In a total game changer for the worlds of toys and technology (Hasbro and Zynga have teamed up to make toys and board games based on Zynga’s popular online video games. Starting with Words With Friends, the partnership will also see FarmVille,... Read the rest of this post
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By: Anastasia Goodstein,
on 2/10/2012
Blog: Ypulse (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Jobs, MTV, board games, brand loyalty, Shannon Hale, Jane Austen, friday, Millennials, Ypulse Essentials, Gen Y, helicopter parents, hasbro, zynga, Elizabeth Eulberg, e-textbooks, get yourself tested, figment, rebecca black, hotel transylvania, Words With Friends, Chipolte, The Vow, tweens and beauty, Wet Hot American Summer, E. Lockhart, Add a tag
By: Betsy Bird,
on 2/28/2007
Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Brand Loyalty, Why Blog?, Add a tag
Head on over to this posting and offer your own thoughts. Some fine minds have already left their opinions.
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Blog: Ypulse (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Jobs, MTV, board games, brand loyalty, Shannon Hale, Jane Austen, friday, Millennials, Ypulse Essentials, Gen Y, helicopter parents, hasbro, zynga, Elizabeth Eulberg, e-textbooks, get yourself tested, figment, rebecca black, hotel transylvania, Words With Friends, Chipolte, The Vow, tweens and beauty, Wet Hot American Summer, E. Lockhart, Add a tag

Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Brand Loyalty, Why Blog?, Add a tag
It's a legitimate question.
Me, I get the satisfaction that comes with playing a really intense video game. As I play, my user stats go up. It's the same sense of accomplishment you get when you've won a particularly difficult portion of Tetris.
Bookseller Chick wonders what it all means, though:
... what kind of content do you expect from your writers who blog? How about from the bloggers who aren’t (and never will be) “professional” writers? With the proliferation of writer blogs, group writer blogs, reader blogs and the personal blogs that blend all these things into one, I’ve really begun to question what I need from each source as well as how each affects my thoughts on the blogger. How much is too much? How much is not enough?You don't want to hear me wax poetic on my own blogging because, frankly, that would be dull. I am very interested in the idea of "brand loyalty" though. Some people find a blog they like and stick with it through thick and thin. They find the idea of looking at more than one blog a day tiresome. I, on the opposite end of the spectrum, look at tons of blogs, if I'm able, so as to cull information for the following day. I have no brand loyalty, though there are certain places I prefer to visit first.
Head on over to this posting and offer your own thoughts. Some fine minds have already left their opinions.
6 Comments on What Do You Get Out of Blogging?, last added: 3/6/2007
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What about leaving our thoughts here???
I am delighted that you like to look at tons of blogs. Yes, please, and then tell us all the news. I especially love the insider reports of trips to the publishers for viewings of the new lists.
I am down to three blogs. You, the BRGs and Mr. Roger.
Katherine
Who is Mr. Roger?
Mr. Roger had a neighborhood, didn't he? But I suspect Katherine means Roger Sutton.
But I do wish to echo her comment that your insider reports totally rock. Oh, the rest of the blog rocks, too, but I've said that before!
Oooooh. THAT Roger. Right-o. Me so slow.
Well, I for one read Gotta Book every day. So there you go.
Definitely brand loyal when it comes to blgs; I read you, honorable Fuse, & Chicken Spaghetti. Indeed, I do find it tiresome (& a wee bit difficult as a student) to troll through numerous blogs per day. Thankfully, you do that for your brand-loyal audience & we reap the benefits!
--Laura B.
Yay, brand loyal audiences! When I am rich I'll send you all homemade brownies in thanks.