Blogging and 9/11

On September 11th 2001 I was on holiday with my wife Cathy and my son Elliot, who was nearly two years old at the time. We had been out to lunch and got back at just after 2pm. Elliot wanted to watch a video, so we switched on the TV to be faced by the shocking, live images of the chaos at the World Trade Center. Only a year or two before I had been sitting in a private dining room at the very top of one of the Twin Towers amazed at the views, the engineering and the fact that the whole of the building swayed gently from side to side. “You get used to it,” one of the waiters told me, “if the building didn’t sway in the wind, it would just snap,” he added. As I sat and watched the unfolding horror I remembered that waiter and with tears in my eyes realised that he was probably dying at that very moment. Even at the age of almost two years old, Elliot clearly realised that something unusual was happening. He gathered some toys and played quietly for several hours without needing any attention from Mummy and Daddy as we sat transfixed in front of the TV.

So, here we are five years later. Elliot is nearly seven years old and is a happy little boy who has just trotted off to school singing and jumping for joy. He is little aware of the changes in the world in his short life time. Most adults, though, are painfully aware of what happened and how it has changed the world. One of the reasons for that is the Internet. In 2001 blogging was only in its infancy – indeed it was roughly the same age as Elliot at the time of 9/11. Since then, blogging has grown up quickly and it was 9/11 that was one of the spurs onwards. Many people wrote blogs about their experiences and feelings. Families produce memorial blogs, victims wrote blogs just as a cathartic action. Nowadays, you will find many people suggesting blogs are a great way to make money online quickly. But as a psychologist I’m acutely aware, especially today, that there is much more to blogging than a device to make money.

International Blogging Day Will Help Internet Marketing

Today is International Blogging Day. The idea is that it brings more of a high profile to blogging. Apparently we are all meant to link to five other blogs today so that we can spread the word of blogging. But there is more to it than this. If you are trying to market your business online, blogging is an essential component in helping you to establish or enhance your reputation. If you can get just five people to link to your blog today, you’ll be spreading your influence and therefore making your ability to sell your services online less difficult.

So, here are my blogs I think you should look at:

Infoselling – information product selling online
Speaker Fortune – how to make money as a professional speaker”
Presentation Skills News
The Latest News from Elliot Jones
RSS Announcer

Blogging will be a significant recruitment tool

As more and more people take up blogging, recruiters will use blogs to pre-select candidates. Human resources specialists will be able to search blogs to find out what kind of person you are. They will be able to use blog profiling tools and services to work out which is the best of several candidates. Not only will blogging help recruiters, it will help individuals as well. They will be able to gain an online reputation which will help ensure they get the kinds of jobs they want.