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Wednesday, February 05, 2003
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Business Blogging Experiments Weblogs vs. Websites. Erik Heels went live with his Radio-powered site last week. Part of this is an experiment to see whether weblogs deliver greater ROI than a traditional website (his "traditional" site is a database-powered website that is at heels.com). Keep an eye on this. Erik's analysis is always detailed and his conclusions often surprising.[tins ::: Rick Klau's weblog] I have deployed a similar experiment I hope to share as well.
Kathleen Goodwin follows her B-blog article with a roundup of the feedback she recieved. Her take on weblog adaptation for business was more externally facing, a la Gonzo Marketing, than other definitions (klogs). Internal adaptations (such as Rick's k-log pilot) will prove just as powerful or more.
6:09:25 PM
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Whole System Maps The Blogmap project continues with new maps of the December and January data of Blog Network Friendships within Ryze. Last time we revealed the structure of the network core and how it evolved over the course of one month. This time we reveal the context of the network core in the Friendships of Blog Network members -- "whole system" maps.
December 2002:
- 64/90 Tribe members had links - 358 internal links amongst the 64 - 1444 external links to 973 other Ryze members
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January 2003:
- 151/180 Tribe members had links - 583 internal links amongst the 151 - 2567 external links to 1693 other Ryze members
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Both maps reveal the Blog Network to be open. Some network structures are relatively closed, a sign of an insular community. Ron Burt, a leading network expert, explains that a tightly closed network "amplifies predispositions, creating a structural arthritis in which people cannot learn what they do not already know"[PDF...][Orgnet].
For example, Valdis Krebs recently used the "book buddy" data that a major online book retailer generates through collaborative filtering. This strikingly revealed two closed networks that could be categorized as liberal and conservative in a bow tie pattern.

Social Network Analysis, amongst other things, looks for patterns of weakness such as the bow tie above or network holes. A bow tie pattern in an organization could spell its death. But there are also strengths in a closed network. If a group has dense internal ties (short path lengths and high clustering), information flows more directly within the core to foster agility. Purely open networks, by contrast, have more external ties. The open outreach of these networks is optimized for seeking opportunity, information and knowledge. The "golden ratio" of internal:external ties for network structure for an organization remains unknown.
11:12:53 AM
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Radio-Groove Interop Exploring Tim Knip's Radio/Groove interop tool. When you install Tim Knip's Groove/Radio interop tool you specify three tools in a shared space. First, a discussion tool whose items are sent to your blog. Second, a files tool whose contents are upstreamed. Third, another discussion tool that collects the RSS items fetched by your news aggregator. ... [Jon's Radio]
I deployed Groove at a small startup that is a consulting client. It decreased reliance on IT support, but is primarily used as a distributed file server. Perhaps this tool will engender collaboration use as blogging is participatory.
8:58:44 AM
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© Copyright
2003
Ross Mayfield.
Last update:
3/5/2003; 9:03:25 AM.
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