How Blogging Can Help Your Business
While
the goal of a business-type blog is to build interest in your product or service,
there is a right way to go about it and a way that is sure to fail. Instead of
trying to sell products in each of your posts, think about trying to open a dialogue
with your customers. That brings up another point - if you are not 100% confident
in your product or service then a blog is not for you.
We have been
writing online since 1994, but we didn't know that we were blogging until around
the year 2000 :)
Wikipedia says: The term "weblog" was coined by Jorn Barger
on 17 December 1997. The short form, "blog," was coined by Peter Merholz. He broke
the word weblog into the phrase "we blog" in the sidebar of his weblog in April
or May of 1999. Basically a blog is a website where a blogger enters "posts" in
reverse chronological order ( meaning that the newest "posts" are displayed first
) using some sort of blogging software that allows readers to comment on posts,
effectively adding new content to the blog.
Initially blogs were generally
private affairs with bloggers using them to keep online diaries. These days blogs
have expanded to a virtually unlimited number of uses, including helping to build
businesses. While a number of unscrupulous business men have resorted to publishing
"splogs" or spam blogs, we will focus on how you can utilize blogging to help
build your business while contributing to the blogosphere.
The blogosphere
( the community of blogs or the social network of blogs ) has a certain set of
rules that have to be followed in order to publish a successful blog. The first
rule is that your blog must contribute to the blogosphere - that is you must actually
publish real content and not advertisements. A sure way to produce a blog that
flops is to pump it full of advertisements disguised as content.
While the
goal of a business-type blog is to build interest in your product or service,
there is a right way to go about it and a way that is sure to fail. Instead of
trying to sell products in each of your posts, think about trying to open a dialogue
with your customers. That brings up another point - if you are not 100% confident
in your product or service then a blog is not for you.
With the way that the
blogosphere works if you are not willing to get behind your products and services
completely. then you are going to have problems. When your customers or clients
post comments to original posts, there are bound to be some problems or issues
exposed - it is just the nature of the beast. If these issues are not addressed
satisfactorily ( or even worse if comments are not followed up on or even allowed
to be posted at all ), then your company is not going to have a very good reputation
in the blogosphere. If you are not willing to have an open discussion of your
business with the readers of your blog, don't blog.
The goal is to build up
a reputation for your blog that reflects positively on your company. If you can
do this, you are well on your way to building a successful blog. If a potential
customer comes to your blog and notices your clients that had a problem were satisfactorily
appeased, then they will view your company in a better light than they would without
that information.
And that brings up a huge advantage to having a blog for
your business - you can out flank the media, your competitors and all of the other
traditional information outlets with your blog. If you successfully optimize your
pages and build up a reputation for your blog ( think Google pagerank ), your
posts stand a good chance of coming up first in search results for a particular
product or service. Obviously if that page reflects well on your product or service
this is preferable to your clients getting their information from a different
source.
Another advantage of creating a blog about your industry is that you
can set yourself up as an expert on the topic. While this only works if you have
substantial knowledge of a given subject, most business owners are well versed
about their industry - at least more so then the average reader of their blog.
So capitalize on this knowledge by posting "insider" information about your industry
- and where appropriate highlight your company's, products or services strengths.
You have to remember however that your blog is not a press release. If the
readers don't feel like you are posting in the true spirit of blogging, then your
blog is doomed to failure. So don't let your PR guys write the blog; take the
opportunity to make real connections with the readers of your blog. Blogging done
the right way is one of the best ways to truly achieve 1 to 1 marketing.
Your
blog will have to be integrated into your whole net strategy - for example in
your online catalog you can have links to posts that discuss that product. If
customers contact support, they should be sent links to blog pages discussing
the information they are looking for as well as the product pages or the FAQ.
And don't forget to include your blog in your marketing strategies, new product
launches, etc.
The bottom line is that if your are confident in your company
and its services and/or products, then blogging is an important piece of the online
puzzle. If you are not blogging your company, you may be losing out to your competitors
who are.
Source: Free
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
James
Kendall runs
JTkconsulting and helps
individuals and businesses break into blogging.