This is a guest post by James Chartrand of Men with Pens, and is the first guest post for Guest Post Week here at Remarkablogger.
Setting up a blog for your business can produce phenomenal results. You can increase your client base, show off your work, boost your credibility and tell people more about your business.
But blogging involves some challenges that many people aren’t aware of. Not only that, some bloggers create obstacles that hinder and not being able to ask for directions isn’t reserved only for stubborn male drivers. It may be clear as day to you where to find your email, but you don’t really matter – your client does. Your client won’t ask you for directions. He’ll just leave… and probably buy from your competition.
Have someone test your site. Sit them down. Let them click around freely. Do they get stuck anywhere? Do they ask questions about what this or that means? Is there something they find confusing? Now ask them to find specific information – your contact info, your About page, your rates, etc. Can they do it easily? Quickly? Happily? Fix what’s broken; improve on what isn’t.
What Should I Write?
In business, always avoid the taboos: sex, religion and politics. Keep your posts neutral at all times to increase the appeal of your content. Also avoid writing about what everyone else writes about, unless you have something new to add or a different angle to present. Redundancy gets your business nowhere.
Write about your business and its processes. Discuss what’s going on in your industry. Post about frequently asked questions and provide some answers. Do case studies of clients you’ve helped. Write whatever seems relevant and valuable.
But I Want to Voice My Opinion!
People enjoy blogging because it lets them air their views, opinions, comments and personal feelings on many events and situations in life. If a client discovers a scathing monologue or a boss stumbles on a harsh critique, get ready for consequences.
Business blogs are professional blogs, first and foremost. You are not there to bash the competition, your co-workers or your peers. Leave out identifying information. Talk generally. Focus on the positive in the negative. Write to share lessons, not to rant, vent or attack. If you can’t help yourself, start a second personal blog, rant away, and avoid identifying information.
I’m Still Stuck for Ideas.
Since blogging is a long-term affair, eventually it feels like there’s nothing left to say. You’ve covered all aspects of your business and given out all the advice you know. Lately, you’re spinning your wheels on writing something you feel is interesting. Pressuring yourself to write only makes the feeling of having nothing to write worse. Now what?
Now dip back into your archives. Pick a post – any post. Close your eyes and point your finger. The paragraph you land on is the basis for your new post. Expand on it. Contradict it (yes, you can do that). Debate it. Do a pros and cons post. Update it with the latest news.
How Should I Write?
Blogging opens up worlds of opportunities for business, but that doesn’t mean that everyone is a blogger. Blogging means writing, and if you can’t write well or still struggle with spelling and grammar, that impacts your business negatively. Poor writing is unprofessional. Do you see “i can haz your bizniss” on United Airlines’ brochures?
First, write well – or find someone who does. Take some free courses online. You don’t have to be Shakespeare, but your blog should read as well as Curious George Goes to the Zoo. Format your text for screen reading, too. Break up long paragraphs, keep fonts one color, use bullet points and headers and choose a simple sans-serif font like Arial.
When Should I Write?
Irregular consistency can kill a blog faster than Russian roulette played with a shotgun. Too much blogging can send your creativity plunging downwards until it disappears. Not enough blogging makes your blog (and your business) appear to be one that is failing.
Your posting frequency should be the right frequency for you. Some authorities suggest more and some less, but one recommendation is constant across the board – post regularly. Decide on the number of posts per week you can handle, pick a regular day for publishing, and get at it. There are no wrong answers.
And if you get sick or have an emergency to deal with? You’d call in to advise your employer you couldn’t make it to work, right? The same goes for your blog. Post a short “I’ll be back note” and go take care of real life.
How Do I Get Traffic?
“If you build it, they will come” does not apply to blogging. Assuming that search engines will start sending you traffic just because you blog is a huge misconception. Bloggers do not get traffic; they go looking for it to herd it towards their blog. They also invest the time and energy required to market their blog effectively.
Link out to relevant posts from other bloggers. Comment on their blogs. Start interacting on social media sites like Twitter, Digg or StumbleUpon. Interesting comments on your behalf engage others, and they stir curiosity that encourages people to click through to your site. If you aren’t present and active, you aren’t driving traffic.
So I Don’t Need SEO?
Search-engine optimization poses a problem for many bloggers. They don’t know how to SEO their blog or their content, or they focus on writing for search engines and not people. Sometimes they focus on writing for people and forget search engines.
A blend of both SEO and good content helps your blog be picked up by search engines and helps readers enjoy what you have to offer. Do a little research into basic SEO and apply it. Don’t expect tons of overnight traffic – SEO does offer results, but good results come over time.
Yeah, But I Don’t Have Time.
A major challenge for bloggers is finding the time to pay attention to their blog, write posts and drive traffic, all the while staying updated on other blogs and being active in networking settings. Keeping a blog going can be grueling. A day only has 24 hours, after all.
Choose a lower posting frequency that fits your schedule. Outsource writing posts, if you can afford it. If you can’t, decide how much time you can spend per day on your blog and do what you can. Pick one good social media site as a favorite to leverage. You don’t have to do it all – you just have to do a little and do it consistently.
Why Am I Not Getting Business?
Many new bloggers slap up a blog and expect to become overnight successes. There is no such thing on the Internet. Realize that boosting your business reputation with a blog takes time, effort and perhaps some investment. You knew that your business would start small and grow… Why do you expect different from your blog?
Make sure your blog represents your business well. It should reflect your business image properly, it should include showcase samples, a contact page, information about you and information about your services or products. Make a checklist of what you’d like to know about someone else’s business – and then see if your blog fits the bill.
Oooh, This is Cool!
The latest gadget or widget or meme or trend or fad may be the coolest thing going, but if it doesn’t help your business, it has no business being on your blog. Your friends may love the cute little avatars on the sidebar from a blog directory, but what’s that doing for your sales? Do your friends keep you in the money?
Invest your time and efforts into proven marketing strategies instead of the hot widget of the moment. Sure, test new things to see if they help your business, but ask yourself first if a client would appreciate what you want to try. If you do try and don’t increase sales, ditch the widget, folks.
When you’re blogging for business, treat your blog like a business. You may be a creative soul with breezy thoughts or the struggling hopeful trying to break into an industry, but you remain a professional business owner. Act accordingly on your blog, and give people the right impression for better success.
How about you? Do you recognize yourself as struggling with any of these problematic areas? Do you have some other challenge that you’re facing? Share and see what help you might get – it may set your business up for life!
If you want more great tips to set your business up for life, head over to Men with Pens, where James and Harry share their web business tips for writers, freelancers and online entrepreneurs. Better yet, grab the Men with Pens feed by subscribing here.