TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

The entrepreneur's blogging dilemma

36 pointsby micaelwidellabout 12 years ago

13 comments

hkmurakamiabout 12 years ago
You are seemingly only permitted to be positive. This is the case not only for entrepreneurs but true for anyone: job seekers, execs, managers, you name it.<p>Having doubts or problems is an inescapable part of life, yet our public lives aren't permitted to reflect this reality. We need to masquerade: happy, motivated, fearless. I myself have agonized over this regarding my blog. As a participant it the job market, I can't shake the fear that saying anything negative will hurt my prospects in whatever path I may choose.<p>This dissonance with reality, the need to deceive not only others but yourself is at best tiring and at worst torturous.
评论 #5732414 未加载
评论 #5731537 未加载
评论 #5731568 未加载
mindcrimeabout 12 years ago
(Note: I'm going to put links to my own posts here, not to be blatantly self-promotional, but to illustrate points I'm talking about, since the topic of this discussion is blogging. Feel free to ignore the links).<p>I've been blogging more than ever lately, and - FWIW - here are my observations:<p>1. Time is my biggest "problem" vis-a-vis blogging. Given everything else I could be doing with that time, it's sometimes hard to prioritize writing a blog post over writing code, or any number of other things.<p>2. There's not a lot that I <i>want</i> to write about, but feel constrained <i>from</i> writing about. We haven't had a lot of internal co-founder drama or turmoil, or any inter-personal scandals, or especially bad relationships with investors, customers, media, etc. so there isn't a whole lot that I have to restrict myself from talking about from the "avoid upsetting people" point-of-view.<p>3. That said, I do sometimes write a post[1] that challenges something somebody else said, or is a bit argumentative or controversial. A good recent example was when I read a WRAL Techwire post by Joe Procopio, took it one way, and sat down to write up a testy response. But then I emailed Joe to say "Hey man, I read your article, and I'm thinking about posting this in response, do you have any comment first"? He replied, clarified some points, sent some links to other works, etc., and I rewrote a big chunk of the post. The spirit of the post remained the same, but it became less of a specific response to his article, and more of a general observation / commentary. So no hurt feelings or conflict needed.<p>4. The blog is marketing. Blog posts are a way to drive traffic to our site, gain search engine positioning, achieve TOMA, establish credibility, etc.<p>5. I feel that I need to stop writing about "startup stuff" so much, because writing about startups isn't doing anything to drive revenue for us. It's time for us to focus on blogging stuff that will attract <i>our customers</i> to our site, by writing about: the industries we are targeting, the executives we want to attract attention from, the kinds of problems we are working on solving, etc. The blog is content marketing, and people who want to read about startup drama just aren't our customers. People running plants making nonwoven technical textiles, or furniture, or farm tractors, etc., are customers. Ergo, we need to write about the nonwoven technical textiles industry, the furniture industry, or the farm tractor industry, OR something that will be relevant to people in those industries. So, for example, if we want to get our message to CIOs, CTOs, IT Directors, etc. we write posts like this[2] and this[3].<p>6. The blog is a form of "market education". So it's important for us to blog things that educate the market in a way that helps align them with what we're trying to do. We are working on incorporating a specific methodology into how we engage with customers, so we write blog posts that explain it and advocate for it.[4][5][6]<p>7. I'm not a big fan of "newsjacking" per-se, but if there's a topic that is "in the news" AND I happen to actually have a strong opinion on the topic, I like to write about it[7][8]. It's usually good for getting traffic and sometimes it leads to an interesting discussion. And, per <i>The Cluetrain Manifesto</i> - "markets are conversations".<p>8. Sometimes it's cool to just have fun and post something kinda random or seemingly silly.[9]<p>9. I wouldn't have a problem blogging about <i>some</i> aspects of our strategy, and we do strive for a high level of transparency. Heck, we're an Open Source company, so we have to be transparent to a certain point, by definition. But there will always be <i>some</i> secret sauce that we don't go around telling everybody. And that's fine. Nobody says you have to blog <i>everything</i>.<p>[1]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/03/the-point-of-startup-is-to-make-money.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/03/the-point-of-startup-is-...</a><p>[2]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/10-essential-reads-for-cios-ctos-and-it.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/10-essential-reads-for-c...</a><p>[3]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/essential-reading-for-it-leaders-part.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/essential-reading-for-it...</a><p>[4]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/01/why-capability-cases-are-must-when.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/01/why-capability-cases-are...</a><p>[5]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/02/so-what-is-capability-case-anyway.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/02/so-what-is-capability-ca...</a><p>[6]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/capability-cases-part-three-sample.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/capability-cases-part-th...</a><p>[7]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/03/post-good-google-who-will-defend-open.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/03/post-good-google-who-wil...</a><p>[8]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/why-kiera-wilmot-situation-is-bad-for.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/why-kiera-wilmot-situati...</a><p>[9]: <a href="http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/prolog-im-going-to-learn-prolog.html" rel="nofollow">http://fogbeam.blogspot.com/2013/05/prolog-im-going-to-learn...</a>
