It’s hard to consistently blog like Seth Godin or Chris Brogan. If you are a developer who just blogs because you know you have to get your name out there, perhaps more so.
Paul Stamatiou and Calvin Yu came up with a brilliant idea for curing writer’s block for your blog–create a way to ask readers what they want to read. Just like UserVoice allows software users to ask for features, their latest invention Skribit empowers blog readers to ask for certain kinds of content. Install the Skribit widget on your blog and put some context for the kinds of ideas you want. If a reader makes a suggestion, they will get notified when you actually take it.
Skribit is also a social network of sorts too. Readers can search for content related to what they want, and according to Paul, “Bloggers that don’t have huge traffic can browse our archive of suggestions and see what is relevant to them.”
For more information, see:
Skribit’s website: www.skribit.com
Skribit’s blog: http://skribit.com/blog/
Skribit’s Twitter: http://twitter.com/skribit
Skribit’s Crunchbase profile: http://www.crunchbase.com/company/skribit
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