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In Blogging for Business, Go Ahead and Be a Secondary Source

 

Historical novels are stories informed by the past, Hunter Liguore explain in Writer’s Digest. But when doing research, should you start with primary or secondary resources? Primary evidence comes from the diaries or biographies of people who actually witnessed an event. In contrast, secondary sources analyze and interpret information.

Often, Liguore points out, with primary sources you can stumble upon fascinating details (whether people in that era or region used forks or what their chief source of light was). But primary sources don’t offer opinions or insights or draw any conclusions from those primary facts. Primary research gathers; secondary research analyzes and interprets.

At Say It For You, we realize, all of us freelance business blog content writers are creating secondary research. Our job, in fact, is to interpret and synthesize information and put it in terms others can understand.

There’s much more to it than that, however. Bloggers for business now need to go beyond providing information and become “thought drivers”. Whether it’s business-to-business blog writing or business-to-consumer blog writing, the blog content itself needs to use opinion to clarify what differentiates our client’s business, professional practice, or organization from its peers.

The primary distinguishing fact of secondary research is analysis or “slant”. A point I often stress in corporate blogging training sessions is that whether you’re blogging for a business, for a professional practice, or for a nonprofit organization, the content must be driven by a unique slant on the information you’re serving up for readers. Yes, you might choose to just aggregate information, but that’s unlikely to result in readers coming to your client’s business or practice for service, products, and advice.)

Be sure the things you choose to say in your blog posts (about what you sell, what you do, ad what you know about) also make clear why readers should care about any of those things. Bottom line, after all, is that while you may be the “primary source” in running your business or practice, the content needs to interpret and opine, showing readers why and how your information can make a positive difference for them.

In blogging for business, go ahead and be a secondary source!

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O.K., You’re Biased. Your Content is There to Tell ‘Em Why

opinion in blogging
Is coming across as biased a bad thing? Not when it comes to blog marketing, I concluded, after reading in the Guardian about a great lecture by writer Neil Gaiman. Gaiman started out the lecture he was giving on the importance of libraries by saying “It’s important for people to tell you what side they are on and why.” As an author of fiction over the last thirty years, Gaiman has been earning his living through his words, so it’s obviously in his interest, he admits, for people to read.

Journalists often feel compelled to try to prove they are “unbiased,” Walter Dean admits in a piece for the American Press Institute . “But what if they took a different approach, acknowledging that bias is built into the choices they make when deciding what to leave in or leave out? Draining a story of all bias can drain it of its humanity,” he says.

Serving as head of the Say It For You team of blog content writers, I’ve had a lot of time to ponder the notion. Our mission is to help business owners and professional practitioners frame their stories, letting readers know what they know how to do and what they offer. But in addition, they need to show what they stand for and what they stand against. One of the gurus I follow is Seth Godin. In the book, All Marketers Tell Stories, Godin says something really powerful: “Your opportunity lies in finding a neglected worldview, framing your story in a way that this audience will focus on.” That “worldview” is a bias.

As content creators, we are influencers. We have to be. The content itself needs to use opinion – call it bias if you wish – to clarify what differentiates that business, that professional practice, or that organization from its peers. Just why have you chosen this particular model for your business or practice? I loved this sentence from the University of Sussex Department of Communications and External Affairs about opinion pieces in general:

“The most important thing to remember is that “readers are not necessarily interested in what you do; they are interested in what you have to say.”

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