emptydumpty.com emptydumpty.com emptydumpty.com
Search:    Site Home :> About Us :> Privacy Policy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Add Article   
Get 3 way links
 

Family & Home

Banking & Finance

Outdoor & Sports

Policies & Law

Healthcare & Medicine

Games & Play

Science & Research

Children

Recreation & Entertainment

Education & Reference

Business & Commerce

Automobile & Automotive

Eating & Drinking

Property & Estate

Self Enhancement

Society & Issues

Shopping Online

Fashion & Lifestyle

Creative Arts

News & Media

Computers & Networking

Tour & Travel

Jobs & Employment

Health & Therapy

 

Site Home –› Computers & Networking –› Blogs
 

Who Should or Should Not Write a Business Blog? Guidelines for Corporate Blogging

 
Author: Jonathan Kranz

After the initial burst of buzz (and balderdash), blogs have become yet another medium businesses now have to consider as part of their marketing mixes. But blogging isnt for everyone. Following is a short list of thoughts that may help you decide if blogging is right for your business or organization.

You SHOULD seriously consider writing a blog if:

* Youre in an industry, such as hedge funds or healthcare, in which expertise and thought leadership plays an important role toward establishing credibility and/or attracting leads.

* Your industry generates an ample flood of news that requires analysis or more widespread distribution.

* You can readily identify an audience (existing or potential) that actually wants more news and insight on the topics youll blog about.

* Your organization genuinely has something to say, an angle, point of view or intellectual approach that makes a meaningful contribution to your profession or industry.

* You have someone in your organization who will assume responsibility for the blog, who is both willing and able to sustain the blog with regular posts.

* The rest of the organization will respect the bloggers efforts by allocating time and money for it.

You SHOULD NOT consider writing a blog if:

* Youre in a relatively static industry, such as floor tiles or custodial services, in which a discussion of strategies, new ideas or cutting-edge resources is irrelevant and/or unnecessary.

* You cannot identify (or even imagine) a readership base that would seek or value your written contributions.

* Your organization doesnt really have anything to say. (If this is the truth, be honest with yourselves. Better to say nothing than to create clutter by blogging for its own sake.)

* No one in your organization is prepared to write regularly (at least once a week}.

* Your organization is opinion-phobic and will not allow a blog to be posted without a time- consuming committee and/or legal review first.

* Your organization is in a sensitive industry, such as securities trading, that makes open discussions dangerous.

In sum:
Good blogs are open, informal and opinionated exchanges of relevant news and ideas an audience is genuinely interested in. If you can meet the key requirements you have ideas, an audience and the license to speak freely then give a blog some thought. But if you dont, dont force it. Focus your efforts on other communications vehicles.

Author Bio:

Jonathan Kranz

Today, I enjoy the confidence of numerous marketing and advertising agencies, but unlike most independent copywriters, my career didn't begin with them. Instead, I had stints as a follow-spot operator in a regional theater, a park ranger on an allegedly haunted island in Boston Harbor, and as a summarizer of documents in large-scale litigations (think: Melville's Bartleby the Scrivener).

After completing my MFA in Creative Writing in 1995 (and publishing a number of short stories in literary journals such as the Missouri Review and the Green Mountains Review), I leap-frogged agency life and jumped into freelancing with both feet. Since then, I've written a huge stack of advertising, direct marketing, and public relations materials for consumer and B2B clients in financial services, banking, insurance, high-tech, healthcare, education, and other industries. I don't enter award shows myself, but my clients have submitted material, with my copy, that has won a number of honors, including the 2004 New England Direct Marketing Association's Awards for Creative Excellence ?Best of Show? gold medal.

On the side, I've written columns for local newspapers and have been a guest essayist on National Public Radio's All Things Considered. I've taught writing courses at Harvard University Extension School, Emerson College and Northeastern University, and I'm currently president of the Southern New England Chapter of the Society for Industrial Archeology.

I live in Melrose, Massachusetts with my wife, Eileen; two daughters, Rebecca and Anastasia; and a vast collection of LP records.

You can search for this article using: free blogs, web blogs, popular blogs, free weblog, blogging web weblogs, personal weblogs & webpages
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
3 Reasons Why Medical Billing Software is Leading the Way
 
7 Ways To Increase Your Affiliate Commissions
 
Setting Up an Art Affiliate Site - Part 2
 
Affiliate Programs Can Help You!
 
Don't Sell An eBook on eBay Unless There Is Something In It For You
 
ebook Review: The Definitive Guide to Google Adwords
 
I Want My Own Product
 
Home Field Advantage in the MLB (Part 2): Tale of Two Halves
 
Free Automatic Content - Can the Search Engines See Yours?
 
Would You Let A Dog Or A Butler Market Your Website?
 
 
 
   Site Home :> Privacy Policy :> ToS
© 2006 www.emptydumpty.com - All Rights Reserved