Posted by Ingrid Riley on February 5th, 2010
You can find extensive listings of Caribbean Blogs on top5jamaica.com. You can find a growing list of blogs on CUblogz.com even more so that Cariblogger.com seemed to have dived into the dotcom dead pool. You can follow some of the regularly updated Caribbean blogs on blogscaribe.com and blogjamaica. And You can find a small and growing community of Caribbean Bloggers on Facebook. Last year I was happy to report that there was a Caribbean Blog boom brewing, we had discovered how easy it was to start a blog with wordpress and blogger and we were happy.
Popularity: 3% [?]
Posted by Ingrid Riley on February 1st, 2010
This is what I’ve been seeing for the past two days. I hope they’re just switching servers or something and didn’t fall into the dotcome dead pool. I had high hopes for Cariblogger.com.
Related Posts
Cariblogger.com – the Caribbean’s First Blog Network
CUBlogz.com – another Caribbean blog network launches
BlogsCaribe.com – A Guide to the Caribbean’s Top Blogs
Popularity: 3% [?]
Posted by Ingrid Riley on April 25th, 2009
The relevance of mainstream coverage seems not to be an issue for this Internet Generation. I recently attended a rehearsal meeting for an upcoming event. About 10 people gathered to run through the agenda and to meet who was doing what and when. Then one person asked…so is the media coming? The chief organizer without missing a beat listed the names of two well trafficked and respected blogs and a Caribbean social network which covers events, take pictures and brands these pictures and puts them solely online. No one seemed perturbed by this announcement and less surprised at the response by mainstream media for the request for coverage was met with the usual we’ll see how the days events go to decide whether or not to send a reporter or photographer over.
So it made me ask this question…..is seeing and being seen online, getting “coverage” online and being able to share with friends in social networks, on twitter, by email, on instant messenger and by phone a fast growing appeal, reality even, with the clamour to be covered in the mainstream print and by tv stations dwindling?
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Popularity: 3% [?]
Posted by Ingrid Riley on April 22nd, 2009
I’m in the middle of creating an online publicity campaign for a client and found three free Caribbean-focused press release submission websites – caribpr.com which was the first PR wire of the Caribbean which is based in New York, caribbeanpressreleases.com which is out of Barbados and then we have Jamaica-based jamaicapressrelease.com and a sweet list of 50 free press release submission websites.
Now not all press release submission websites are created equal. Most tends to simply allow you to upload the text and make your release available to the readers who come to the site. Other sites are what I call fully loaded- meaning you can submit a press release with live links back to a desired website; they allow photos,videos and audio; their site has rss feeds; is syndicated to mainstream journalists; has relationships with a network of influential bloggers;is regularly picked up by major search engines such as Google and Yahoo and more; and some are targeted to specific industries such as technology or business or travel. So it means seeking to find what matches your online publicity needs.
Popularity: 6% [?]
Posted by Ingrid Riley on April 8th, 2009

CUBlogz is another Caribbean blog network that just launched and was spawned from an American-based group of Caribbean Americans. They’ve branded themselves the Official Caribbean blog Network “where the best of the best in the Caribbean web scene reside (their blogs anyway ).” They went on to say on their site, that they “host some of the most notable names on the web, and we are expanding everyday…”
So Cariblogger.com which was the first Caribbean’s blog network now has some competition. Let’s see what happens in a few months now that Caribbean bloggers worldwide has more choice.
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Caribbean blog revolution brewing
Cariblogger.com- the Caribbean’s first Caribbean blog network
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Popularity: 4% [?]
Posted by Ingrid Riley on January 5th, 2009
We first wrote about the Barbados-based company Herrd.com – (the Caribbean News Social Network where you can share, discover, bookmark, and promote Caribbean stuff that’s important to you) when they were weeks old. The fresh-faced Caribbean startup which launched in July 2007 was mapping the global online trend of news via social networking, gunning to be the number one in the region, like the America-based Digg.com is now globally. They were on a sweet growth path until recently. We reported in November last year that we got a suspected malware site warning every time we surfed on over there. Nowadays, that picture you see with this blog post is what we’ve been getting. Have they hit the dotcom dead pool or are they regrouping?
Popularity: 1% [?]