To Blog or Not to Blog
Should your business blog or not blog? Is blogging just a fad and when will it go away. IDC predicts that user generated content will grow to become the dominant type of content in the digital universe, with more than 70% of the content being user generated. The numbers prove IDC’s forecast, in 2007 Technorati published a blog citing the growth of blogs. Some of the highlights include:
Blogging is more than a trend, companies need to learn how to blog. Customers want to hear from companies. Business Week published some of the benefits blogging can provide companies:
- Blogs are a great way to introduce new products and services to visitors without recoding.
- Blogs are a great way to generate repeat traffic – pure gold.
- Blogs tell you what customers like and don’t like – first-hand market research.
- A blog is a great way to keep product reviews in front of your buyers.
- A blog entry can be easily syndicated to other sites – all pointing back to your site.
- A blog is easy to set up, easy to maintain.
- Search engines love blogs. Tips for gaining traffic are included in our article “SEO Your Blog“.
- A blog keeps your site fresh.
- A blog has become part of visitors’ expectations.
- A blog is lots of fun.
For those that want to get started, I recently read Chris Brogan’s article on 50 Steps to Establishing a Consistent Social Media Practice.
I thought he gave some great tips that could be applied for companies who want to start their own blogs. Here are some of the points I found most useful from his blog:
- If you’re blogging, make that a home base for all your other efforts.
- Pick 3 social networks to join based on where your customers might be. 3 might sound like too few, but it probably will be too many.
- On those networks and on your “passport” accounts, make sure you link everything back to the blog.
- Get a second (maybe even a 3rd) person in the company to build accounts on these places. Nice to have backups, in case you get busy.
- Build an editorial calendar to think about your posting schedule and subject matter.
- Subscribe to 50 or more blogs in a similar space as yours, including competitors, and any industry blogs.
- On all your presence points, be human, and write a human-sounding profile. Use a human-seeming profile picture. (Did I mention “human?”)
- After you’ve written your first blog post, take some time to comment on some of those 50 blogs, but NOT about your first post.
- Make sure it’s easy for people to subscribe to your blog, via a reader and also via email.
- Run periodic checks of your blog/site using Website Grader to see if you’re technically sound and findable.
- Use tagging and other metadata to improve your blog’s search features. Most newer blog software has this built in. If not, look for plugins.
- For whatever reason, graphics in posts improve audience. Check out Flickr’s Creative Commons pool for how to use which kinds of graphics appropriately.
- Consider a nice clean theme for your blog’s design. There are many free themes for different blogs, and some inexpensive ones like Thesis that are worth every penny.
- Outside of your blog, be sure to update/refresh the information on your social networks every two or three weeks. USE the networks more often, but refresh your profiles and other info.
- Seek out opportunities to guest post on more popular blogs in your space. Don’t be spammy and over-link to your own site/posts. Add value.
- On social networks, look for ways to contribute, even when it’s not directly related to your company/product.
- Continue building relationships outside of having a specific need. Don’t ONLY try to build relationships with customers, for example.
- To create consistent content, read daily, and not just for your industry. Skim, synthesize, and post.
- Use notepad files to jot post ideas down when you don’t have a moment to write. Return frequently.
- Riff off other blog posts you like, and add some value beyond linking back to those original posts (and always link back to those posts).
- Go to the grocery store news stand and find popular magazines. Convert their story titles to blog post titles for your field.
- Skim news aggregator sites like Reddit or Digg (or what’s appropriate to your industry), and create posts from there.
- Ask your audience what they need, what they’re struggling with.
- Revisit a month of posts and see what you’ve covered the least.
- Think about things your customers/stakeholders/prospects might need and write about that, even if it’s a bit off-topic.
- Check your stats to see what people are searching for, and address it.
- Branch out your blogging into video and audio where appropriate.
- Look into building a community platform around your content platform.
- Invite your audience in to guest post where appropriate.
- Add social bookmarking plugins like Add This to your blog to improve distribution.
- Look for cross-promotional opportunities for like-minded blogs in your space.
- Consider starting groups on your social networks (such as a Facebook group) to further discuss the space you’re covering.
- Remember to comment on other people’s blogs frequently, and show your participation in the communities where you have presence.
- Occasionally produce PDF versions of your better posts and email them to customers and prospects to encourage growing your audience.
- Consider a conversion engine like a free offer to help sort prospects from fans and audience.
- Move towards measurements quickly, as these are often where companies decide their vote.
- Create a simple report on how you will report what you’re doing for upper management.
- Work out which numbers might matter. Comments received. Links in. Times bookmarked?
- Rank each blog post on effectiveness based on your own criteria. Review weekly and monthly.
- Figure out a “downstream” metric that drives real business value. Reduce costs to call center? Sales leads?
- Never count # of friends or # of followers as a valuable metric. It’s quality in that case.
- As soon as you can, find ways to tie your numbers to marketing and sales numbers where appropriate.
- Move to automate the numbers collection parts early. Keep the sentiment reporting parts human.
- Set 3 month goals to review progress with upper management. Determine if this is having any impact.
- Though these last 10 tips are about numbers, NEVER treat people like numbers in social media.
A simple search can provide you with several success stories of niche blogs. One of those is the story of Ken Savage who was diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes and in a effort two learn more about the disease he started a blog called BattleDiabetes.com.
BattleDiabetes.com attracts over 7,000 to 9,000 pageviews on a given day and brought in almost $40,000 a year in supplemental income from online advertisement.
If Ken can do it, why can’t your company start blogging and benefiting from this new social media channel? Just Blog!
Tags: BattleDiabetes.com, Blog, Business Week, Chris Brogan, Ken Savage, Search Engine Optimization, Social Media, Success Blog
