Who Are You? (who who, who who…)

I was talking to Andrew B Clark (the Brand Chef and new owner of Create Wow Media) at the monthly meeting of Central Iowa Bloggers on Friday about how I am almost the “Anti Social-Media Expert.”  We laughed about it and his response was simply “write a post about it!”  After my series of volatile social media posts the last couple of years, I think I will pass on anything controversial, but it did get me thinking.

I get frustrated by the success others have within their niches, but truth be told I don’t really HAVE a niche.  Not so much anyway.  Let’s face it, unless you are Wil Wheaton (hi, Wil!) having a “personal blog” is never going to reap the monetary or statistical rewards of one focused within a personal niche.  The entire category of “personal blogs” is not filled with many success stories.

I have struggled over the years to find my “niche.”  So much so I sat in a room with Joel Comm, Dan Nickerson and Joel Ownby in the offices of InfoMedia in Colorado asking them “am I just boring?”  Their response was swift and decisive: “You have a book.  You’ve sold over 2,000 copies.  Leverage that – there’s your niche!”  Yes, I could do that.  But I am so far removed from the niche living here in Iowa, that I don’t feel what I say would actually matter.

So I have struggled in finding that niche.  Maybe it is “filmmaking in Iowa” and I can blog about the state of the film’s film industry, etc. since the incentives dried up.  But there is already a blog on that. Besides that, there is really only one other niche I am willing to devote the amount of time to:

Making money on the Internet

And try to break into THAT. It is one of the “no no’s” of trying to start a blog.  Everybody tries to get into that and everybody fails. Besides, I don’t have a product, list or network built up that would support that.

Attending Blogworld was inspiring, but it still did not yield many ideas for my “perfect niche.”  I am still looking for that one “thing” that will hold my interest (and readers).  I admit I was very jaded about blogging a few months ago and was resigned to the fact that the only people making money on the internet were people selling products on making money on the internet.  While I know there is room for “real people” to be successful blogging… I still wonder at times whether I am “interesting” enough to do so.  It isn’t a lack of knowledge on the fundamentals – perhaps it is a lack of understanding and knowledge of MYSELF.

Definitely something worth investigating and cause for more introspection.

Dartboard photo by Loutsu

Guilty Pleasures

Many of my readers know of of the autograph collecting I did while I was in Los Angeles (NOTE: I really need to spend the time to scan in everything, and rescan some others) but another one of the collecting I have begun, and only have a few of, is collecting/acquiring autographs on books.

I only have a couple right now, but I have uploaded them to Flickr and they appear below. I hope to be able to add CC Chapman’s to my list at some point (nudge nudge, CC!) – but I think I’m off to a good start with these two.

"Book" Marked

I was tagged in J. Erik Potter’s blog (whom I didn’t know had one!)  answering questions about books – what you have, how many, etc etc.   Seemed interesting.

The Protocol: Answer 5 questions. Tag 5 booklovers.

The Questions:
1) How many books do you own?
2) What was the last book you read?
3) What was the last book you purchased?
4) What five books are most meaningful to you?
5) What is your most obscure favorite book? Or, favorite most obscure book?

My Answers:
1) Only about 70 or so.   Ive donated mega boxes full to libraries in both Ames and Simi Valley at various times of moving.

2) Tie between The Dip and The Four Hour Work Week

3) The Dip (see above)

4) Geez.   Mirror by Graham Masterton, The Eternity Brigade by Stephen Goldin, Kids in the Biz by Troy Rutter (I had to put it in…), How To Publish Your Non-Fiction Book, Othersyde by J. Michael Straczynski

5) Hm, now this is a hard one.  I would have to say The Eternity Brigade above.  I read it several times growing up, and then it was near impossible to find.  Now he has reprinted it both in print and digitally, so it is available again.   There are so many levels dealing with war that parallel things going on today even, plus the science fiction aspect.   It’s not a literary classic by any means, but always a good read.

So now I get to tag people?  How about…

Jennifer Nieland, Michael Burstein, Dan Wood, CC Chapman, and what the heck Wil Wheaton

[TAGS]book marked, jennifer nieland, michael burstein, Dan Wood, CC Chapman, Wil Wheaton, books, J Erik Potter[/TAGS]