Social Media Survival Kit For Small Businesses Part 3: Build Blogger Relations

Part 3: Build Blogger Relations

Inevitably, those that find themselves lost in any forest will happen across tribes of inhabitants that exist to help – and tribes that exist to hurt. And the social SEO forest is no different.


If you are preparing to journey through the social SEO forest, you must also prepare to come face to face with the bloggers – by far, the most powerful tribe in this space. Fortunately, if you are willing to listen, and to speak their language, they are almost certain to help you through. But be warned – any false step can stoke the ire of the entire tribe.


In part 3 of our Social Media Survival Kit for Small Businesses below, find five tips for building blogger relations:


Target Bloggers


1. Target The Right Bloggers


Not every resident of the social SEO forest is there to help you achieve your PR goals. Some are gentle residents, who are simply not a target for your pitch. Others are darker, and are just waiting to trap and expose a lost traveler who dares to cross them. (Learn more about this in tip 2.)


This most important tip for anyone seeking to build blogger relations, and one that will permeate through the balance of the tips on this list: target your pitch to the right bloggers – bloggers that are a vertical fit for your product or service, bloggers that are open to being pitched, and bloggers that offer the network that will help your story travel.


Listen to Bloggers


2. Remember To Listen


A good public relations professional would never dream of pitching a story to a large and influential media outlet, without first getting to know the publication from cover to cover, and journalist to journalist. This scenario should really be no different when building blog relations. And yet:


“It seems so simple and obvious, yet it is the biggest mistake made when pitching bloggers. Look at the categories of the blog and look at previous blog posts. Is your pitch REALLY relevant for the blog? For example, I get pitches about things like online advertising or creative interactive advertising campaigns and if you look at our categories or previous blog posts, we clearly do not cover advertising.”
(Lee Odden, TopRank Marketing).


The danger inherent in Odden’s quote above is that a blogger is typically unfettered by any editorial guidelines or time restrictions. If you happen to catch an influential blogger with the wrong pitch on the wrong day, there is very little that prevents your entire pitch being torn apart minutes later – in a blog post read by thousands.


Know the Bloggers writing style


3. Know Their Language


Bloggers don’t speak marketing-ese, a fact to which Cameron Chapman and thousands of other bloggers can attest.


The beauty of social media, of which blogging is a cornerstone, is the one on one and straight-forward level of communication that it’s defined by. Because of this, some of the purest bloggers will reject any sort of email pitch altogether.


Fortunately, the easiest way around this is to simply toss away the marketing language we’ve learned, in favor of the plain language communication style we inherently know. Unless, of course, the blogger in questions happens to LOVE marketing-ese. If your blog relations efforts have led you to such a case – pat yourself on the back for adhering to tip #2.


Understand Blogger Needs


4. Understand Their Needs


This represents the next logical step in building blog relations.


In the social SEO forest, not one of us is without a need. If what you need is a blogger to help you capture success in a new and unfamiliar environment, discover what it is they need – and offer it freely, without reservation. This is not simply the cornerstone of blog relations – this is the cornerstone of both relationship building and public relations.


And much like public relations, what the blogger needs to survive is a topic to blog about. If you’ve followed tips #1 through #3, and find yourself holding the content the blogger needs, you’re likely just an email away from achieving the coverage you need.


Join the blogging world


5. Join the Tribe


To truly think like a blogger, become a blogger.


All tribes of the social SEO forest share one thing in common: they live in a place that’s only recently become inhabited. You have just as much right to live in the online space as they do, whether you’ve travelled this forest for years or are just now making your first foray with a blog relations initiative.


And the best part of becoming a blogger is that it automatically transforms you into your own media and publication channel. Rather than counting on blog relations to get your story heard, you now have your own channel – where all you need to begin building online awareness for your product or service is the time to write and publish your own content. Of course, now that you have your own blog, you’ll be free to borrow time against your blog relations efforts.


Coming up in part four of our Social Media Survival Kit for Small Businesses, we show you how a tiny spark can become the fire that lights your way in How to Build Media Relations on Twitter.


Find more news release distribution resources from PRWeb.



