
Last week, HubSpot published an interesting piece of research on small companies who blog compared to those who do not. Their findings support what we have seen with our InnoBlogs clients: Blogging makes your business Rock! HubSpot looked at data from over 1,500 clients and found that the average company who blogs has 55% more website visitors, 97% more inbound links and 434% more indexed pages! The formula goes something like this:
Business + Blog = Web Traffic, Links & SEO
Since Web Traffic, Links and SEO translate quickly into Revenue for many businesses, we can quickly draw a line directly from blogging to Return on Investment (ROI). If you are ready to tap into the power of Business Class Blogging, check out our InnoBlogs Platform. This could be the best money you spend all year.
Be sure you check out the work that HubSpot did.
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/5014/Study-Shows-Small-Businesses-That-Blog-Get-55-More-Website-Visitors.aspx
Their blog post attracted a ton of comments as well. See a sample of these below from users just like you.



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Tagged as:
Business Class Blogging,
Hubspot,
InnoBlog,
InnoBlogs,
return on investment,
ROI

Lately, ROI has become a dirty word in the Social Media arena. VPs and Execs who are just beginning to look at social media as a channel are asking the first question they always ask when evaluating anything new…”What’s the ROI?”
The problem with ROI and Social Media is that no one has truly cracked the ROI formula yet. We know Social Media is valuable. We have seen first hand how it drives web traffic and increases chances of sales. We know it connects people and creates relationships that would otherwise be impossible…but we can’t seem to say “If you invest $10,000 in these social media applications, you will see a return on your sales of $100,000 in 12 months”)
So, what are we to do?
Lately I have been noticing a disturbing trend among social media practitioners. Instead of admitting the difficulty of ROI and seeking to crack the formula, people are simply renaming it! I’ve heard it called “Return on Influence” and “Retention on investment“. I also recently saw the letters re-arranged to IOR for “Impact on Relationships“. This does little to satisfy the executive’s need for hard data.
So…instead of jumping on the re-definition bandwagon, I went on the hunt for some smart folks who have begun to address ROI for what it is… a way to measure the success or failure of time and money spent on social media.
Here is a great consolidated list of ROI resources. This list is quite extensive. So, if you are short on time, here are a few of my favorites:
Social Media Compendium
Calculating the ROI of Blogging
Ten things to know about measuring Social Media
Social Media FAQ #3: How do I Measure ROI?
Tagged as:
measuring success,
return on investment,
ROI,
Social Media