio will be different for everybody, and today’s post merely posed the question.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Not offended and I agree. Not about my drivel, but about the need for marketing. :-)

    The word “drivel” means nonsense, and whether you’re talking about me or anybody else, I would disagree that what’s being published is mostly drivel. Are you seeing a lot of overlap? Yes. Is it coming at you like a firehose? Yes. But, is it nonsense? No.

    Definitely see where you’re coming from, tho.

  • http://www.itinerantentrepreneur.com/journal/ Robert Dempsey

    Great points Allen, however it sounds like there are two different types of products being discussed here. In your example you’re talking about a course, whereas David seems to be talking about a continuous stream of content. Those are two very different beasts sold in different ways, and to different buyers.

    I have unsubscribed to many monthly subscriptions though for the exact reasons you mention. However I’m to a point where I have very specific problems I need solved. So for me ongoing charges are not something I want or need.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Thanks, Linda. :-)

    And, you’re very right. I think the one caveat might be if your product/service IS information, which is where I’m at. But, again, it doesn’t change the purpose of the blog… just perhaps in the way you go about it.

  • http://twitter.com/virtualvip Jeff Yablon

    Well, as I said . . . you can take issue with that word.

    Thing is, after a time, whether or not the contents of the firehose contain good stuff of not, that good stuff gets overwhelmed by a lot of garbage, which causes disaffection relative to the entire process. So we end up with . . . umm . . . drivel like Murdoch/NewsCorp’s The Daily. And it will do something for NewsCorp and more for Apple, but very little for the readers.

    Yet, it will attract way more traffic than you or I could ever hope to.

    Making blogging look less attractive to all but the most intrepid among us.

    Argggggh.

  • http://www.freelancetourist.com Eileen

    Allen,
    I feel the same way as your dad. Every blog I go to that pops some selling point up in my face is not one I will buy from because it feels shoved. The ones who want $$$ per month are also caution for me since it all adds up. Where do you spend your dollars and what is left out of those monthly charges? Finding good content under $15 is what I look for or go to the library. Buying books is too expensive. With ebooks, am hoping the libraries get more and more. No selling back books when you bought an ebook.

    So I am with your dad

    Eileen

  • Swaapslaap

    It’s been too long since a blog post challenged me so deeply. I’m a baby when it comes to internet marketting. When ever a market becomes as saturated as the bloging market something has to change, someone is dreaming up an idea right now that is so simple and so obvious the rest of the world will wonder why they did not think of it. There is a new world waiting. Posts like this one brings us closer to it

  • http://jessicamstone.com Jessica Stone

    This has been the most popular conversation topic as of late. I’m a writer who got sick of how difficult it was to pitch and publish in mainstream media, so I turned to blogging in 2006. A few months later, thanks to my posts (and not my MA in journalism), I got my first clip in The NY Times. A year later, I was featured on TV.

    I’ve never charged for my content nor did advertising, but I felt like the blogging did pay off because of these “lucky” breaks. Now that mainstream media don’t mean a thing, I’m questioning where to go from here. It used to be that the holy grail was getting an agent and getting a book published, but I’m not so sure. Perhaps going the App Store route is the way forward.

  • http://www.ebooks4writers.com Sherryl

    I agree, David. I think the culture of free is harming more than blogging. Recent discussions about ebooks end up being lists of complaints about how much money publishers are making out of ebooks (no printing, paper or shipping) and how ebooks should be no more than $4.99. And they completely forget about the author, because publishers are baulking at paying more than 20% royalties – do the maths. (Yes, I’m a published author with more than 40 kid’s books out there and I still need a day job so the thought of a drop in royalties freaks me out.)
    I think the problem is not that people don’t listen to you, but that there is always someone else out there saying stuff like “You can make $10,000 a month doing hardly any work” and that’s the one they want to listen to because it sounds *easy*.
    If moving away from free content gets rid of those people, good. I think people will start to want more reliable, substantial information and yes, they might well pay to get it. But we’ll have to “prove” we are worth paying for first, and I guess that brings us back to blogging content!

  • http://AllenJFuller.com/ Allen J Fuller

    At the end of the day we each have to realize that information that helps us is worth money.

    I am not advocating a continuation of a free system that keeps talented people from helping me or others move forward.

