Tags Are Your New Website

March 15, 2007 · Comments

Follow me on this. This idea came to me yesterday while talking about what organizations own with regards to events and conferences. It was more pointed towards PR folks and product or service vendors hoping to capture the buzz of their exposure at an event.

Tags Are Your Website

When I say “tag,” I mean data identifiers used by services like Technorati and Flickr, Network2, and anywhere else clever enough to help people find things easier. When I say they are your website, I’m suggesting that following the conversation created by people not inside your organization is far more important than creating pretty flash pages and dazzling product descriptions on a site that you still have to push people to visit.

I’m saying, “bring the conversation out into the web where it belongs. Don’t leave it bottled up on your site.”

Sure You Need a Presence

It’s great to have a landing website, and better still to have lots of great participatory interactions built into it (like phone contact info, comments for your blog posts, pictures of the people who contribute to the organization, ways to find the information you need). And that website should be alive with audio, video, text, and all kinds of ways for people to experience what you want them to experience. But your website itself is no longer the storefront. It’s no longer the front line of “awareness” of you or your organization. Instead, it’s the fulfillment, the backoffice, the meeting rooms off the main stage.

Tags as Neon Signs

If you choose NOT to use tags, awareness of your efforts will stay in the same channel it has always occupied: your friends, your colleagues, competitors, some fans. By using tags to deliver your message further, and to absorb the conversation about your product, service, organization, or whatever it is you need to communicate.

The message is no longer a buzzword you control (though you can influence it). It’s a conversation the people create.

In Action

In case this is too meta, the concept is this. Imagine we give out Video on the Net tags at the beginning of the event for bloggers, videobloggers, the Press, etc. What if we ask that folks tag things VON2007? On top of it, things I liveblog or videoblog or things the team blogs will be tagged with “event, conference, techconference, videoblogging, podcasting, community” and whatever else.

The first set of tags are “official,” and they’re the neon signs I mentioned above. The second whole string are words that don’t bring “Video on the Net” to the picture, but that might be caught by someone surfing Google or Technorati for the phrases contained therein.

Now, when I go out and surf Technorati and Google Blogsearch, I have a means to find conversations in and around what we’re doing. Now I can see what the people think of the event. Hate it? Great. I’ll know about it better if you tag it VON2007. See how it goes? It’s a conversation that happens OFF my websites, but instead onto the open roads of the web.

Full of crap? Make sense? I’m yours to abuse on this one.

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  • Good stuff...

    I tag as a secondary act after posting.

    I rarely pursue the tag after that,

    But I do allow it in addition to bookmarking and burning feeds.

    I want permanent contact, not a fleeting moment.

    I am not a whore! I'm a blogger.
  • just starting to feel this. thanks for putting into words.
  • I have this blog I need to host, so the tags are more doable- but in the meantime, I have a post over at Parent's Eye View about how we are all internet electricians, responsbile for hooking up the wires, making the connections, and letting people pull the switches to the stuff they find interesting.
    Without the links, tags and the like, the wires don;t connect and the bigger lightbulbs caused by great ideas never get ignited.
  • I'm buying it.

    Dale -- the point (as I choose to understand it, anyway!) is that the tags are pointers to everything that is being said about you or about whatever topic you are supporting on your site. Of course the tags _themselves_ are not the website, it's everything that is tagged. "Things That are Tagged Are Your New Website" just doesn't look as good on a t-shirt.
  • For once I disagree with you, Chris!

    "Tags are your website?" No. That's like saying a card catalog is a book. It's not. It's a means to an end, but not the end.

    Tools are tools, but content is still king. Check out Zeldman's latest post for evidence. http://www.zeldman.com/2007/03/15/web-1-point-0...
  • What I didn't say in my first comment-- I think you are definitely on to something, Chris. The "medium is the message" comment by Bob is right in my line of understanding as well: Even blogs aren't so different except that it is a new medium-- it's what you say that counts-- that is also true in my profession, PR--.

    (McLuhan taps me on shoulder, says: "You know nothing of my work. How you ever got into the media business at all is totally amazing."
    Woody Allen taps me on shoulder, says: "You know nothing of my work, either. To quote my best-known film out of context betrays your crass ignorance.")
  • I have only recently been adding tags to my blog posts. For one thing, I just didn't know I had the option before. And another, I don't like the fact that they clutter my blog posts. I am going to look into whether they can be hidden on my page but still there to be searchable...
  • This is a very McLuhanesque thought. Tags are the site; the medium is the message. Will tag clouds become a new form of writing?
  • You are full of something? It, maybe. I think in this instance you are right on.
  • makes total sense!
  • You are right on... I love it when a random thought turns out to be brilliant like that. :)
  • As a tiny example of what you say-- boo me if I am misreading-- I use technorati tags on my Gischeleman blog and noticed that most of my traffic comes from technorati tags (webkinz was a recent example).
  • It depends completely on how much you insist on controlling your brand and how much you enable your users / participants to "be" your brand.

    It's getting to the point where your brand is a by-product of the experience of the users; that experience IS the brand, and your USERS ARE the brand.
  • where "full of it" = "absolutely correct"
  • you're full of it
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