Archive for the ‘Corporate / Business Blogging’ Category

A War on All SEO Spammers!

November 28th, 2009 by Claudia D'Arcy

Ripping into Those Who Practice Bad SEO!

I have had it with people who are obviously attempting to do the same sort of job we do here at DragonSearch with one huge exception; they really suck at it!

Badly Done SEO Morally Offends Me

Maybe I take it too personally, but I am not a marketer, nor a public relations guru, or an advertiser. I am  a blogger, and before I was a blogger I was an internet message board junkie and forum addict. I don’t just need the internet for my job, I love the internet for the ability that it gives to people to find each other, connect and speak our truths.  I believe in the higher power of the world wide web to really change the world.seo-blog-spam

Anyway, I had just about had enough with watching other people intent on some get rich scheme abuse the power of the web for their own crass causes.  I will not sit by and allow them to go forth and commit mad acts of spam and not be held accountable for it. Every bad spammy comment on a blog makes it so much harder for anyone to trust our  hand crafted relevant comments.  Every link farm based blog wheel makes cheapens the connections of a real blog niche community. Every lousy blog pitch makes it so much harder to build a real connection and grow a relationship.

I Call Spam War!

Last week I emailed a music website to inform them that they have a lousy SEO campaign. If they are spending their budget making repetitive bad attempts at back linking a MP3 site to a wine review blog I manage, then it’s time to rethink because I deleted every one of those comments. They actually replied, but claimed that had no one doing SEO work. Really? Ok, then turn off your bots because they suck too. (more…)

Tourism Blog Writing

September 29th, 2009 by Kristina

Elements of a Good Tourism Blog

A tourism blog discusses topics related to recreational, leisure and business travel.  Travel and tourism are often used in place of one another; however tourism seems to point to traveling with a purpose. So chances are these travelers “with a mission” are doing some research before their trip.  Oftentimes, they consult multiple sources when planning travel, accommodation and attractions.  The number of tourists using the Internet and tourism blogs to gather information and also book their trips is growing exponentially.  However, the most trusted source of information is still friends and family.

mohonk-view

One of my hikes at Mohonk

So what if there was a way to combine the Internet and information from real people… wait, there is!  A tourism blog lets you use your voice to (more…)

Social Media Measurement – Why Is It Controversial?

July 10th, 2009 by Kristina

Measuring Social Media is a bone of contention for many

Perhaps the difference of opinions in how to measure Social Media boils down to our background.  All business majors are taught the importance of quantifying your marketing efforts through measurements such as ROI  in order to economically justify the effectiveness of these efforts.  Then along comes Social Media Marketing and suddenly business and marketing professionals are forced to delve deep within the reserves of our brain to access all that we absorbed while sitting through economics, finance, marketing and statistics classes and apply this knowledge to quantify social interactions.  That’s a tall order if you ask me.  “A tall order” – hold that thought…

tall-order

Doesn’t part of the whole “college experience” involve acquiring skills other than those defined as purely academic?  What about the all-important Social Skills?  Just because you get a 1600 on your SAT (2400 now), does this mean that you will become an instant success upon leaving college and entering the real world?  Or course not.  But the SAT doesn’t measure social skills.

In Measuring Social Media, Ask Yourself How Do You Define Success?

(more…)

Corporate Blogging Advice: Blog Like a Party

March 10th, 2009 by Claudia D'Arcy

The other day I had my brain picked on Twitter and blogging for one of our PR associates who had to give a talk to tother PR folks.

One of the questions I was asked was, “What do you think are the best social media tools a business can use to promote themselves?”

And of course, I answered Twitter, and then I said Facebook, and then, I answered blogging.

Now aside from the pure SEO benefits of blogging: increasing the size of your website, being able to use weird, but relevant long tail keywords to bring in new traffic, and the ability to get a corporate message across over and over again in many various forms to reach the minions; we got onto the typical mistakes people make with corporate blogs:

A Corporate Blog should not be just about selling your brand or product.

If no matter what is written, every blog post ends with, or even worse, begins with: At XYZ Corp we sell the best dern widgets in the universe”, then really who is going to keep coming back??

  • A blog is not an advertising platform.
  • A blog is not a place to tell everyone how great your product is.
  • A blog is not always the place to blow your own  horn.
  • A blog is not the place to speak marketing speak, unless you are blogging about marketing!

A blog, corporate or not, is the place to expand your platform to areas that might only remotely touch onto what you might be selling. Yes, you want to write about areas that are relevant to your business, but, as I like to tell my kids: It’s not always all about you!

A corporate business blog, done well, will have much content and interests aside from what is to be sold.

