In Focus

10 ways to boost the value of your corporate blog

Trends 1 and 2

Trend 1: A focus on what's important
The healthy thing about a bad economy is it forces us to get focused on the activity and investments that actually drive our businesses. The days of tweets or Facebook occupying our brains are long gone. In online marketing, we have to focus on high-return activities. Vince Lombardi said that football was about two things: blocking and tackling. Likewise, online marketing is about two things: email and search. Since more than 90 percent of the internet population engages in a search every day, businesses should focus on this instead of how to measure ROI on blogging.

Trend 2: Blogging for search
Organic search is driven primarily by the formula (D + C) x V = OST. That means data plus content multiplied by volume equals organic search traffic. In the case of online marketing, the data are your targeted keywords. Content is based on target to those keywords. The magic enumerator is volume. The more web content you create specifically around your targeted keywords, the more organic search traffic you will drive.

This is where businesses really start to appreciate the power of corporate blogging. We must forget about RSS feeds or comments as the measure of success and realize that blogging is a target marketing strategy based on delivering a message to a keyword, just like email delivers a relevant message to an email address.

When you consider the three main traffic sources to corporate blogs (direct navigation, referrals, and search), search is the only measure you should focus on because it's the only one you can control and, more importantly, scale. You can't increase the number of referrals or direct navigation; it either happens or it doesn't. But on the other hand, when discussing search, if you want more organic traffic, you simply have to add more blogs targeted specifically to your keywords and write more content.

 

Comments

Laureen Peck
Laureen Peck April 6, 2009 at 3:28 PM

I loved your article. Very educational.

I am going to put much of your advice into practice for my blog on new business development strategies and techniques, newbizwiz.blogspot.com

Keith Harrison
Keith Harrison April 3, 2009 at 10:01 AM

Excellent article. Strategic advice combined with tactical direction in a distilled form. It is a terrific reminder that the "blocking and tackling" are critical and demand our continued focus. It helps to be cautioned that Web 2.0 is simply a means to support Web 1.0.

Thanks for the sage advice!

Keith
www.recmar.com

Kate Lorenz
Kate Lorenz April 1, 2009 at 1:58 PM

I would love to see examples of corporate blogs that are following these trends.

Hal Goodtree
Hal Goodtree April 1, 2009 at 12:15 PM

Excellent, "pithy" summation of best practices. I added it to my Delicious bookmarks.

http://delicious.com/goodtreecompany

Thanks Chris!

ps - does html markup work in the comments?

Lida Citroen
Lida Citroen March 31, 2009 at 6:50 PM

Thanks, Chris! This is probably the most entertaining and succinct directive on corporate blogs I've read to date. I tell all my clients not to let the technology lead -- they're like kids. They see something shiney and sparkly (or fun) and they want it in their marketing toolkit too.

Let the strategy drive, and blogs become more transparent, natural and entertaining!

Thanks for putting it all down in one place. I've posted this to Twitter to share with others.

Lida

Greg Padley
Greg Padley March 30, 2009 at 3:06 PM

Excellent Chris!

It is tempting to jump on the band wagon with the newest goodies but there needs to be strong reasoning behind doing so and metrics to prove success.

The media has changed but the song remains the same - http://5691gerg.com/?p=3

Marketers need to pay attention to the "simple math" you point out so well.