Lessons from ten years of blogging and eight years of podcasting – Interview with Neville Hobson




Adrian Swinscoe » Interviews show

Summary: Today’s interview is with Neville Hobson, an entrepreneurial communications professional who has been blogging since 2002 and podcasting since 2005. This interview came about after Neville posted on his blog in the middle of December that he started blogging ten years ago. Following that post, I was thrilled when he agreed to be interviewed for my blog about the lessons that he had learnt from his years of blogging and podcasting. This interview follows on from my recent interview with Jacob Morgan Solve customer and business problems faster through collaboration and makes up number forty-four in the series of interviews with authors and business leaders that are doing great things and helping businesses innovate, become more social and deliver better service. Highlights from the interview: Neville has a curiousity for technology and how people use it Neville has been blogging for ten years He started out of curiousity to see if it it was something that he wanted to do and started using blogging as an online diary of sorts. However, initially was a very infrequent blogger and has realised over time that you have to be clear as to why you are blogging Do want to share insight (thought leadership), do you want to think out loud, do you want to engage in discussion around a a certain issue etc Blogging has become a broad term and is not just about writing a blog but also encompasses Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn etc updates/posts Broadly, a blog allows people to get to know you over time and facilitates connections that may not have otherwise have happened The barriers to entry for blogging are effectively zero with so many free services around People worry about the technical side of things but if you can operate Word or another word-processing package you can write a blog post There are advantages to having your own self-hosted blog for a number of reasons including discoverability and control When someone googles you and nothing shows up that can say a lot about you to the person doing the search and can often be worse than finding a negative comment Whether you like it or not everything is online or has an online presence these days Some people are not great writers so writing may not be the best route for them but there are lots of other choices whether video, audio, voice/video over a slide deck presentation. Because of those choices it makes it harder to not do it The biggest barrier to starting is fear. If you want to get started here's something to keep in mind: Write informally, conversationally, don't use jargon and write with energy and passion so it jumps from page. That does not mean that it needs to be frothy and full of hyperbole but that your users get a sense of who you are. Write something that you are interested in and that people will find useful Think about what people search for (keywords) Ask yourself this question: Do you know what keywords your customers are using when searching for the thing that you do? Not everyone will read your content on your blog so think about your headline as that is the most important part of your post when it comes to getting someone to read or share your post….a bit like a headline in a newspaper Try and write a headline that is 'tweetable' Attribute, cite and link to other content on the web - this will get your link building off to a good start Post frequently…Google loves new content Like most things that bring value, this requires time, energy, patience and commitment The reasons for podcasting in the US and the UK are very different. In the US, there was/is a general belief that radio in the US was not very good and people were looking for an alternative. However, in the UK it is different as the UK has really great radio. But, outside of mainstream radio you are hard pressed to find good business podcasts. Like blogging, the barriers to entry for podcasting are almost zero.