It’s the place to build authority and expand one field of interest. Done well, a corporate blog will stretch the proverbeal customer net as far and wide as one can, using keywords and links to entice readers to follow that link and read. Done well, the content will be so engaging and rich, that a reader relaxes a bit, puts their feet up, and continues down the line of posts, soaking in the wit and wisdom. Done well, the reader is  so entertained; that he or she forgets why they came there to begin with and are just reading. Done well, and eventually they look up, wonder where they are and look around to find the rest of the website, very openly and clearly explaining who you are, what the company does and how to get the great products you are selling! And because of the well done blog, they are more apt to think that company XYZ sure does have the best dern widgets in the universe NOT becausee you told them , but because you have so much great knowledge about everything else in the world that might have something, however remotely, to do with those widgets.

The heart of blogging is about being real. Not a selling tool, but a real person with real feelings and a real, non corporate identity, sitting behind the computer really writing and sharing what they have to say. A real blog is about building the relationships with those people who also have similar interests even if they are NEVER GOING TO BUY YOUR PRODUCT!

And this is where a blog is like a party.

You go to a party to have fun. To kick back, to be with friends, and maybe, you might network, but it’s NOT a business mixer, it’s NOT a job fair, it’s a PARTY! Yeah, you never know who you might meet, but that’s not why you came. Who wants to be the bore of a party? The stereotypical insurance guy who won’t stop selling life insurance policies? Who wants to be the self centered jerk who always talks about himself and just wants an audience to stroke his ego? Who wants to be the shallow snob who is there to show off ?

You don’t want to be that blog either!! You want to laugh. You want to have a deep conversation. You want to keep in touch with friends and meet new ones. You want to hear a good joke, maybe share a few yourself. But you want to have fun and be entertained. So does everyone else who is there (besides the bore, the jerk and the snob).

After I went forth with my tirade, the next question was posed to me: What if no one is reading the blog?

And again, it’s back to the party. If you go to a party do you stand in a corner, alone, and talk to yourself, waiting until someone else comes over to listen to you? No! You move though the room, you MINGLE. You go to a group of people who look interesting, maybe you know one of two, and you join in the conversation. First you listen, you gather up what the topic of conversation is about, and then you wait, until it is your turn to interject and add something relevant to the conversation.

Same with Blogging.

If you have a corporate blog and no one seems like they are reading, get out of your own corner!

Go forth and mingle! Find other blogs that you are interested in, that are slightly relevant to what your field is about, that look interesting, that seem like they are fun and engaging. Then listen. Gather up what they are talking about. The easiest way to do this is to take some time and actually READ the blog and comments. And then join in the conversation!  Make a comment! 

Just make sure it’s NOT selling, not promotional and not sounding like it’s coming from the bore or jerk or snob! Use your best party line;  you know the one that makes everyone laugh or think you are oh so witty. And yes, make sure that you bother to sign in, add your own Blog URL to the login, so when the host of the party/blog wonders who that fun person was who added so much to the conversation is, they know where to find you! All they have to do then is click on your name and it’s just like returning the invitation; except this time the party ’s at your house!

No matter what the ultimate purpose of your corporate blog, think of is like a party.

Find interesting relevant things to talk abut that will be fun and interesting and entertaining for the reader, homever they might be. And then mingle. If you want to throw a party, first you have to make some friends. And again, you never know who you might meet.

And if you just happen to sell some widgets from the deal, well, that’s a bonus.

Oh, I’m not in Kansas Anymore.

February 15th, 2008 by Claudia D'Arcy

I started blogging on a lark in late ‘05 and have been pretty consistant with it since then. Granted I was writing before, but that was mostly on forums and I was always better with one on my long rants rather than a quicky supportive hug kind of thing.  The blog concept was just perfect for me…my own public soapbox…ahhh. But, I have to face the fact that I am a niche blogger. A small niche blogger..more a niche in a niche. And even if now, I am a well known respected Blogger, it is still in my tiny Adoption Blog niche. Not even the general “Adoption” blogs, as most of them are written by adoptive parents or wanna be adoptive parents who sign the glories of Adoption, but the contoversial and often ugly “Adoption Truth” bloggers where we expose the ugly side of it all. And while I know like *all* the big names in Adoption world…it’s a tiny world and unless you are somehow interested in Adoption Issues, you don’t know me.

The other side of this is that I have hardly paid any attention at all to Bloggers outside the Adoption Community. Of course, that all changed these last few weeks. Now it’s my job to know and wow, I have been living in a tiny little bubble! My eyes are opened and they smart from all this big city smog while my neck is cramped from looking at these huge tall buildings….Lordy, the Blogosphere is much huger than I thought, but still somehow, just through the nature of blogging, I feel like I know some of the big dogs already.

