Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Some Thoughts on Social Media and Publishing
Some Thoughts on Social Media and Publishing
Dec 14, 2025 1:53 AM

After hearing about an established Christian publisher recently launching an official blog for their products, I did some thinking about the relationship between the traditional publication outlets and social media.

I’m sure that traditional publishers have a relatively large budget for print advertising, but it seems that they are very slow to hire professionals to do serious social media work, blogging, and online advertising. This seems true at least in the academic markets and relative to their print marketing outreach. And the blogs that publishers do have are usually not very good, although there are exceptions.

All this is true even though there are a number of reasons why digital advertising is better than traditional print. With digital advertising and outreach you can get real numbers in terms of reactions in real-time, seeing almost immediately what is effective and what isn’t. But you are also engaging people in a place where they are much more likely to buy and doing so is far easier.

If someone sees an ad in a magazine, they have to either stop what they are doing and go to puter or pick up the phone, or remember to do so later after they’re done reading the magazine. When you reach someone on a website, Twitter feed, or a blog, they already poised to buy in that they are always one click away from Amazon, where they already have an account set up, and so on.

And despite many of the rumors of the death of blogging, I liken the relationship of blogging to social media to the relationship of journalism to blogging. Without blogs and the kinds of content generated on blogs, there’s far less to drive social media, just as without journalistic content there’s far less to drive blogging. So I don’t see blogging going away any time soon, but the turnover rate of blogs will continue to be high because of the variety petitive voices and sources for mentary, and promotion. The kinds of transition over at First Things in recent years, which has really e a plement to the print publication, seems to me to be a good model for established publications looking to broaden their digital footprint.

So even though it may seem odd that an established publisher is just now forming an institutional blog, there are some good reasons why starting a blog now is a good idea.

To keep abreast of some of the things going on with Christians and new media, keep an eye on the Christian Web Conference.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
How real GDP per capita measures standard of living
Note: This is post #72 in a weekly video series on basic economics. If money can’t buy happiness, why do we measure standard of living in economic terms, specifically GDP per capita? A primary reason is that increases in real GDP per capita also correlate to improvements in those things money can’t buy, such as health and happiness. In this video by Marginal Revolution University,Alex Tabarrok explains why it’s a helpful measure—and where it falls short. (If you find the...
Samuel Gregg: Why America needs a patriotic case for free trade
“While the economic arguments for free trade pelling, the political rationale requires a long-overdue overhaul,” says Samuel Gregg, Acton’s research director. Writing at Public Discourse, Gregg argues that America needs a patriotic case for free trade: So how does free trade bolster America’s standing in the world? Here are three particular benefits that free traders might consider emphasizing. First, free trade helps make America a more economically flexible and disciplined country. Openness to petition prevents, for example, American businesses from...
Mao’s ‘rational faith’: How communist China sought to replace God
In light of Greg Forster’s Acton lecture on Whittaker Chambers, the famous Soviet spy who later converted to Christianity, I recently noted Chambers’ routine reminders munism is not, fundamentally, about a certain menu of economic theories or political tactics. “[Communism] is not just the writings of Marx and Lenin, dialectical materialism, the Politburo, the labor theory of value, the theory of the general strike, the Red Army, the secret police, labor camps, underground conspiracy, the dictatorship of the proletariat, the...
What you need to know: Today’s new Brexit transition agreement
On Monday afternoon, David Davis of the UK and Michel Barnier of the EU revealed that their governments had agreed on the shape of their relationship during the first two years after Brexit. Here’s what it will look like: A 21-month transition period: The UK will officially leave the European Union on March 29, 2019. Monday’s announcement adds a 21-month transition period, which will end on December 31, 2020. During this phase, the UK will enjoy all “thebenefits, the advantages...
The broom prophet: Lessons from a craftsman on sanctified work
Throughout its history, the American economy has transitioned from agrarian to industrial to information-driven. In turn, “work with the hands” has e less and mon, replaced by widespread automation and a host of intangible services. Meanwhile, a quiet resurgence in craftsmanship has begun, whether one looks to the massive online marketplaces for handmade goods or the diverse range of specialized artisans who continue to find niches in a globalized economy. Take Jack Martin, owner of Hockaday Handmade Brooms, who still...
Why do Russian oligarchs hide their money in London?
Former Russian intelligence agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia are clinging to life after being attacked with nerve gas in Salisbury. British Prime Minister Theresa May and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson plan to target the finances of Russian oligarchs in retaliation. Russian elites have spirited their cash to the UK via a dizzying array of British banks, businesses, and luxury properties: British banks reportedly processed $738 million in funds from an elaborate Russian money-laundering scheme known as “The Laundromat”;Transparency...
What has God got to do with banking and finance?
In the latest edition of The Independent Review, Gerald P. Dwyer Jr. reviews Samuel Gregg’s For God and Profit: How Banking and Finance Can Serve the Common Good. “The most unusual aspect of Gregg’s book is bination of topics advertised in its very title: For God and Profit,” says Dwyer, “We all know about defenses of free markets. God seldom appears in those arguments. What has God got to do with it?” Catholic social teaching is the framework Gregg uses...
How managers can help save the world
Why are some countries rich while other countries are poor? A primary reason, as economists have been pointing out for hundreds of years, is productivity—the efficient use of such resources as labor and capital. Imagine that panies have the same number of workers and use the same amount of materials to make identical widgets. pany A is able to make 100 widgets in the time it pany B to produce 50 widgets. Company A obviously has some “secret sauce” that...
The winter of our disconnect: Green energy policies leave Europe out in the cold
“Human beings are called to be fruitful, to bring forth good things from the earth, to join with God in making provision for our temporal well being,” according toThe Cornwall Declaration On Environmental Stewardship,of whichActon Institute co-founder Fr. Robert Sirico was an original signer. “Our call to fruitfulness, therefore, is not contrary to but plementary with our call to steward God’s gifts.” This article about transatlantic policies thatput human well-being into opposition with environmental stewardship, whichappeared in MEP Daniel Hannan’s...
Radio Free Acton: Tech & Work: The effect of technology on farming; Upstream on ‘The Rending and the Nest’
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, Dan Churchwell, associate director of program outreach at Acton, speaks with Kevin Scott, a farmer from Valley Springs, SD, on sustainable farming and growing technology as well as the dramatic changes in agriculture that have taken place due to new technologies. Then, on the Upstream segment, Bruce Edward Walker talks with author Kaethe Schwehn on her new dystopian novel“The Rending and the Nest.” Check out these additional resources on this week’s podcast topics:...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved