I’m trying to decide if Blog-zilla is for real or a some type of blogspam program. I’d love to hear your thoughts, particularly if you’ve tried the thing.
About Contributor Paul Chaney
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- Blogging Systems Group
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Posts by Paul:
What Do You Think of Blog-zilla?
E-tailers Jumping on Blog Bandwagon
A recent NY Times article reports that online retailers are beginning to drink the Kool-aid and jump on the blogging bandwagon. They cite specifically Ice.com, eHobbies.com, and Bluefly.com.
Two
of the retailers express some concern over the effect their blogs will
have on the bottom-line. Since the blogs include links off to other
sites, their marketing gurus feel it will lead readers away rather than
driving traffic to their ecommerce sites. That’s a valid point, since
the primary purpose of the blogs is marketing and driving sales.
One retailer questioned the appropriateness of putting product links
inside the blog posts. A quick review of all three blogs showed they
each did, with Ice primarily using hyperlinked images of its products
to draw visitors in.
Another retailer not mentioned in the article, Stone Creek Coffee, has also just added a blog. From what I can tell, the blog is part of their home page.
Bluefly asserts that their blog
has had a positive effect on sales, even stating that visitors who
click to the blog “have been more likely to make a purchase than those
who visit Bluefly directly.� I think they call that “qualified
traffic,� which is certainly one thing a blog can do for you.
Here are some random thoughts…
- Blogging
as a marketing channel will vastly increase in popularity over the next
few months. I congratulate retailers such as these who are willing to
lead the way. - Yes, definately include links to products in the blog posts. That’s why you have the darn thing anyway!
- Rather
than giving readers a sales pitch, tell a story. Talk about the
experience of using the product. Refer to other related articles found
on the web and work a product link in. Do what eHobbies does in showing
photos of their employees having fun playing with products. - If
blogs are going to prove themselves as viable marketing tools, then
it’s imperative there be some system in place to track their
effectiveness. That should be a given and not something difficult to
do. After all, blogs are just a website and you can track statistics
about site visits, referers and page views, have unique URLs for each
product which can be tracked through to the ecommerce site and on
through to purchase, and track movement from the blog to the main site
as well.
I contend that, though blogs are not for the faint of heart,
they will prove themselves to have viability for retail marketing. In
an ideal scenario the benefits they provide will occur in sequence:
- They’re
niche-driven attracting readers who are interested in the topic at
hand. That’s qualified traffic. It makes sense that those will be some
of the best customers. - If the blogs are routinely updated visitors will come back again and again, many of those being existing customers.
- Trust and brand loyalty will result.
- Many
of these customers will become evangelists for you and talk about you
via their own consumer-generated media outlets (blogs, IM, chat rooms,
email, etc.). - Your blog will become a center of influence around which a community of interested customers/shoppers develop.
What’s not to like about that!
Here are links to each of the blogs mentioned: Ice.com, eHobbies.com, Bluefly.com, and Stone Creek Coffee.
[Special thanks to Rich Ottum for stimulating my thinking about this issue in two blog posts he did.]
Reinventing Business Blog Consulting
When I first started blogging one of the first sites I latched on to was this one. On a daily basis it kept me up-to-date on trends in the blogosphere, written from the candid, often humorous perspective of its creator Rick Bruner.
When Rick announced his semi-retirement from the blog some months ago inwardly I groaned. To say that I had learned a great deal from him would be an understatement. That’s why it’s terrifically exciting to be part of this revival, or more precisely, this reinvention. Business blogging has come a long way since I first started reading this site back in early 2004. Much has changed. The medium has matured.
I believe this site will continue to provide great value to the business end of the blogosphere. Some of the greatest minds in the industry will be contributing to it regularly. As such, you will get a panoply of opinion and commentary. Yet, we will adhere to Rick’s original vision as being "directory for news and advice on business blogging."
This blog is a landmark of business blogging’s past. With this new iteration it’s my fervent belief it will continue to be an integral part of its future as well.
 
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