Not exactly tumblrin’ for ya

Happy birthday, abandoned tumblr!
Happy birthday, abandoned tumblr!

Have you ever created a thing in the social media space, more or less on a whim, or just because you thought it was the thing to do, and then promptly forget all about it?

That’s what happened with me and my tumblr account.

I had completely forgotten I had created a tumblr.

Then I got an email Tuesday from the tumblr people to let me know that, while I was busy doing other things, my tumblr had celebrated birthday number 4.

This is why I don’t have children.

Five posts. Five posts in four years. What a pathetic tumblrer I’ve been. (Is that what one calls a person who has a tumblr? A tumblrer?)

I really should have remembered I have a tumblr account, because I documented its creation in a blog post (written four years ago). This act of creation is noted in a humble little P.S. at the end of a rambling post about the next big thing in social media.

P.S. – I just created a Tumblr account. Maybe that’s the next big thing. For me, anyway.

Well, that didn’t work out so well for me.

But now tumblr has gone big time — and not just for memes or picture-quotes. Brands have taken to tumblr recently, and at least 10 of them are doing it right (according to Mashable). Some colleges and universities are also using tumblr now.

Which makes me wonder. Should I?

When I wrote my Next Big Thing post, the “blogging is dead” idea was all the rage. But for me, it’s still very much alive, despite occasional bouts of blog fatigue.

I don’t quite see a fit for tumblr in my digital media diet right now. I’m not sure I ever will.

How about you? What purpose does tumblr serve in your digital life?

P.S. – It’s kind of funny to read the comments on that Next Big Thing post. One even suggests that Posterous is the new tumblr. And Todd Sanders still believes that flying cars will soon be in vogue.

Content strategy is fine, but…

Photo via Bob Warfield's SmoothSpan blog
Photo via Bob Warfield’s SmoothSpan blog

I’m grateful to see the higher ed world talking so much about content strategy these days. This emphasis on thinking about content in a way that connects it with our organizational goals is important.

I’m glad that people are writing books and blogs about content strategy, too. And talking about this subject on Twitter. And planning entire conferences around the theme. These are important efforts, and I learn a lot from the content strategists I follow on Twitter and from their blog posts. I’ve learned valuable lessons that I’ve incorporated into my everyday work, and I’m thinking more about the importance of content in context.

But I sometimes wonder if we’re focusing too much on the content side of things.

I sometimes wonder if we need to pay more attention to the content needs or wants of the people we’re supposed to be creating our content for.

In other words, our audience.

The way content strategy is sometimes talked about, it reminds me of supply-side economics. In a way, I suppose it is. As technology has lowered the barriers to creating and distributing all sorts of content, consumers of that content have more than enough options at a very low price point.

But content strategy without regard to audience is misguided. Simply flooding the marketplace of ideas with more content won’t achieve many business goals for any organization.

Entrepreneur and blogger Bob Warfield touched on this in a post last December. “A lot of entrepreneurs,  when faced with the question, ‘What’s the most important thing to do first?’, would answer, ‘Build a product,” Warfield writes. “Big mistake.”

The most important thing to do first is to find an audience.  It may be that building a product is an integral part of growing your audience, but you’re not ready to build a product or grow your audience until you’ve found the right audience to start with.

Audience strategy, anyone?

I haven’t heard the term “audience strategy” bandied about much in the higher ed or marketing circles. But maybe someone should latch on to that idea and run with it.

Maybe it’s because we take our audiences for granted in higher ed. We’re not the entrepreneurs Bob Warfield is talking to. And while we do roll out new products from time to time (new degrees or certificate programs) or new services (online options, blended learning), we probably don’t look at our roles the same way an entrepreneur would.

Most of us work in established organizations. We probably don’t worry too much about finding the right audiences for our content. We have scores of them, and many of these audiences (alumni, current students, members of the community where our schools reside) already have a connection with our institutions.

But we should be thinking more strategically about who these people are.

I recently read about one approach that connects both audience and content in a pretty nifty way. It’s called audience-centric content strategy. It begins with the audience first.

Whether we call it “audience-centric” or by some other name, the important thing is to keep our audience in mind as we design our content strategy. Then maybe the most relevant aspects of our plentiful storehouses of content (the supply) will better connect with what our audience is looking for (demand).