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The 15 Minute Case for B2B Blogging. ASBPE Annual Meeting July 21, 2006 David Shaw. Questions. Questions for you How many of you have a blog? Personal? Professional? Both? How many of you read blogs regularly/occasionally?. Agenda. Background information Why I blog
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The 15 Minute Case for B2B Blogging ASBPE Annual Meeting July 21, 2006 David Shaw
Questions • Questions for you • How many of you have a blog? Personal? Professional? Both? • How many of you read blogs regularly/occasionally?
Agenda • Background information • Why I blog • Why you and your magazine should blog • Why more editors/magazines don’t blog • Blogging best practices • Examples
Background • I am not a blogger—but I am a B2B publisher who has a blog • Most bloggers have day jobs • Implications for time and commitment • B or Not 2B—A Business Media Blog • Founded January 2005 • http://www.gridmediallc.com/bornot2b.html • Bio: • President & Managing Partner, GRID Media • Former SVP, Phillips Business Information • Former Group VP, Advanstar Communications • 25 years in b2b media
Why I Blog • Started as an experiment • I spend a lot of time thinking about B2B media • I think better through writing • I’ve built an audience, and a set of expectations
B or Not 2B • Website averaged 600 visitors/month in January 2005 • Now averages between 18-20,000 visitors/month • Readership includes B2B media company CEOs, group publishers, publishers, editors, financial analysts • International readership
What Blogs Do • Provide a platform for opinion/observation/news • Organize your thinking/force daily research • Build traffic and search engine rankings • #1 Business media blog • #1 Grid media • #2 B2B media • #5 trade magazine blog • Create a personal connection with audience/readers • Build personal “fame”—really
The Quick Case for Blogging • Media interaction has moved from one-way (editor to reader) to two-way (editor to/from reader) or all-way (reader to/from reader). • Blogs provide a strong two-way mechanism that keeps you in the reader’s loop • Instantaneous Publishing • Deeper story telling • Context, sources, alternative views • Limitless editorial well • Your readers are reading blogs • They should be reading yours
Unlikely Blog Readers Directors & Boards magazine • Audience: “Male, Pale & Stale” • Average age: 55 • Average revenues: $1.712 billion • 44.9% regularly or occasionally read blogs (only 29.1% never read blogs) • 73% regularly or only read their business media online (only 1.4% never read business media online) • 84.4% have attended a webcast Source: D&B Survey, May 2006
Why Don’t More B2B Editors Blog? • No time • Another thing to do without pay • Blogs are seen a less than editorially sound • Bathrobe prophets • Averse to offering opinions • Worried about advertiser/reader reaction
Time • Can/should be integrated into what you already do • Typical time burn • 20-40 minutes daily “research” • 15 minutes writing/editing per post (average) • Time can be shared • Group blogs pros and cons • Aggregate other blogs
Pay • You’re being paid to: • Provide thought leadership • Shape industry conversation • Build readership/traffic • Blogging is one of a number of publishing tools that helps you do your job successfully
Editorial “Soundness” • Bloggers reflect the editorial soundness they bring to any other form of publishing • Your readership forces editorial soundness, because they can comment and agree/disagree in nearly real time • Some content choices • Insider views (how we did a story), further story context and extended reporting, original reporting, commenting on stories in other media, show “daily,” etc.
Opinions • Editors should have strong opinions about the businesses they cover • A blog can and should be like your magazine’s editorial page, only more frequent • Readers read your publication as much for its point of view as for its fact-based content • All content choices are an opinion
Advertiser/Reader Reaction • Implication that blogs are for flaming/attacking • Mirror your magazine’s print editorial policy • A strong blog, like a strong magazine, can withstand criticism • Need management buy-in
Blogging Best Practices • Voice • Personality, attitude, mix business/personal • Frequency • Making the time to blog—set a schedule • Avoiding blogger’s block—follow the schedule • Speed • Brevity • Shorter posts work better • Honesty/Transparency
The “Rules” of Conversational Media • Have something to say • Give credit/link promiscuously • Provide comment function/Offer trackback to other blogs • Have a policy related to comments • Comment on other blogs • Be civil
Blog ExamplesBlogs run by people with day jobs • A brief selection, not including our panelists: • Rex Hammockhttp://www.rexblog.com/ • Philadelphia City Paper’s Cloghttp://www.citypaper.net/clog/(Excellent group blog) • Sue Pelletier’s face2facehttp://blog.meetingsnet.com/face2face/ • Mark Cuban’s Blog Maverickhttp://www.blogmaverick.com/ • Robert Scoblehttp://scobleizer.wordpress.com/ • CJR Daily Audithttp://www.cjrdaily.org/the_audit/(Group blog) • Alan Mecklerhttp://weblogs.jupitermedia.com/meckler/