    There is a tedious balance here we have to figure out.

  • http://AllenJFuller.com/ Allen J Fuller

    This is true. And I don’t want to forget that it is usually easier to undercharge than over charge, at least if our primary desire is to help people while also surviving.

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts David, great discussion!

  • http://AllenJFuller.com/ Allen J Fuller

    This is true, I am trying to note that many issues are not easily solved by a constant stream of content, free or paid.

    Often we have a problem to solve. So why not create a specific plan to solve that problem?

    Why talk about general business or blogging or whatever when we can break things down intelligently and price accordingly.

    Specific problem -> specific solution.

    If we want to charge for a constant stream we open ourselves up to diluting the message. I think about this…

    If Techcrunch started to charge for many it would be worth it. But there could always be someone like Scoble who is sponsored by a company wanting to create new ways to get their name out there that would post content for free.

    Who wins here?

    We don’t know for sure yet, but at least in my mind the hyper targeted problem/ solution relationship is the only way to maintain an income in an information economy.

  • http://my-3ds.com Nintendo 3DS Freak

    Your right… After reading your post I am considering charging 99c for my most up to date info, tips n tricks, etc. I think I’ll hunt around WP for a PayPal subscription plugin ASAP. If the IM Gurus can charge mega bucks for CR*P wortless garbage I’m sure a Pro-Blogger like me can charge a little for the best info in my niche…

  • Anonymous

    Very interesting, David. It’s exciting to be on the cusp of a new wave. I still think that blogs – especially if they have a strong subscriber base – are in a great position to make the most of the ‘pay for content’ revolution.

    If anything, I think it’s super important to make one’s blog attractive and to write insanely useful content. However ‘pay for content’ will finally work out, the most important ingredient will be to have a big group of loyal readers who are willing to pay for content.

    Mary | A-List Blogging Bootcamps

  • Anonymous

    I feel the same way. Look at going to college. When I was going just a few years ago I noticed that the non traditional students like myself worked harder to get good grades than the traditional students who had there college expenses paid for them. They took for granted the money their benefactors put into their education. They had no real skin in their education, so if they dropped out they weren’t out anything but their parents who paid for everything were.

  • Tony

    I’m with Mike CJ. I’m outside of the mmo/blogging and tech niches. The competition is unbelievably weak. And my audience is far from jaded.

    That reminds me, a lot of IM’ers are saying the Product Launches are dying. Well, I just started doing them. It’s going great!

    I think the problem, in the blogging about blogging niche, is this. Most people who read blogs like this are people who write blogs like this. Is your list full of tire kickers or people selling the same type of stuff you are selling (promoting the same products you are promoting)?

    Truth is, the majority of people who could actually benefit from this information aren’t searching for it. It’s the “small business paradox”. They are small businesses for a reason.

    It ends up being a lot of opportunity seekers, selling the opportunity. Dan Kennedy touches on this a few times in some of his material.

    Do I think “free” is getting out of control on the Internet. Yeah, I do. But I think Vaynerchuk is right.

  • http://www.shiftfwd.com Naomi Niles

    I never put that much stock into blogging myself. I guess because I started working on websites in 2001 and blogging wasn’t common then. And then when it started getting popular, most blogs were personal journals.

    That kind of always stuck in my mind (the personal journaling bit). So, I’ve never felt comfortable putting all my cookies in that basket. I have a blog that I update about once per week now. First one I updated with any regularity. I like to use it to start discussions, share some advice, and connect with people.

    But, I don’t consider it a direct source of income and I doubt I ever will. I might give away some general advice and what-not. But, the advanced and custom stuff and direct access to my brain, you pay for. I didn’t spent a decade working in this medium and investing tons of time and money into developing my skills for nothin’. :)

    I’m curious to see where it goes. Only one thing is certain. As you mention, things always change.

  • http://twitter.com/mystoso Christine Fernand

    When I studied for my degree in publishing 12 years ago, it was obvious that content online was going to revolutionise publishing. There was a lot of debate about business models, payment, making money from content (I could go on) and my dissertation was on Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs). DOIs were a solution to identifying the owner of the rights to digital content (music, text, video) and described by one expert as being as easy as ‘nailing a blamange to the ceiling’.

