Advice to Companies Blogging

Over on Marketing Profs, Mack Collier had a post yesterday entitled Company Blog or Online Brochure.

More and more companies are adding a blog to their marketing efforts. That’s the good news. The bad news is, many of these companies aren’t using their blogs as a tool to engage their customers, but rather as an extension of their Web site, as a way to simply promote their products and services.

Mack makes a good point here. If the “company blog” becomes the “company store,” people are only going to visit when they want to buy something. No one will get in the habit of dropping by to hear what your company has to say if it’s the same old, same old they can download in a pdf.

I work with a number of technology customers (mostly small companies), and only one - the least techie and most “youth oriented” -  is into any sort of blogging at all.

What I do advise my customers when they ask about blogging is the following:

If you’re going to be blogging, you’re going to be doing so to develop a relationship with your customers. As Mack writes, blogs work

 …when you respect your customers enough to tailor your content so that it appeals to them. That builds readership, and loyalty.

And it gives those readers a reason to want to interact with the company through their blog. That’s when a blog’s true potential as a communication tool can begin to be realized. But that potential can’t be reached until the company is willing to examine its blog from the reader’s point of view.

Before much longer, company blogs will no longer be a “nice to have”, they’ll be a “must have.” Even those companies who aren’t testing the blogging waters quite yet will be doing so sooner or later. And it’s never too early to start thinking about what your blog strategy should be.


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Comments

Great point Maureen, companies have to commit to sticking with their blog. I think many want to be able to immediately quantify their results, such as X number of posts will equal X number of percentage increase in sales. It doesn’t work that way, the benefits are indirect, and come from the conversation and community that’s created over time.

And it does take time. I think this is the biggest point to make to companies that are considering blogging.

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