Ben Barden is a versatile guy, busy with blogging, coding and occasionally composing. The 28-year-old blogger, who is the mastermind behind the increasingly popular Top Ten Blog Tips, and the Zen Working productivity blog tells us about moving to a different continent, his new venture of launching an advertising network for bloggers and why IT people shouldn’t make excuses.

How much of your grown-up life have you spent with blogging?
I had a LiveJournal account as far back as 2002, and wrote an occasional personal blog on my site from 2005 onwards. I didn’t get into blogging “seriously” until November 2007, when I started writing about blogging and website tips without the jargon. I launched Top Ten Blog Tips, my current blog, in late 2008.
Was it a linear growth and development, or was there a trigger point when you decided to “take it seriously”. Did you have a particular reason or motivation to do so?
I guess I was one of the many, who joined in back then. You seem pretty versatile. Is it because you hated school and preferred to learn a lot of things you were interested in but they never taught you?
What brought you to Australia? How come there are so many bloggers located down under?
How long did it take to reach financial independence? Have you managed to reach it, by the way?
You are planning to launch an ad network shortly. What will make it special?
Which social networking site is your favorite one? Is it also the one that brings the most traffic to your sites?
What do you do to avoid blogger burnout symptom?
What will be the main difference between the state of the blogosphere now and one year from now?
You know, some people have these crazy predictions about the future of the web, and I think too many people get caught up in the technology – hey, a new social network, ooh a software upgrade.
What I’d LIKE to see is people stopping to think WHY they want to blog instead of just jumping right in, then realising they have no readers because they don’t have a clear focus for their blog. I’d also like to see fewer blogs that assume everyone is a PHP developer who uses WordPress, and more blogs that write original content that isn’t only for techies.
Oh, and less of the “Web 2.0″ buzzwords, too. It’s the web, it can’t be versioned.
It’s a bit odd (but nice) to hear it from someone who actually is a php developer. You say on your sites that you okay with your age, still, I proved unable to figure out how old you are…
I may be a developer, but I’m still a user of other people’s applications, and I use my own, too. I can see why tech people go to tech conventions, but what they need to remember is that though technology may be cool and all that, you need to make it do something that people will want to use.
A big issue I have with social networks is that they all do the same stuff- you sign up, log in, you can make friends, send messages, maybe post blog entries… but there isn’t anything particularly compelling with the majority of these sites.
Part of the reason I got into IT was because I was sick of having IT people making excuses for things like bugs or missing features. Once you know how things work, you know when someone’s being up front with you or if they’re just making excuses.
You moved to a different continent to spend most of your days in front of a computer. Have you managed to keep your off-line friends, relations all the while?
Some of them yes, but life moves on, and it is very hard to stay in touch with friends when you move abroad. Even if I’d stayed in the UK, I’m sure we would’ve drifted apart, mainly due to finding a new job.
Who is your blogging hero?
I’m not sure I can answer that question. Things seem to be in a period of transition at the moment, as quite a few of the blogs I was reading in 2008 have slowed down, disappeared, or haven’t kicked off since Xmas and New Year. I don’t read a lot of the bigger blogs because they seem to post more often than I can keep up with. I do read ProBlogger but he’s had a lot of guest posts, and a lot of them don’t interest me.

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