Does the public trust bloggers?

The answer to that question breaks along the same line as when people are asked if they trust congress. The answer is no, but they trust their own congressperson by electing them again and again.

The net's been a buzz this week about a recent Forrester report posted by Jeremiah Owyang finding the public doesn't trust bloggers as much as other sources when commenting on products or services.

The problem with the survey's findings is the question asked, 'Do you trust bloggers?'

What what if the question had been, as suggested by Joshua Porter, 'Do you trust bloggers who you read regularly/subscribe to?' Of you course you do. Why else would they read them?

Bill Ives cites two commenters to Jeremiah’s post to further make the point. From Jon Montjoy:

Contrary to what you may imply, you are trusted by many of your readers. You’ve earned this trust by being transparent, by being consistent, by slowly building a reputation, and by the multiple channels in which someone can learn about you.

And from Kate Carruthers:

I think that you are confusing two categories. Of course people don’t trust a generic category called ‘bloggers’ But they do trust people they ‘know’, and in these days of social networking ‘knowing’ someone may mean you have never met them in real life. But if a relationship of trust & authenticity has been developed between you & them, then they could trust a blogger.

Thousands of people read my blog. They must trust something I say. I'm not that entertaining.

People put their butts on the line at least once a month asking me to speak in front of large groups. Just received invites to speak at the Texas Bar Annual Conference and to keynote at a Wisconsin Bar Association Conference. I don't know any of the people who invite me. They're reading my blog. If they didn't trust what I was writing, would I get an invite?

Law firms, from solo's to the largest in the country, call me for advise on blogging. The same firms subscribe to LexBlog's blog service. No other way those folks know me than my blogging.

Read the surveys, but don't leave your common sense behind.

Don't get left behind, get your own blog

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Tips for better law blogging

Joshua Porter, editor of Bokardo, a site about social web design, shares '9 Lessons for Would-be Bloggers.'

I found these 7 particularly helpful and thought you, as a blogging lawyer, would too.

  • Write follow-up posts. When you post something that resonates with folks, follow it up with another post citing their comments. Maybe do a series of posts on the topic.
  • When you screw up, say so immediately. Admitting idiocy is one of the most important things a blogger can do. It completely diffuses a situation that could quickly turn ugly.
  • Link back to your good stuff. Refer back to your good stuff via links in a new post or with a bulleted list of 'Related Posts' at the bottom of a new post.
  • Reread to yourself. Blogs aren't books, poems, or even journalism. They're conversations, so they need to be conversational. Make them read like how you talk.
  • Keep updating your best posts. If you take your posts seriously, and you treat them as an reference archive, then people will link to them and send traffic to them over time. So, if the post could use pruning, or additions, be sure to go back and add them. It's OK…this isn't paper we're publishing on. Just go back and change it, and maybe add a note that you've done so.
  • Name things (e.g. The Del.icio.us Lesson, The Chanel No. 5 Lesson). Does not apply to every post but works well for popular posts people may keep repeating over and over. People like things that are easy to remember.
  • Link to the quiet, unknown ones. Link to people who nobody has heard of, just to give them some exposure. They're just as smart as anybody else, they've got just as much to say. They just don't have the attention yet.

Good stuff Joshua. Thanks.