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Blogger outreach is digital Public Relations

effective blogger outreach Blogger outreach is digital Public RelationsThe current catch-all these days for what I do is social media; unfortunately, when what you do is described as social media, people tend to think Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and maybe Google+. My expertise, however, is online community outreach and engagement. Back in 2006 I developed a strategy of blogger outreach that allowed my to reach out to more than just 25 top-tier bloggers by hand over time but to 2,500-5,000 bloggers.

I have always called this long-tail blogger outreach (though I would love your help with choosing a new name for it) because it focuses on the B-Z-list bloggers, the online influencers who are often overlooked by most social media teams at digital agencies.

While I agree that the top-25-50 bloggers do deserve deep, long-term, and personal engagement, spending that sort of time, over time, on “everyone else” would take all the time in the universe. So, what my team and I developed is the equivalent of blogger-brand speed dating. According to Wikipedia:

Speed dating is a formalized matchmaking process or dating system whose purpose is to encourage people to meet a large number of new people” . . . “Men and women are rotated to meet each other over a series of short “dates” usually lasting from 3 to 8 minutes depending on the organization running the event. At the end of each interval, the organizer rings a bell, clinks a glass, or blows a whistle to signal the participants to move on to the next date. At the end of the event participants submit to the organizers a list of who they would like to provide their contact information to. If there is a match, contact information is forwarded to both parties. Contact information cannot be traded during the initial meeting, in order to reduce pressure to accept or reject a suitor to his or her face.”

blogger outreach2 Blogger outreach is digital Public RelationsAfter collecting between 2,000-4,000 blogs that are topically-, geographically-, or demographically-appropriate, preparing a content-laden microsite and penning a very short-and-sweet email message pitch, then I send out those 2K-4K emails, each and every one a speed-date, and wait, real-time, at the Inbox.

Before long, hundreds of email replies stream in. Some aren’t interested, some are game, and others are curious but need more information. Like speed-dating, we’re not interested in the no’s but we’re interested in the yes’s.

Of course we’re courteous and we’re present and we’re always kind — “hugs not horns” I always remind my team — and we’re never anything but earnest and polite — “be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a great battle” — but if they’re not interested, we don’t contact them again. And if they’re very unhappy, we’ll beg their pardon and put them into a Do Not Contact list; otherwise, everyone who replies is taken off the campaign list.

The secret sauce, however, is that this form of speed dating requires email — and email is unreliable. And people are suspicious and busy. And email sometimes doesn’t quite make its way to the Inbox.

blog 300x190 Blogger outreach is digital Public RelationsSo, a week after the initial email outreach, I send a reminder email, but only to those bloggers who didn’t reply at all. No reply results in a follow-up email.

And it works. Too many practitioners of blogger outreach, email marketing, email outreaches, or even triple-, double-, and single-opt-in mailing lists are just too shy, too feeble in their messaging, for fear that they’ll get hundreds or thousands drinks-in-the-face. Nope, not if you do it right.

If you do it right, you’ll get twice the response you did from your first email. So, for instance, let’s say we emailed 4,000 bloggers and a 1,000 bloggers responded. 250 would have responded to the first email outreach, 500 would have responded to the second outreach, and then 250 would have responded to the final outreach.

Yes, a week after we mail the first follow-up email, we send out a final follow-up and thank you, thanking the blogger (who has yet to email us or reply at all — pretty much radio-silent) for his or her time, for the inconvenience, and also to let the blogger know that he or she is welcome to take advantage of the opportunity when and if he or she gets around to reading and responding to the campaign pitch.

blogger outreach large 500x331 Blogger outreach is digital Public RelationsOur rule is to always be friendly, loving, generous, happy, kind, and even respectfully playful with each and every blogger, even the Grumpy Cats. Never rise to the bait, never fight fire with fire, never engage in snark/irony/sarcasm because the only person who is allowed to be anything but completely charming and gracious is the blogger.

Again, “be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a great battle” — our corporate mantra.

And you know what? If we do everything right, we’ll generally earn a couple-hundred earned media mentions directly shared on the bloggers’ blogs, we’ll also earn secondary mentions through Facebook, Twitter, StumbleUpon, Pinterest, Tumblr, Google+, digg, and even, if we’re lucky, reddit.

