Back to debbieweil.com
store · newsletter · bio · contact

BlogWrite for CEOs

Debbie Weil on CEO blogs, writing a thought leadership blog and the corporate blogging phenomenon.

Book · Speaking & Consulting · Blog · Subscribe
My Photo

About

Subscribe



  • Enter your email address:

Search this blog

  • Google

Add your Comment to this blog

  • Because I value your thoughtful opinions, I encourage you to add a Comment to any entry on this blog. I may edit for length or clarity and will delete off-topic or inappropriate comments.

E-newsletters Aren't Dead


  • Award-winning E-newsletter Starter Kit: PDF or print binder

Sponsors

Flickr Photos

  • www.flickr.com
    This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from wordbiz. Make your own badge here.

Recent Posts

  • Testing TypePads new TypePad Micro.
  • Christmas Boat
  • This Blog Has Moved! Lots of Changes: New House, New Site, New Thinking
  • Fictional Interlude... Life on the Coast of Maine
  • WOM-in-a-Day in the Windy City

Recent Comments

  • Jennifer Lawrence on How GM's Fastlane blog was born
  • monster beats outlet on Top 7 tips to write an effective business blog
  • deepa on Testing TypePads new TypePad Micro.
  • Hogan Shoes on John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods, Is Back to Blogging
  • ugg bailey button on Lawsuits against bloggers are starting to pop up... you may want to add a "Comments Disclaimer" to your blog

Categories

  • Blog design
  • Blog stats
  • Blogging 101
  • Blogging Etiquette
  • Blogging is mainstream
  • Book reviews
  • Branding & blogs
  • Business Models
  • Buzz
  • Case Studies
  • CEO bloggers
  • CGM
  • China
  • Corporate Blogging
  • Corporate Blogging Guidelines
  • Corporate Communications
  • Crisis blogging
  • Customer acquisition
  • Downloads
  • E-newsletters vs blogs
  • Employee Blogs
  • Etiquette
  • European corporate bloggers
  • Events
  • Fear of blogging
  • Fortune 500 blogs
  • Gobal blogosphere
  • Internal blogs
  • International
  • Legal Issues
  • Marketing & blogs
  • MSM on blogging
  • Online video
  • Podcasting
  • Presenting & speaking
  • Re-categorize
  • ROI of blogging
  • RSS
  • Selling with a blog
  • Senior exec bloggers
  • Social media
  • Social media for social good
  • Stats
  • Stats & metrics
  • Tagging
  • Tagging & social media
  • Ten Questions for CEO Bloggers
  • The Corporate Blogging Book
  • Tools
  • Tools for corporate blogging
  • Twitter
  • Useful Articles
  • Video blogging
  • Web 2.0
  • What to write about
  • Wikis
  • WOMM (word of mouth marketing)
  • Writing Tips

December 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    

Archives

  • December 2009
  • January 2009
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
Powered by TypePad

Quoted in Investor's Business Daily on China and Blogging

After spending two weeks in China last fall I do not profess to be an authority. However, I did pick up enough to feel I could respond knowledgably to a reporter from IBD who called me about Internet censorship, the Net Nanny and the state of blogging in China. Here's the story by Doug Tsuruoka published yesterday: In China, Good Blogs And Bad Blogs.

"Weil says curbs on blogs and other media will stay for the foreseeable future. "What Chinese call the Net Nanny or GFW (Great Fire Wall of China) isn't likely to disappear anytime soon," Weil said. "What is certain is that censorship will continue to be unpredictable."
- Investor's Business Daily (March 7, 2008)

Posted by Debbie Weil on March 08, 2008 at 12:46 PM in China | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: china blogging

Q. & A. on social media in China

China_socialmedia_buzzbin Thanks to Geoff Livingston for prompting a bit of reflection on what it all meant in Debbie Weil Discusses Social Media in China.

China Blogging Tour chronicles my two weeks in China in October 2007 during which I spoke to a number of audiences (primarily English speaking ex-pats) about corporate blogging and social media in the U.S.

I tried to learn as much as possible about the attitudes in China towards the tools and technologies of social media and how they're being used by businesses, both multinational and Chinese. But in two weeks, you can only scratch the surface.

