Tag Archives: TechCrunch

How NOT to pitch a blogger

Blogger Relations The Anti Social Media 274x300 How NOT to pitch a bloggerI talked about how blogger outreach is scary, and I talked about why this fear exists for most people before they start talking to bloggers. In great measure, these fears exist because of the horror stories that have resulted from wrong-headed approaches.

In the five years that we’ve been reaching out to bloggers, we’ve learned just as much about how NOT to pitch as we’ve learned about the right ways. The main thing to keep in mind is how you feel when you are on the receiving end of a misguided PR pitch. If you just stick with that mindset, you’ll avoid the lion’s share of pitching mistakes.

Now, I have been getting pitches for my blog, Because the Medium is the Message, since 2004 or so. Now, Marketing Conversation gets loads of pitches as well. Some of the insulting things that abuse me to no end include sending your pitch to “Dear Blogger,” or to “Abraham” when my name is Chris Abraham.

I can generally tell when a compliment is hollow: they’re either too general or way too recent and specific. It is very easy for even the least sophisticated of my fellow bloggers to sense sucking up or kissing up, especially if you haven’t done any homework or any research at all.

Also, if you don’t have your formatting sorted and it looks like you obviously copied and pasted back and forth and I can make out weird spacing and a strange mixture of fonts and sizes, I can tell you’re probably cutting corners and doing things carelessly and without concern for how I will perceive it–as though half-assed is all I am worth since I am not a Mashable or TechCrunch. People don’t like it when they can obviously tell that you’re going through the motions until something else better comes along. Bloggers will always call you out if they sense you’re just calling it in.

No, I also don’t blame the agents too much. They’re often understaffed, juggling too many balls, have insufficient experience, or lack technological skills and are just doing their best. The agencies are why these agents are oftentimes coming up short. And, at the end of the day, many agencies have given up on earned media because earned media can be risky and it can oftentimes be an all or nothing venture. Outreach failure is easily possible when there is very little cultural awareness and understanding of how best to appeal to these thousands and thousands of very real people who wield very real power and influence over popular consensus and perception.

Perhaps the only thing you’ve come away from this article is that you need to hire me in order to get some of that white-hat link-farming SEO love. So, let me warn you: it doesn’t work unless you spend a lot of time, money, energy, and creativity to actually put together a plausible and meaningful PR campaign.

Bloggers did not fall of a turnip truck. If they don’t see the value in the pitch, they won’t post; if they fancy that you’re just asking them to post because you want to vampire bat on their Google juice, then you’re likely to be in a whole lot of #fail and possibly a whole lot of pain. The white-hat link-farm organic SEO pwn effect is only secondary if you are, the entire way along, a total Mensch and have amazing assets, viral-quality video, a great pitch, an accurate target, and a gentle, kind, and generous follow-through.

It is sort of like dating. You need to remain present during the entire date and not even get angry or resentful–or hostile–if you are not invited upstairs for a night cap. If you’re caught just calling it in and going through the motions, just being on the date because you’re hoping to get lucky at the end of the night, you’re likely to end up either hurting someone else’s feelings or destroying your reputation. Enjoy the company, enjoy the date, enjoy the diversion, enjoy the desert, enjoy the wine, enjoy the walk in the park, enjoy the play, enjoy the coffee, and then be surprised and appreciative when and if you’re invited upstairs for a night cap.

If you are truly present in blogger outreach, and what you do is driven by what’s good for the blogger as well as what’s good for you, you might be pleased with the results.

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The Intersection of Technology, Start-ups, the Economy & Education According to New Cap's Thomas Turney. Podcast #1

This post is a re-post from Defevere.com and I posted it on my blog “LA-Story.com” as well.

Gray Defevere (head of Defevere Advisory Group) introduced me to one of the Directors of the So Cal Tech Group who is very much into the “start-up” space– particularly since he is the managing partner of a private bank. The interesting part here is that when one is active in that part of the state — and even national or global– economy, you get an entirely different view at that altitude. Hence why Gray DeFevere (and several of his colleagues and friends) will show up on this blog.

