There are 5 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #5 by Helium's members.
Do you Blog for your business?
It wasn't long ago that the word "blog" hadn't been invented. And even when blogs did first appear, they were for sad' people who had nothing better to do with their time than keep an online diary.
But as is so often the case in the electronic world, blogs have moved on apace and are now ignored by businesses at their peril.
There have always been diary writers, such as Samuel Pepys, and Mr angry from Balham' who commentated on current life and burning issues of the day in the newspapers. The letters pages of the national newspapers have been a good source of a cross section of views by the wider public on a host of different topics.
Sometimes these views were about businesses and their activities, but the publications often had a short shelf life or a limited audience and the views could be influenced by positive pro-active marketing campaigns.
With the advent of the internet and the opening up of global communications on an unprecedented scale, views and opinions can be disseminated to the four corners of the world at the click of a mouse. This makes the consumer or customer more powerful than ever before.
Blogging started as nothing much more than an online diary, but it has developed into an online forum, a source of views and opinions, and a space for people to sound off' about a burning issue.
Picture the disgruntled customer, who is dissatisfied with a product or service they have received. Perhaps he has been to stay in a hotel and had a poor experience the experience might not even have been the hotel's fault. When he gets home he lets off steam on his own blog on his own web site, perhaps joins in a discussion blog about hotels on someone else's web site or posts a critique on a hotel directory site. If his comments attract further attention, others might add their comments until the particular web site becomes very busy with lots of traffic. Inevitably this pushes the site up in the search engines.
Now, along comes another potential customer carrying out some research as to where to stay. He types in the name of the hotel and the top reference is the web site with the critical blog comments. Reading the comments he will probably decide not to stay there!
Roll this scenario out into your own business. How often do your prospective clients or customers find out about you through research on the internet. Do you know if there are blogs out there saying negative things about you? Does a blog about you appear high in the search engines?
I
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
Blogs are often published by individuals - a public diary - wanting to share their views on the world with anyone who is
by JQ Adams
More and more small business are coming to realize the benefits of starting blogs. Getting involved in the blogosphere can
by Nicky Davis
There's been a lot of "trend" talk in relation to the blogging (and microblogging) phenomenum but, for now, one thing seems
by David Ware
Is your company using a blog to increase its public relations efforts? If not, your company could be missing out on two effective,
by Sue Heddon
Do you Blog for your business?
It wasn't long ago that the word "blog" hadn't been invented. And even when blogs did first
Add your voice
Know something about The value of company blogs for public relations?
We want to hear your view.
Write now!
Cast your vote!
Click for your side.
Featured Partner
Sunshine Week is a nonpartisan, good-government effort led by the American Society of Newspaper Editors, but with a c...more
hide