This thread on self-publishing is taking on a life of its own. It merits a post to bookmark this moment for posterity. This discussion on self-publishing demonstrate the self-organizing aspects of the blogosphere.
Here is the cycle in a nutshell:
An idea is expressed in the blogosphere and it generated ripples of interest and comments which cause further eddies of related activity (people commenting about the topic to others).
The topic then attracts people with specialized expertise who contribute their knowledge to the conversation in order to provide a better understanding of the boundaries and potentials of the initial idea. (They do this for personal gratification, not personal gain.)
The trail-breaking aspects of the topic suggest commercial and marketing potentials to those people who convert ideas into money flows, and the race is on to develop a working business while a market window exists.
We have here on this weblog, and in this thread, the pattern of technological change which brings about new businesses and industries. We have a creative commons of pooled knowledge about self-publishing which gains value with every added comment. Blogging is truly magical because we create value by communicating!
I started a thread about the current state of self-publishing. Others joined in to express interest. The conversation attracted those who have expertise in the area and quickly became more than an exchange of viewpoints.
Within hours we had moved into a discussion of the role POD (Print on Demand) plays
in the spectrum of self-publishing and started
accumulating information on the readability of ragged right
versus fully justified copy. At that point, this thread started becoming a useful resource for future self-publishers. There is still more to come.
The thread will eventually attract the interest of people who have valuable ideas but who couldn't get published in the cold and unfriendly world of traditional publishing. These unpublished J. K. Rowlings and Grishams may decide to create their own path to customers and ignore the barricades set up by traditional, and struggling, publishing houses. They will publish their book and a new saga will begin.
This cycle will repeat endlessly, as long as a free blogosphere continues to exist. If there are topics of general interest related to solving problems, a new set of business relationships will arise almost spontaneously from the ensuing discussion.
This cycle is not new. This kind of round-robin discussion was going on long before the Pyramids were being built. The power of weblogs has merely put an afterburner on the process, so that industries are conceived and initiated in weeks, instead of years.
When we engage in blogging, we are playing with fire. We are harnessing the power of open communication in ways which will shape our future in ways we can't even imagine.
To drive this point home, you should realize when we blog about something, we actually change our future in respect to that area on the fly. Now, if that isn't that a sobering thought, what is?
...and I find the ripples from blogging strongly move into other areas of my life as well.
Well said.
Take Care
Michael
Posted by: Michael | Mar 03, 2005 at 10:29 AM
Ditto Michael's comment. I feel the Ripple effect myself. Hope you are well David. It sounds as though you are. I downloaded 'Danger Quicksand' but have to wait until the weekend to read it carefully.
Posted by: Marie | Mar 03, 2005 at 10:11 PM
I have downloaded 'Danger Quicksand' at work and am reading it at my desk in down time, I left it on the "Dead End Job" heading and went to lunch. I am that ignored...
Posted by: Tim | Mar 03, 2005 at 10:47 PM