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Shel Holtz
Communicating at the Intersection of Business and Technology
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A character blog comes a little closer

The fact that I don’t object to the concept of a character blog doesn’t mean I’ve seen one yet that doesn’t suck. Frank Willis’s blog comes a bit closer than the rest.

There is no Frank Willis, of course. He was invented for an advertising campaign for Ipswitch, maker of a collaboration suite for small and mid-sized businesses. You won’t see the ads in mainstream publications, but rather in the likes of Network World and other IT trade rags. Willis is a clueless IT manager who, in the space of a few months, gets hired by a fictional meat company, plays it safe instead of implementing the Ipswitch Collaboration Suite, and gets fired.

You can’t accuse Ipswitch of being entirely lueless by taking the character blog approach. After all, they have a “real” blog, although posts to it are few and far between. The Willis blog has an obvious goal: To tell a story over a short period of time that tracks with the print ads. It’s still lame for a number of reasons. It’s not well written (although at times it’s funny) and it looks terrible. But it does offer a hint of how a character blog could be used to better effect than Captain Morgan and its ilk.

And even though the Family Guy blog, written by real show staff, is better than a character blog by Stewie might be, I’d still read a Cartman blog. I’ve seen the South Park creators before, and Cartman’s funnier.

06/19/05 | 2 Comments | A character blog comes a little closer

Comments
  • 1.Hi, Shel.

    Thanks for talking about Frank's blog. We've responded on our blog.

    Alex Neihaus | May 2005

  • 2.I have read with interest the articles about character blogging over the last month or two, including your post. My own character blog is now live, and while it is still experimental, and early days yet, I do believe I have a formula that works.
    I hope the great character blog debate continues.

    Damien

    talgard.com

    Damien | June 2005 | United Kingdom

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