When I recorded this podcast, the outlook for California’s economy wasn’t so great. In terms of a global picture here in California where typically the economy for this state has been larger than MOST countries, it’s been a bit wobbly. I can’t say whether it’s much better but looking at what’s going on in terms of start-ups and growth of middle market ventures there is some serious reasons to be optimistic. To assess where the economy both locally, state-wide and nationally, it’s often best to talk to someone who has a truly “global” view of the business landscape. One such person happens to be Thomas Turney, managing principal in NewCap Partners

GEDC02471 The Intersection of Technology, Start ups, the Economy & Education According to New Cap's Thomas Turney. Podcast #1

Mr. Turney has been involved in a variety of merger and acquisition transactions during his career with NewCap Partners. He has also participated in a variety of financing transactions, with a particular focus on management buyouts. Tom Turney was willing to talk about the state of the state and lots more in this 2 part podcast. This is part one. It’s fascinating when one ventures into the world of venture capital and helping emerging businesses – particularly those in technology — grow.

Relevant Points:
–Comparison of this recession or GDP decline currently and that of the Great Depression.

–Shift in cost of labor versus cost of capital (leaner numbers of employees)

–Rise of technology and innovation in various sectors

–Import of education and how the US education system compares on an international level.

– Use of internet for education

– Entrepreneurial spirit and environment

– Tax policies (on various levels — state and national) to foster innovation and entrepreneurial ventures

–States (read California!) need to get competitive with other states to keep innovative and tech-savvy companies within the home state.

– Outsourcing of jobs overseas

–Regulations of start-ups and middle market jobs

– Creation of products that global market will want to buy!

Thanks to Thomas Turney for his time. This is just part 1; part 2 is even better!

Like content like this? You can find more at the blog at www.defevere.com

You can also find more content & interviews with venture capitalists, start-ups and lots more at www.la-story.com
Follow me at twitter.com/lastory
“LIKE” LA-Story on Facebook.com/lastoryblog
Hit me on Pinterest at http://pinterest.com/lastoryblog

Stay tuned for Part 2 of this podcast!

Stevie Wilson,
LA-Story.com

Why haven’t you embraced frictionless sharing?

I have been exploring frictionless sharing for years in the form of auto-tweets, retweets, automatic cross-posting, and attention data.

attentionData Why havent you embraced frictionless sharing?

What is it, you ask? Well, according to Wikipedia, frictionless sharing refers to “the transparent sharing of resources using social media services.” What this means is that all you need to do is look at a particular piece of content such as a news item, story, video, or content, and that piece of content is linked to on your Facebook Timeline, in Google Plus and in other social media.

We all have been frictionless sharing with advertisers, social media companies, big data minters, and search engines for a decade in the form of implicit attention data, part of an attention economy. While people are freaking out about how privacy-invading frictionless sharing is, we have all been frictionless sharing everything and anything — sometimes even including our credit card information, Social Security numbers and secret questions’ answers — with everywhere and everything, including Friendster, MySpace, eHarmony, match.com, Facebook, Twitter, AOL, Yahoo!, Microsoft and the No. 1 data-vacuum, Google.

On Facebook, the most common frictionless sharing experiences come from their social sharing apps, with the Washington Post’s app being the most famous and infamous – though TechCrunch and ESPN and quite a few other media platforms have invested. Trouble is, none of these social sharing apps perform very well in new Facebook because their new stream of news Timeline algorithm prioritizes friends and family above the social shared content. Continue reading

Have you embraced frictionless sharing yet?

I have been exploring frictionless sharing for years in the form of auto-tweets, retweets, automatic cross-posting, and attention data.

attentionData Have you embraced frictionless sharing yet?

What is it, you ask? Well, according to Wikipedia, frictionless sharing refers to “the transparent sharing of resources using social media services.” What this means is that all you need to do is look at a particular piece of content such as a news item, story, video, or content, and that piece of content is linked to on your Facebook Timeline, in Google Plus and in other social media.

