By David Kirkpatrick and Daniel Roth
10 TECH TRENDS
Why There's No Escaping the Blog
Freewheeling bloggers can boost your product—or destroy it. Either way, they've become a force business can't afford to ignore.
from the Jan. 10, 2005 issue
Early in the evening of Dec. 1, Microsoft revealed that it planned to
take over the world of blogs—the five-million-plus web journals that
have exploded on the Internet in the past few years. The company's
weapon would be a new service called MSN Spaces, online software that
allows people to easily create and maintain blogs. It didn't take long
for the blogging world to do what it does best: swarm around a new
piece of information; push, prod, and poke at it; and leave it either
stronger or a bloody mess. The next day, at the widely read Boing Boing
blog, co-editor Xeni Jardin opted to do the latter. She titled her critique of MSN Spaces "7 Dirty Blogs" and
hilariously sent up the fickle censoring filters Microsoft appeared to
have built in. MSN Spaces prohibited her from starting a blog called
Pornography and the Law or another entitled Corporate Whore Chronicles;
yet World of Poop passed, as did the educational Smoking Crack: A
How-To Guide for Teens. Within the first hour of Jardin's post, five
blogs had linked to it, including the site of widely read San Jose
Mercury News columnist Dan Gillmor. By the end of the day there were
dozens of blogs pointing readers to "7 Dirty Blogs," a proliferation of
links that over the next few weeks topped 300. There were Italian blogs
and Chinese blogs and blogs in Greek, German, and Portuguese. There
were blogs with names like Tie-Dyed Brain Waves, Stubborn Like a Mule,
and LibertyBlog. Each added its own tweak. "Ooooh, that's what I want:
a blog that doesn't allow me to speak my mind," wrote a blogger called
Kung Pow Pig. The conversation had clearly gotten out of Microsoft's
hands.
Typically Microsoft would have taken the hits and kept powering
forward. That is the Microsoft way. For years such behavior has done
little but make people feel defenseless against the company. But this
time Microsoft deployed one of its most important voices to talk back:
not Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer, but Robert Scoble.
Scoble has been at Microsoft only 19 months
and has neither a high-ranking title (he's a "software evangelist" who
works with outside programmers) nor such corporate perks as a window in
his office. What Scoble does have is a blog of his own, Scobleizer, on
which he weighs in daily with opinions about happenings in the tech
world—especially the inner world of Microsoft. On a recent day he
posted nine remarks, each averaging a paragraph, on topics ranging from
how a company programmer had fixed a security bug to the fact that his
wife is becoming a U.S. citizen. Nothing too profound or insightful,
yet Scobleizer has given the Microsoft monolith something it has long
lacked: an approachable human face.
When it came to the criticism emanating from Boing Boing,
Scoble simply... agreed. "MSN Spaces isn't the blogging service for
me," he wrote. Nobody at Microsoft asked Scoble to comment; he just did
it on his own, adding that he would make sure that the team working on
Spaces was aware of the complaints. And he kept revisiting the issue on
his blog. As the anti-Microsoft crowd cried censorship, the nearly
4,000 blogs linking to Scoble were able to see his running commentary
on how Microsoft was reacting. "I get comments on my blog saying, 'I
didn't like Microsoft before, but at least they're listening to us,'"
says Scoble. "The blog is the best relationship generator you've ever
seen." His famous boss agrees. "It's all about openness," says chairman
Bill Gates of Microsoft's public blogs like Scobleizer. "People see
them as a reflection of an open, communicative culture that isn't
afraid to be self-critical."
The blog—short for weblog—can indeed be, as
Scoble and Gates say, fabulous for relationships. But it can also be
much more: a company's worst PR nightmare, its best chance to talk with
new and old customers, an ideal way to send out information, and the
hardest way to control it. Blogs are challenging the media and changing
how people in advertising, marketing, and public relations do their
jobs. A few companies like Microsoft are finding ways to work with the
blogging world—even as they're getting hammered by it. So far, most
others are simply ignoring it. That will get harder: According to blog search-engine and
measurement firm Technorati, 23,000 new weblogs are created every
day—or about one every three seconds. Each blog adds to an inescapable
trend fueled by the Internet: the democratization of power and opinion.
