I've been Str*mp**t*d but it's over
Feel like a fool. It's over. If you don't know what I"m talking about, so much the better. If you do know, you'll understand why I'm not gonna link to anything.
« Sorry Strumpette, your Corporate Blogging's Dead riff is oh so clever but it's not accurate | Main | Group or multiple author blogs will become more common »
Feel like a fool. It's over. If you don't know what I"m talking about, so much the better. If you do know, you'll understand why I'm not gonna link to anything.
Posted by Debbie Weil on July 27, 2006 in Corporate Blogging | Permalink
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It's ok Debbie. You are well respected.
Posted by: David Porter | July 27, 2006 at 09:37 AM
Debbie,
What does that even mean? As I asked Leo in the prior post, why do you "PR Pros" always sink to ad hominem arguments. Are your beliefs that weak? Sure looks that way.
- Amanda
Posted by: Amanda Chapel | July 27, 2006 at 04:50 PM
Having spent some time backgrounding myself on this controversy, it seems to me that you, Debbie, were a non-combatant who got strafed by self-hating terrorists wearing black hoods.
And fanatical behavior is everywhere to be found these days. The "moderate majority" is mostly lurking on the blogosphere at this point (that, or they are unaware of it altogether).
The field of conversation seems to be dominated by self-absorbed extremists -- of both the Strumpette and Clue-Train varieties. The extremism, quite obviously, weakens their powers of analysis. After all, corporate blogging -- like most marketing trends -- will go through a classic "hype cycle"; it will not burst like a tech bubble. (Not nearly enough money in this stuff to make that absurd analogy).
Then again, the self-styled "revolutionaries" who write "open letters" to folks like Michael Dell deserve a little comeuppance. The soft-porn jihadis at Strumpette have provided that in spades. So can we move on now? Or are we all going to just strap on explosives and dash off into oblivion?
Corporate blogging will probably take a hit pretty soon (if it hasn't already), but then it will reemerge -- as any good Gartner analyst can tell you -- on the "slope of enlightenment."
Posted by: Britton Manasco | July 27, 2006 at 06:41 PM
love the high road - nice job.
Posted by: Dennis | July 29, 2006 at 02:29 PM