If you want to learn more, feel free to take a look at this blogger outreach deck I created for my friends at Sage over on Slideshare.

blogger outreach Blogger outreach is digital Public RelationsAnd here are some links to additional posts I have made about blogger outreach in the past:

Blogger outreach and engagement is much more than social media. It could be seen as content marketing, yes, but it could and should be a communications strategy toward discovering and prospecting new and future influencers.

influencers blogger outreach Blogger outreach is digital Public RelationsIf you can identify a passion player, someone who is already talking about you, your products and services, or products and services you, too, offer, and you can woo them into becoming citizen brand ambassadors, and if you are their “first kiss,” then you’ll be able to develop a very large pack of proponents and passion-players who will be loyal and will have safely imprinted on your attention, your acknowledgement, and your generosity. To be sure, it’s much easier to prospect for new fans when these fans haven’t been wooed by another than it is to woo them away from a secure brand-attachment.

And, to be honest, every single blogger anywhere close to the top-50 has already been spoken for in a big way; and, generally-speaking, their brand sugardaddies probably have deeper-pockets and are internationally more prestigious that you may well be — so it behooves you to play blogger moneyball: find a large number of very talented bloggers who can personally assist you in your branding goals and bottom-line rather than spending your time and money on a few outrageously-compensated stars, most of whom are too busy and too distracted by an embarrassment of riches to actually give you all the time, attention, and coverage that you, your brand, your products, and your services deserve.

Blogger Blogger outreach is digital Public RelationsAnd remember, if you do all of this right, it’ll all be an earned media campaign, meaning you won’t have to pay each and every one of these bloggers to post, to cover, to review, or to promote. That’s not to say this’ll all be free to you — all of this can be expensive, both in terms of client service agency hours as well as in terms of the give, the gift, you pitch the blogger with, be it informational, a product, or a service. And you need to make it good. Unless it’s an offer that can’t be refused — give ’til it hurts — and you just expect a blogger to blog about you “just because” then you’ll always be disappointed.

As you can tell from my mantra, the blogger is always right. I have had clients get all diva about drop shipping the number of review copies of products in the past, telling me that they’ll go bankrupt because they’d need to drop ship 200 books or 39 pairs of glasses, asking me to pick and choose which of the bloggers should receive the gift. It doesn’t work that way. The bloggers have all the leverage. If you don’t make good on your generous offer, each and every blogger has recourse — and we knew they did — and it’s their blog! And their tweets and Facebook posts and their Tumblr and Pinterest and reddit and everywhere else.

But that never happens. Give ’til it hurts, understanding that better I do my job and the better and more generous my pitch is, the more bloggers will want to engage, thereby resulting in possibly hundreds and hundreds of requests, based on an outreach of 4,000 blogs — it’s only math. I would hate to hit the jackpot on behalf of a client only to find out that I have “bankrupted” them with my success success (and the client is never bankrupt, the client is generally just cheap with a tendency to exaggerate, though this had only happened a couple times in the last 7 years).

So, long-tail blogger outreach is an amazing platform to both discover and engage with a multitude of natural allies and the people who are already talking about you, and giving them all the tools, the copy, the content, the gifts, and the impetus to share stuff about you, as earned media mentions, in very short-order, all over the Internet (an entire campaign only takes around six-weeks, total). It also allows you to harvest all of the bloggers game enough to mention you and your goodies into your inner-most, inner-most, your sanctum sanctorum, where you can personally grow your relationship with them now and groom them into the future — build up your own Guy Kawasaki, Om Malik, and Robert Scoble prospected and recruited and from the bush leagues or from “high school.”

I didn’t expect this post to be so long, but I guess I had a lot to share. Do you consider what I am doing with blogger outreach to be “social media?” What do you think about the discipline? The theory of “everyone”? The concept of flirting with bloggers en masse and engaging with them in a very quick “yes/no” speed-dating scenario? Do you think it is worthwhile to reach out to thousands of bloggers — all the way down to “nobody” — instead or in addition to the top blogger celebrities? Let me know what you think in the comments. I am very curious as to what you think and would love to tweak my methods, evolving it over time. Thanks in advance!