I don’t necessarily “get” all the big deals in the blogosphere.  The whole gadet thing alludes me, but then again, I am a girl..hence no special tool..so the grown up toy..aka gaget.. thing leaves me flat. Of course I cannot use my gentle sex as an excuse, as the gossip/Holloywood blogs are sleepers to me as well, I don’t get the cute cat giggkes and I have been confused by the knitting craze for years new. Knitters obviously cross many borders as Wooly Bloggers have been duel idenified as Adoption Bloggers a long time ago now.  Then again, I get all wrapped up sometimes with visions of grand uniqueness…a hold over I fear from being a “special” birth mother… so I want to think that I am just *too cool* to get interested in what the *typical* American blog reader likes. In any case, I better get over myself real quick!

On the upside, I have really been learning all kinds of new things this week besides finding out who the Kings of Blog World are. There is even a colorized map of it! Who knew! And Adoption Blogs are NOT mentioned at all….sniff sniff.

So I am feeling ready to get out from behind my little snow globe and say hi to everyone else. So while I do feel like the small town girl in a huge big city, I am not afraid of getting mugged. Heck, I have never been mugged for real and that even was true when I was a little 17 year old chickie running around Mannhatten. Plus that’s one thing good about growing up in Adoption land……there ain’t nobody who is gonna get under my thick skin.

Ethical Considerations

February 15th, 2008 by Claudia D'Arcy

I love this post and I love the comment conversation.

Why?   I have been doing little more in the past fortnight aside from reading blogs about how to make money from blogs and what bloggers think about making money from blogs.  And this is a wonderful conversation about all the things that Blogg.io is about and it is looking for answers to the really important ethical questions.  Mark Collier brings it all home with the one question:  What does the blog reader get from a Blogger receiving compensation from advertisements and other incomes generated from a blogger’s ability to blog?  He then goes on to give examples of how it could work and what might not work and, as I said, the comments keep the discussion going.

Now I almost have an ethical dilemma as I have a job to go to blogs and promote Blogg.io and I have to do that through commentary at times.  Now as a blogger, I can’t stand when my blog would get spammed about some stupid money making thing that had NO relevance to my blog. At first I would look up the stupid spammers website and send back my own version of adoption “spam” just to return the favor, but eventually, I enabled my capcha thingy, as annoying as it is, to get rid of the spam content.

Given that I AM going to blog posts where conversations are about monetization of blogs and Blogg.io is a way to monetize one’s blogs, so it’s not like I am popping in on a knitter and talking about cats, or adoption blog faux pas, going to a PAP blog and calling them baby stealers (and if you have no idea what that means, then don’t worry about it, or go to my personal blog and learn..lol) But still, sometimes I feel just a little dirty. It is my job. I am getting paid. I am now straddling the line between blogger and marketer. I am blogging, but I am marketing. I could be seen as spamming, or at least pitching, (which I have been called out on) and I don’t like that.

It’s the ethics that save me.

Which brings me back to Mack’s piece and his question about the benefits of the reader.  See, with the whole premise of Blogg.io to be a mechanism connecting Bloggers to marketers it only makes sense if the bloggers get what they want out of it. No, let me correct that. It will only work if the bloggers get what they want out of it. They can’t get crap. It can’t be spam.  It can’t be more work.  Granted the money might be helpful in some degree, but unless you are being hit with a new communiqué every day, then participating in Blogg.io is not going to really pay the rent.  Even if you and targeted for a Blogger exclusive, that’s still not a rent payment unless you share a rusty trailer in a shanty town. And I’m not dissing my employers with this; it’s just the cost of living in the world.

What Blogg.io IS giving to the Bloggers is credibility, even if they, we, have claimed credibility already on our own.  There is recognition, as a whole, for bloggers as a force. Yeah us and I mean us, the Blogger us.

Now, with the ideal premise of Blogg.io, there is something in it for the marketers and PR folks if they get the opportunity to harness that Blogger force, and get their information releases though quality means into the Blogosphere. That’s easy and we might be able to put a money value on it. Oh right, my boss guys did already…it’s the cost of the products Blogg.io offers. Ha-ha.

So back to Mack’s question if applied here: What does the reader get out of a Blogger who has joined Blogg.io?

The readers get improved content. 

The content is improved because the blogger has the OPPORTUNITY to write about relevant information that might not have been available to them. Notice my capitalization emphasis…the key word here is OPPORTUNITY. The blogger is not OBLIGATED to post about the marketers content to be paid, they are given the choice. What they are getting paid for is their TIME to review the information, usually a press release, which has been proven to be RELEVANT to what they CHOOSE to blog about.  Paid to read the blogger is, not paid to write. That was my bad Yoda speak, but like Yoda, it’s all about not going to the dark side.

Oh, granted it might be about one’s “point of view” if I want to keep running with my Star Wars obsession, but I don’t feel like I am rationalizing.  Yes, I comment on the originally post, and the link back on my name will take you to my job site, but I didn’t spam. I didn’t.  I commented… teaser comment really…with nothing by name…just this lovely track back. J After all, it is my job.