View the original article here

Social Media Survival Kit For Small BusinessesPart 5: Safely Navigating The River of Facebook PR


Print Social Media Survival Kit For Small Businesses
Part 5: Safely Navigating The River of Facebook PR

Most travelers that find themselves lost in a forest are saved by following – or sailing – a river that leads back into civilization. Travelers seeking safe passage through the social SEO forest refer to the river that will carry them through as Facebook.


In the fifth and final part of our Social Media Survival Kit for Small Businesses below, we’ve offered five tips for safely navigating the river of Facebook Public Relations (PR):


Understand the depths of social media


1. Understand the Depths


In March of 2010, web traffic to Facebook pulled ahead of Google, according to research presented by Hitwise. To help frame this, think for a moment about how ubiquitous Google’s brand name is with search (i.e. you would never suffer a moment of confusion were you to hear of someone ‘googling’ something.) And now, despite Google’s prevalence in our global culture, there is a channel that shows the potential to become even more popular.


This should not be taken to mean, of course, that Google is in danger of losing out on search queries to Facebook. comScore’s June 2010 report shows that while Facebook search queries achieved a more than respectable level of 621 million, this number still fell well below Google’s nearly 10 billion.


While Facebook may be in its tributary stages in terms of generating searches, it is rapidly benefitting from being found in searches, as Facebook content is commonly served in results from Bing, Yahoo – and of course – Google. When seeking to understand the power of Facebook PR – understand first that Facebook has become an explosive source of global connection – and this means everything from connecting friend to friend or journalist to story.


Test the social media waters


2. Test The Waters


A common theme throughout our Social Media Survival guide is the notion of listening. And just as with nearly every other section in our guide, listening is critical to any attempt at Facebook PR.


In regards to Facebook PR, your prime objective in listening will be to find ways to build your community. And the best way to do this is to learn more about what your target community needs.


Start by joining and listening to the dialogue happening in groups that are related to your industry. After you’ve spent time listening, offer something of value that the group needs – whether it’s a comment, advice, or link. Start slow – with just a toe in the water. While it may seem counter-intuitive to your PR efforts to not develop a direct ‘pitch’ – this more gradual effort can quickly help build up your status in the community as a source of value – rather than promotion.


Prepare your vessel


3. Prepare Your Vessel


Surviving the rapids of an enormous river is simply not possible without the right vessel. And in Facebook, this vessel is made up of the fans that you cultivate – who become both your brand ambassadors and brand protectors.


In terms of brand ambassadorship, think of this as cultivating a following so fervent that it will do the work of rowing your brand down the Facebook PR river. In an ideal scenario, these ambassadors remove much of the burden of traditional PR and promotion as their online advocacy (via posts or comments) transform into content that can be found by searchers ranging from journalists to consumers.


Brand protection, on the other hand, transforms your ambassadors into a crew that will defend your brand against any storm. One recent example, cited by Ben Bennett of the blog Which Half?, details how fans of the Country Music Association (CMA)’s Music Festival rushed to the its defense when an argument broke out suggesting a competing festival was superior. The result, as Bennett states, was a defense that was “better and conducted with more creditability than the CMA ever could.”


Remain socially visible


4. Remain Visible


Most lost travelers that leverage the river as their source of salvation are saved when they are spotted by rescuers. Remaining visible on the river of Facebook PR is just as important.


Journalistics reports that nearly 70 percent of journalists use social networks to assist in reporting. And alongside this statistic is the sage advice to avoid direct media pitches on Facebook – unless you have an existing personal relationship with the journalist. In regards to media relations on Facebook, your primary benefit will be courtesy of inbound media relations – or making yourself easily found by journalists seeking your expertise.


And perhaps the most effective way to make yourself found is by consistently sharing valuable information – that will attract an audience – that will support and defend you as needed. (Note: Everything noted in this paragraph represents searchable online content.)


Social media horizon


5. Keep an eye on the horizon


The Facebook search queries data from comScore cited above leaves out one key data point: the 621 million search queries generated by Facebook in June 2010 represented an increase of more than 200 million queries in just five months. And the searchable social content? Also a newer development.


While we save this tip for last in our five part Social Media Survival Guide – it is perhaps that is most important to everything from Facebook PR, to building blogger relationships to optimizing press releases: always be aware of what is coming next. Keep your eyes to the horizon of the industry and be proactive in capitalizing on the newest digital channels. This is your key to surviving the social SEO forest.