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Treat social like the media empire it is

newsroom2 300x227 Treat social like the media empire it isIf you read your local newspaper or a typical magazine, you’ll realize that most journalism is specialized. You have your columns, reporting, reviews, editorials, letters to the editor, and ombudsman; however, most companies don’t have the volume, diversity, or constancy of news required to need such staffing.

That said, enough does go on each and every day in your office, amongst your staff, in your business, in your industry, with you and your very own personal brand that you need to cover the entire newsroom on your own, including the advertising and publicity (because like the news, everything comes down to driving revenue, and if you can’t prove that all the time, energy, and resources you’re spending online aren’t feeding sales, your one-man-social-media-band is not long for this world.)

Let me break it down.

I would start by saying tone down the shameless self-promotion that you’re incessantly dropping into your streams and onto your walls, but I have a feeling you’re not being aggressive enough. Why? Because I don’t think that most social media experts, consultants, and gurus recommend being aggressive enough.

At the end of the day, you need to become a reporter of your own facts. You need to lead your followers deep into who you are, what you do, what products and services you can, have, and do offer. You need to make sure you use your platform — your own personal newsroom, your own personal media empire.

Newsroom 300x225 Treat social like the media empire it isIt’s OK because that’s part of what makes you interesting: what you do, what you can do, and who you are.

The content on your web site — about us, who we are, what we do, products, services, case studies, client lists — can be woven into what you discuss on a daily basis, interspersed with other news and content that come from other departments of your newsroom.

How would I write that stuff up so I don’t sound like a self-promotional, self-loving douchebag? Be objective. What I would say is that you should report the facts, ma’am, only the facts, even of the facts reflect the work, experience, products, services, staff, and culture of you and your company.

It’s amazing how much time and energy is spent developing witty commentary and narrative outside of what you, your brand, and your company actually do, spending much too much time being cute, coy, playful, and timely — riding the meme-wave, if you will (actually, in many ways, dancing around the subject of what people come to your branded properties for anyway) — instead of getting down to business and giving the people what they want.

lohan 300x451 Treat social like the media empire it isPeople are tired of just playing peekaboo; people are a lot more earnest and hungry for real news, worthwhile content, and a spirited conversation that just razzle dazzle or the dance of the seven veils that you may think. Bombast and titilation have their place, but people grow tired of the same old tricks and eventually want something more, especially if you’re not actually TMZ or Rush.

In addition to wanting to know more about what you do, who you are, what you know, and how you can help, people following you on social media in order to engage with you. They have questions, queries, concerns, issues, and problems. People also come to you to find out what you think. They come by to see if you have an opinion or analysis of what’s going on in your space.

And it is your opportunity, every day, to offer your unique insight into what’s going on in the news. Sadly, most people spend more time sharing other peoples’ news, analysis, critiques, and insights hoping that the quality of news that they curate from others into their own social media stream says a lot about them. Sometimes that’s indeed true; however, the real value-add in this scenario is when the reshare, reblog, and retweet isn’t just a carbon copy but offers additional commentary, analysis, or personal color-commentary.

People come to you not for your curation and aggregation skills but for your take on things. Many people criticize newspapers circa 2013 because they’ve become news aggregators for nationally-syndicated content, AP wire news, and barely-doctored press releases. Spending a little time taking the news that’s coming across your news desk and putting your own personal spin on it is essential to your success and the value of your voice in a very noisy social mediasphere.

This is indeed less possible on Twitter where we’re only offered a paltry 140 characters but blogs, Facebook, Tumblr, Google+, and even Pinterest allow hundreds of characters, plenty of room to go into quite a sophisticated analysis.

And finally, there’s the role of editor, teacher and ombudsman. After you’ve spent some serious time out there producing opinionated, brave, smart, and insightful content, you’re likely to get questions, queries, concerns, misunderstandings, and request for more, specific, content.

Cronkite 300x226 Treat social like the media empire it isIt’s time to listen, now — and listen carefully. Your followers will not only tell you what they need, want, and dislike, but they’ll also give you many opportunities to expand upon your ideas, to refine your thoughts and insights, and to learn more about your current clients and brand fans but you’ll have an opportunity to listen to what your natural business prospects are interested in and be able to sell towards that.

