By now you've heard about blogs or Weblogs. They're the next new thing. They're cool. The blogosphere (the community of active bloggers) has grown from a dozen or so Weblogs in 1999 to an estimated half million today.

And, just maybe, blogs are the next killer app of online marketing. Technology evangelists like Chris Pirillo are saying that “email marketing is dead.” Killed by spam and clogged inboxes.

Will business blogs replace e-newsletters as the most powerful, cost-effective tool for communicating with customers? Should every company be adding a blog to its site—or replacing a static site with an ever changing Weblog?

Don't be shy. Let me pose five questions you've probably been dying to ask. Then you decide whether business blogs are the new new thing.

What Is a Blog?

It's a Web-based journal powered by a self-publishing tool that enables the author(s) to regularly and easily update the content. The log consists of commentary along with links to other blogs or online resources. Blog posts are always presented in reverse chronological order. Each entry is time and date-stamped.

Wait! There's more!

What's the Definition of a Good Blog?

Blogs are usually written by one person and in a style that is candid, authentic, even raw. Miles from corporate marketing speak.

The voice of a blog is sometimes edgy; usually opinionated; often smart. Bloggers are not journalists but they comment, analyze and report in real-time on politics, culture and all things Internet. The coolness quotient of a blog is based on how many other Weblogs link to it. And what kind of buzz it stirs up in the blogosphere.

A-list bloggers (of which there are only several hundred) use tools like Blogrolling's Top 100 and Technorati's Link Cosmos to measure popularity. Two longtime bloggers well-known in the blogosphere are Dave Winer (now a fellow at Harvard Law School) and Doc Searls. (Serious bloggers reading this will pounce on me for not including a longer list.)

By this definition, blogs don't sound like a natural business tool. “Coolness” is not a measure of success these days. Web traffic, click-throughs and conversion are what count, along with open rates for an email newsletter.

Why Should Businesses Blog?

Simple. No one listens anymore to sanitized marketing messages. If you find the right person in your organization to “blog” about your products or services you'll brand your company as authentic and knowledgeable. Every company has a closet writer, whether or not that's part of his or her job title.

In addition, a number of companies (including Microsoft and Google) are using blogs as Web-based collaboration and knowledge management tools. These Weblogs are behind firewalls.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Debbie Weil is an online marketing and corporate blogging consultant based in Washington, DC. She blogs at www.DebbieWeil.com and www.BlogWriteForCEOs.com. Visit her main site at www.WordBiz.com.