Business Blogging When You Don’t Have an Opinion
“The type of insight and expertise that a blog can demonstrate is far more useful than any PR pitch you could post,” explains fellow blogger Erica Swallow. Swallow stresses that blogs should be “repositories of analysis and opinions provided by a company’s fine employees”.
Those of us who offer business blogging services agree. When blogging for business reveals your unique “slant” or philosophy within in your field, potential customers and clients feel they know who you are, not merely what you do, and they are far more likely to want to be associated with you.
For that very reason, one important facet of my job as professional ghost blogger is to “interview” business owner and professional practitioner clients, eliciting each one’s very individualized thoughts. In a way, I’ve concluded, SEO marketing blogs are just extended, serialized interviews, with the reader learning from the blog posts about the culture and “personality” of a business or practice.
But, what if the business owner or practitioner hasn’t yet formed an opinion on some important topic? In that case, Swallow suggests taking polls and reporting on the results. And, as I teach Indianapolis blog content writers, it’s valuable to readers when you clarify and put into perspective both sides of a thorny issue within your industry or profession.
Marketing guru Seth Godin speaks of “cat blogs”, describing them as “personal and idiosyncratic”, written for purposes of self-expression or to gain converts to an opinion or cause. And, while the type of corporate blogging for business I and my Say It For You writers produce fall within the category Godin dubs “viral blogs”, a little bit of “cat” goes a long way in “humanizing” those blogs and making them more engaging for readers.
“When consumers get helpful information from an authoritative source that has a human face, they are more likely to come back and purchase from that source,” says InteractMedia.com.
For all of the five years of Say It For You’s existence, before offering business blogging help to any company or practice, I've asked the owner or practitioner to answer a question: If you had only eight to ten words to tell me why you’re passionate about what you do, what would those words be?” It’s not uncommon for my clients to discover, in the course of being interviewed, that they do have important opinions to express through blogging for business, after all!
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