Food For Thought: The State Of UK Food & Drink Blogs


Continuing our series in which take a look at various sectors of the UK Food & Drink blogging sector, which began last week with a breakdown of the country’s Beer bloggers, this week we take a look at the more general field of Food & Drink bloggers. These are the bloggers that we categorise under the topic of Food & Drink – General, which means that they blog about Food & Drink in general terms, rather than being specifically a restaurant review blog or a recipe blog. That’s not to say they won’t include reviews and recipes (almost all do), but that they contain a mixture of articles, as well as more general writing about Food & Drink.

Over half of our Food & Drink – General bloggers do so  from the London region, with a fairly even spread across other regions, but with a particularly strong showing in the South West. More than 50% of bloggers are aged between 25 and 34, with almost twice as many women blogging as men. The vast majority of blogs are personal ones, although there are a reasonable number of corporate sites (usually restaurants, food manufacturers etc.) and most bloggers are enthusiasts, although around 1/3 are either industry professionals or journalists. In terms of content, most blogs feature recipes, restaurant and product reviews alongside a lesser but significant number of more general articles on food and drink, industry news and diary content. Relatively few blogs here feature advertising, roughly 1/5 at present.

Food Blogs - Theres a lot of them out there!

Food Blogs - There's a lot of them out there!

Here are five of the best Food & Drink – General blogs:

Helen Graves loves food and her Food Stories blog is pretty much the archetypal Food & Drink – General blog. With its mix of recipes, restaurant reviews, food diary and articles about her own appearances at food events across the country, it’s a blog that looks great and if it could smell great too, it would.

Gastrogeek, while being less pleasing on the eye than Food Stories, is an equally informative blog with an excellent range of varied and unusual recipes, restaurant reviews and her own food diary.

Eat Like A Girl is perhaps more diary-led than the above blogs, but it suffers not for it. It also has more general food articles, such as a recent one on the state of local butchers, as well as recipes and reviews.

London has so many places to eat that there are a host of London eating review blogs out there. Hollow Legs is one of them and more. With reviews of the capital’s eateries and scrumptious looking recipes, it’s one not to be missed.

Our wild card today has to be Snackspot, a blog which reports on sightings of unusual or limited edition snacks. If seeking out hard-to- find bars of chocolate or packets of crisps is your thing (and it does seem to be a number of people’s!), you need to get there now!

About the Author

Paul Barnett

Paul Barnett

Paul Barnett is a Social Media Analyst for Social Media Library, responsible for developing the content within Social Media Library. Paul lives in a world of blogs, blogs and more blogs, scouring the web and plucking out the juiciest information he finds. Previous to this, he worked as a Music Press Officer. He is also a freelance writer, an organiser of Scrabble Sunday and blogs about stuff that he does here.




Fancy A Pint? A Rundown of the UK’s Best Beer Blogs


It almost goes without saying that Food & Drink is a huge area within the blogging community. Our database currently 16 different sub-sections under the topic of Food & Drink alone. These include Recipes, Cocktails, Vegetarian & Vegan and Coffee & Tea. In the Research team, we’re constantly sifting through the existing data that we have, making sure it’s up to date and correct and searching for new blogs to add to the database.

This week, we’re going to take a look at UK beer blogs. Most are based in London, but there are also strong showings from the North West and Yorkshire regions. Unsurprisingly, the vast majority are authored by men, with an almost equal split between the 25-34 and 35-44 age ranges. Most bloggers tend to be enthusiasts, but around a quarter work in the industry. As far as social media is concerned, ¾ of bloggers have a Twitter presence, with a handful also on Facebook. In terms of content, most blogs are a mixture of industry news, beer and pub reviews and diary content. Almost all blogs carry product reviews (the ones that don’t are company corporate blogs), but few carry advertising.

Beer!

Beer!

Here is a brief rundown of 5 of our top UK beer blogs:

The daddy of the UK beer blog is Pete Brown. As a beer writer, his influence is unsurpassed currently. A mixture of a diary (almost always relating to his trips to pubs, breweries, beer events etc.), news of his own professional movements, comments on the industry and actually surprisingly few beer reviews. He occasionally wanders off topic, but I’ll forgive him that for the good taste in music and film that he displays!

Not far behind Pete Brown is Boak & Bailey’s Beer Blog. Their quest for the perfect pint is logged here, with more beer and pub reviews than Pete, although PRs should take care to approach them in the right way, as evidenced by their About Us section.

