Hewson, Jim
JHewson at nciinc.com
Thu Aug 6 15:00:19 CDT 2009
I, for one, like the email format. Most blogs are hidden from me. The company I work for restricts access to ALL blogs including those by Microsoft. They use a proxy server and it filters a LOT of stuff. I have found a work around... I use a laptop at work so have to disable the locate network connection (Cat5), turn off the connection to proxy server, locate the local wireless connection, log on and then sometimes I can get to a blog. There are some customer sites that also use a proxy to limit employees access to the internet. Besides, most of the blogs that I have encountered (at work and at home) contain little substance and lots of arrogant "experts" that chide the questioner. They do that by answering with responses like: "We discussed this last month. Don't you read all the posts?" or "I am tired of answering the same question - do a search on the archives." Jim -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Kenneth Ismert Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 1:55 PM To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com Subject: Re: [AccessD] Moderator Message OK, I've been harping on the way things are, so I want to offer some positive suggestions: 1. Produce web content, not email content. Our content needs to be visible to the outside world. A mail digest is hidden from search engines. Even the archive is a black hole -- I've never seen any AccessD post show up on any web search, ever. Someone tell me if they've ever seen AccessD in even the first ten pages of search results. 2. Move to a blog format. I increasingly rely on blog posts in my technical searches. I appreciate that someone has taken the care to produce a cogent post that answers a particular topic. Blog posts can be perma-linked, tagged, and categorized -- a huge boon for search engines. You also get a constant, fresh stream of new content, which boosts search rankings. One of the problems with an email thread is that you get: Question, debate, flames, baiting, then off-topic rambling near the end. Sometimes there is an answer in there, sometimes not. That's why email-thread format groups are my last option in search. But, if you reframe the email thread as an incubator for a blog post, you present the opportunity for the person with the best response to summarize their post as a blog entry. That's easy, because most of the article is already written. Everyone wins -- blog posters get web exposure, questions get distilled into a clear and easy-to-follow format, answers get vetted by a community of experts, and you gain in search engine rankings which will draw new subscribers. 3. Co-opt Experts Exchange It burns me that experts-exchange, AKA 'drooling idiots trying to charge money for non-answers', is so dominating in technical search results. They understand SEO, and are clobbering use in terms of exposure, even if they have nothing to offer. What a waste! We have an incredible pool of talent, that, given convenient tools, could handily beat expert sex change in terms of quality of content. But, if we keep hiding our light under a bushel, we really need to accept that AccessD is a private club of friends who chat about what's going on in their technical lives, and occasionally answer an Access question, too. -Ken -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com ################################################################################ If you have received this message in error, please contact the sender immediately and be aware that the use, copying, or dissemination of this information is prohibited. This email transmission contains information from NCI Information Systems, Inc. that may be considered privileged or confidential and is intended solely for the named recipient. ################################################################################