From the category archives:

Blogging for Leads

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If your online marketing strategy includes corporate blogging, then I have one challenge for you concerning your blog. Remember from my last article, we are supposed to remember to internalize the idea that our corporate blogs are to gain leads. On that note, I have a word I want you to concentrate on (a phrase really) that makes marketers drool: inbound marketing.

Content Makes Your Blog a Foundation for Inbound Marketing

Seriously? Yes. Seriously. But you have to use it the right way. And that comes down to the content. I have read so many blog articles and books about the importance of content, and I agree with them. Content should be informative, helpful, funny, inspire awe, and yes, content is king. I get it. But there are so many blogs and websites out there that it seems like all the good content has been taken up. It can be a little discouraging. At times, it can even be daunting. But the truth is, in order for your blog to be a foundation for inbound marketing, in order for people to want to share it with others, your content needs to be really, really good. So good, in fact, that people will want to share it. And that takes time.

An Inbound Marketing Challenge for You and Your Blog

Now, before I scare you anymore, I have an answer for this so it doesn’t seem so daunting. It’s based on the writings of one of my favorite bloggers, Leo Babauta, who blogs over at Zen Habits. After reading his blog for several years, it’s clear to me that we need to apply one of his mantras about creating healthy habits to this whole blogging thing: just do one thing at a time. So I’m going to give you a challenge for your business blog: plan ONE really cool piece of content.

One really cool piece of content can help make your blog THE foundation for inbound marketing that it can be. My biggest piece of advice about this one really cool piece of content, is that you make it embeddable (implicitly shareable) content. What happens with embeddable content is that people reuse it! When they do that, that content gets pointed back to your blog or website!

Share and Make Shareable

Consider this really cool piece of content an artifact. It is an artifact of your business. So treat it like gold. Here are some things you are going to want to do with that artifact during its “life”time:

  • Make sure to create the metadata (tags) for it
  • Support it yourself by posting it to sites like Digg, Stumbleupon, etc.
  • Ask your friends, followers, and fans to share it, tweet it, repost it for you
  • Make sure you have your social sharing buttons enabled in the post in which it belongs

Slow down for a minute and realize the importance of REALLY good SHAREABLE content. Stop writing and rehashing the stuff you’ve already seen online. Take the time this week, this month (however long it takes depending on how much time you have) to create a really shareable piece of content, a piece of content that you can place in your blog post as say, an image, an infographic, a video, a PDF – and be sure you include credit to your website in a way that is not easily removed from the content. A piece of content that really, truly is a help in some way to your customers. Then come back and let us know what you did, and how it worked for you.

You can do it! I know you can!

Thanks to Funchye at Flickr for the great sharing photo

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Ross Furlong of blogstar.co.uk, recently posted a great infographic about business blogging in one of the LinkedIn groups that I follow. With the post, he asked a good question: are corporate blogs an inward facing vanity project or a marketing powerhouse for customer engagement?

*Original infographic posted here: http://www.blogstar.co.uk/our-blog/

Why Do Businesses Blog?

In answer to his question, I reflected on the stats concerning “why” a business blogs. Seventy percent of the responders said that they blog to share expertise, in comparison to the 52% who said that they blog to attract new customers. While sharing expertise is a definite draw for people to read your blog, if this is your ultimate goal for blogging, you haven’t yet internalized the purpose of a corporate blog.
While sharing expertise is what we are doing when we write for a corporate blog, it is not the why, the purpose for investing time and money into a corporate blog. The ultimate purpose for business blogging is to gain customers. If this purpose is not internalized in the hearts and minds of those who write or direct these blogs, they will be missing the mark, and missing out on a lot of opportunity to gain customers.

Your Purpose in Blogging Determines Your Content

The difference between having a mindset that you are blogging to share expertise or blogging to gain customers lies in the content that you will produce as a result of that mindset. If you are blogging to share expertise, then the answer to Ross’s question is that you are blogging as an inward facing vanity project. Your content, then, will not necessarily answer the questions and concerns that your customers care about. You might hit the mark sometimes, but more often than not, you will simply be admiring your own stockpile of intelligence.

Blogging for Leads

On the other hand, if your mindset is to blog to gain customers, you will have your customer’s needs and concerns as your goal for writing. Your blog topics will answer their questions, stimulate their curiosity and result in engagement. This is when your blog turns into a marketing powerhouse for customer engagement, as Ross suggested a blog should be. But I would go even a step further and say that if you keep this goal (gaining customers) as your central focus, your blog will be not only a powerhouse for customer engagement, but a resource for leads.

So keep your purpose at the forefront of your mind, internalize it and then act on it when you write for your blog. And that’s how you blog for leads.

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