No matter how much social media experts and gurus talk about the traditional media as being broadcast-only, newsrooms have always depended upon their community to provide them news, traffic reports, leads, human interest stories, letters to the editors, and local community news.

In many case, at a macro scale, you’re now a publisher. You are your own personal newsroom and while you might want to keep the reins in and keep your own media empire relatively modest for now, you still need to think more in terms of engaging with your community in a real way instead if just entertaining and amusing them.

And that’s the way it is.

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Google Analytics’ “International Space Station” April Fools

meToo Google Analytics International Space Station April Fools

Thanks to the vigilance of Phillip J Rhoades and his obsession with HowToPhil.com‘s traffic, we’ve sorted out the April Fools joke perpetrated by the Google Analytics team — go check out your Real Time: Overview, and you should see this:

real time 1024x413 Google Analytics International Space Station April FoolsAnd since it is, supposedly, the International Space Station‘s control room, it moves across your Real-Time screen as it orbits — very funny but I think that Google jumped the gun because you didn’t assume that Phillip was keeping his eyes peeled like he does — he’s hyper-vigilant!

issCR Google Analytics International Space Station April Fools

For your information, there are only 3 crew members of the ISS and not 41 — 4-1? April 1st done in the American style.  Most of the world is saying, “41? What’s 4-1?” Because they write today’s date as 1-4-2013 and not 4-1-2013. Oh well, it’s an excellent — maybe too easy — tell.

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Google+ for Brands Best in Show Webinar

Today I did a webinar for Bulldog Reporter PR University titled “Google+ for PR: Mastering Google+ Pages and Hangouts—Best Bets for Brands in 2013” and while I was indeed sharing the stage with the amazing Stephanie Scott, Katie Morse, Danielle Brigida, and Brian Pittman, this is just my part of the presentation without any edits or changes or cuts — so you’re welcome to enjoy just my part of it, wherein I talk about the three types of Google+ for Brands adopters: Hot & Heavies, Afterthoughts, and Zombie Ghost Towns. I hope you enjoy this, learn loads, and ask me tons of questions. Via Google+ for Brands Best in Show Webinar from Chris Abraham.

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Make your website your communications hub

Coms1 Make your website your communications hub

At the end of the day, none of us owns anything we do on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Google Plus. What we do own is our personal properties.

No matter how many hours I spend at the Java Shack or Peregrine Espresso, I am just a customer. Social media and its social networks may feel like a home to some of us, but they’re really just private public spaces, similar to coffee shops, the Politics & Prose reading area, or the ballroom at the Rosslyn Marriott.

At the end of the day, none of this is yours. These places, while filled with amazing opportunities for connection and growth, mean nothing if you can’t bring it all home, be it sales, self-promotion, networking, creativity, marketing, education or brand building.

Ultimately, your home is your business and yourself

What is home? Well, in a practical sense, your online home is your web site; maybe your blog. More philosophically, your home is your business and yourself.

I was installing a new personal consulting website over the weekend and I was reminded of this. I chose to use Drupal, a content management system (CMS) that is similar to WordPress, though known less for being a blogging platform than a content platform. I chose a database-backed Web application instead of a Flash-based or flat file site for several reasons, all of which had to do with making my online brand identity work as hard for me as possible.

Some of the core functionality that drew me to Drupal is how well it connects to Cron, sort of like a server’s timekeeper. It keeps my website primed not just when I am available, it can also work on my behalf even when I am on a plane or asleep.

What do I mean by this? Well, Drupal is open source software, so there’s not only a lot of useful functionality built in but also thousands of modules and plug-ins that easily and readily extend the functionality of my site out the wazoo.

So, there’s a built-in aggregator that I can set up to suck in all the RSS feeds of all the blogs to which I contribute, including Twitter. This allows me to write for Tumblr, other blogs, and Twitter and have as much or as little of the content brought back into my business home site, and shoved into my own database for my own posterity.

Sharing doesn’t happen by happenstance

Another thing it lets me to do is add a plug-in that easily allows me to offer all my visitors the ability to effortlessly share my content to Pinterest, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and more. This makes it easy to add and remove different buttons as social networks go away (good bye, Google Buzz!) and add them as they’re introduced (hello Google+, for now).