Blogs are just the latest tool that makes it harder for corporations
and other institutions to control and dictate their message. An amateur
media is springing up, and the smart are adapting. Says Richard
Edelman, CEO of Edelman Public Relations: "Now you've got to pitch the
bloggers too. You can't just pitch to conventional media."
Of course, it's difficult to take the phenomenon seriously when
most blogs involve kids talking about their dates, people posting
pictures of their cats, or lefties raging about the right (and vice
versa). But whatever the topic, the discussion of business isn't
usually too far behind: from bad experiences with a product to good
customer service somewhere else. Suddenly everyone's a publisher and
everyone's a critic. Says Jeff Jarvis, author of the blog BuzzMachine,
and president and creative director of newspaper publisher Advance
Publications' Internet division: "There should be someone at every
company whose job is to put into Google and blog search engines the
name of the company or the brand, followed by the word 'sucks,' just to
see what customers are saying."
It all used to be so easy; the adage went "never pick a fight
with anyone who buys ink by the barrel." But now everyone can get ink
for free, launch a diatribe, and—if what they have to say is
interesting to enough people—expect web-enabled word of mouth to carry
it around the world. Unlike earlier promises of self-publishing
revolutions, the blog movement seems to be the real thing. A big reason
for that is a tiny innovation called the permalink: a unique web
address for each posting on every blog. Instead of linking to web
pages, which can change, bloggers link to one another's posts, which
typically remain accessible indefinitely. This style of linking also
gives blogs a viral quality, so a pertinent post can gain broad
attention amazingly fast—and reputations can get taken down just as
quickly. No one knows that better than Dan Rather. In a now infamous
episode, the anchor fell like Goliath to the political bloggers during
the presidential campaign. From the start, it was clear that these
nobodies with laptops were going to have an impact. Conservative blogs,
like the hugely popular InstaPundit, run by Glenn Reynolds, a
University of Tennessee law professor, and Little Green Footballs,
written by web designer Charles Johnson, or left-leaning sites like
Markos Moulitsas's DailyKos, were rallying their hundreds of thousands
of daily readers to whatever cause they alighted on. Then, in
mid-September, came what the blogosphere—the term used in the blogging
world for the blogging world—calls Rathergate. On 60 Minutes, Rather
scooped rivals with memos that offered proof of George W. Bush's
dereliction of duty while in the Texas National Guard—or that seemed
to. Within a half hour of the broadcast, bloggers started questioning
the authenticity of the memos. Others picked up on the suspicions and
added their own thoughts and findings. After denying it at first, CBS
later admitted it could "no longer vouch" for the memos. Soon after the
election, Rather announced his retirement and the blogosphere declared
victory—to the chagrin of the mainstream press. "We used to think that
the news was finished when we printed it," says Jarvis. "But that's
when the news now begins."
Just as Rathergate was breaking, corporate
America got its clearest sign of blogger muscle—in this case, brought
on not by memos but by a Bic pen. On Sept. 12 someone with the moniker
"unaesthetic" posted in a group discussion site for bicycle enthusiasts
a strange thing he or she had noticed: that the ubiquitous, U-shaped
Kryptonite lock could be easily picked with a Bic ballpoint pen. Two
days later a number of blogs, including the consumer electronics site
Engadget, posted a video demonstrating the trick. "We're switching to
something else ASAP," wrote Engadget editor Peter Rojas. On Sept. 16,
Kryptonite issued a bland statement saying the locks remained a
"deterrent to theft" and promising that a new line would be "tougher."