评论 #5732651 未加载
obviouslygreenabout 12 years ago
In my opinion, "time" is the biggest one; he mentions it first, but I don't think the gravity is expressed adequately. I have time to waste on HN because I spent a year and a half building the one I'm on now; at this point a blog... just doesn't matter. That's most certainly <i>not</i> meant to be a general comment, but in my case, time was a problem to the point where, once it wasn't (as much), a blog was no longer valuable.<p>Whether it's valuable or not is highly dependent on your product, your goals, and your audience. I don't think there are many areas where it's totally worthless, but if you're actually an entrepreneur and not just tentatively trying something out and looking for backers, in my experience it's hard to find enough time to both blog and <i>promote</i> your blog unless you're either a minority-share-of-the-grunt-work partner or already so plugged in to some popular scene that you don't actually have to worry about the exposure a blog would otherwise be intended to bring.<p>I guess the point of this is that "I can't blog" is the equivalent of a first-world problem in a first-world profession: If you have the time and/or connections to do it and make it effective, it's likely you'd succeed in a very similar way without it.
diegoabout 12 years ago
<i>The problem is that when you are a startup founder, most of the things you deal with on a daily basis are confidential.</i><p>You're doing it wrong. Either you're too paranoid, or you're focusing too much on confidential stuff. It's not like your company develops stealth technology for the military ("Swedish one stop bargain shop on the web"). There must be an infinite number of industry insights that you can share.<p>As a CEO, one good reason to blog is to be perceived as a thought leader in your space. One of the reasons Silicon Valley is a successful technology hub is all the shared knowledge. Many successful entrepreneurs here may not blog that much, but they do share insights through interviews or talks. Others (like Paul Graham) enjoy writing, and they share unique knowledge. Are you keeping this kind of knowledge to yourself because you believe it's a competitive advantage?
评论 #5731697 未加载
alexshyeabout 12 years ago
As a first-time entrepreneur, I do have a blogging dilemma but it isn't related to confidentiality. My problem is that I both don't have time, and don't know what I am doing.<p>Everyday is a struggle to figure things out as fast as possible. Given the situation, I can either (1) blog about how I am struggling during the struggle, or (2) move forward as fast as possible without wasting the time it takes to write and manage a blog.<p>Lately, I have opted for (2) with the hope that I will be able to blog more meaningfully with some real experience under my belt.
评论 #5731922 未加载
overgardabout 12 years ago
I wonder how the rate of blogging among startup founders relates to the average blogging rate among other people (IE, more or less). Based on the upvotes I'm guessing a lot of people relate to this, but I'm not sure I'm convinced that startup founders blog less than the average person.<p>Personally, the reason I don't really blog is because what you write on the internet is (mostly) permanent. I tend to subscribe to the notion of "strong views, weakly held", but the transient nature of that philosophy clashes with the permanency of publicly stating an opinion that's easily searchable and indexable. I think at some point culture will catch up and we'll recognize that what people wrote five years ago isn't necessarily representative of who they are now, but I'm not sure we're there yet. So I avoid blogging because I don't want to burn bridges because I wrote some rant that in a years time I don't even agree with.
carterschonwaldabout 12 years ago
Emphatic disagreement. The more I talk about what I'm working on at Wellposed, the more I talk about how I'm solving problems, etc, the more opportunities I've stumbled into / potential customers I've found.<p>Amusingly, I've actually had more and more requests over time to start blogging about even the parts of my technical work that I'd consider pretty unsophisticated!<p>Point being (as businessy as this may sound), the more channels you have to engage with your customers in a positive, engaging, informative (and hopefully educational) manner.<p>I'm pretty sure that every business that is doing something sophisticated benefits from providing more channels for passive customer discovery and education. (or so I'd hope!)<p>That said, it could be argued that I've a pretty unusual business so I may have have opinions that won't make sense for normal businesses.
danmaz74about 12 years ago
Why are you blogging? If you're blogging strategically, you should be trying to establish yourself as a subject matter expert in your startup's field. The best way to do so, which is beneficial to you AND the community, is by giving away for free useful information (insights, advice, analyses, etc). So, just choose useful information you happen to know that is not confidential - I'm pretty sure every founder has got a lot of that. If the insights come from real cases that you'd like to recount but you can't discuss publicly, anonymize them.<p>EDIT: The real dilemma - but the author barely scratches the surface there - is time. How much should you devote to writing vs to developing your business? I don't have an answer here, but I'm seriously thinking about hiring someone to help me there.
评论 #5733149 未加载
yuhongabout 12 years ago
Reminds me of this for example: <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3783114" rel="nofollow">http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3783114</a><p>I'd like the problems be fixed if possible.
prawnabout 12 years ago
You don't have to blog exclusively about your venture, surely? There are countless topics out there in your industry and others, nice features you've seen in other products, etc.
NameNickHNabout 12 years ago
Writing takes skill and motivation. Very few people have both and why should entrepreneurs be any different?
orangethirtyabout 12 years ago
Few people realize the value of a blog.
marzeabout 12 years ago
Write a book?