Why-Don’t-YOU-Do-It Blog Writing
We’re all used to today’s celebrities, CEOs, and public figures who can’t spare the time to write their own books or speeches, and who hire ghostwriters. As a professional ghost blogger, I’ve become an avid reader on forms and styles of ghost writing. “Ghosts” are behind everything, I keep learning – from classical and country music to the most popular mystery and romance novels.
The current issue of The Nostalgia Digest, a wonderful periodical I came across at the bookstore, has a story about oldtime radio show “This is New York” featuring the character Archie, bartender at Duffy’s Tavern. Reading the piece, I was reminded of the old, yet ongoing debate about who should be writing content for business blogs. Should it be the owners of the business or practice, or a hired content creator (a “ghost”)?
Producer Ed Gardner wanted a guy to talk New Yorkese, and who would sound like a bum, not a gentleman. He kept auditioning people, but was never happy – the accent wasn’t right or the timing would be off. Someone in the control booth said, “Hey, Ed, why don’t you do it?” “And, by golly, he did,” relates Nostalgia writer Martin Grams, Jr. “He filled a picture of the character (Archie) with his timing and his voice.”
So what’s the reason business owners and professional practitioners don’t “do it” when it comes to blog writing? They lack the time, the discipline, or the writing skills to do it themselves. But can an outsider ever do “Archie” as well as the bar owner? Yes, if….. is the answer. As with any promotional materials created for a business by outside professionals, I caution owners, your blog must be in harmony with your style, your approach to your customers and your niche within your industry or field of expertise.
Over my years of working with hundreds of Say It For You client companies and practices, I found that those clients knew that writing blogs in their area of expertise was going to be a great idea for them, yet not very many of them felt they could take the time to compose and post content on a regular basis. Still, just as Ed Gardner needed a guy to talk New Yorkese, we freelance content writers need to talk the language of each client’s target customers market , and we need to do it in the way that each owner or practitioner would if he “did it himself”!
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