birdwatcher
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wonderful entry-Im a follower
LOLOLO. When I was teaching college English, it frequently occurred to me that English was rarely the native language of many of my students.With keeping up with the Vets B & Bs, phone calls, and City stuff plus DH (another doc appt today took 4 hours out of my day), I have not had the time nor inclination to blog for weeks. Have to force myself to get back to it. Have a horrendous week coming up with City stuff with 3 days next week with me out of the office.
Birdwatcher, you do VERY well with the English language considering it is not your first language..
Ahhh, but when I blog, it is about what is happening in my area and the joys of finding out I can still march with the band at half-time and my body telling me the next say why I was an idjit and why I should NEVER try to march again - but probably will if it comes up next year.LOLOLO. When I was teaching college English, it frequently occurred to me that English was rarely the native language of many of my students.With keeping up with the Vets B & Bs, phone calls, and City stuff plus DH (another doc appt today took 4 hours out of my day), I have not had the time nor inclination to blog for weeks. Have to force myself to get back to it. Have a horrendous week coming up with City stuff with 3 days next week with me out of the office.
Birdwatcher, you do VERY well with the English language considering it is not your first language..
I have a different attitude toward blogging (Oh, BTW, the High Mountain Lodge's blog is http://innkeepingataltitude.blogspot.com/.) Setting a fixed number of posts in a particular period is not my style.
It seems to me that, when the B&B marketing gurus tell you to "write a blog," they never really give you a justification for doing so--except the generic "you'll get more business." It's one of those things that we're expected to do to be successful, but they never get around to telling us WHY?
I'm pretty sure that writing a blog is an extension of *being nice* to guests who stay at your inn. You chat in the late afternoons, give them crackers, cheese, chips, salsa, glasses of cheap box wine, and offer advice on places to eat, while you make jokes and tell stories. In short, you connect with them and do your best to make their stay at your inn a memorable and unique one.
You also can give them insights into your innkeeping struggles to the extent you would confess the same to a nosy neighbor (i.e.: not much).
But you would never admit to a couple watching you replace the exhaust duct work from the pool boiler who asked you "how's it going?" that it wasn't going very well and you weren't planning on opening the pool because you still hadn't isolated the carbon monoxide leak and you didn't want to suffocate them in their sleep--at least before their credit card cleared.
And you certainly wouldn't blog about your tribulations to the world in general.
Blogging is about bringing people in, it's about making them loyal to your place. It's about telling stories and cracking jokes. It's about telling them about your triumphs so they can celebrate them with you. You don't want to be self-absorbed when you blog, because nobody cares.
It's all about making people feel part of the family.
When I was teaching college writing, I made my students keep journals. This was in the days before blogs, and lordy, reading all that ungrammatical self-absorption was like pulling out my nose-hairs one by one with needle-nose pliers. Julie had to hide the ice pick when I was grading those things, out of fear that I would either stalk my students the next day or turn the point on myself.
Your blog is a marketing tool that reveals and extends your personality--it's a way of making people aware of what they'll find when they show up at your place as well extending the experience they had while staying with you.
If you're not comfortable with writing, then don't bother with a blog. A Bad Blog is worse than No Blog At All.
Blogs shouldn't be a marketing chore, they should be fun, like sitting down with your guests over a glass of wine. If they're work, then don't bother.
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I am with High MT. Lodge and JB both. I want to see pics and read interesting stories...not the day to day goings on in the inn. Photos really pull folks into the blog. Just think how many times your mouth has watered this week looking at those recipe blogs JB shared with us.I differ somewhat in my opinion to the purpose for blogging to what High Mountain Lodge said, and agree with quite a few points he made.
For innkeeping purposes, a blog is an extension of your website.
Events happen and you cannot update the website constantly with every event, nor give enough detail. A blog is a place to showcase the many events, things to see and do (even if it is the "art of doing nothing" at your inn). Maybe share a little bit more about a certain room "Featured room of the month" where you can specifically highlight what your guests innjoy about this room.
It is a place to provide a bit of personality, your personality. Many inns have hired webmasters who create and update their sites, a blog is a more personal place to add bits and pieces of yourself, if you are humorous it will show in your blog, if you love your area it will show in your blog. Maybe, like Kathleen mentioned, your spouse is a painter, you may want to show some of his latest work - on the blog. Should it be on the B&B website? Maybe, maybe not - that is up to interpretation. For a blog there are no rules, so go for it and have fun!
I do not believe a blog should be a place to dribble on and on and philosophize. Unless it is a personal blog, not a B&B blog.
If you have recipes, show photos or don't bother. If you are doing reno's show photos or don't bother. This is my thing, this is what I look for in other blogs, so I do what I like to see in other blogs. Things that are interesting, not boring. If I came to visit you, I want to see your blog and see some of the off-the-beaten-track things that may not be in a tourist brochure, but I would surely enjoy.
I saw Innkeep's blog from this forum where she showed this image that absolutely intrigued the gutts out of me! MADE ME WANT TO JUMP ON A PLANE AND GET OUT THERE! Amongst so many other articles, on Amish country, old barns, chicken pulls, etc. Learning about that area with her innside innformation is a boon! I
t's not all about marketing. I agree with High Mountain if you do not like to write, then stay away from it altogether.
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There are ways to edit and size your photos in blogger. Once you post your image, click on it. Below the image it allows you to select small, med, large, etc and wrap style.I've tried to put other pics in my blog, but they seem to shrik too much, wanted to put a picture of a river in my blog, but they turned out to be so small that it did not look right. I will try to put things on the blog that go on here, but truthfully not much goes on right here in this little town; however I will try to make it interesting because we are Innkepers that don't own their own Inn-so this gives someone a different prospective..
We do disagree. That is what it is all about. Do what YOU enjoy and read what YOU enjoy reading, plenty of folks have different ideas on what makes an interesting blog article. For those on this forum who wish to begin blogging, I say go for it. Don't be intimidated by the PC police, nor the grammar police or anyone else, let your creative juices flow. Sometimes it is the crap that fertilizes the garden..
Amen sister. If you run upon a blog you don't like, DON'T read it! No one is going to tell me that I shouldn't or can't do something.Joey Bloggs said:We do disagree. That is what it is all about. Do what YOU enjoy and read what YOU enjoy reading, plenty of folks have different ideas on what makes an interesting blog article. For those on this forum who wish to begin blogging, I say go for it. Don't be intimidated by the PC police, nor the grammar police or anyone else, let your creative juices flow. Sometimes it is the crap that fertilizes the garden.
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