Find more news release distribution resources from PRWeb.



View the original article here

Social Media Survival Kit For Small Businesses Part 3: Build Blogger Relations

Part 3: Build Blogger Relations

Inevitably, those that find themselves lost in any forest will happen across tribes of inhabitants that exist to help – and tribes that exist to hurt. And the social SEO forest is no different.


If you are preparing to journey through the social SEO forest, you must also prepare to come face to face with the bloggers – by far, the most powerful tribe in this space. Fortunately, if you are willing to listen, and to speak their language, they are almost certain to help you through. But be warned – any false step can stoke the ire of the entire tribe.


In part 3 of our Social Media Survival Kit for Small Businesses below, find five tips for building blogger relations:


Target Bloggers


1. Target The Right Bloggers


Not every resident of the social SEO forest is there to help you achieve your PR goals. Some are gentle residents, who are simply not a target for your pitch. Others are darker, and are just waiting to trap and expose a lost traveler who dares to cross them. (Learn more about this in tip 2.)


This most important tip for anyone seeking to build blogger relations, and one that will permeate through the balance of the tips on this list: target your pitch to the right bloggers – bloggers that are a vertical fit for your product or service, bloggers that are open to being pitched, and bloggers that offer the network that will help your story travel.


Listen to Bloggers


2. Remember To Listen


A good public relations professional would never dream of pitching a story to a large and influential media outlet, without first getting to know the publication from cover to cover, and journalist to journalist. This scenario should really be no different when building blog relations. And yet:


“It seems so simple and obvious, yet it is the biggest mistake made when pitching bloggers. Look at the categories of the blog and look at previous blog posts. Is your pitch REALLY relevant for the blog? For example, I get pitches about things like online advertising or creative interactive advertising campaigns and if you look at our categories or previous blog posts, we clearly do not cover advertising.”
(Lee Odden, TopRank Marketing).


The danger inherent in Odden’s quote above is that a blogger is typically unfettered by any editorial guidelines or time restrictions. If you happen to catch an influential blogger with the wrong pitch on the wrong day, there is very little that prevents your entire pitch being torn apart minutes later – in a blog post read by thousands.


Know the Bloggers writing style


3. Know Their Language


Bloggers don’t speak marketing-ese, a fact to which Cameron Chapman and thousands of other bloggers can attest.


The beauty of social media, of which blogging is a cornerstone, is the one on one and straight-forward level of communication that it’s defined by. Because of this, some of the purest bloggers will reject any sort of email pitch altogether.


Fortunately, the easiest way around this is to simply toss away the marketing language we’ve learned, in favor of the plain language communication style we inherently know. Unless, of course, the blogger in questions happens to LOVE marketing-ese. If your blog relations efforts have led you to such a case – pat yourself on the back for adhering to tip #2.


Understand Blogger Needs


4. Understand Their Needs


This represents the next logical step in building blog relations.


In the social SEO forest, not one of us is without a need. If what you need is a blogger to help you capture success in a new and unfamiliar environment, discover what it is they need – and offer it freely, without reservation. This is not simply the cornerstone of blog relations – this is the cornerstone of both relationship building and public relations.


And much like public relations, what the blogger needs to survive is a topic to blog about. If you’ve followed tips #1 through #3, and find yourself holding the content the blogger needs, you’re likely just an email away from achieving the coverage you need.


Join the blogging world


5. Join the Tribe


To truly think like a blogger, become a blogger.


All tribes of the social SEO forest share one thing in common: they live in a place that’s only recently become inhabited. You have just as much right to live in the online space as they do, whether you’ve travelled this forest for years or are just now making your first foray with a blog relations initiative.


And the best part of becoming a blogger is that it automatically transforms you into your own media and publication channel. Rather than counting on blog relations to get your story heard, you now have your own channel – where all you need to begin building online awareness for your product or service is the time to write and publish your own content. Of course, now that you have your own blog, you’ll be free to borrow time against your blog relations efforts.


Coming up in part four of our Social Media Survival Kit for Small Businesses, we show you how a tiny spark can become the fire that lights your way in How to Build Media Relations on Twitter.


Find more news release distribution resources from PRWeb.



View the original article here