As a brewer himself, David Bailey knows a thing or two about beer. His blog, Hardknott Dave’s Beer and Stuff Blog takes an industry-focussed view, with features and comment pieces, as well as diary entries detailing his own movements and business.

Pubs and beer are inextricably linked and as owner of a small chain of London-based pubs which “attempt to recapture the perfect public house”, Charlie McVeigh knows a thing or two about the industry. His personal blog details not only his growing business but also reveals his thoughts on pub culture in Britain. This blog is also noted for being one of the few beer blogs that is pleasing to the eye!

Ten Inch Wheels combines one blogger’s love of beer and scooters. It’s worth following for some lovely photos and a mix of diary, features and reviews.

About the Author

Paul Barnett

Paul Barnett

Paul Barnett is a Social Media Analyst for Social Media Library, responsible for developing the content within Social Media Library. Paul lives in a world of blogs, blogs and more blogs, scouring the web and plucking out the juiciest information he finds. Previous to this, he worked as a Music Press Officer. He is also a freelance writer, an organiser of Scrabble Sunday and blogs about stuff that he does here.




Weak Ties and Social Media: Malcolm Gladwell Is Partly Right


Philosophical discussions surrounding the reach and power of social media are all too often tedious and predictable, but the news that Malcolm Gladwell has written a piece in the New York Times which fiercely doubts the extent to which social media can effect large-scale social change, got me interested.

Malcolm Gladwell

Malcolm Gladwell

Basically Gladwell’s point is that mass behaviour, such as the civil rights movements in the 1960s, took place perfectly naturally without the need for social media. Furthermore, he points out, social media encourages a culture of “me too” in so far as clicking “Like” or “RT” is concerned, but our activism tends to be confined to words rather than deeds these days. In short, social media encourages lazy activism.

Social media evangelists, some of whom often cite Gladwell as their hero, are up in arms, and apparently feel a bit betrayed. There have been numerous discussions on all sorts of blogs in the last few days since the article as published – including an interesting riposte by Leo Mirani here. Meanwhile Twitter’s Biz Stone has hit back as well. I’m in two minds, but tend to agree broadly with much of what Gladwell says where social change is concerned.

An example is Justgiving. A few years ago, if someone was climbing Kilimanjaro or running the marathon for charity, they’d call up their friends and relatives, go into their local newsagent, do a whip-around at work. These days, it’s merely a quick page on Justgiving and that’s it. Most requests for donations completely pass me by because they’re two-a-penny, impersonal requests; if someone called me up and asked me to sponsor them, I’d do it! Then there are the “awareness” campaigns. While I’d agree with Leo Mirani that awareness campaigns are vitally important in many cases, and that social media has indeed revolutionised the way that causes and issues can explosively reach a mass audience, at the same time there are plenty of examples of limp, “passive activism” through social media.

An example was World Aids Day earlier this year, when any tweet with the hashtag #red changed colour. It took off in a big way – huge numbers used the hashtag. But there was rarely any context; I didn’t actually realise the significance of the hashtag until the day was nearly finished, having seen dozens of tweets referring to it. Having fun with colour-changing tweets is all very well, and I’m sure the HIV-positive millions in south Africa would be touched, but commitment levels were clearly minimal.

Another social media example, this time on Facebook, was the viral spreading of Facebook status updates by women, who posted a colour (it turned out to be their bra colour) – apparently men weren’t supposed to know what it meant. To that extent it worked: my at-the-time-all-male office were puzzled for days. (It transpired that it was something to do with breast cancer).

Just last week, a new breast cancer “update your Facebook status” campaign has appeared. If any of your female friends have posted something saucy (“I like it up on the kitchen table”) recently, that’ll be it…I believe it’s something to do with handbags. I must admit to sniggering when a friend of mine wrote that she “likes it hanging from a lightbulb”! Harmless fun, but what good does it to cancer sufferers? I nearly fell into a fatal trap: I posted a cynical update to my own Facebook status, and was shutting down the machine…when the realisation of my own hypocrisy hit me, and I pulled the finger out to give a tenner to Cancer Research (he said, virtuously)!

The examples posed by Gladwell were concerned with activism, but to what extent does social media, more generally, have the power to change behaviour? Can social media affect our decision making processes, which in turn might affect commercial or other enterprises? The debate, I think, is far more wide-reaching than merely political campaigns. To what extent can the connections people forge via social media channels change their behaviour, compared to connections made by more “traditional” means? What are the political, social and commercial implications?

