Ahh, the spirit of blogging. Responding to things in an open forum.

Frank Barnako, of MarketWatch, took a few swipes at us and the Business Blogging Awards today.

He says that there wasn’t enough peer review, that it was just a popularity contest, and that things weren’t run seriously enough.

Which I’ll happily concede. Because as Frank quotes, and apparently forgets: it was all just for fun.

Frank even goes so far as to accuse us of rigging the votes (or something):

To suggest the competition’s purpose was more business development than professional development, consider that one of Wright and Barefoot’s consulting clients, eBizBlog.ca, won an award. You have to wonder: why didn’t all of them?

Huh. See, here was me thinking this was all just for fun. Why the jab, Frank? Why no phone call? You do have my number, I know you do. And you’ve taken to not answering my emails either. Have we somehow soured you on the concept of InsideBlogging? I’d really love to know.

Obviously I’d have said all of this on Frank’s article, except there were no comments.

Thankfully, others aren’t taking these awards as seriously as Frank is. Steve Rubel brushes them off, which is the right thing to do. It was all just for fun, and to showcase some cool new blogs people might not be aware of.

Frank seems to think that Steve deserved to win, and that Media Guerilla was unworthy:

Who are these guys? I cover blogs, read blogs, and talk to Web loggers. The winners in this “contest” are unknown to me. [...] By contrast, Steve Rubel’s Micro Persuasion, which draws tens of thousands of readers, was passed over.

Personally, I just have to laugh. The amount of press these awards have garnered is fantastic for everyone. Washington Post and MartetWatch straight down to some more local papers.

I just think it’s ironic that it’s largely thanks to a previous article Frank wrote (on the auctions) that we even exist today.

Were the awards just a “PR stunt”, as Frank purports? Not really. The problem with PR stunts is you typically have to be trying to get PR by doing them. The BBA site had less than 20,000 visitors. That’s roughly what my blog gets in 2 days. It’s not a lot, and the “PR” from the awards was meaningless. What wasn’t meaningless is the connections we’ve made, the fun that’s been had, the blogs we’ve discovered and the giggles we’ve gotten over some of the responses.

Frank, seriously, this is the kind of thing that deserves to go in a blog, not in MarketWatch. But, it’s in MarketWatch, so thanks for the traffic and have a great weekend. I’m sure all of this will matter much less after a few drinks and a little bit of sun. I, for one, am glad the awards are over and we can look forward :)

ps: I’m writing all of this with a smile on my face. Irony, intrigue, scandal, laziness? What more could you ask for on a Friday?!