△ MENU/TOP △

Holtz Communications + Technology

Shel Holtz
Communicating at the Intersection of Business and Technology
SearchClose Icon

The upside of the echo chamber

One of the dominant criticisms of the blogosphere is that bloggers just write about what other bloggers have written about; it’s nothing more than a huge echo chamber.

I don’t buy the echo-chamber argument. Based on the 10% rule, which suggests that 10% of a blog’s (or Wikipedia’s or any other collaborative property’s) readers contribute to the content, that leaves 90% who are passive consumers of the content.

But the fact that bloggers write about what other bloggers have written about is a good thing. It’s one of the reasons I don’t think the much ballyhooed impending attention crash will happen. Here’s an example:

I read a blog called Brand to be Determined. Many of you—readers of this blog—probably don’t. So when I point you to a resource I learned about on Brand to be Determined, you’re getting information you probably wouldn’t have otherwise received.

In this case, the resource is a shared PowerPoint presentation on Primal Branding.

It’s a terrific presentation outlining the principles of a book I hadn’t heard of but will now read. And for some of you, my blog is the only way you found out about it. You don’t have to read every PR and marketing blog to discover this content (although I do highly recommend Brand to be Determined). Because we write about interesting things we’ve read on other blogs, the word spreads. (What, after all, is the concept of word-of-mouth all about?)

There are, by the way, six elements for a brand to succeed, according to the book, Primal Branding:

  1. Creation Story
  2. Creed
  3. Icons
  4. Rituals
  5. Pagans
  6. Sacred Words
  7. Leader

07/22/07 | 4 Comments | The upside of the echo chamber

Comments
  • 1.Shel: You left '.com' (or whatever( off the end of the link.

    Eric Eggertson | July 2007

  • 2..com it is, Eric. Thanks; fixed.

    Shel Holtz | July 2007

  • 3.It'd be even better if the echo chamber cited other bloggers more often. This seems to be a growing issue.

    Geoff Livingston | July 2007 | DC

  • 4.Shel -

    Thanks for bringing this book to my attention. I went through the PowerPoint and was intrigued by the Pagans element. I've seen variation of the others before, but this was the first time I'd seen non-believers identified as a key element to a strong brand. That's insightful, since so often corporate leadership wants everyone to love their brand. They forget that if they are all things to all people, then no one has strong feelings for them. Passion for your branded item is like passion for your team -- if there isn't an opposition, it just isn't any fun!

    Kris Gallagher, ABC | July 2007

Comment Form

« Back