The crucial sentence in Gladwell’s article simply states that “The platforms of social media are built on weak ties”. Yes – but aren’t those the ties with the most potential? Close family-and-friends bonds are immensely powerful, restrict yourself to your usual social circle and it’s all too easy to find yourself associating with people from similar cultural and economic backgrounds, with similar outlooks on life. By throwing caution to the wind (the relative anonymity of social media can help throw off the shackles – a bit like alcohol for losing inhibitions!) and getting involved with a range of conversations, minds have the potential to be changed. I’ll never have a bad word said against my closest friends, I love them all, mates for life and all the rest of it, but our conversations tend to be limited to rugby, women, poker, alcohol, and how much the rest of them are earning. My loose connections in social media allow me to have active discussions on all kinds of offbeat topics.

The internet has facilitated this since its early days. Whether it’s an interest in obscure music or bizarre sexual practices, the internet has allowed people to come together and spread ideas; the fact that Facebook and Twitter have come along and made the process a bit more personal and one-to-one haven’t “revolutionised” this, rather they are an organic extension of internet culture as it was in the early 2000s. And what of the ultimate in extreme views, the cult? It’s far easier to join a cult now than it was in the 60s, and many people are doing more than just spreading words and ideas, but going ahead with actual deeds.

Just a little aside about weak social bonds. They can be misleading. I was at my ten-year school reunion over the weekend; catching up with people who have little in common except that we spent six years in the same building. The general impression beforehand was that the evening would be a cringeworthy affair where we put on plastic smiles, exchanged the usual pleasantries, tossed up a few memories, and left. That couldn’t be further from the truth. Many of us came away open-mouthed about how much those long-distant memories meant to us all. Old school friends are classic examples of those sorts of casual Facebook relationships – but a reunion demonstrates just how those apparently flaky, throwaway “friendships” can be astonishingly powerful.

One of the great things about social media is that it’s possible to converse on an equal footing with world experts in a particular area. People at the top of their game within a profession or interest area mingle with dabblers on a hashtag or discussion forum. It’s something which Andrew Keen rallies against in his book Cult of the Amateur (I haven’t read it); apparently the thrust of his argument is that there’s an obsession with sharing knowledge, even from people who are clueless, so we see a false sense of gravitas created by an individual based on participation levels, social skills, or other interactive means. This week Andrew Marr launched a tirade against bloggers for similar reasons. It’s true that it’s possible to exude a false sense of gravitas on forums and social networks based on participation levels or social skills. It’s also true that many heads are not always better than one. But at the same time, crowdsourcing and wikis provide collaborative efforts unheard of before. (One of the most interesting articles on Wikipedia is actually about the reliability of Wikipedia). There’s no longer a top-down approach to knowledge – a point also made by Ben Goldacre in his excellent Bad Science. Yet the “top” of “top-down” might not be experts but rather a media, government and commercial elite who form opinions almost by brute force. As Goldacre points out, when the small media elite get things wrong, there can be disastrous consequences, as with the MMR “scandal”.

Andrew Marr

Andrew Marr

Lively discussions now occur in frameworks as diverse as Amazon reviews, Wikipedia talk pages, and comments sections on mainstream media publisher articles, notable on the Guardian and Daily Mail websites (not to mention Guido Fawkes’s blog comments, although tread there with caution). Of all social media, I find forums the most fascinating. Unlike most social networks, forum users tend not to know each other when they join up initially, but bonds and cliques naturally form over time, while all sorts of interesting social undercurrents start to manifest themselves. Inspired by Tom Ewing’s excellent Confessions of a Moderator, at some point I will write a little piece comparing forum dynamics of the ones I’ve known. For a rainy day, though.

In my own personal experience, social networking has allowed me to participate in discussions (often arguments) with people I’ve never met, sometimes halfway around the world. The flow of inbound information and content is far more varied (and just more abundant); no longer are we restricted to what we read in the Metro in the morning, and watch on the ten o’clock news. With minimal effort we can subject ourselves to some rather extreme views from all sides, evaluate them, spread our own ideas around.

Postscript: the bank called me the following morning, alarmed at an unusual payment on my card the previous night to Cancer Research that “didn’t fit in with my normal spending habits”. That’s me told!

About The Author

Eoghan ONeill

Eoghan O'Neill

Eoghan O’Neill is a Social Media Analyst for Social Media Library. Responsible for developing the content within Social Media Library, Eoghan spends his day darting between reading blogs and Twitter posts from around the world, and with his nose deep in spreadsheets! Prior to joining Social Media Library he worked within Arts Marketing for a leading arts trust and is a Physics graduate from Imperial College, London.

