Week 305 - Presentation of the Travelogue - 06-17-2012
Presentation of the Travelogue:
(Creating travelogues Part II)
Okay,
you’ve got a lot to share, how will you get it to your
readers? We use
email and a
website. You could also use a
blog,
Twitter,
Facebook,
LinkedIn,
Pinterest and dozens of other
mediums.
Some
form of all the above methods were available in 2006
when we began to travel. Like any other invention, it is
always surprising to learn when things were first
created or ideas were first proposed. For example,
production automobiles switched from flathead V8 engines
to overhead values in the mid 50’s. But, Chevrolet
built overhead value V8 engines in 1917 and 1918.
Computers
have been around since the early 50s. The Internet since
1962, the Web 1979 (commercial usage exploded in1992), email 1992, blogging 1994, LinkedIn 2003, Facebook 2004, Twitter
2006, Pinterest 2010. So why did we choose email? In
2006 it was the most prevalent method of online
communication. And in 2009 we created our website
www.BigRigBible.com
to archive all of our travelogues and other full time RV
living research articles.
Today,
you have hundreds of choices of media for travelogues on
the Web. In June 2012, the top four social media tools
are Facebook (7 billion visits per year), Twitter (182
million), Pinterest (104 million) and LinkedIn (86
million). We have created accounts on all these to show
examples of what you can do. Let’s review them.
Blog:
Using a blog (web log) you can post your travels with
pictures. There are many free blog sites. Two very
common sites are
www.WordPress.com
and Google’s
www.Blogger.com.
We did have a WordPress account for BigRigBible but
rarely updated it, so we deleted the account. This
brings up a great point. If you want readers to follow
your travels, you need to post at least weekly. Less
frequently and your readers may lose interest. We
occasionally skip a week when we have nothing worthwhile
to write about. But, believe us, we hear about it!
With a blog you have many choices as
to who can participate. Obviously, you will write and
your readers will read. You can allow others to blog if
you want and you can allow others to comment on your
posts. If you disallow all others, your blog would look
similar to our archive of travelogues.
We
created two blogs recently, to learn about the current
features. These are Google blogs. The result is a good
looking site, quick to setup and post. The posts are
automatically put into the table of contents. We do not
allow others to post blogs or comments.
Blog advantages: Free,
easy to use, automatic table of contents, multiple
format templates, readers can sign up to your blog
without your involvement.
Disadvantages:
You are limited in the maximum size of your photos, you
could be limited to total pages and the blog host
controls your content and may delete it without your
confirmation.
NewBigRigBible.blogspot.com
MattsonExpress
Facebook:
Most everyone knows of Facebook. This is a blog, but
with very unique features. It automatically connects
your blog with those whom you have invited to be
friends. With all of the options and Facebook’s constant
enhancements, the learning curve here can be quite
extensive. In it’s simplest form, it can look like a
limited blog. However, as of 06-2012 you cannot block
comments. So, if like us you want to totally control the
content, Facebook is not a good choice. Ellen does use
Facebook to communicate with her invited friends.
Facebook advantages: 900
million possible readers, free, lots of interesting
features added weekly.
Disadvantages:
lots of interesting features added weekly, Facebook has
total control of your data and can delete it if they
like, limited width of screen for your photos and text
and you will have advertisements on your display. Also,
your readers must have a Facebook account to view your
pages.
Ellen's Facebook
Twitter:
An interesting little critter. It took Pete years to
find the value in Twitter and it is still questionable.
Each post in Twitter is limited to 140 characters. It
was designed to be updated by texting from your phone.
Therefore, you can post your activities and locations
from anywhere allowing your readers to track your every
move.
Advantages: Post every
minute and if you crash your motorhome, the whole world
will know exactly where to find you! Your readers do
not need a Twitter account to read your posts.
Disadvantages: Not
enough text space to say anything worthwhile. No
photos, only links to other pages. There are some great
uses for Twitter but travelogues are not one of them.
Our website business has a Twitter account. We use it
to let our potential future website clients know when
we are in their area.
Twitter Alternative: If you can't understand
Twitter, just buy a megaphone, run around and randomly
says things. That's pretty much the same. You might get
some followers.
www.Twitter.com/USAMotorhost
LinkedIn:
This is a site similar to Facebook but with the
intention of connecting only to professional
associates. We recently created an account for our
company
www.MattsonExpress.com.
We received an invitation from one of our clients to
connect to their LinkedIn account. And since we are the
“computer specialists”, how could we refuse? We are
still searching for the value here. Most likely, over
the years, we will be connected to many others in our
website design field. These connections will provide
answers to questions, support and possibly new clients.
LinkedIn:
Not for travelogues.
MattsonExpress LinkedIn.
Pinterest:
This is the newest of the bunch and has already passed
up LinkedIn. The concept behind this site is to “pin”
photos of products, services, locations and
opportunities that you like. No photo, no pin. We
created a Pinterest account to test out this newest
media. We have pinned a few photos from
www.BigRigBible.com.
You pin a photo, add a caption and choose a category.
Readers that find your photo can then access the website
it came from. And they can re-pin it onto their account
in the same or different category. For our first test we
pinned a photo of the Telesteps extension ladder that we
carry in the Mothership. Another Pinterest user saw the
photo of our motorhome by a lake and pinned the photo
under Dream Vacations! Hmmm!
Pinterest Advantages:
Free, you can blog a “pin” in seconds and people love
photos. We can totally relate to this as
www.BigRigBible.com
is a site with over 7,000 photos.
Disadvantage: Not usable
as a travelogue as you only get one photo / caption per
pin.
That
brings us back to Email. Email is easy and
everybody has it. You control the total content: size
of photos, text and who receives it. There are two
types of email programs: web-based and email clients.
Yahoo, Hotmail, AOL, Gmail and many other free emails
are web-based. This means that your emails start and are
forever on the web (not on your computer) until you
delete them and your host company also deletes them.
Two of the most popular email client programs are
OutlookExpress and Thunderbird. These programs allow
you to create new emails while not connected to the web,
save them to send later, or send now if connected to the
Internet. Therefore you can write emails in remote
non-connected locations or write as you travel, not
worrying about whether you will lose your connection as
you move.
With
your own email address e.g. YourName@YourDomain
you are in total control of the content, nothing is
added by the email host. With web-based emails, you will
get certain phrases added to your text or even
advertisements.
Using
email, your travelogues will require more work from you
to have the “cool look” of a blog. If you learn how,
they can be just as flashy with no ads or extraneous
text.
Email Advantages: You
have total control of format, can create off-line, no
limit to photo size, you control who is on your viewer
list. Using an email client your emails are on your
computer, saved for the millennium. Disadvantages: Learning
curve will be higher if you try achieve “cooldom”.
WhereInTheWorld email for Week305
website: We created www.BigRigBible.com as a repository for all things motorhome. Each week we
send our travelogues by email. Then, we add the
travelogue to the website. Don't try this at home,
leave it to the professionals!
www.BigRigBible.com
Recommendation: If you want an archive of all
your travelogues, we recommend a blog. They are free and
fairly easy to set up and use. We like Googles
Blogger.com.
It is simpler than WordPress with not as many options,
which equates to being simpler to set up. If you are
using WordPress and understand it, don't switch; it is a
great blog tool and very popular.
Helpful, maybe not, but reading this kept you from
working!
Love, Pete, Ellen and the always sticker-filled Mandy
By Pete . Ellen Mattson