Corporate Blogging For Quality Relationships
The struggle for customer share is as intense as ever, and
companies need to shore up their corporate message in anyway
they can. Corporate weblogs, or "blogs", are a great,
cost-effective way to engage customers, fellow professionals, or
merely the curious. This opportunity to reach thousands of
interested people requires no hefty advertising budget, yet can
significantly strengthen your client-customer relationship.
Taking dialogue online means added and valuable interaction with
your customers.
A corporate blog can be used in any number of ways, from an
informational hub to an online diary for a sales rep. They tend
to be no less varied than personal blogs are. They deliver
on-point messages to anyone who reads it. Since blog entries
often have a personal touch, they tend to reach readers in ways
a company homepage can't. This is where creative and well
written blogs can really count; quality keeps people coming
back. A blog isn't a venue for the hard sale but instead a
resource where resource where readers can stay informed or sign
up for newsletters and emailings.
Just because lemonade stands can afford to blog doesn't mean
it's not something for the big guys, either. One well known
corporate blogger, Bob Lutz, Vice Chairman of General Motors,
has found tremendous success with his "Fast Lane" blog.
Thousands of daily readers get his thoughts daily on all things
automotive, with a decided emphasis on GM. What's more, these
daily readers are usually car buffs and industry and not a
motley cross-section. His blog's success lends influence to his
opinion and GM's corporate message. Just as many readers of
Lutz's blog are in the car industry, those who'd read your
corporate blog would most likely be in your field, too. It's
targeted readership, just what the blogger wants.
2005 marks the year that blogs finally got hot, probably because
people are realizing how valuable targeted Internet flow is. In
an advertising sense, sure, that's value in search marketing.
It's somewhat similar for a corporate blog, especially
considering the high interest level of writer and readership.
It's high quality interaction where a person and a company can
do themselves good amongst some people who really count: their
peers and interested customers. Blogs do not generate
smorgasbords of readership that resemble radio listening
audiences. This is new media, where quality trumps quantity.
Our CEO at ICMediaDirect.com, Vladimir Khomenko, has gotten the
chance to implement corporate blogs for many clients. It's his
belief that in the matter of less than a year multitudes of
companies have identified blogging as a viable means of
corporate messaging, whereas it was once a wee minority. He
says, "In the corporate world a blog gets a controlled message
delivered to interested parties in real time. Readers will see
it either when prompted to or when just "checking in". Simple as
it may seem, it still represents incredible innovation because
readers of a blog are usually receptive to their message."
Strategists unfamiliar with blogging should visit blog search
sites, like Technorati, and gauge the impact of the blogosphere.
Technorati keeps a running tab for visitors on the number of
blogs in network they advertise. They are up to 27.4 million
blogs and this number ticks up, practically on a daily basis.
These numbers underscore the importance of blogs today. The blog
is a mainstream phenomenon, not a fad. Corporate blogs are
growing in number and importance right there with personal
blogs, too. Our consulting team at ICMediaDirect.com is
approached by more and more companies who wish to blog
themselves and we've noticed that companies are increasingly
approving of employee blogs, if not encouraging them.
Employees on blogs communicate with customers, with business
partners and anyone else about a wide array of business topics.
The topics of such blogs are as varied as imagination will
permit. Understandably, these corporate tools tend to focus on
the company and industry, but general chit-chat makes for good
blog fodder, too. Because comment boxes make the blog
interactive, general industry issues are often discussed.
Good blogs often have valuable perspective on business issues.
None of this is to say that a corporate blog is a safe place to
say anything, far from it. It would be a foolish place to gossip
about your workspace or give away proprietary information (yes,
people have been fired for this). Whatever content of a business
blog is posted should be done with the idea that a corporate
blog represents the company. It's a fine line, sure, but not a
difficult one to navigate with proper consideration. Just as the
workplace has become irreversibly entwined with the Internet, so
too will the blog become a part of the company message. We'll
continue to see it grow in corporate importance in upcoming
months and years and as it does, look to start one of own. And
let me know, I'd like to check it out.