A Creative Way to Reach Out To Bloggers

Some small businesses would love to get the attention of bloggers in their niche, but don’t know how. After all, getting your business mentioned in a blog that covers your vertical or is influential in your market, can raise your business’s visibility.

The problem is, it’s your business and dozens, even hundreds of others vying for attention. Popular bloggers get bombarded with companies trying to get a piece of their mind share. If yours is one of those companies, how do you stand out so you can start to build a relationship with bloggers, as experts recommend, in a way that will make a lasting impression?

One enterprising entrepreneur has figured out a way to break the ice and get a conversation started — using word clouds in the shape of the blogger’s logo. His approach is so creative, we actually picked it as one of the 99 examples in my upcoming book, Visual Marketing.

In case you don’t know what a “word cloud” is, it’s nothing more than a visual representation of data. You’ve probably seen one common type of word cloud on a website somewhere: a “tag cloud.” A tag cloud is very simple — it just lists the tags (keywords) used on a site. The more often the tag is used, the bigger the word appears in the tag cloud. Here’s our tag cloud over at BizSugar:

Tag cloudNot visually interesting, is it? But a word cloud need not simply be a list of words. The words can be arranged in an interesting shape.

That’s where David de Souza comes in. He runs a popular tax-refund site called TaxFix in the U.K. and another site that’s a self-employment forum. He is very familiar with the blogs in his niches. Getting the bloggers’ attention was the challenge. So he came up with the idea of taking commonly used words on the blogger’s blog, and turning them into a word cloud — but with a twist. He uses a free online tool called Tagxedo to create the word cloud in the shape of the blogger’s logo.

To illustrate, he created a word cloud of Small Business Trends using our logo:

Logo word cloudHere’s a closeup just of the “ball” in the Small Business Trends logo. Due to our logo’s shape, the ball is where the tag cloud is represented:

tag cloud logo 2Bloggers and site owners who receive an email with their logo as a word cloud will be intrigued. It’s obvious the sender spent some time on their blog. The sender stands out.

The point of this article is:  take that extra step.  Find a creative way — make it your own “signature” way — to break through the noise when doing blogger outreach.   Once you’ve broken the ice, you can start building a relationship with the blogger.  But first, you must get the blogger’s attention.

From Small Business Trends

A Creative Way to Reach Out To Bloggers

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

Want Customers To Friend You, Reach Out!

One of the questions I get most from small business owners is, How do they get customers to engage with them in social media? For example, once they’ve taken the time to build and create their Facebook presence, what’s next so that customers find them and begin to interact? Often we talk about how to drive fans to your Facebook page in terms of offering exclusive content, hosting giveaways, and leveraging other activities designed to increase engagement and awareness, but it seems we forget one thing:

If you want your customers to engage with you on social media, you have to ask.

eMarketer shared a survey done by DDB Worldwide and Opinionway Research and found that three-quarters of Facebook users worldwide who had “liked” a brand did so as a result of an invitation or advertising from the brand that they followed. Only 49 percent of all Facebook users said they had friended a brand after doing their own research.

Yes, you need to create a page that users will want to join and one that will bring value. But once you do so, you have to make sure that they know about it. And sometimes that’s as simple as letting them know that your page exists.

You have to use self-promotion to get the word out about the social account you’re trying to build up. As a small business owner, that may mean:

  • Sending out personalized Facebook messages to those in your hometown network.
  • Creating a street team to spread the word in their own networks on your behalf.
  • Putting a call to action in your company newsletter.
  • Promoting the accounts on your Web site or in your company blog.
  • Listing the accounts in all printed company material.
  • Linking all of your social media accounts together to make them easier to find.

Whatever you do, you have to do something. The research by Worldwide and Opinionway Research illustrates that just because a customer knows you exist, that doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll track you down in social media to friend you. If you’ve moved in next door, sometimes you need to ring the door and let them know.

Also stressed in the survey was the importance of keeping a customer’s interest once they do become a fan. According to the research, 36 percent of users who “like” a brand will eventually unsubscribe. Reasons for unsubscribing include losing interest in the brand (32 percent), the brand publishing too much information (27 percent) and not being interested in the information published (27 percent).  These numbers drive home the importance of being in tune with your audience and knowing why it is they’ve connected with you. What information/experience do they want and how can you offer that to them?

For small business owners on social media, the secret to success is to learn why your customers would want to interact with you via these new channels (what can they get on Facebook that’s not on your site?) and then making sure they’re aware it exists. It sounds simple, but sometimes it is. Because sometimes it’s simply about giving people exactly what they want.

From Small Business Trends

Want Customers To Friend You, Reach Out!

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

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