Interesting. But you left out the 'lessons to be learned' part which I'll gladly suggest here:
* For a blog to thrive, it must maintain the same outlook and quality that once captured people's attention. This means that whatever housekeeping must be done in the blog, try to keep the readers out of it in order to minimize disruption of core service for which readers are after.
* Writing apology posts is bad publicity. Writing long complicated apology posts is just plain detrimental.
AL wrote:
Interesting. But you left out the 'lessons to be learned' part which I'll gladly suggest here:
* For a blog to thrive, it must maintain the same outlook and quality that once captured people's attention. This means that whatever housekeeping must be done in the blog, try to keep the readers out of it in order to minimize disruption of core service for which readers are after.
* Writing apology posts is bad publicity. Writing long complicated apology posts is just plain detrimental.