Simplifying My Blog: Not an easy task!

It’s time to simplify, simplify, simplify. My blog has been getting messier and messier over the past few months as I blog more. So I have decided: time for a spring clean! When your blog is messy, what do you clean?

Here’s my list:

1. Categories: I’ve got categories coming out of my ears, but I’m going to be paring the subcategories back to the barest minimum. I think that should make for clearer organization. I’ve already cut back the BlogRoll categories, now I’m starting work on the postings categories. I think 12-15 should be a fine number. Watch as it shrinks!

2. New Theme: I’ve been trying out several themes over the last few months, I’m looking for a cleaner and simpler look. I just haven’t been able to find anything just yet that really suits! Right now I’m trying MistyLook, but I don’t care much for the coloration. I’ll be trying some alternative colors before I do the CSS makeover.

3. Some Links: Some have to go. There are just too many on one page. I’d rather cut out the unnecessary ones, and leave the best! So I’ll be paring there too. Pared, in fact.

4. CSS: I’ve been trying to decide what to do on that front to make my page unique. I’m still pondering this makeover!

Thoughts, comments? Did you like the old theme or the new one better?

Blogging: The blog IS the website!

383fThese days, many companies large and small have been adding ‘blogs’ to their corporate websites as a way to juice traffic, improve their image and generate sales. In fact Ensight reported a story from Fortune 500 companies that found (guesstimating) around 10~20% of companies were using blogs in some ways.

Blogging: it’s effective
It’s not surprising that blogs are so widely used in companies. Technorati reports that around 70 million blogs have now been created. It seems that the business world is now just jumping on this bandwagon. And with good reason, blogging creates an easy way to post content, update your website, create discussion and interaction with your readers, and can combine text with media elements such as audio, video, etc..

nozkidzOf course, if some companies are using blogs as part of their website, I wonder how many companies have taken the next step and designed their website AS a blog. In other words, how many companies are now using Blogs as their own website, instead of just a supplement.

The Blog IS the website
My own business, for ease of use, quite early on decided on using a CMS to manage the website. We tried Joomla, Mambo, etc.. but they were either clunky or slow or unattractive or impossible to use. So, I erased the whole lot, and just installed WP 2.0 as it was as our website CMS.

Naturally, our website doesn’t look like a website, so much as a blog; but the advantages are tremendous:

  1. fresh information is published right at the front, not hidden away on an internal page;
  2. pictures and media get posted for maximum publicity;
  3. administering the pages is relatively easy with online/offline tools able to handle most of the regular stuff;
  4. more advanced administration is easily handled through the interface;
  5. of course, we can also take advantage of Blog type tools that aren’t open to static websites, such as Technorati;
  6. and more traffic means better SEO, higher Alexa rankings, and so on.

We did face some criticism from some members of staff who didn’t get it: why can’t you have someone just design your website and get it done? Then, like so many businesses, the website would have been DONE and left unupdated for years, until the next make over… This way, we’re creating reasons for people to come back and visit us more often to see what changes or news there have been.

Could there come a time when more companies realize the advantages of a blog type CMS and dump their Frontpage/Dreamweaver/… static sites in favor of a simpler and more dynamic solution? I think so. I know our school made the switch. We aren’t going back, either.

Buzz #1: Army Mom’s Blog

armymom

There are so many attractive looking designed blogs out there! I found this one through the boards on Payperpost. It’s called An Army Mom’s blog and is about the life of an Army Mom, called Charlotte, whose daughter is serving in the US military overseas right now.

What caught my attention though is the carefully crafted khaki colored background. Very nice, and it really helps to cement the blog’s concept and design. You’re never very far from that as the visual reminders are everywhere. Check it out! Thanks, Charlotte, and I hope your loved one returns home soon, and safely.

 


 Want a little buzz, too? It’s quite simple! Read the instructions here.