Coffee heat rising

A PF Blogger’s Glass Ceiling?

A group of women bloggers I recently fell in with subscribes to the idea that a blogger’s glass ceiling holds women writers back from the big time in the PF blogging world. How big the  PF “big time” is remains to be seen. We know several male bloggers—Trent Hamm at The Simple Dollar and J.D. Roth at Get Rich Slowly, among others—have built sites that earn enough to free them from their day jobs to write full-time.

On the other hand, we know successful women PF bloggers are holding forth, too: Silicon Valley Blogger’s The Digerati Life is going well enough to excuse her from the day job treadmill.

I don’t know whether Squawkfox earns proprietor Kerry Taylor enough to quit the ratrace, but this very day she posted an announcement that the Globe and Mail has her in the running for its Best of Money Blogs poll. Quite a few of the sites on my blogroll are written by women—most of them, come to think of it—but I’m pretty sure none of us is making a living at this business. MSN Smart Spending supports a couple of long-time women journalists, but they’re freelance contractors with no health insurance and, one might fairly guess, frugal wages. On the other hand, plenty of male bloggers aren’t making a nickel and a dime to rub together, either.

Is there some sort of good ole boys’ club out there for bloggers, a virtual country club where men go to play computer golf games together, every day but Ladies’ Day? It’s one of several issues that have been floating around in my coffee cup as I mull over ways to improve on Funny about Money and build its readership. Having reflected on this for a while, I really don’t think so.

Clive Thompson published a fairly nuanced article in a 2006 issue of New York Magazine, reflecting on the permutations of blogger success. He reports on research showing that one key indicator of a blog’s success is the number of links pointing to it, particularly links on large sites. The “A-list,” as he calls the most successful of the monetized blogs, is extremely small; “most bloggers toil in total obscurity.” This isn’t surprising, and by extension it’s unsurprising that lots of women bloggers are among the totally obscure, along with lots of men bloggers.

If you look at the blogs that men write—the ones that seem to be successfully monetized—and the blogs that women write, you see some fundamental differences. Successful blogs tend to be tightly focused; that is not often true of women’s blogs, which characteristically are rather gestalt. I believe that difference stems from men’s and women’s responses to fundamentally different life experiences. Women’s daily lives are gestalt, scattered among a score of conflicting responsibilities, whereas men’s daily lives are often spent on a job where they focus for long periods on the work at hand.

Consider, for example, Peter Rojas, who in 2006 was supposedly “the best-compensated blogger in history.” When Thompson visited him, we learn,

he’s sitting at an Ikea desk bedecked with three flat-panel screens and looking relatively fresh, considering he’s just come off another eleven-hour blogging jag. Like most A-list bloggers, he hit his keyboard before dawn and posted straight through until dinner. “Anyone can start a blog, and anyone can make it grow,” he says, sipping a glass of water. “But to keep it there? It’s fucking hard work, man. I’ve never worked so hard in my life. Eighty-hour weeks since I started.”

How many of us, whether we’re women or not, have 11 hours a day to spend on a single task? Writing at Work It, Mom, Lylah Alphonse, proprietor of Write. Edit. Repeat, puts it in a nutshell:

It’s about the daily juggle—my career, my commute, freelance work, homework, housework, married life, social life, and parenting—and finding the time to get it all done.

The issue for women is that few of us have 11 uninterrupted hours, or even eight, or even six, in which to develop, write, and market a blog. Observing my own work habits, I can say they reflect a lifetime of adaptation to demands on my time that come from every direction: work, friends, parenthood, wifehood, school, housekeeping, yard care, pool care, shopping, money management, pet care, healthcare, bureaucrats, editors, clients, advertisers, neighbors, cops…you name it, and somebody thinks they have a claim on my time that’s more important than anything I imagine I should be doing with my time.

The natural response to a cacophony of demands like this is to learn to do several things at once. And that is a very inefficient way of working. Yesterday, for example, around trying trying to get my blogging act together I had to…

Walk with a friend at dawn, dragging the dog along by way of getting two things done at once;
Call WellPoint to find out where the bill for Medicare Part D is, necessitating another time-wasting turn through a punch-a-button phone maze;
Check and adjust pool chemicals;
Wash two weeks’ worth of laundry;
Read 80 pages of technical copy for a client;
Rough out a calendar for one of my fall courses;
Dredge up some old university-level course materials, rewrite and reformat 21 single-spaced pages newly targeted for lower-division community college students, and key them to the proposed new course syllabus;
Create another single-spaced page of boilerplate copy-&-pastable comments keyed to this material;
Feed the dog;
Feed myself;
Read page proofs;
Water the plants…

I was in front of my computer more on than off from about 5:30 in the morning to about 11:00 at night. But as you can see, that time was interrupted repeatedly, and relatively little of it was spent focusing on what I thought of as the day’s primary task: learning more about driving traffic to FaM and putting some of those strategies into gear.

