Measuring the ROI from blogging is notoriously difficult. Particularly when you’re first starting out, the results can be strictly anecdotal. Nonetheless, blogging can be an extremely valuable marketing tool.
Here are a few first-hand observations on how to get a blog to work and the true value of blogging in building your business:
· Simply posting to a blog doesn’t do anything. No one is going to miraculously find your blog, even if you use keywords and post it to the various blog-aggregation services. I get some, but very few, hits from these sources.
· Publicizing your blog works. I could definitely do more, but here are a few ways I publicize my blog. I :
o Post my blog on my LinkedIn profile. Everyone who’s a contact gets LinkedIn updates that include blog updates. Thus, my contacts are reminded of my existence every time I update my blog.
o Post my blog as a discussion in my LinkedIn Groups. To avoid angering people on the discussion boards, I’m careful to post only content that will be useful to my readers—I never post blatant pitches about my services.
o Send links to recent blog posts to my in-house mailing list.
o Automatically create a Tweet for each new post.
· Getting someone else to publicize your blog works even better. In several cases, other bloggers found my blog and posted links to it on their site—those third party postings work far better than my own publicity, especially if the blog in question has a bigger readership than mine. For example, when MarketingProfs posted an excerpt of one of my posts along with a link to my site, traffic skyrocketed. Not only that, a number of people tweeted about the post, which further added to my hits.
· Blogs work best at reconnecting with previous customers. People in high tech move around frequently. I may work on several successful projects with someone, and then they’ll stop calling. Inevitably, I find out that my contact has moved on. By publicizing my blog in places where these people are likely to be, I’ve found that they remember me and many of them contact me when they have a new project in my area of expertise. They don’t mention the blog per se, but it’s difficult to believe that it’s mere coincidence that quite a few old contacts reconnected when I started my blog.
· Blogs help turn cold calls into warm calls. When I am most active on my blog, other sales efforts are far more effective. While no one mentions the blog explicitly, I close much more business more quickly and easily when the blog is active—and conversely, new business is more difficult to close when the blog is not updated regularly (shame on me).
· Inquiries increase. On occasion, new customers that I haven’t approached at all have approached me. I’ve heard that many people do get new business this way, but that seems to be a longer term benefits, say, after six months of blogging, or even longer.
Based on these experiences, the evidence is strong that blogs are effective marketing tools. But blogs only work if you publicize them, and they work best if someone else publicizes them for you. And people only do that if they like your content.
What business-building experiences have you had with blogs?
Excellent post. I have tried some of the suggested approaches, and my traffic has shot up for my film review site.
Posted by: Ted Faraone | August 19, 2010 at 09:06 PM
I follow you VIA GFC and I love your blog!
Posted by: Moncler Speichern Online | January 14, 2012 at 03:01 AM