Here is the complete text of my Q & A on social media in China for the BuzzBin (BB) blog:

BB: What’s the state of social media in China?

DW: It's exploding. First, there are the sheer numbers: 162 million Chinese Internet users. That puts China right behind – or almost even with – the U.S., which has an estimated Internet user population of 165 million to 210 million, depending on whom you believe. And yes, blogs are big.

There are 30 million Chinese blogs [links to PDF report], according to CNNIC. But discussion or bulletin boards, known as BBS, along with email and IMing, are even bigger. Everyone in the middle class uses BBS – to express themselves, to network, to learn. [Read about the 2007 Chinese Blogger Conference in Beijing.]

Sharon [links to YouTube interview with her], the guide I hired to take me to the Great Wall, told me she met her husband online, in a discussion forum for those who've studied abroad. Jason Ge, general manager of channel & marketing sales for Sina.com, China's major portal and BSP (blog services provider), told me the site gets 300 million page views a day. Jason and I were on an Ad-tech Beijing panel together, along with Des Walsh.

"... with that many middle class consumers online, Chinese customers are like low-hanging fruit, just waiting for companies to engage with them through blogs, contest Web sites, discussion forums, SMS and other channels. And yes there are Chinese CEO blogs."

As for corporate use of social media - both multinationals and Chinese companies - yes, it's starting to happen. Think about it: with that many middle class consumers online, Chinese customers are like low-hanging fruit, just waiting for companies to engage with them through blogs, contest Web sites, discussion forums and SMS. And yes there are Chinese CEO blogs. Here's my short list of Chinese CEO and corporate blogs.

BB: What was your biggest take away from the China book tour?

DW: The red-hot sense of possibility. I loved it. The energy, enthusiasm and entrepreneurialism amongst the professionals I met – both ex-pats and native Chinese – was astounding. China reminds me of America and the exhilaration of the dot com era. And yes of course it might be a bubble. But it's not going to burst anytime soon.

We know that China’s economy is exploding: the growth is palpable. Factories are cranking; office towers are shooting up; everybody is working 24X7.

[Aside: Remarkably, there was no (apparent) pollution in Beijing the week I was there, Oct. 15 - 19, 2007. Locals said the 17th National Party Congress, meeting that week next to Tiananmen Square, had purposely shut down factories surrounding the the city two weeks earlier. Like much of what goes in China, nobody really seemed to have the answer.]

If I could live a different life I’d move to Beijing or Shanghai, learn to speak Mandarin fluently and work there as an ex-pat. Oh yeah, my take away? I want to go back and dig deeper. You can’t possibly understand China after a two-week trip. Here’s a list I compiled of best resources to learn about social media in China.

BB: How is commenting different?

DW: Again, the sheer numbers. The Chinese are comment crazy. But you need to put commenting in a bucket that includes all kinds of posting online. The population of the US is just over 300 million. The population of China is over 1.3 billion, or 20% of the world’s population. As Sharon Ruwart, CEO of Elsevier Science & Technology China told me after I spoke at AmCham China in Beijing: “Just put two zeroes next to anything you’re accustomed to.”

So instead of 10 comments, think 1000 comments. When she started blogging for Elsevier she posted a first entry that said simply: “I’m starting a blog.” She didn’t publicize it in any way. She immediately got seven comments. Sharon and her husband moved to Beijing three years ago and are among the new group of older ex-pats.

When the Forbidden Starbucks drama unfolded (a Starbucks was formerly located inside Beijing’s Forbidden City palace; it has since moved), it was mentioned on a TV newcaster’s blog, then picked up and discussed thousands of times in discussion groups. The ripple effect? Close to 3,000 comments on one blog post about it.

BB: How do the Chinese fight off authoritarian control of their sites?

DW: They don’t “fight it off” per se. The Chinese government censors the Internet and everyone knows it. The cyber-police are always hovering. Self-censorship comes naturally. But so do entrepreneurialism and a certain amount of risk-taking. Everyone knows about proxy servers like Anonymouse.org. They’re also accustomed to sudden and unexplained shutdowns of sites like YouTube.

