hrj: (doll)
[personal profile] hrj
…that my "user information" indicates that 226 people list my journal as a "friend" but even in my recent burst of activity for the Lesbian Historic Motif Project, the maximum number of unique LJ-user views I've gotten on any particular day was 14. On that same day, I had 25 unique non-LJ visitors. (I plaster links to this series all over: fb, twitter.) On the average, I've had 20 unique visitors total each of the 15 days I've posted LHMP entries. This compares with an average of 29 unique visitors daily for a 10 day period in May starting with my first Kalamazoo postings (though some of the traffic at the end of that period was for several writing-related entries). The main thing that all this says to me is that if I were to move my blogging to a different platform, it would have very little impact on my readership. One of the worries I've had about, say, setting up a blog on my alpennia.com site (which is still very much in larval form) has been that I'd lose readers who couldn't be bothered to follow me over there. But the LJ stats show that the majority of my readers aren't reading my through LJ accounts. (On some days, as few as 10% of my readers are through LJ and the rate is always below 50%.)

So here's a question: is there anyone out there who is currently reading me regularly through LJ who would not be willing or able to follow me on a separate blog (presumably one with RSS capability, and where I'd be providing links in fb and twitter)? LJ has essentially lost its usefulness as a community-building or community-maintaining tool. I suspect a lot of those 200+ accounts still listed as following me are leftovers from people who have long since drifted away. On the other hand, I don't see myself stopping reading my friends-list here because there are a number of very good friends who still post regularly. So I'm dithering.

Re: Technical bits

Date: 2014-06-23 11:02 pm (UTC)
brooksmoses: (Default)
From: [personal profile] brooksmoses
There are ways to "syndicate" an RSS feed into something that is sort of a quasi-livejournal. The big problem with them is that while they do allow commenting (but the blog author doesn't get notified), the entries and their comments disappear after a couple of weeks. So people have to click through back to the alpennia.com journal to make permanent comments.

There are also ways to set up a blog so that it automatically crossposts things to a livejournal when you post to it. See, for example, this post from [livejournal.com profile] swan_tower and the first of the two "crossposted from" links at the bottom. In my opinion, that would be the better option. I'll be glad to ask her how it's set up if that would be useful.

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