And remember, it’s always better when other people share your stuff. Just like compliments, it’s always better when other people say how pretty and smart you are. Also, by design every share will include a link to your content, to your brand, and to your contact info. It’s genius! You’re also not prohibited from sharing from your own site as well — nobody said not to.

Another reason why I chose Drupal is because Google gets Drupal and Drupal gets Google. Unfortunately, too many people roll their own sites. Generally speaking, these are some flat file sites, some bizarre proprietary solution some Web guy peddled you, or a pretty minimal WordPress install, designed by a graphic designer instead of a coder.

The flat file and the proprietary solution are alien to Google, at least for a little while. While Google has seen a bazillion Drupal, WordPress and Joomla installs, it might take a while for Google to suss out what you’re about on your proprietary or brochureware site, if ever. This is especially true if you’ve also designed the entire site in Flash or a sliced-up Photoshop file.

On the other hand, Drupal is very aware of classifications, user-readable URLs, customizable title, keyword and description tags. I have already installed a module that connects to Google Webmaster Tools via a dynamic XML Sitemap, to Google Analytics, and to all the Ping Servers (do people even use those anymore?). What more, I’ve installed an SEO module that will help me further explain myself and every page I make to Google.

Drupal can prevent you from being Sandboxed or De-Listed

And since the Drupal community is so Bright White Hat, they make several modules that audit your site to make sure you didn’t do something evil that might be perceived by Google as being Black Hat, resulting in your site getting either Sandboxed (pretty darn bad) or De-Listed (devastating).

All the work you’ve ever done on social media is likely to vanish unless you spend time capturing your work, words & creativity

Since I have my own server, I have access to server logs, which are great ways to look deeper into how people are interacting with my site than even Google Analytics can go. That said, Drupal does a pretty good job of being able to actively and dynamically promote similar and popular content to my visitors so that anyone who comes in looking for Blogger Outreach Services because of one search will be offered all the pages that are similar to the topic that are available on the site, hopefully keeping folks on the site until they’re convinced that they want to hire me.

I believe that Drupal also offers the ability to auto link text in its core or as an extension. I can write my copy with abandon without having to worry about linking text or whether those links will go dead or change over time. Every time my article explicitly says “Blogger Outreach” the server will turn that phrase into a hyperlink and that link will go to the page on Blogger Outreach. If I change things up, I can change the point-to link to somewhere else and it will change every instance instantly.

Drupal also offers dynamic meta-tag titles, descriptions, and keywords; it can connect directly with other web applications via XML, RSS, or ATM, both read or write, if you set it up correctly. It can also cross-post whenever you post something on your site — be it news, something bloggish, something sales or hiring, or something PR — out and about, automatically: to Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook, or wherever.

drupal modules2 Make your website your communications hub

And, if there’s anything you can imagine that you might want to do, there’s probably an app for that (well, a module, really). Now that Drupal has been accepted widely and has matured over time, anything that may well be missing can be created for you by extending an application that already exists (by either joining the team and adding features or by forking the code into your own thing) or by hiring a Drupal developer to do it for you. Since it’s “just scripting” (PHP and MySQL, really), you won’t be stuck behind that proprietary wall of opacity. There are lots of options and developers of all levels of talent, skill, and experience (back when I started, PHP-coders were rare and Drupal developers were like unicorns).

Make your website your communications platform

OK, I am a total geek and I am so psyched to be elbow deep in Secure Shell (PuTTY), FTP (FileZILLA), vi, chmod, wget, and tar xvf that I would like you to forgive me for this article (I should be talking about social media marketing and digital PR, after all). However, I have been in the PR world now for 10 years and most PR websites really suck. Your own personal web site should be more than just a landing page for decision makers. It’s also your own personal platform for communication, engagement, sharing, and for square-dancing with lovely spiders and bots of Google, Bing and the gang.

Take some time to become better than yourself. You make not be a geek like me, but you really need to take advantage of all the cool stuff I can do. The setting up of all the back-end stuff only took me one dedicated Sunday, so it’s not rocket science.

Good luck and remember that all the work that you do and have ever done on social media in support of your brand is ephemeral and likely to vanish into thin air unless you spend some time capturing your work, your words, and your creativity somewhere you can keep it and keep on using it.

It might as well be in your own online home, your website.

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