That happened while I was there. Everyone felt it was connected to Google’s ill-advised decision to launch YouTube China during the Party Congress meeting in Beijing.* The explosion in the use of the Internet – despite censorship – is a fascinating part of the contradictions that define China.

BB: What should the U.S. learn from China?

DW: Not to be complacent. That our utterly unfettered self-expression is precious. But to look to China for energy and possibility. There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that this is the China Century. If you have a chance to visit, go.

BB: After blogging, what’s your favorite social media form?

DW: My new iPhone. I’m captivated by it: the expanding and shrinking photos; the text messages in bubbles; the voicemail that automatically plays back for you. Oops… wait, an iPhone isn’t social media. My husband says I haven't spoken to him since I got mine a few weeks ago.

I guess I have a love/hate relationship with Facebook. I’m fascinated by the concentric linkages it creates between and amongst communities. And the blurring of personal with professional. I’m wary, however, about the lack of privacy and of course appalled by Facebook’s recent misstep in how it launched Beacon for advertisers.

I have a Twitter account but don't use it much.

BB: What’s next for Debbie Weil?

DW: I’ve got some big ideas. I plan to go back to China and work with multinationals on implementing social media strategies. But as long as you’re asking… at some point I’d like to move outside the corporate realm. I would like to create the programmatic piece of Nicholas Negroponte’s One Laptop Per Child.

What should these kids do with their laptops? I want to teach kids all over the world how to write clearly by using a blog. How to network and empower themselves and their families by tapping into the global online economy.

I believe in the power of words. Blogs and other online channels are just a new place to deploy them. If anyone’s got great contacts at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, or another appropriate resource for executing a big idea, let me know.


* Has YouTube China been launched - ? I can’t find it. Tudou is the Chinese equivalent of YouTube.

Posted by Debbie Weil on December 21, 2007 at 07:14 PM in CEO bloggers, China, Corporate Blogging, Social media, The Corporate Blogging Book | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: social media in china

Simon Chen interviews me about corporate blogging at BlogWorld Expo

Thanks to Simon Chen of Melbourne-based Eight Black for this really nice video interview about corporate blogging and my book. Simon obviously uses much classier equipment than my idiot-proof Flip video recorder - which I love except for how long it takes to upload the videos to YouTube. If you're thinking of buying one, BTW, be sure to get the new ultra Flip which is flatter and plugs into your laptop less awkwardly.

Simon also kindly live-blogged my BlogWorld panel on Corporate & CEO Blogging on Nov. 8, 2007.

Posted by Debbie Weil on November 07, 2007 at 11:01 PM in China, Corporate Blogging, Events | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: blogworld expo, simon chen, the corporate blogging book

Best links to learn about blogging, social media, Web 2.0 and technology in China

Danwei_101807DATELINE: Beijing (Oct. 18, 2007): There is a small group of expats who speak fluent Mandarin and are extremely knowledgeable about social media, Web 2.0, etc. in China. Three of the best are Sam Flemming, Jeremy Goldkorn and William Moss. Here are their blog/sites, along with some other great resources.

Danwei
http://www.danwei.org/

Imagethief
http://news.imagethief.com/blogs/china/

CIC
http://www.seeisee.com/index.php/sam/

China Web 2.0 Review
http://www.cwrblog.net/

Ogilvy China Digital Watch
http://digitalwatch.ogilvy.com.cn/en/

Silicon Hutong
http://siliconhutong.typepad.com/silicon_hutong/

Proxy servers

You have to know about these in order to get to sites like Technorati.com, which is blocked in China.

Anonymouse.org (server in Germany)
anonymouse.org

Posted by Debbie Weil on October 18, 2007 at 07:50 AM in CEO bloggers, China, Corporate Blogging, Social media, Web 2.0 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: china, social media

I'm in China! Please follow the China Blogging Tour...

First (jetlagged) impressions: China is amazing! Shiny, new, modern, BIG. I''m in Beijing. It's 6:30 AM Monday morning here; 6:30 PM Sunday back in the U.S. Follow the China Blogging Tour!

P.S. This blog is loading very slowly from my hotel in Beijing. Not sure if there is a problem.

