The value of corporate blogging
An item from PRLeap.com on corporate blogging quotes Sally Falkow, senior strategist at Los Angeles-based Expansion Plus—an “Internet and PR firm”—touting search engine visibility as “one of the most important reasons to start a corporate blog.”
Search engine visibility is certainly a desirable outcome, but if it’s the motivation behind starting a corporate blog, your odds of success will drop precipitously. When Neville and I interviewed Michael Wiley, the man behind General Motors’ blogs and podcasts, we never once heard him talk about search engine visibility. His remarks focused squarely on a connection with the customer. I was particularly struck by Wiley’s observation that many of the comments to GM Vice Chairman Bob Lutz’s posts on the GM Fastlane blog seem to come from people who have been waiting years for a channel allowing them to engage directly with someone in a position of authority.
Wanting to engage the customer (or other constituent audiences) must be the driving motivation behind a corporate blog. Embracing that concept will help ensure that the blog stays focused and builds positive relations. The GM blogs, according to Wiley, have received somewhere between 5 and 10 comments that were so inappropriate they needed to be deleted. This remarkably low number is attributable in large part to the customer focus of the blog and the clear evidence that the company really is listening to its customers.
Falkow does recognize the power of a corporate blog to put a human face on the company. But nowhere in the article does she address building relationships or interacting one-on-one with customers. (Of course, this doesn’t mean she doesn’t recognize the connection between blogs and social audiences; it could easily be that the reporter left out those remarks. Falkow has her own blog: falkow.blogsite.com.
02/28/05 | 3 Comments | The value of corporate blogging