That wasn't enough. ("Trivial empty answer," wrote someone in the
Engadget comments section.) Every day new bloggers began writing about
the issue and talking about their experiences, and hundreds of
thousands were reading about it. Prompted by the blogs, the New York
Times and the Associated Press on Sept. 17 published stories about the
problem—articles that set off a new chain of blogging. On Sept. 19,
estimates Technorati, about 1.8 million people saw postings about
Kryptonite (see chart). Finally, on Sept. 22, Kryptonite announced it would exchange
any affected lock free. The company now expects to send out over
100,000 new locks. "It's been—I don't necessarily want to use the word
'devastating'—but it's been serious from a business perspective," says
marketing director Karen Rizzo. Kryptonite's parent, Ingersoll-Rand,
said it expects the fiasco to cost $10 million, a big chunk of
Kryptonite's estimated $25 million in revenues. Ten days, $10 million.
"Had they responded earlier, they might have stopped the anger before
it hit the papers and became widespread," says Andrew Bernstein, CEO of
Cymfony, a data-analysis company that watches the web for corporate
customers and provides warning of such impending catastrophes. Those who have tried to game the blogosphere haven't done much
better. Mazda, hoping to reach its Gen Y buyers, crafted a blog
supposedly run by someone named Kid Halloween, a 22-year-old hipster
who posted things like: "Tonight I am going to see Ministry and My Life
With the Thrill Kill Cult.É This will be a retro industrial flashback."
He also posted a link to three videos he said a friend recorded off
public-access TV. One showed a Mazda3 attempting to break dance, and
another had it driving off a ramp like a skateboard, leading in both
cases to frightening crashes. Other bloggers sensed a phony in their
midst—the expensively produced videos were tip-offs—and began talking
about it. Suddenly Mazda wasn't being hailed; it was being reviled on
widely read blogs. "Everything about that 'blog' is disgusting," wrote
a poster on Autoblog. Mazda pulled the site after three days and now
says it never intended it to have a long run. "It was a learning
experience," says a spokesman. Tig Tillinghast, who runs the respected
advertising industry blog Marketingvox.com, calls Mazda's blogging
clumsiness "the moral equivalent of doing an English-language print ad
that was written by a native French speaker."
"If you fudge or lie on a blog, you are biting the karmic
weenie," says Steve Hayden, vice chairman of advertising giant Ogilvy
& Mather, which creates blogs for clients. "The negative reaction
will be so great that, whatever your intention was, it will be
overwhelmed and crushed like a bug. You're fighting with very powerful
forces because it's real people's opinions."
It all sounds like so much insanity: a worldwide cabal ready to
pounce on and publicize any error a company makes. Yet it's not as if
corporations are just sitting ducks. For one thing, not every negative
voice is that influential. For every Rathergate or Kryptonite, there
are thousands of other posts that disappear into the ether. Simply
railing against Wal-Mart or repeating the latest conspiracy theory
about Halliburton doesn't guarantee that the blogosphere will take
notice. More important, obsessive blogs can mean
obsessive customers. The witty blogger behind Manolo's Shoe Blog may
bash Birkenstocks and Uggs, but he drools over Coach, Prada, and, of
course, Manolo Blahniks. Before blogs, finding someone like him—a
person who probably helps others make buying decisions—would have been
difficult and costly. Now it's just a matter of Googling or searching
on any of the blog-specific search engines like Technorati or Feedster.
For those who want to go deeper, firms like Intelliseek and BuzzMetrics
use sophisticated software to analyze the blog universe for corporate
clients. They use this growing online database of constantly updated
consumer opinion for marketing and product-development ideas.
But how to speak directly to this swarm? Wary of a Mazda-like
fiasco, most companies that want to blog try to walk a fine line:
telling employee bloggers to be honest but also encouraging evangelism.