Posted by Debbie Weil on October 14, 2007 at 06:54 PM in China, The Corporate Blogging Book | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

First look at the Mandarin Chinese edition of The Corporate Blogging Book

Posted by Debbie Weil on October 14, 2007 at 12:36 PM in China, The Corporate Blogging Book | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: the corporate blogging book

China Blogging Tour: first night in Beijing

Jetlagged... so won't try to be witty. Just a huge thanks (xiè xiè) to Sabrina Dorr with Edelman Beijing for picking me up at the airport. A fun dinner tonight at the cool, crowded and noisy Jin Ding Xuan restaurant near the Lamah Temple.

Photo left to right: Bao Lei, director of corporate communications for Johnson & Johnson's Olympics Sponsorship; Sabrina (aka Sabs) with Edelman; yours truly and Sharon Zhang, also with J & J. Full disclosure: J & J is an Edelman client.

This was a purely social evening but we did discuss corporate blogging and how or why it could benefit a company like Johnson & Johnson, with multiple brands. (See video of Bao signing the new Chinese edition of my book!) Interestingly, neither Bao nor Sharon had heard about J & J's new BTW (By the Way) corporate blog, launched in June 2007.

I don't take this as ignorance on their part (both speak fluent English). I interpret it as a deliberately under-the-radar approach to blogging by J & J's media relations team in the U.S. Food for thought (yes, it was delicious)...

Posted by Debbie Weil on October 14, 2007 at 12:32 PM in China, Corporate Blogging, The Corporate Blogging Book | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: edelman beijing, the corporate blogging book

Enough procrastinating... what I (didn't) do over the summer

This seems like the perfect way to get back into blogging. Today's Wall Street Journal has a great article that, I suspect, will resonate with many readers: How I Spent Squandered My Summer Vacation (registration required). One of the things at the top of my list was to learn Chinese (OK, a few phrases) via fluenz (a DVD) and chinesepod (a podcast and online lessons). Confession: I didn't do it.

But heck, according to the WSJ, neither did comedian Andy Borowitz learn Italian before a planned trip to Italy next month. Instead, he ate pizza several times as a way to "practice Italian."

Onward... I'll land in Beijing on Sunday, Oct. 14th, Chinese phrases memorized... or not.

Posted by Debbie Weil on September 07, 2007 at 03:28 PM in China, The Corporate Blogging Book | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

What readers are saying

  • Steve Clayton
    "Go read Debbie's book. Along with Scoble it's the other bible. Buy it." - Steve Clayton, CTO Microsoft UK Partner Group

Contact

  • Debbie Weil
    www.debbieweil.com
    mobile: 202.255.1467
    land line: 202.333.2022


    View Debbie Weil's profile on LinkedIn

    Add BlogWrite for CEOs to your Technorati Favorites

    this is Debbie's profile


    follow debbieweil at http://twitter.com

Blogads


The Corporate Blogging Show

  • The Corporate Blogging Show

Top CEO and exec blogs

  • Alan Meckler
  • Bill Marriott
  • Bob Langert
  • Bob Lutz
  • Bob Parsons
  • Dave Kellogg
  • David Brain
  • David Sifry
  • Irving Wladawsky-Berger
  • John Mackey
  • Jonathan Schwartz
  • Karen Christensen
  • Mark Cuban
  • Mike Critelli
  • Richard Edelman
  • Ted Leonsis

Corporate Blogging Resources

  • Fortune 500 business blogging wiki
  • NewPR wiki list of CEO blogs
  • NewPR wiki list of corporate blogs
  • Other corporate blogging resources

debbie's sites

  • Home Page

    Book blog

    E-book store

    Subscribe to WordBiz Report and download FREE a 15-page guide: Top 7 Tips to Write an Effective Business Blog!

Buy the Book · Speaking & Consulting · Blog · Podcast · Store · Newsletter Archive
Media Kit · Bio · In the News · How to Advertise · Grab Your Feeds · Privacy Policy · Contact

Tel: +1 202.364.5705 | Fax: +1 202.686.4746 | Email: wordbiz(at)gmail.com
© Copyright 2007 Debbie Weil and WordBiz.com, Inc. · TypePad · Design by Blogging Expertise