Blogging as Part of Your Marketing Strategy

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Blogging and your marketing strategy

Last week, the good folks over at Social Media Breakfast Waterloo were kind enough to invite me over to speak to their members.

The topic was crowd-sourced, and the chosen talk was on how blogging could be used as part of your marketing strategy. Since the audience was made up of every business size, from solo entrepreneurs to SMB owners and C-suite executives, it was a great topic to be talking about.

You can view my presentation below, but i just wanted to highlight the four key points that you can take away for your own blog and marketing combination.

1. Research

One of the most important things you can do before you start a business blog is research whether your customers and audience actually want one. It’s all well and good saying, “Well, our competition has a blog – we should too!”. But that’s just setting yourself up for failure.

Look at your customer base; are they the kind that read blogs? Are they mobile-led (which would suggest a blog-friendly audience)? Are they computer-literate?

A slaughterhouse in Moldova is probably not going to need a blog; a hospitality industry business probably should have one. Ask your customers if they’d be interested in a blog – a questionnaire, an email, when they’re in your store, etc.

Having a ready audience will immediately increase your chances of having a decent corporate blog.

2. Strategy

Just as important as the research angle is the strategy one. If you launch a business blog and you don’t have defined goals with it, you’re just wasting valuable time and resources in maintaining it.

Will it be for lead generation? Will it be to promote your business’ thought leadership? Is it to handle service questions, or give the latest news on product or company updates? Is it to get to know your customers better and what makes them tick?

Have a solid strategy in place on what you want to achieve, and how you wish to achieve it. Then set timelines in place to measure how you’re doing, and adapt accordingly.

You wouldn’t go into business without a clear goal and plan – why would you do anything different with another angle of your business?

3. Consistency

If there’s one thing that blog readers hate, it’s inconsistency. This can be across multiple areas – publishing posts, comment systems (yes, I’m guilty of this one!), voice, editorial, writers and more.

And there’s a simple reason for this – there are currently between 180 and 200 million blogs out there, and reader interest is becoming shorter and shorter as publications vie for eyeballs. So if you’re confusing your reader with ever-changing positions on your blog, they’ll more often than not decide it’s not worth hanging around.

If you want to keep your readers and grow your blog, be consistent.

  • If you’re going to post once a week, make it the same day and the same time of day. If you’re going to post 2-3 times a week, keep it the same days.
  • If you’re going to be primarily a text blog, remain that way. If you’re going to be a video-led blog, be that blog. You can mix things up now and again, but keep the prime focus the one you set up yourself up as.
  • Keep the tone consistent. if you’re going to be a serious blog, remain in a serious tone. If you’re looking to show the fun side of your business, highlight that with pictures and a lighter tone.

If you keep to the goals you set out with, and the way you set out reaching them, it’ll cause less confusion and encourage readers to stay with you.

4. Measurement

One of my biggest bugbears is when I speak with business owners and ask them about analytics and measurement, and how they’re tracking their success based on their goals, and they reply with a blank stare and an, “Uh….” soundbite.

If you’re not tracking your activity, how do you expect to know if you’re succeeding; where you’re succeeding; where you need to adapt and more?

The best of it is, you can track all this stuff for free (with the exception of cost of man hours to do so).

  • Use Google Analytics or Woopra to track your web visits, as well as where the traffic is coming from, what your visitors are doing while on site, where they’re going afterwards, and much more. See which content works, which doesn’t, and amend your approach accordingly.
  • Track social media success with tools like Jugnoo (I’m biased, but we do track pretty well!), Most Shared Posts, or social campaigns in your analytics solution(s). By knowing what content resonates, and where, you can be far more strategic on your approach to both your blog and that platform.
  • If you’re selling products from your business blog, use something like WooCommerce and Improvely. This can identify the source of the purchase, the referral, the costs involved and much more.

You don’t have to run a bells and whistles measurement solution – but for the love of all things common sense, please do have at least some way to track what you’re doing!

As I mentioned, these are the four key areas for any business blog to really concentrate on and get right. There are more, which the presentation looks at. But as a starting point, they should be the ones you answer if you want your business blog to succeed.

The rest is up to you.

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About Danny

Danny Brown is Chief Technologist at ArCompany and an award-winning marketer and blogger. His blog is recognized as the #1 marketing blog in the world by HubSpot. Danny is also co-author of Influence Marketing: How to Create, Manage and Measure Brand Influencers in Social Media Marketing.

8 comments
Suzanne Mannion-Hopkins
Suzanne Mannion-Hopkins

Great article Danny! I would like to add some thoughts regarding the Research matter. Finding the right target for the business is vital, but it’s not everything. After you choose a target the key is to keep them engaged. One of the most common mistakes brands make is to overwhelm their audiences with promotional information, instead of striving to educate and motive so they can relate to the type of information services that you are offering. We recently posted an article on this topic which you can read here: http://www.newsmakergroup.com/blog/to-blog-or-not-to-blog-if-youre-just-looking-to-rant-dont-waste-your-time/

Catherine
Catherine

Danny I agree that consistency is important, and can sometimes be hard to achieve when blogging. Thanks for the reminder!

Sam Fiorella
Sam Fiorella

Excellent advice. I'd add another from personal experience: "have a point of view". Writing with passion and specific voice (and consistently as you note) can differentiate your content from the many other bloggers who are probably writing about the same topic.

Ralph Dopping
Ralph Dopping

Great stuff here.

I am working with a non-profit (as a volunteer) in their marketing group to help them understand an approach to social media.They are out there but not seeing value yet. It will be a good test of what I have learned about social media over the past 15 months. The first question that came up is "do we need to blog more?" I hope to use some of these tips to help communicate a strategy I am working on. Thank you very much for sharing it. I am no expert but with the sound advice from you and a few others in this space I feel I can make a positive impact without going off the deep end.

Cheers!

Danny Brown
Danny Brown

Hey there Ralph,

Thanks, mate, really glad the post resonated, and especially given the reason you share here, mate. If there's one industry that can truly use social media and blogging to connect, it's the non-profit one. Every non-profit I've ever supported has been because of the personal and human connection the story behind a non-profit can bring to the table - get that part, and you're halfway there in your "battle".

Let me know if I can help in any way, mate.

Brian D. Meeks
Brian D. Meeks

I really liked your point about if you mainly do text, stay with text. I really don't care for videos or podcasts, because MOST people don't know how to speak well. It is a skill one can certainly learn (join Toastmasters), but few have bothered to take the time.

I want to read blogs, not listen to blogs, or watch blogs, but sit back and take in the words. The people that tell a good story, well, they've got me. Unless you look like the woman from Hot for Words, don't give me a video of your "uhm and you know filled musings", as I won't even bother. If you do look like her, then by all means video away.

Danny Brown
Danny Brown

Hey there Brian,

I'll have to pretty much agree with you, mate. I've dabbled in some video (and I'll do some more, but nothing major), but my comfort zone is in writing. I think that's where folks fall down - like you say, a lot of people can do one thing really well, but not so much elsewhere, and that comes across with their comfort level.

Do what you do great, and leave the mediocre stuff for someone else. Cheers, mate!

Ralph Dopping
Ralph Dopping

I love video but I've cracked a few camera lenses with my gorgeous mug. If you practice you get better, right? Like public speaking.


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