Corporate propaganda almost always drives readers away; real people
with real opinions keep them coming back. At the GM Smallblock Engine
Blog, employees and customers rhapsodize about Corvettes and other GM
cars. Stoneyfield Farm has several blogs about yogurt. Not
surprisingly, the earliest adopters have been tech firms. The biggest
chunk of the 5,000 or so corporate bloggers comes from Microsoft, but
others work at Monster.com, Intuit, and Sun Microsystems—where even the
company's acerbic No. 2, Jonathan Schwartz, gets in on the action. (A
recent Schwartz post openly criticizes competitor Hewlett-Packard: "Yet
another series of disappointing announcements.")
At best, these blogs can act like tranquilizers in an elephant:
slowing a maddened charge against a company but not stopping it.
Macromedia three years ago set up a few employee blogs to give
customers a one-stop place for info and tech support. The blogs, and
the employees running them, quickly became an important resource to
customers—as well as to the company. When Macromedia in 2003 released
software that was maddeningly slow, the company bloggers quickly
acknowledged the need for fixes, helping ease some of the tension. "It
was a great early-warning system and helped us frame the situation,"
says senior vice president Tom Hale. "It accrued a huge benefit to us."
"I need to be credible," says Microsoft's Scoble. "If I'm only
saying, 'Use Microsoft products, rah rah rah,' it sounds like a press
release, and I lose all ability to have a conversation with the world
at large."
Unfiltered conversations aren't exactly the kind of things
in-house counsel encourage, though. And employees have been fired at
Starbucks, Harvard University, Delta, and social-networking software
company Friendster for blogs the organizations apparently deemed
offensive, though none will comment. Even blogging boosters Microsoft
and Sun have hit bumps. Microsoft fired a temp who posted photos of
Apple computers sitting on a company loading dock. Sun CEO Scott
McNealy was urged not to blog after he showed trial posts to company
lawyers and colleagues. "I've got too many constituents that I have to
pretend to be nice to," he says.
As big companies try to maintain a delicate balance, it's often
the smaller players who are nimbly working blogs to their advantage.
Entrepreneurs like Shayne McQuade have learned that bloggers can be an
easy—and free—marketing arm, if used right. McQuade, a onetime McKinsey
consultant, in 2002 invented a backpack with built-in solar panels that
enables hikers and Eurotrippers to keep their gadgets charged. He spent
$15,000 getting the company up and running, outsourcing design and
manufacturing to jobbers in Asia and warehousing and shipping to a
company in New Jersey. The only thing left for him was getting the word
out: He ended up outsourcing that to bloggers.
In late September, just after McQuade received an early sample
of the Voltaic Backpack, he asked a friend, Graham Hill—who runs a
"green design" weblog called Treehugger—if he'd mention the product.
Start up the swarm! Within a few hours of Voltaic's hitting Treehugger,
the popular CoolHunting blog mentioned McQuade's product, which got it
seen by Joel Johnson, editor of Engadget competitor Gizmodo. Each step
up in the blogging ecosystem brought Voltaic to a broader audience.
(Yes, for all its democratic trappings, there are hierarchies of
influence in the blogging world.)
In came a flurry of orders. Ironically, McQuade—who had helped
research Net Gain, a seminal book on how the Internet would change
business—was unprepared. "Overnight what was supposed to be laying a
little groundwork became my launch," he says. "This is the ultimate
word-of-mouth marketing channel."
These are still the early days of blogging,
and the form is still morphing. Blogs that host music and video are
popping up, people are starting to blog text and photos from their
phones, and sites like NewsGator, using a technology called RSS, allow
people to subscribe to blogs. Plus, an arms race is building behind the
scenes. Venture capitalists last year invested a still tiny $33 million
into blog-related companies, but that was up from $8 million the year
before, according to research firm VentureOne. Blog ad companies, which
place ads and pay per response, are enabling bloggers to earn money
from their sites. And blogging publishers have emerged. Two of the most
prominent, Jason Calacanis and Nick Denton, are going head-to-head with
stables of popular blogs (Engadget and Autoblog vs. Gizmodo, Gawker,
and Wonkette, among others). More important, some of the most
competitive companies in tech are throwing their weight behind
blogging.
