I have a slightly different take on a report from Forrester that was forwarded to me, titled "A Majority Of Firms Are At Least Considering Blogs".
They asked 275 IT managers and IT executives (arguably the wrong people, but more on that later) the question, "Has your company invested in blogs?" and found that only 27% were actively using them, another 27% were piloting or considering them, with the remaining 46% answering, "No, and we have no plans to".
Maybe it's because it's a Friday and my glass is half empty at the moment, but I'd have titled this survey "Almost Half Of Firms Are Not Considering Blogs". Anyway, Forrester's glass is clearly half full, so on we go (later in the slide deck they even conclude that "Blogging has hit the mainstream, with only a minority of firms not at all interested in the technology").
They also asked those that have implemented or are piloting blogs the business reasons why they are using them. Aside from "Internal knowledge and content management", almost all these "IT decision-makers" cited some kind of communication purpose ("Internal communications", "External thought leadership", and "Marketing to customers and prospects").
Which brings me to my point (you'll be pleased to hear). How many communications people actually involve or even talk to their IT people about this stuff?
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