I like differing opinions, thoughts and comments. I think it's good to have a variety of thought. No one likes a yes man right? Except maybe in the social media world. Then sometimes it resembles a quid pro quo type of environment. I'll promote your stuff if you promote mine. The thinking is well illustrated by David Armano with his depiction of influencer ripples. If your content can be promoted by the right people then it can reach more people. It's why companies are so hot on the influencer thing right now - find the influencer and get eyeballs and sell product. Look, I'm down with helping my friends out but...
Today's online influence is overblown, overrated and diluted and can be gamed.
Here's why. What if the content sucks? Yet because you and I are friends and we read and promote each other's stuff, we'll retweet and share content sometimes sight unseen. That's kind of jive isn't it? Yet it's effective. That's not really fair to the reader is it? But it works. What if the reader is someone on the outside and is trying to "get in" to the world of social media? They might share and promote your crappy content, too. Add the element of two people with very large networks of followers and subscribers sharing content and you can see how this can all be affected. Crappy content always has a fighting chance with a killer post title and a supposed influencer sharing it.
How about these two scenarios? The first one I've been sucked into a bunch of times. You see a compelling blog title tweeted, you click on it and it ends up being something that you might wrap your dead fish in. The second, I will refer to this definition from Wikipedia.
A spam blog, sometimes referred to by the neologism splog,[1] is a blog which the author uses to promote affiliated websites, to increase the search engine rankings of associated sites or to simply sell links/ads.
We're all suckers for a great blog post title. Why? Because we're hoping for fresh, we're hoping for a different POV. We're tired of repetitive thoughts, posts and comments without any backbone. A lot of people have ceased writing for their audiences and are writing purely for search, link juice and hollow authority. Unfortunately there's no end in sight and we'll continue to be influenced into clicking on and reading. Hoping.