In Blogging For Business, Keep Current To Keep Relevant

David Markowitz blogs about food and drug laws, aiming to “provide timely and useful information to people working in FDA-regulated industries”. In fact, Markowitz refers to his site not as a blog, but as a “web portal”.  Whatever you call it, in blogging for business, Markowitz has hit on a valuable strategy for drawing readers to his blog and then to his training company’s corporate website.

Working with my ghost blogging corporate clients, whatever the nature of their business or professional practice, I always advise that we use the blog to provide information – especially new information – related to their field.

Couldn’t online searchers go directly to more complete and authoritative sources?  Markowitz has the answer to that question down pat, although, by his own admission, most of the information in his posts comes from the FDA website itself.

“Going to the FDA website is like visiting the Library of Congress,” he points out.  “We sift through the information and present what is most relevant to our readers.” Sure, I explain to clients, searchers can go to government or academic sites to find data, but they need you as an expert in your field, to help them make sense of the information, which you do by highlighting and explaining just one important concept in each blog post.

Blog maven Ted Demopoulos compliments Markowitz’ technique, explaining that each of David’s posts includes a link to a page of his website, where his training products and services can be purchased.

The Markowitz strategy of using your business blog as a sort of “Reader’s Digest” is especially appropriate for businesses in industries undergoing changes – new legislation, new discoveries,  new technological advances.  Real estate, mortgages, and life sciences are three areas that spring to mind, but keeping blog material relevant depends on staying current, no matter what the industry.

Blogging about what’s new – and why it matters – may go a long way in making your blog the “go-to” site for information in your area of expertise.  In other words, keeping up may be the secret to moving up (in search engine rankings, that is), while offering real value to your existing clients and all those soon-to-be’s!
 

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Is More More, Or Less More, In Blogs?

Earlier this week, I compared blogs to real estate stagers (see "Staging Your Business Blog"). I love watching HGTV, especially shows where professional stagers on a limited budget work miracles getting a home ready to sell. The homeowners always seem to have decors that are either too bare or too cluttered.  The stagers are either combing bargain furniture stores for decorative pillows, vases, picture frames, and mirrors to adorn the place, or they’re busy taking stuff off the shelves and off the walls and putting that stuff out of sight.  So, I gather, in accessorizing a home, more isn’t always good, but too little isn’t good, either. 

That is so reminiscent of a dilemma business owners face in blogging.  Obviously, blogging is about content. As Chris Baggott, CEO of Compendium Blogware notes, "Blogging is unique in that it’s largely a quantity game", adding that consistently generating brief content is what does most for a company’s blogging program.  Statistics show that increases in content creation lead to increases in traffic to the blog.

However, as any stager will tell you, being brief doesn’t mean being boring.  As blogging consultant Mack Collier points out, most companies spend too much time blogging about themselves.  And, while blogs should be "small" (readers should not need to scroll down to read "the rest of the story"), the way to make blogs exciting, Collier advises, is by finding your "bigger idea".  In other words, rather than touting your company’s pet grooming product, blog about the proper way to groom pets.

When I’m talking with new clients about setting up their blog, I sometimes need to quell fears that they’ll be giving away valuable information "for free". (This is particularly true of personal service and advice businesses.) But what will really be happening as that, through providing valuable information in their business blogs, the business owners will be positioning themselves as experts and "go-to" guys and gals.

In short (pun intended!) what you want to shoot for in your business blog is providing value, so that less really does become more!

 

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Easier To Get Unstuck With Blogs

"Some people go on and on about blogs," remarks web designer John Raleigh, "often missing the point that it is basically a web site." "Web sites are pretty cool when they’re done right," he adds, "and blogs make it pretty easy to get it right."

I thought about John Raleigh the other day while opening my refrigerator.  On the door, a magnet held an article I’d saved from the Indianapolis Star, called "Ways To Get Stuff Unstuck", by T.J. Banes. I’d kept this list, so if I ever have trouble peeling decals off the tub, removing encrusted food from supposedly nonstick pans, or getting gum off the sole of my shoe, I’ll know just what to do.  The message I’d found in this useful little piece of journalism was – if you make mistakes, there are ways to fix them.

