Are you contributing to one of the estimated 36.1
million (and growing) blogs online? Or are you thinking of entering the
fray and starting to publish a blog for your small or home business?
Make sure you are publishing the right type of blog for your kind of
business, or all that writing time will have been for naught.
The Blog Blood Test
Just as there are different types of blood, there
are many different types of blogs, and each serves its own purpose.
Giving your blog a blood test will help you determine which type of
blog is best for your business and what may be wrong with the one
you've got now.
Blog Blood Type 1: Customer Relations
- Blogging is one of the best ways to put a face and personality on
your business, especially if you operate entirely in cyberspace. Those
that best employ their blog in strengthening relationships with their
customers spend a lot of time interacting with customers, answering
questions, providing useful tips, and keeping them informed of business
happenings. These blogs focus less on the company's products and more
on the company's culture and outlook. The goal of this type of blog is
to engender customer loyalty and establish a consistent flow of
interested website visitors.
Blog Blood Type 2: Sales - As
you can imagine, most businesses that blog do so because of the
perceived benefit to their bottom line. While very little quantitative
research has been done with regards to the actual monetary impact of
blogging on overall sales, the ubiquity of sales-oriented blogs
indicates some kind of return-on-investment. Sales blogs focus on
product developments and benefits to the customer. There is less online
interaction with customers via the blog as the goal is to move readers
off of the blog and onto the product pages. The goal of a sales blog is
to encourage visitors to purchase a product, service, or information
that the company is offering.
Blog Blood Type 3: Personal Web Journals
- These blogs make up the bulk of the 36.1 million web logs online. The
majority are personal accounts written without regard to size of
readership or monetary value. Many have heralded free blogs as the
Internet's greatest achievement, allowing virtually anyone with an
internet connection to publish literally whatever they want, and all in
a matter of a few minutes. There are as many purposes for personal
blogs as there are bloggers. Perhaps the most common theme is the
chance to be heard.
I've Taken the Blog Blood Test…Now What?
Which category did your blog best fit in? Did you
find that you're writing one type of blog but desiring the benefits of
another? If you haven't already started your blog, which type do you
believe would best match your writing abilities and desired outcome?
Simply put, if you're not writing the best type of blog for the
benefits you want, you'll never get them - and you'll waste a lot of
time in the process.
If your current blog is doing exactly what you
want it to, leave it alone. If you find that some changes are
necessary, consider the following questions:
- Do I think I can drive actual sales from the
blog?
- Would I rather spend my writing time
interacting with customers (both positive and negative) or writing
about my product? (Remember the blood test)
- Am I the best person to author my blog, or is
there someone else who could do a better job?
- Do I want to stage the blog as a
company-sponsored communication tool or would I rather it appear as a
kind of third-party, objective review?
- How much time am I willing to spend writing?
- How free do I want to be with regards to
frequency of posting and responding to customer comments?
Millions of others are already blogging, but don't
let that stop you from starting. Give your business the blog blood test
and see which type works best for you.
About the author:
Nick Smith is an internet marketer with
an internet positioning strategy. For
information about a DNA blood test and other DNA products,
visit Genetree.com.