    12 years later, although I can see some earlier questions have been answered, the publshing industry continues to be in a state of flux and I feel that it will be some time before it is obvious what shape the publishing industry will take. And with 3-D printing technology (fusing layers of powdered metals, ceramics and other materials to create actual 3-D objects) there will be no longer any boundaries left between producer and consumer. We may be able to create physical books in the home.

    I am leaving the subject I know, but I wanted to try and put publishing (content) into the bigger picture of where new technology is in relaation to the consumer.

    Back to blogging, 12 years ago (sorry) one of the phrases was ‘everyone is a publisher’ and as we have seen, by removing barriers there is a mass of information of varying degrees of quality. As the comments suggest we, the consumers, neither have nor want to spend money in case it is not what we want.

    As in a bookshop, one can peruse books and ‘test’ them before purchase, blogging allows the consumer/reader to ‘try before buying’. If the content is good then the reader will be more inclined to pay for more of the same. To conclude I see blogging as a loss leader. It is a platform to display your wares and encourage people to buy. It is also a place to build a reputation as an influencer within your subject. Hopefully this will lead to your content standing out.

  • theartchannel

    Thanks Rusty!
    As a ‘free blogger’ who has ‘walked away’ from one blog because of many of the issues the preceding comments have mentioned. This model really makes sense and seems ‘doable’ in my particular circumstances – thanks!
    (It’s not that everyone else’s comments haven’t been helpful, it’s just that – at this point – a lot of them are ‘over my head’ in terms of techno-speak).

  • Anonymous

    You pose a tough but good question David.

    I have been trying to figure out where I go now myself. I have been blogging for a few years now and have acquired a lot of skills. I know how to set up a blog from start to finish… well as much as finished as possible ie. theme installation, plug in installation and populating with blog posts. I know how to set up FB pages and Twitter profiles. I also know how to do all the social bookmarking tasks. But then I get to this mind set that there are others out there that also know how to do all this and that stops me because I don’t know how to make what I know what to do into a work able business model. Locally I don’t have much competition but globally my competitors are many.

    And then there is the information overload I know others face with how to do all this stuff online and I am like “I don’t want to add to that overload, but I got skills I know people need.” I don’t want to work for “the man”. I want to work for myself.

    I have always been on to just DO it. But unless your writing for someone else blogging for yourself doesn’t pay the bills. Reading the comments on this post tho have helped me some in figuring out a direction.

    So thank you all who have put in well thought out comments to help those like myself figure things out a little more. This is one reason I love blogging still tho.In cases like questions like these it is great to have a community to interact with that might have an idea you haven’t yet thought of.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Suggestion: Local marketing.

    It doesn’t matter that you have competition globally. You can dominate locally with small businesses who have no idea how to do any of this stuff, but know they need to.

  • http://davidrisley.com David Risley

    Honestly, the only people who I’ve heard say product launches are dying are the people who get tired of being on the receiving end of one… or the people who don’t do it right and don’t make much money. But, product launches are NOT dying. As you’ve found. :-)

    And, yes, the blogging niche is rather incestuous, no doubt. But, most of my readers are not selling competing stuff to mine. Some are, and that’s fine.

    But, we in this niche often forget that the Internet is frickin HUGE, and that we’re all sitting in a little bubble.

  • http://www.genecolemanonline.com Gene Coleman

    I don’t really know, but I do know I have a very hard time trying this for two years and I rarely have encouagement.Maybe i have changed to much.

  • http://prosperouscoachblog.com/ Rhonda Hess

    I’ve felt a ripple in the force too. I’ve only been blogging for two years and it’s been a great way to build up my list so far. I’ve recommended blogging as a way to build trust and credibility (as well as their list) to a lot of coaches and service providers too. I’m getting double the daily subscriptions I used to get since installing Pop-Up Dominator!

    BIG BUT… my open and clickthroughs are way down, so are my comments and I’ve heard that from a lot of others. It’s like we’ve hit some critical mass in the amount of information blasting out to people. And I know I’m reading less myself — can’t keep up with it.

    Still, charging for this kind of touch-base-with-value content goes against the grain. There would be a big “retraining” period and what happens with your list then, do they just drop off and go away until everyone is charging for it? It would take a long time to turn that big boat around.