Search articles from thousands of Examiners
Write for us
New York Business and Finance Tech Marketing Examiner
Tech Marketing Examiner

The 4 most important things you need before you blog

June 8, 10:26 AMTech Marketing ExaminerBecky Sheetz-Runkle
Comment Print Email RSS Subscribe

Subscribe


Get alerts when there is a new article from the Tech Marketing Examiner. Read Examiner.com's terms of use.
Email Address


  Include other special offers from Examiner.com
Terms of Use

Business-to-business blogs are everywhere these days. But that doesn’t mean that blogging is really for everyone. Maybe it’s a fit for your and your business. Maybe it’s not. This article highlights the four most essential attributes needed before blogging. We’ll review even more in part two. If you’re missing any one of the four below, regroup and consider if blogging makes sense for you. 

1. Strategy. We hear all the time that executives are told they need to blog. They feel this overwhelming urge to keep up with the Joneses and their blogs. But what is too often missing from these recommendations is the strategy behind the blog.
 
This is true with any marketing activity. It’s not enough to produce a brochure for its own sake or build a web site for the sake of having a web site. How will the blog help you close sales, boost your credibility, fuel search engine optimization, or create awareness for your products? Start here because the next three attributes are irrelevant without a sound strategy.
 
2. Discipline. Be honest. Are you the type of person who bounces from one thing to the next? Or are you the type who can stick things out and stay the course? Blogging must be consistent, as we all know. Some advise for a daily posting. I think that makes sense if you’re a social media professional or professional blogger. For the rest of us, two to three times a week is a better and more realistic goal.
 
If yours is going to be a multi-author blog, you’ll need an accountable project manager to build the schedule and keep contributors on track. Contributions should reflect the strategy you’ve carefully planned.
 
3. Desire. You have to like to write. You have to want to push out to the world information, trends and issues that are hot in your industry. It’s like going to the gym. If you hate it, or you’re ambivalent, you won’t keep doing it.
 
4. Content. Not all industries lend themselves to B2B blogs. That’s not to say you have to be Guy Kawasaki to create and nurture a blog that people will read. But generally speaking, determine the theme of your blog. Will you cover specific industry verticals? Will your approach be skeptical? Will you provide actionable tips readers can use to help build their own businesses? And importantly--what’s stand-out about the way you will provide information to your world?
 
For more tech marketing and web marketing insight for the B2B and B2G world, visit q2marketing.com.
 
For more info: 

Add a Comment

Name:


Comments:
characters left

NOTE: Do Not Alter These Fields:

Recent Articles

Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Just as selling to government is different from selling to any other industry, marketing to government requires a distinct approach. Although there is …
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
We recently took a look at three lessons for tech marketing from the ABC medical drama, Grey's Anatomy. Here are 3.5 more marketing life lessons from …

Things to see and do

Big Apple Circus
20 Nov 2009 - 11 am
Lincoln Center – Damrosch Park
More special event »
Wolf, The
Hudson Highlands Nature Museum – Wildlife Education Center