Inside Acknowledgements

Wanted to put up a quick post to acknowledge some of the bloggers associated with business schools that my wife (Suzanne Shu) and I are directly connected to. The business schools are INSEAD (France), Southern Methodist University, and The University of Chicago. Haven’t met any of the bloggers here at INSEAD yet, but perhaps that time will come for me.

More business school blogs can be found at The League of MBA Bloggers.

Some Thoughts On Hugh Hewitt’s Book, “Blog”

I finally got around to completing Hugh Hewitt’s book,
“Blog”
. I can’t say that I recommend this book for people looking to understand
business blogging or blogging at a practitioner-level. That said, Hugh does a very nice job of both
highlighting the legitimization of the blog in the context of specific
political events and detailing specific blog and mainstream media events around
the “fall” of Senator Trent Lott, stumblings of presidential candidate John
Kerry, and flurry surrounding the Dan Rather/CBS/Bush National Guard forged
documents.

A couple of interesting things the book touches on:

  1. Hugh draws a very interesting analogy between the invention of movable type printing press and the reformation surrounding the Catholic church and distribution of the Bible. Note that movable typesetting brought down the cost of books more than 400 times, thus enabling knowledge to be dispersed through sub-communities very rapidly. Aside from Hugh’s book, I find it interesting to think about the name of Six Apart’s non-hosted blogging software, “Movable Type” and the how cost of content management software, traditionally thought of as enterprise software, has come down (arguably tens to hundreds of times, where some of the mid-range content management products are in the tens of thousands of dollars range versus blogging at hundreds of dollars [clearly not comparing apples to apples though]).
  2. Using the uber reach of Hugh Hewitt, Hugh writes something to the effect of how he plans to highlight the blogs of up-and-coming and young Republican bloggers to ensure that the next generation of Republicans to defeat the Democrats is in place. He highlights the talent gap on the side of the Democrats, especially given that most of the uber political blogs are all Republican. Interesting tactics to say the least given the Democrat lean of mainstream media, and the recent announcement of Fox News to supporting blogging.

To be frank, I don’t follow political blogs that closely,
and I haven’t followed the rise of talk radio. Perhaps as a consequence, I
don’t follow Hugh Hewitt that closely. I am not sure if Hugh is center right or
far right. He characterizes himself as center right. That said, some of the
accounts in his book strike me as a bit one-sided. Perhaps not nauseating
one-sideness like Moore’s
Fahrenheit 9/11, but you may need to look past some of Hugh’s zeal to get through
this book if you are not a Republican.

Uber Blogger Kottke Zooms Past Ramen Noodle Barrier

I have pretty limited access to the network right now, but thought I would link to a funny but insightful post by uber blogger Kottke that reports on his fund raising results to support himself as a full-time blogger. The graph on the front page is instructional for bloggers aspiring to support a career solely through blogging … Kottke reports he was clearly able to break the "Ramen noodle" barrier, which is as reported by Kottke, "the point at which I could each something besides ramen noodles for every meal". He wasn’t quite able to make his comfort zone of 1/3 pre-blogging salary …

For those that eat two Ramen noodle meals per say, that’s like a budget of $0.50 per day, right?

Amazing how a brand like Ramen can not only describe a near bottom-end point of one’s sustainable lifestyle but also be a widespread loved food and tasty snack.

In other fund raising news over the weekend, Joshua Schachter reports more on the investors in del.icio.us.

The Blogosphere Concludes The MBA Is Worthless

These results irk me to no end (because I have a lot of professorial friends in the b-schools that look to improve their programs all the time), but the blogosphere consensus as seeded by Seth Godin appears to be that the MBA is not an education. He is not alone in his claim. He is supported by a number of other prominent MBAs referenced in blogosphere conversations (click here, but note that the Blogpulse computation may take a while).

Note there are some potential measurement errors here in terms of what is tracked (looks like only formal trackbacks are included) because other conversations have clearly been spawned from Seth’s thread.

That said, presuming the Blogpulse measurement is representative of the crowd consensus, is the wisdom of crowds correct here? I’ve casually thrown in the "crowds" argument to support some of my prior posts, so I can’t have it both ways if the crowds argument is a valid argument, and the crowd concludes the MBA is bunk. Have any pre-conditions for the wisdom of crowds been violated in the Blogpulse chart?

Saving Krispy Kreme

My sources tell me that a big Krispy Kreme in the Chicagoland area just closed up. The world is not eating enough doughnuts? Reuters just reported that $225 million loan was extended to help with the cash crunch. I suppose good word-of-mouth donut-in-mouth marketing is not enough here.