Business Blog Savvy: Avoiding the 8 Pitfalls of Do-It-Yourself
Blogging
You can pat yourself on the back if you're one of the thousands
of small business professionals that have set up a blog to
communicate with your potential clients. Or, maybe you haven't
started your business blog yet, but intend to. Take note now so
you can avoid some of the consequences of do-it-yourself
blogging.
You've heard all the hype, listened to a few podcasts and
teleseminars, and finally sorted out for yourself how blogging
can really work for your targeted niche of readers and potential
clients. You've set up your business blog.
Now, you may be asking yourself, "If I'm so smart at my
business, why do I have a dumb do-nothing blog?"
Here are a few of the pitfalls of creating your blog without any
guidance from blogging experts:
1. You don't know how to use your blogging software, yet
you expect to look like an expert and build credibility. How
could you know? Blogs haven't been around that long, and the
blogging software is continually being upgraded. You need to
learn how to use your blog features that increase your
findability on the Internet and readership. For example, you
need to regularly use trackback, pinging, and permalinks
features.
2. You are writing in a vacuum, without knowing what
questions your clients want answered. You haven't done any
keyword research, or asked your current clients what they'd like
to read. Even worse, you under the impression that a blog should
be like an online diary. You are writing about your personal
life and details, detracting from the on-target, focused purpose
of your blog as a business building tool.
3. You haven't researched other blogs in your field, or
spent any time on them, leaving comments. You need to get out
there and raise your hand in the blogosphere, so people will
know you're there. You also need to know what's going on in your
field.
4. You haven't put a subscription form on your blog, and
you don't understand the whole RSS feed thingy. Your readers
can't find you or know when you have updated your blog.
5. You haven't put any images on your blog and your blog
doesn't look as neat and tidy as your business is. It doesn't
reflect your business image or brand.
6. You haven't put any content-appropriate ads on your
blog, that don't distract from your own products. Your blog
has a non-professional, non-business look and feel to it.
7. You haven't used categories for your blog posts and
your readers are confused about wide-ranging subjects you write
about. What is your core message? What is the focus of your
blog? And important question you must answer for your readers:
What's in your blog for them?
8. You haven't written anything for a month. When you've
got a blog that has lack-luster traffic, your enthusiasm for
writing begins to wane. Why bother posting, if no one is reading
your words of wisdom? Then your blog slips even further, and
begins to look like a ghost town. Worse, it's still up on the
Web, and people will find you and decide you maybe don't care,
went out of business, or changed your mind.
Here's what is promised by having a blog:
- Search engines will find you better - website traffic galore
- Instant credibility in your area of expertise
- A way to communicate with people interested in your field
- Dialogue through comments with potential clients
- Increased sales of your products, whether tangible goods,
informational products, or services
How could you possibly know the most effective blogging
strategies and tactics without learning and guidance by experts?
Sure, blogs are for everyone and the software makes it easy and
cheap for anyone to start a blog.
But a professional business blog that drives traffic and gets
clients must be optimized correctly and treated as a valuable
marketing strategy.
Here are some solutions:
1. Study the professional business blogs in the blogosphere and
model their strategies.
2. Buy an ebook on how to set up and optimize a professional
business blog
3. Take an advanced course in blogging (not one that just tells
you how to get a free account and set it up, but one to explain
how to optimize for business.)
4. Hire a team of professional blog experts to coach you in
using your blog for your business.
5. Hire a business blog consultant team to help you tweak your
blog, or do an extreme makeover
6. Delete your blog and start all over again
Blogs are an effective and powerful marketing tool for
businesses of all sizes and types. Like any tool, though, you
need to know how to use it correctly to maximize your results.