We all have been frictionless sharing with advertisers, social media companies, big data minters, and search engines for a decade in the form of implicit attention data, part of an attention economy. While people are freaking out about how privacy-invading frictionless sharing is, we have all been frictionless sharing everything and anything — sometimes even including our credit card information, Social Security numbers and secret questions’ answers — with everywhere and everything, including Friendster, MySpace, eHarmony, match.com, Facebook, Twitter, AOL, Yahoo!, Microsoft and the No. 1 data-vacuum, Google.

On Facebook, the most common frictionless sharing experiences come from their social sharing apps, with the Washington Post’s app being the most famous and infamous – though TechCrunch and ESPN and quite a few other media platforms have invested. Trouble is, none of these social sharing apps perform very well in new Facebook because their new stream of news Timeline algorithm prioritizes friends and family above the social shared content. Continue reading

Run blogger outreach the way you run Google AdWords campaigns

Last week, I wrote about how to succeed with B-list bloggers, but maybe some of you aren’t convinced.

long tail17 Run blogger outreach the way you run Google AdWords campaignsSo, this week, I want to draw an analogy to successful Google AdWords approaches so that you can see how to apply that same technique to blogger outreach. When it comes to reaching out to bloggers online, there’s a lot you can learn from Google AdWords. Long-tail blogger outreach is like long-tail Google AdWords advertising. Instead of putting all your money on the top 10 most expensive and popular keywords that everyone bids on, smart advertisers segment their markets and hyper-target their highest-performing keywords with their most compelling ads and content while always pruning away their worst performers.

The same should be done with blogger outreach. There will always be blogs that are out of your league and your target audience. Instead of hitting your head against the wall by trying to make it onto TechCrunch and Mashable, learn to segment your blogger list, target more precisely while expanding your pool of bloggers past the top most blogs that tend also to be the most exclusive and difficult to break into — out of your league — to blogs and bloggers who are just starting out, who blog more from passion than ad revenue, and who are naturally more receptive to your content and your message based on a natural affinity.

Affiliate marketers have learned that they can reliably make money by spending money on Google AdWords by finding keyword phrases with such low bids that they can make money from the relatively small commissions or bounty they get from converting the click throughs to sales. Millions in yearly profits cent by cent, dollar by dollar. A cascade of small sales made by people who were so well targeted to that they were almost powerless to resist.

If you’re able to find yourself thousands of bloggers who have yet to be discovered by your all your competitors, you’ll be able to secure hundreds of earned media mentions.

The same thing can be done with blogger outreach. If you’re able to find yourself thousands of bloggers who have yet to be discovered by your all your competitors, you’ll be able to secure hundreds of earned media mentions. In concert, hundreds of earned media mentions both drown out a single post on TechCrunch and also do a better job or finding what you really want: sales.

All the most successful AdWords gurus, such as Adam Viener of imwave, realize that you can only make money in affiliate marketing with Google AdWords if you can make more money from your converted sales than you spend. You can’t do this unless you find the magic sweet spot where there aren’t many competing bidders who are bidding up the price of your keyword phrases so that you can both keep your spending low and also increase the likelihood that those who do stumble upon your ad will not only click through, costing you money, but also make a trackable major purchase, resulting in a commission–in commissions–that cover the costs of the ads and then some. This is not easy and the field fluctuates.

It takes expertise and vigilance, Adam tells me, and a mistake can be costly. One possibly apocryphal story reported that there was a very profitable keyword phrase that suddenly also became popular and the bids shot up without someone noticing, resulting in the equivalent of a Range Rover being lost in one day. Because of such high risks tantamount to the stock market, these folks are very good at discovering and milking the long tail, realizing that making a little bit here and there spread concurrently over hundreds and thousands of ads and keywords is more profitable, long term, than making a single big score.

If you’re loaded with cash and don’t really care about extracting value from your campaign, you can spend all your money on trying to get your ad copy at the top of every Google Search just to see it there but being constantly outbid by others, ultimately clearing out your budget or maxing your credit card; the same can be said with regards to blogger outreach: you can spend all your budgeted time and money pursuing the top bloggers while constantly being blocked by content from bigger, sexier, richer, more impressive national and global brands that have exclusive content and truckloads of valuable review products, better assets, and a promise of more and better traffic resulting in higher advertising revenue.