The newest kid on the blog block, Microsoft, has already seen
what the sites can do for it. Now it thinks it has a chance to grab the
youth market. Blake Irving, the VP who oversees Hotmail, the e-mail
service, with 187 million users, and MSN Messenger, with 145 million IM
accounts, views MSN Spaces as "the third leg of the communications
stool," one that Microsoft hopes to turn into an advertising-fueled
business. MSN is already selling ads on some Spaces for things like
Lacoste shirts at Neiman Marcus online. E-mail is for old people, says
Irving; kids prefer to communicate by phone and IM, and, now, by
keeping blogs. So Spaces is tightly integrated with the latest version
of MSN Messenger. Says Bill Gates, who claims he'd like to start a blog
but doesn't have the time: "As blogging software gets easier to use,
the boundaries between, say, writing e-mail and writing a blog will
start to blur. This will fundamentally change how we document our
lives."
Google, the company that Microsoft is playing catchup with (its
Blogger.com division is the largest blogging service right now), also
expects blogs to become as important as e-mail and IM. Right now, it's
working on ways to better help people find content they want in blogs,
says Jason Goldman, Blogger's product manager. But if Google's internal
use of Blogger is any indication, it also sees it as an essential
business tool. Since 2003, when it bought Pyra Labs, the company that
launched Blogger.com, Google's employees have created several hundred
internal blogs. They are used for collaborating on projects as well as
selling extra concert tickets and finding Rollerblading partners.
Google's public relations, quality control, and advertising departments
all have blogs, some of them public. When Google redesigned its search
home page, a staffer blogged notes from every brainstorm session. "With
a company like Google that's growing this fast, the verbal history
can't be passed along fast enough," says Marissa Mayer, who oversees
the search site and all of Google's consumer web products. "Our legal
department loves the blogs, because it basically is a written-down,
backed-up, permanent time-stamped version of the scientist's notebook.
When you want to file a patent, you can now show in blogs where this
idea happened."
But when you live by the blog, you die by the blog (or at least
feel serious pain). Perhaps the best example comes from Mena and Ben
Trott, the husband and wife team who founded Six Apart, creator of
Movable Type, the blogging software that now runs some of the most
prominent blogs on the web, including InstaPundit and Jarvis's
BuzzMachine. The Trotts, both 27, started the company after the success
of Mena's blog, Dollarshort.org. ("A day late and a dollar short," she
says. "A lot of my stories were about people picking on me and being a
dork.") Unhappy with the software she was using, Mena enlisted
programmer Ben to design their own blog software. They announced the
product in October 2001 with just a post on Mena's blog, and had 100
downloads the first hour. Companies paid a flat rate of $150 and
individuals were invited to pay what they thought the product was
worth. "If we got $50 or $60, that was nice," says Mena.
The Trotts soon started a hosting service for blogs, called
TypePad, and lured $11.5 million in venture financing—along with some
big customers, including Disney, the U.S. Air Force, Fujitsu, and
Nokia. Yet until May, Six Apart was relying on its original pricing
scheme. The Trotts decided to upgrade. Mena posted a long message
describing the new fee structure on her company blog, Mena's Corner.
Less than three hours later, the first comments started rolling in.
"Looks like I'll be dumping Movable Type soon" was the first. Many
others echoed that outrage in what became a total of 849 customer
comments in about ten languages. Six Apart didn't erase any of the comments, even the most
negative ones. Mena read every comment in full, then kept posting notes
explaining why the company had changed the pricing structure and that
it was still working on revising it. Looking back now, she says, "We
made people feel heard." And she knows that sooner or later, the
process will start all over again. Says CEO Barak Berkowitz: "When
everybody has a tool for talking to the rest of the world, you can't
hide from your mistakes. You have to face them. Once you commit to an
open dialogue, you can't stop. And it's painful." As the impact of
blogs spreads through global business, that pain—and promise—will be
something companies will have to deal with. And if they don't? You're
bound to read about it in a blog.