Rettberg’s article, “Blogging Brands” offers insight
regarding different forms of advertising utilized by bloggers, and the positive
and negative aspects of each.
Until my Digital Communications class, I honestly did not
know that some people blogged professionally. Blogging as a career, with a salary was a completely foreign
concept to be. For someone to “bring
home the bacon” just by writing for free online was confusing to me. If anyone may blog, then how can people
possibly make a living off it?
Then of course, it came to me – everything made sense – these bloggers
use advertising.
Blogs that get a lot of traffic, naturally, can be supported
by advertising. It is up to the
bloggers themselves to determine what types of ads they are comfortable with –
some prefer small ads on the sidebar of the blog, some like banner ads, and
some, use sponsored ads.
If we’re being completely honest (and I promise to always be
honest on my blog!) I am not completely on board with the idea of blogger using
advertisements. Rettberg puts my
perspective perfectly in her assertion on page 138:
Blogging
is an unregulated area, and this is the sort of question that shows that
blogging is not simply a form of journalism. It is not clear whether blogging
should follow the rules of mainstream media about separating editorial
content from sponsored content, and even if there were an agreement about
this, there would be no way to make bloggers follow it. J.D. Lasica argues straight
out that a blogger who wishes to be thought of as a journalist cannot post sponsored
entries.
I am of the feeling that bloggers who post about specific
products or companies for payment, are not necessarily being true to
themselves, to their blogs, or to their audiences. It would frustrate me to follow a blog that suddenly gained significant-enough
traffic to where the author decided to start posting about random products. I don’t choose to read blogs to be made
to feel like a consumer. I read
blogs because I like what the author posts. Once the author begins posting sponsored ads, it may not be
the blog it used to be, and I may not like it as much as I did before.
I have less of a problem with sponsored ads if the authors completely
disclose that they are paid to write reviews of particular products, etc. After all, “truth and integrity are at
the core of both the success stories and the failures of commercial blogging,” so
if the author of a blog does not disclose this information to his or her
readers and then is later found out, it is extremely likely that the author
will have lost all credibility (Rettberg 153). In fact, they definitely lose credibility for me.
So my questions are, do blog authors lose credibility for you when
they start allowing advertisements on their pages? What about when they participate in sponsored blogging? At what point would an author lose your
interest because of advertising on his or her blog page?
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