The most obvious thing you can learn is how easily it is to get outbid. Another thing you’ll learn is that AdWords can rapidly burn all your cash with nothing to show for it. Finally, you’ll learn that Google doesn’t wage a fair fight — they both play favorites as well as giving preference to quality of ad over quantity of bid.

What this means in Google AdWords ads is that you’re rewarded for the following: 1) Having lots of cash: a fool and his money are soon parted 2) Finding new markets: Being willing to hunt out holes in the market — keyword combinations that are not so obvious but are hyper-targeted to appeal to a new segment of visitors, bringing new opportunities for Google to make money 3) Creating an irresistible ad: no matter how much money you’re willing to spend, Google doesn’t make money unless visitors are compelled to click through 4) Becoming a long-term client: there are many cases where no amount or money and wit will claim you the top ad position on Google search, inline with organic search, because that spot almost always goes to the client who has made Google the most money, historically, over time.

These lessons map perfectly to blogger outreach.

The blogosphere rewards specialization and laser-targeting

The most desired, desirable, and “easy” keywords are like the top bloggers with the highest Alltop rankings and Klout scores are constantly being pursued. How realistic are you that you can even compete with all the others vying for their time and copy? If you’re Dell or Sony, you probably have the sort of brand recognition and respect to be able to get a blogger to schedule time to review your new gizmo pretty thoroughly. You’ll probably also have the sort of marketing budget that would allow you to offer a review product to everyone you engage.

You’ll probably have a graphic design department and a staff of copywriters who can develop an amusing and compelling pitch which could include press junkets and personal meet and greets. Finally, a company like Dell is able to commit the long-term time, staff, and expense account towards making sure their communications team developed and professional as well as personal relationship with as many online influencers and online journalists over time — to use Google AdWords parlance, they have learned how to appeal to Google on all levels.

How many levels are you able to compete on? If you’re unable to compete on any of these levels, you’ll go bankrupt trying. It’s not that A-List tech bloggers are corrupt, it’s just that they’re under pressure as well. They have only 24-hours/day and they’re heavily rewarded with traffic when they’re able to get exclusive content from a national player such as Dell. In the same way that Google AdWords rewards its clients for trying harder and digging deeper into the “long tail” in order to find new, under-served, markets, the blogosphere also rewards specialization and laser-targeting.

In a perfect world, one should only spend one’s AdWords budget on keywords phrases that display ads only to people who will convert into clients and customers. The better one knows one’s market and customer and the more time one spends finding out who and where they are and engaging them there, the more value you can extract from your sweat and cash.

Let’s say you’re preparing to launch your new book online and you want to use bloggers as an essential distribution channel, both great ideas. However, let’s think this through. Are you internationally famous crime fiction writer James Ellroy or are you an unknown first-time, self-published, crime fiction-writer? Do you have a huge war chest to fuel your promotional campaign or are you running on sweat equity? Do you have thousands of friends online who are already committed to buying your book because you have been developing your popularity online by sharing chapters and answering questions and giving free advice or have you been busily scribbling your work on yellow pads and consider your work protected by strict copyright and not something to dilute by giving it away?

Novice Google AdWords users waste a lot of money with limited results when they start out because they don’t understand how the competition works in contextual ad-buying: It’s an auction. A complicated auction.

In short, the way it works is that every keyword combination, such as “social media marketing,” competes with four things: the general popularity of the search, the quality of the keyword ad, the long-term success of the campaign, and how much money others are willing to bid for their ad based on their keyword choice, also dependent on their prior successes, ad spends, and long-term commitment. In shorter, while how much you’re willing to bid for a keyword phrase is important, it isn’t that simple.

With blogger outreach, you face the same odds as for paid search. If you are targeting only the top blogs, you’ll face immense competition and can easily be outgunned by bigger foes. If you target the long tail of bloggers, you can more easily land your targets and will build up success one blog at a time, rather than in one fell swoop.

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