< Chan:  Whenever we attend an event, there is live tweeting, live blogging,  Facebook updates and we ask questions that our readers pose to us.  
DO YOU remember 
Doogie Howser, MD, an American television comedy-drama starring Neil Patrick Harris as a teenage doctor?
If  you were a child in the 1980s, you could not have missed it. Howser  kept a diary on his computer and the episodes ended with him making an  entry in the diary. That was possibly our first introduction to what is  now known as web log or blog.
According to Merriam Webster’s  Dictionary a blog is a website that contains an online personal journal  with reflections, comments, and often hyperlinks provided by the writer.
Blogs  have become tremendously popular among Malaysians as they look for an  alternative source of information to supplement what is being reported  in mainstream media.
By the end of last year, marketing research  company NM Incite tracked over 181 million blogs around the world, up  from 36 million only five years earlier in 2006.
So how big is  blogging? NM Incite says three out of the top 10 social networking sites  in the United States — Blogger, WordPress and Tumblr — are for  consumer-generated blogs.
Blogger is the largest of these sites  with more than 46 million unique US visitors during October 2011, making  it second only to Facebook in the social networking category, and  Tumblr was the fastest-growing social networking or blog site on the top  10, more than doubling its audience since last year from home and work  computers to 14 million unique visitors.
Overall, these three  blogging websites combined for 80 million unique visitors, reaching more  than one in every four active online users in the US during October  2011.
And who are these bloggers and what else do they do online?  A study by NM Incite indicates that women make up the majority of  bloggers, and half of bloggers are aged 18 to 34.
Most bloggers  are well-educated: seven out of 10 bloggers have gone to college, a  majority of whom are graduates and about one in three bloggers are  mothers, and 52% are parents with children under 18 in their household.
Yang: Blogging with passion will eventually allow you to do it full time.  Besides  this, bloggers are active across social media: they’re twice as likely  to post/comment on consumer-generated video sites like YouTube, and  nearly three times more likely to post in message boards/forums within a  month.
According to Nuffnang, Asia-Pacific’s first blog  advertising community, bloggers generate income through ads placed on  blogs by various brands, and become part of a close-knit community  through a vast range of exclusive events and contests.
“In  Malaysia, blogging started growing exponentially in 2007 when Malaysians  started seeing its commercial viability,” said Nuffnang co-founder  Timothy Tiah.
Nuffnang has approximately 250,000 bloggers on its books and Tiah revealed that almost 50% of them are active.
“In  the US, some bloggers have successfully evolved into full-fledged media  companies that employ full-time writers and editors,” said Tiah who  believes blogs and traditional media can co-exist.
“Clients do not view blogs as an alternative to traditional media. We are benchmarked against Twitter and Facebook.
For example, having an editorial piece in the 
New York Times supersedes one by an online publication,” Tiah explained.
Local  blogging heroes such as Paul Tan and Vernon Chan, and Singaporean Dawn  Yang agree that blogging with passion will eventually enable one to do  it full time.
Chan said his site (vernonchan.com) was born out of the love for technology.
“I  enjoyed writing but in 2009, I decided to take it more seriously and  focused my writing on gadgets and tech-related news,” said the former  graphic designer.
“The blog now operates as a tech website with four writers on board.
“The tech scene is fragmented with plenty of players, but it’s healthy competition.
“I look up to sites like amanz.my and soyacincau.com as they were pioneers in this field,” he added.
Chan said that to remain competitive, a blogger needs to focus on speed, frequency and being current.
“Whenever  we attend an event, there’s live tweeting, live blogging, Facebook  updates and we ask questions that our readers pose to us,” said Chan.
He  walks around with a tablet, two smartphones, a laptop, a DSLR camera  and is always connected with his readers thanks to U Mobile broadband.
Tan echoed Chan comments and added that an honest blogger serves the reader and not the advertiser.
“We  have gotten ourselves in trouble with a particular company a few times  as they were not happy with some of the comments from the readers that  were published on the website.
“They stopped inviting us for test  drives and events for a while, but we serve our readers, and readership  is currency, ” said Tan, the founder of paultan.org, a leading motoring  website in Malaysia.
Tan also debunked the myth that people will read any content as long as its free online.
“Online readers are looking for something fast so it is important to be quick.
“We  do live updates and we have trained our readership,” said Tan, whose  company now owns popular Malay blog site, Ohbulan.com among others.
Tan did not mince his words when asked to comment about bloggers who only write advertorials.
“There  are bloggers who only attend events if they are paid and will only  write a blog posting if there’s a monetary exchange,” he said.
Across  the causeway, controversial fashion and lifestyle blogger Dawn Yang  (clapbangkiss.xanga.com/) was in Kuala Lumpur recently to attend an  event and the 27-year-old told 
MetroBiz that she started blogging to keep in touch with her friends.
“It  started by accident but in 2005, I won an online competition as  Singapore’s hottest blogger. That opened many doors for me,” said Yang  who was sent to Taiwan for a year to be an artist.
She also secured several endorsement deals from international brands to promote their brands on various platforms.
“Blogging has evolved over the years with Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. We can’t just operate on one platform,” said Yang.
Blogging  in Malaysia is seen as an easy way to make a quick buck, but to quote  blogging guru Alister Cameron: “As I have repeatedly written in one form  or other, blogging is not about writing posts. Heck, that’s the least  of your challenges. No, blogging is about cultivating beneficial  relationships with an ever-growing online readership, and that’s hard  work.”
By Nevash Nair