You know…if you have a wife who’s doing those household tasks and doing battle with the outside world, you have a lot more space in which to focus on your enterprise. And an enterprise—a business enterprise—is what a blog ultimately is. My guess is that men are socialized in many ways to focus more directly on the job at hand and are better at resisting interruption.

As I write this, I’m also dinking with trying to figure out how to get Alexa‘s code into FaM’s header. And really I do need to get up and drive to the oculist’s shop and find out why those glasses that were supposed to have been done last Wednesday haven’t surfaced. And brush my teeth and take a shower and wash my hair and fertilize the citrus trees and…oh, yeah: I forgot to eat, too.

Compare a few women’s PF sites with a few men’s, and by and large you see the difference I mentioned above. Check out the topics of the last few blogs at these Male-run and Female-run sites:

The Simple Dollar (M)
Walking from your mortgage
Employees’ attitudes
Financial advice to readers
Book review
Frugal tips

Budgeting in the Fun Stuff (F)
Monthly household budget
Splurge on bedroom furniture
Yakezie Alexa ranking
Weekly favorites link-love roundup
Gardening

Bargaineering (M)
Federal legislation re extending tax cuts and unemployment compensation
Increase on FDIC insurance to become permanent
Moving a CD ladder to another bank
Ally Bank’s .25% CD renewal bonus
“Legal ripoffs”

Out of Debt Again (F)
Top referrers
Paperless bank withdrawals?
Plan to pay off Discovery card
Gardening
Review of 2010 Quicken Deluxe

Darwin’s Finance (M)
Analysis of energy tax credit toward central AC
Gold bubble?
Debt & major financial crises
Saving for college
Greek debt crisis & the markets

A Gai Shan Life (F)
Summer travel costs
Took out a store credit card
Relaxing; blog challenge
Weddings & cost of travel
Freelancing as lifestyle

Five-Cent Nickel (M)
Mortgage strategies
America’s worst banks
Credit card offers
Traditional vs. Roth IRAs
Sallie Mae raises online savings rate

Frugal Scholar (F)
Children’s books
Pantry remodel leads to domestic squabble, food ruminations
Cookbook collection
Pantry project (with literary references)
Gardening & frugality

Get Rich Slowly (M)
Home safety precautions
Personal data collection
The $20 challenge
Learning from Baby Boomer experience
Finishing what you started
(These are all guest posts, since JD has been on vacation)

The Digerati Life (F)
Nintendo Wii games to cut down her gym costs
Credit card review
Carnival of Financial Planning
How to lower homowner’s insurance costs
Rant at annoying “Wall Street trader letter” circulating on Web

Notice how tightly focused the men’s most recent posts are? While the women are not exactly off-topic, they tend to write more personally and they often wander from the topic of personal finance in its strictest sense. Counting a discussion of a financial matter framed in terms of the current events in one’s own life as “personal” posts, I come up with this quantitative comparison of subject matter:

Men
Personal Finance, Economy: 21
Personal commentary: 2
Blogging: 0
Other: 2

Women
Personal finance, Economy: 5
Personal commentary: 13
Blogging: 5
Other: 2

Sooo… Does this have meaning? Should all us girls who just wanna have fun making a living off blogging start copying the boys?

Not IMHO. But I do think we need to recognize that women have a different blogging style from men’s. Possibly we have different things to say to the world.  Moi, I like reading personal takes on personal finance (isn’t that why we call it “personal,” after all?)—but I have to recognize that may restrict my readership to other women.

The other lesson I take from this observation is some of the men’s blogs show how much focused energy is devoted to those sites. Making one of these things fly pretty clearly requires stretches of uninterrupted concentration. You don’t get the sense of gestalt from, say, The Simple Dollar, where Trent is posting at least two articles a day, often lengthy ones, that you do where authors appear to be writing on the fly, while they’re braiding the threads of their lives and can’t let go of even one.

Link Love…

Between the semester-end deluge of student papers and SDXB’s illness, there hasn’t been a lot of time to write. But browsing other blogs seems to be irresistible, no matter how pressed for time you are! Over the last few days I’ve stumbled upon a few gems. Check these out:

Simple Life in France put up a guest post at Money Funk on the question of whether the $8,000/year average tuition for private schools is worth it. Simple Life is fast becoming one of my favorite bloggers because of the excellence of her writing. Add her engagement in an interesting life experience, and you have the perfect mix for a daily blog.

Budgeting in the Fun Stuff has as its interesting premise the idea that a good frugal budget should include some room for things that give you pleasure—even some pretty pricey things. I got a hoot out of a recent post discussing things she and DH (and readers!) don’t skimp on.

A Gai Shan Life is the story of a young woman whose life is an ongoing drama. It’s fascinating stuff, and along the way she wrestles with financial and life issues that all of us are either dealing with now or soon or later will have to deal with. Recently she observed that her new coworkers display an alarming tendency to workaholism, leading to a post that spawned a slew of comments on the subject.

