day-level permalink   Sunday, August 25, 2002

I suspect that beginning bloggers and kloggers are often inhibited.images/InsertLink_joel.gif

This could be a problem. When I started this weblog on July 30th, my objective was to post items that were notes to myself. I thought that the chances of someone looking at my site were slim to none.

Then my referrer page would show a few hits, and I was both flattered and nervous. Once I realized that the community was smaller and kinder than I had assumed, I posted more frequently.

If we set up a k-logging community for our company intranet, I suspect there will be an initial _hump_ of hesitation among the employees. Maybe having a few designated posters at the beginning would ease the transition. Must think on this.

Lessons learned from a large scale K-logging implementation.
  • Most people don't like to write. We've had a difficult time designing interfaces that encourage adding information instead of just reading.
  • There's no substitute for good, accessible writing. We have several people who write consistently for the system. The logs show that postings from one writer get far more attention and prompt far more linking than those from the other writers. "

[Seb's Open Research]

12:26:34 PM  comment [] | Categories: KM Klogs, Writing for Weblogs|

Writing Inhibitionsimages/InsertLink_joel.gif
Writing inhibitions, the causes:
  • It is a public display of facility they may not feel they have, and may not have; one correspondent was afraid his spelling was bad.
  • It makes folly as clear as wisdom, but is more persistent than a comment made in the hall
  • It takes time and thought (and a little hubris—per Larry Wall) to put words out for others, and to make them—and think them—good enough for public consumption.
[Ron Lusk's Radio Weblog]

12:18:44 PM  comment [] | Categories: KM Klogs, Writing for Weblogs|