Tavi Quits, My Little Thought Triggered…. Distorted Evolution of the Blogosphere

December 13, 2012 in Bloggers, Blogging, Blogging Foundation, Blogging Philosophy, Blogging Principle, Blogosphere, Fashion Celebrities, slide-show, Slideshow

Tavi Genvinson

Tavi Gevinson at Marc Jacobs Fall/Winter 2011 runway show at New York Fashion Week

Photo courtesy of The Wizard of Odd

Inspired by the news that the 16-year-old super blogger Tavi Gevinson quitted because of the disappointment she felt with the fashion game she has played in the past three years previously posted on Hamilton Fashion Blog by an insightful American blogger friend William Hamilton, I strongly feel the need to say a few words about the distorted evolution of the blogosphere. Before fashion bloggers have gradually expanded their sphere of influence to become a major media force less than ten years ago, only the commentaries made by high-fashion magazine editors, well-known fashion journalists and reputable stylists would be taken seriously (yes fashion is always an exclusive game for a small group of people). It was until 2009 when Bryan Boy was first invited to Marc Jacobs Fall/Winter show at New York Fashion Week sitting in the front row as a blogger (not an editor, like Anna Wintour or Anna Dello Russo, or a fashion celeb, like Alexa Chung) that the fashion industry has finally recognized the power of blog writing, unprofessional though it may seem, it has indeed officially overturned the traditional media ecology. Bryan Boy, Rumi Neely, Tavi and other super bloggers get a million hits a month on their blogs, which can absolutely compete with the high-end glossy magazines such as Vogue and Bazaar.

Evolution of the blogosphere 1

Anna Wintour at Lanvin Spring/Summer 2013 runway show at Paris Fashion Week (front row)

Anna Dello Russo at Lanvin Spring/Summer 2013 runway show at Paris Fashion Week (front row)

Alexa Chung

Photo courtesy of Zimbio, Zimbo and of Alexa Chung’s Style

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Analyze Your Traffic Data in A New Way; Look At Your Blogging Identity Through New Eyes – “hey I don’t need to be a glossy fashion star, I just want to be a down-to-earth brilliant blogger”

November 9, 2011 in Blog Topics, Bloggers, Blogging, Blogging Career, Blogging Identity, Blogging Philosophy, Blogging Principle, Fashion Celebrities, slide-show, Slideshow

There is a strange phenomenon that some bloggers get thousands of hits a day for their posts yet the number of followers is not even close to a hundred and not even a single comment was received. Seemingly contradictory or opposed to common sense, the situation yet can be seen as meaningful from which bloggers can learn to reposition their blogging identity. If you have had such a frustrating experience, I bet you are probably one of those strategic bloggers who can read the minds of the general public and know exactly what kind of blog topics your blog should focus on to maximize readership, yet forget the most important principle in blogging, which is that we bloggers blog for ourselves, not for the market or we make no difference from the mainstream fashion media. People hit your blog not necessarily because of the blog content, they may not have ever actually read it, but may be simply because of the attention-getting titles of the blog posts spotted which make them want to click on your link and visit your blog, which explains why the number of followers does not increase proportionally with the number of hits as all the credit belongs to the big brands and top designer names mentioned in the titles and probably spotted everywhere in the texts while skimming through them, not the blogger himself/herself. Readers love to keep up with the latest news on their favorite fashion stars but they do not see the point of interacting with the blogger who does the most-blogged topics like every other blogger does and with his/her blog if it just keeps repeating the same bunch of information borrowed from other sites without bringing a fresh new perspective to it, not to mention following it. Yes, it’s cruel and that’s the reality.

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