One of my perennial favorites is Frugal Scholar, who’s been in the same game I have for about as long and whose running commentary on life, the universe, and all that I find endlessly sympathique. Today she’s set me off with a post describing a guy who made a nice pile of money when he sold a successful business and then went back to graduate school, working for slave wages as a T.A.  Touches on one of my favorite hobbyhorses, the exuberant exploitation of graduate students and employees common to all universities.

I always watch for Room Farm‘s posts. She was much missed while she was out struggling with cancer treatment. This is freaking hilarious!

Simply Forties, a single woman who sold her home to take off on a long life adventure, is given to publishing THE most incredible recipes, as well as interesting ruminations like this one on Kindle, books and libraries.

Mrs. Accountability is one of the few women PF bloggers who live here in lovely uptown Arizona. I think she must live in a semirural area, because she describes what sounds like a big lot with a magnificent garden. Of late, she’s been ruminating about her credit score, whose mysterious decline led to some interesting discoveries about how those things are calculated.

Oh, my… It’s getting late and I have to get ready to go to class. Amazing how fast time passes when you’re reading about other peoples’ lives, isn’t it?

Summertime, and…what am I gonna do, anyway?

Only another half-dozen class meetings until the end of the semester. Then a blitz of monster student papers, and then…and then…white-hot silence.

For the first time in many a year, I’m looking at an entire three-month summer break with nothing to do. Even when I was in graduate school and couldn’t take summer classes because they didn’t give enough time to write graduate-level research papers, I had things going on in the summer: research projects, society-wife machinations, trips to Hawaii, West Virginia, Atlanta, England, and waypoints. When I was teaching at the Great Desert University, I usually taught in at least one and sometimes both summer sessions by way of generating a living wage. And of course, over the past five or six years I held a twelve-month administrative position. Though it had normal vacations time, I rarely took any because I had nothing better to do.

So. In the “nothing better to do” department, the question is what on earth am I going to do this summer? Choir ends on May 30, by which time I probably will have both my fall classes set up and ready to go. And in a 115-degree summer, there’s never much going on in Phoenix.

I’m thinking this will be a good opportunity to try to wring a book out of Funny. That’s been on the agenda since shortly after I started the blog. I haven’t done it mostly because I’ve been busy. Mining almost three years’ worth of posts for material that will hang together in a reasonable way will be a big job in itself. With that done, there’ll be the matter of rewriting the stuff to obliterate the blogginess and make it act like print book copy.

Another possibility is to focus on the blog itself and on trying to expand readership. In the past couple of days, Funny has experienced an amazing spike in traffic, apparently because an MSN Money Talks story that mentioned the Great No-Detergent Laundry Experiment was featured on Yahoo.com. The result was huge: in one day, Adsense earned more than it normally does in an entire month.

If daily traffic averaged half that much, 325 days a year, that plus the Social Security plus the normal flow of editorial projects would return my net income to about what I was earning at the Great Desert University. And I’d never have to read another freshman paper again.

It being unlikely that I’d earn that much on a book and certain that book revenues would not stretch out over a period of years, I incline toward spending six to eight hours a day on the blog: writing, marketing, and publicizing. If I actually sat down and organized my time intelligently, three months of that could at least set Funny on the right trajectory.

Or, in the “now for something entirely different” department, I could try to write a genre mystery novel. That’s also an idea that’s been percolating. But I dunno…it’s hard to work up much enthusiasm. I think I’d rather edit them than write them.

Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson. Sidney Paget. Public domain.

March Madness Results Are Up!

Free Money Finance has posted the winners of this year’s March Madness competition:

Debt-free Adventure’s Identify & Overcome Money Anxiety & Stress in Relationships: $500 to Habitat for Humanity

Personal Finance by the Book’s Debt Free in One Year: A True Story: $300 to ¡Vámonos! Community Ministries

Bible Money Matters’ Managing Your Money Is An Exercise In Both Mathematics And Psychology: $100 to Second Harvest Heartland

Funny’s Truth, The Highest Thing that Man May Keep: $100 to All Saints Episcopal Church‘s music ministry

What an inspired and generous thing FMF’s March Madness project is—even more generous of his time, I expect, than of his cash. Thank you, FMF!

w00t! A win!

FMF just e-mailed to say Funny won one of the $100 prizes in Free Money Finance’s March Madness competition. Thanks to everyone who kindly participated by voting for Funny in each of the contest’s many rounds!

Far as I can tell, he hasn’t posted the grand prize winner’s name yet. But the final round is here, showcasing the two finalists. One post was Debt-free Adventure’s rumination on Money Anxiety Disorder, and the other was Personal Finance by the Book’s amazing story of son and daughter-in-law’s marathon escape from debt. Both are very fine examples of the blogger’s art. If you haven’t read them yet, you absolutely should.

Anybody wanna write a guest post?

Are you interested in submitting a guest post to funny about money? I broke & dislocated my shoulder this evening & so won’t be up for typing, possibly not for several weeks. Would welcome any guest posts that might keep funny going for the duration.