Eoghan blogs frequently and is an active user of Twitter too @EoghanLondon.




Put Down That Bacon Sarnie! Is Social Media Powerful Enough To Change Your Diet?


As part of a growing campaign, Meatless Monday has taken to social media to spread its cause. The movement which, as it says on the tin, encourages people not to eat meat on a Monday, can be traced back to the first world war, when civilians in America were encouraged to cut back on the amount of meat they ate by the government so it could be sent to feed soldiers and civilians in Europe, where supplies had been affected by the conflict.

But why is there a need for this now, in 2010? The campaign argues that eating less meat improves your health, will decrease the risk of chronic preventable illness and improve the health of the planet.

Would you go meatless on a Monday?

Would you go meatless on a Monday?

The campaign has a number of aspects which we like here at Social Media Library:

-The name. It sounds pretty catchy, probably deriving from the trend started by Twitter’s #FollowFriday. Alliterated titles like this have become more and more common since the Twitter explosion. It works well, in that it rolls off the tongue, encourages commentators to write about it and, of course, it can be slotted in to a Twitter hashtag just like that.

-On their blog, they have a section where businesses have pledged their allegiance to the idea, telling the public what they are doing to keep things meatless on a Monday. Within this, there are links to their blogs, which then host recipes or just blog posts that relate to meatless Monday. All great stuff for increasing the awareness of the campaign.

-On top of this, they are also on Facebook, with just under 7000 likes, allowing them to communicate to up to 13000 people in total.

-If we read between the lines of this campaign, the thinking could be that you are more likely to indulge on unhealthy products on the weekend. Whereas when you get back in to the weekly routine, you tend to think more healthily about what you are eating. It feels as though the start of a new week is a reset for your body. This ties in neatly with the name of the campaign.

 

These kind of causes are ripe for social media engagement, so long as campaigns utilise the technology correctly, alongside more traditional means of spreading the word. Meatless Monday are ticking a lot of the social media boxes. Whether you’ll ditch the bacon sarnie in their name though, is another thing entirely!

About The Author – Tom Clayton

Tom Clayton is an intern on the research at Social Media Library. He is a student from Nottingham and is going to college next year to study Economics, Physics, Computing and Mathematics.




The Random Factor: Why Your Brand Needs To Stay Alert To Social Media


For marketers, social media is basically useful for one thing – spreading your message. Pages and pages of discussion have been devoted to the best ways that a brand can use the new media to direct attention towards your product or service.

But what if fate takes hold and produces some random element which causes your product or service to gain attention?

Yesterday, Monster Munch began trending in the UK on Twitter. The reason for this was because one Debbie Taylor appeared on GMTV talking about how she’s eaten nothing else but Monster Munch for the last 10 years.

Debbie Taylor - Inadvertently kick-started a social media trend

Debbie Taylor - Inadvertently kick-started a social media trend

Upon seeing the crisps mentioned in trending topics, my first thought was that it must have originated from Monster Munch themselves. But no, a large amount of people were sufficiently amused/appalled by the tale of Debbie Taylor that it took hold and spread organically (even if only for a short period). So, rather than Monster Munch kick-starting a campaign which got the public talking, the public simply started talking, by themselves. A sure stroke of luck indeed!

However, could Monster Munch have done anything to maximise the opportunity presented by this slice of good fortune? Could they have effectively done what most brands do when using social media but in reverse, and used the public talking about them to kick-start a campaign?

While a portion of the country was talking about their brand, Monster Munch were nowhere to be seen.

Monster Munch

Monster Munch

A quick search reveals that they don’t have a Twitter account (although Walkers do) but they have a Facebook page and a, no longer updated, blog. For a brand with such a visible and marketable presence (the monsters!), this seems strange. By being active on Twitter, they would have seen the interest randomly generated in their product and they could have capitalised on it. An awful lot of people revealed their love for the crisp and their intention to buy some straight away. Monster Munch could have conversed with these people, built up relationships, made the conversation last longer and actually made something out of this randomly generated publicity. Instead, the monsters were hiding.

About the Author

Paul Barnett

Paul Barnett

Paul Barnett is a Social Media Analyst for Social Media Library, responsible for developing the content within Social Media Library. Paul lives in a world of blogs, blogs and more blogs, scouring the web and plucking out the juiciest information he finds. Previous to this, he worked as a Music Press Officer. He is also a freelance writer, an organiser of Scrabble Sunday and blogs about stuff that he does here.




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