That’s the thing about blogs, you see.  Raleigh says blogs are "trivial to update", as compared with corporate websites, which are more difficult to change frequently. If your blog two days ago wasn’t stellar, you can blog more skillfully today.  What’s more, since the posts appear in reverse chronological order, your better blogs are the ones people see first!  As your research gets better and you become more confident and focused, blog marketing gives you a chance to get "unstuck" from old marketing and networking habits, and to use blogging as the wonderful communication and customer acquisition tool it can be.

with the terms "stuck" and "unstuck", I’m reminded of the term "sticky blog", which refers to an introductory blog post that tells readers what your intentions are for your blog and what kinds of information you’ll be offering there in your blog posts. My own sticky blog, for example, is "How Say It For You Blog Was Born". My "sticky" is where I explain why I became a professional ghost blogger and where I invite busness owners to visit my blog for "how-to’s" on business blogging.

I now know WD-40 helps remove labels.  Mineral spirits can help get tar off my automobile. The very next time I get gum stuck on my shoe, I’ll wrap that shoe in plastic and put it in my freezer overnight, then zap it with cooking spray.

Meanwhile, I’ll be busy helping business owners who are "stuck" for time keep up the frequency of posting relevant content on their business blogs!

 

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Staging Your Business Blog

SmartMoney.com’s Kelli Grant talks about cheap ways to boost your home’s value, but her article can serve as a tutorial on adding value to business blogs. "Make your first priority the front door," she advises.  "Potential buyers standing on the front porch have 15, 20 seconds just to look", she warns.

I’m not a real estate professional, but I do know blogs, and the "front door" of your blog is the title. BlogManiac  advises making sure one or more of your primary key phrases appears in the title.  After all, searchers who’ve clicked on your blog won’t linger even 15 seconds if your blog title doesn’t reassure them they’ve come to the right place. Names matter in blogs, as I emphasized in "A Blog By Any Other Name Wouldn’t Smell As Sweet."

One common mistake homeowners make, according to Lyle Martin of Assist-2-Sell in Reno, Nevada, is making aesthetic upgrades while ignoring basic maintenance. Spelling and grammar errors divert readers’ attention from even the greatest of blog content, and, while blogs (as I’ve often taught) are more personal and more informal than websites, they shouldn’t be sloppy. Blog maven Ted Demopoulis agrees. There’s a difference between more formal business writing and blog writing, he says, but "that’s no excuse" (for typos, misspelled words, and poor grammar).

Real estate stagers are familiar with this startling statistic: Buyers traditionally negotiate a $2 discount for every $1 of damage that turns up in a home inspection. Internet searchers won’t negotiate at all – they’ll navigate away from your blog and find somewhere else to go.

Not sure where to start? asks SmartMoney. Hire a professional home inspector. Not sure how to incorporate blogging into your online business marketing strategy? A professional ghost blogger could be the "stager" for your business blog!

 

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Don’t Just Blog There – Promote!

Back in December, I remember reading in Nuvo, twelve poets jumped into frigid Green Lake in Seattle; they thought it would be a good way to publicize their art.  As one poet remarked, “It’s not enough to write.  You need that audience.”

Business blogs need to be promoted, too.  The very monikers Internet and World Wide Web denote linkages (think of a spider web, with strands stretching in all directions).  Search engines attribute value to links, both inbound to your blog, and outbound from your blog to other websites, according to Compendium Blogware’s Chis Baggott.

Leaping into lakes probably won’t do much to promote your blog, but leaping into linking will. Do a little sleuthing of your own to find people who are blogging on topics related to your business and post comments (sincere comments on what they’ve written, not disguised commercials for yourself).  You might also email other bloggers telling them about yourself, offering to share ideas.

In-person blog promotion opportunities abound. Share your excitement about your blog with other business people you meet, as well as friends and neighbors.  Invite them to “catch” your latest post and to add comments.  Many, you’ll find, will Just Say Yes!

In “Blog Offers Whiff Of Website”, I positively gushed with praise for Tim Colossy, the Chevrolet dealer in Bridgeville, Pennsylvania who uses a box that sends up puffs of new car scent in his showroom, as part of his plan to entice buyers to visit the dealership.

Your blog is just one piece of your overall business marketing plan, the “whiff” to whet the appetite of potential customers.  But, they’ve got to find you first.  To paraphrase the soaking wet and shivering Seattle poetess, it’s not enough to blog.  You need that audience!

 

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