Rubbing Shoulders in the Blogosphere – strategies and ideas for companies.
In my last article I gave an overview of the emerging power of consumer
bloggers and their ability to form powerful social networks that spread news
quickly. For those feeling uneasy about this change, there is much good
news. Public relations, customer service, and project communications are all
enhanced using these tools. Some examples and tips:
Journalists love blogs, and with good reason. It provides a ready source of
information delivered to their desktop. It digs beyond the press release
while making their job easier during early research. Companies that are
blogging receive more journalistic interest, and some PR experts are calling
blogging the “transformation of PR.” With news coverage, an existing blog
can be your first line of communication with the newly-curious public. If
you utilize the techniques I’ve mentioned earlier in RSS: One big happy
brain you can scan ahead for items you may want to respond to in your blog.
Customers, investors, and partners will see you as pro-active and dynamic
through your rapid responses. The openness and honesty gives customers
little reason to continue a negative message, rather, these are often
praised in highly visible places producing a form of PR that money cannot
buy.
Timeliness,
regularity, relevance, and use of important keywords are more
important than perfection in blogging.
But don’t wait until then. I advice you become familiar with this before you
need to join in. It offers an opportunity to make important connections, but
not a chance for the company line. Nobody on the blogosphere wants a pitch
or a “refer to our website” in place of a thoughtful answer. It’s a
person-to-person style, not a podium. It’s okay to express emotion and to
give the world a peek into your company’s culture. Still, one should be
thoughtful enough not to embarrass the firm – and some firms are
establishing blogging policies to enforce certain restrictions.
What to expect after your blog is live is the next question. This varies,
and you should watch blogs to see what seems to interest people in your line
of business. Unfortunately, many are abandoned, and the most common reason
is a lack of time. This is unfortunate, because they aren’t supposed to be
long and drawn out. Even posting a new paragraph a week is going to achieve
many of these goals. Timeliness, regularity, relevance, and use of important
keywords are more important than perfection in blogging. Nobody is going to
slam you for it when you post a fuzzy “sneak peek” of the latest product or
a less-than-formal writing style.
Blogs can build important contacts. Ben Cowgill, a legal ethics attorney in
Lexington, says of his very popular blog “It has been far more successful
than I could have imagined. The regular subscribers include lawyers
throughout the United States, Canada, Great Britain and Europe. It has also
received visits from lawyers in Japan, China, Russia, Africa and South
America. I have established relationships with a number of other experts in
my field of practice.” Ben Cowgill’s blog can be found at legalethicsblog.com .
Don’t forget…. Google loves blogs. When people create regularly updated
entries it increases the frequency of the Googlebot (Google’s “scan”.) For
me, changes to my website (which holds my blog) are now visible to Google
within a half day, letting me try new techniques, fix mistakes, or react to
news. If a hot new topic hits the web, I can post my thoughts so they become
part of the buzz early – while people are still searching for it.
Whether it’s about products, services, any company with motivation can
create one that has real value to their visibility. Even restaurants can
blog about new menus, for example, and horse farms about new foals. And no,
you do not have to call it a “Blog.” You can call it “Chef’s diary,” “The
Chalkboard” or “Paddock 9.”
One growing use is the extending FAQ, or Frequently Asked Questions. On
websites, this is frequently the most visited page, often receiving more
visitors than the home page. These “blogged” FAQs can be a fast, spontaneous
Q&A, answering questions like “Are there any tables left for the Blue Grass
Stakes Preview Dinner next week?” you’d probably not post on your permanent
FAQ page.
Lastly, don’t neglect the value of “private” blogs. These are simply
password-protected types meant for one known audience, such as members of a
project. They maintain context, and unlike email, can be corrected if an
error is posted. Some customers will subscribe via RSS and others will just
hit the private webpage to read them. Everyone stays in the loop, while
Email volume is reduced as well, which we all can appreciate.
I hope to have expanded your view on the benifits of blogging and
encouraged you to look at your own business for ideas how it might work for
you.