I've compiled a handful I thought you'd find useful (or funny): Top 14 trends from Seth Godin's new book, Meatball Sundae; 10 tips for new bloggers from Jorn Barger who coined the term "Weblog" 10 years ago; Pete Blackshaw's Official 2008 Web 2.0 Buzzword Forecast; the best of Harvard Business Online. Merriam-Webster's 2007 Word Of The Year is w00t! More…
2007 Word of the Year
Merriam-Webster's 2007 Word Of The Year is w00t! (Yes, those are double zeros.) It means yay! and yippee! as in, "I won!" #2 in M-W's Top 10 words for 2007 is facebook.
Best of Meatball Sundae, Seth Godin's new book
Seth Godin's Top 14 Trends from his new book, Meatball Sundae. You can also listen to Bryan Eisenberg's interview with Seth on Web Master radio.
Top 10 tips for new bloggers from the guy who coined the word "Weblog"
10 Tips for New Bloggers from Jorn Barger, who coined the term "Weblog" exactly ten years ago on Dec. 17, 1997 "to describe the daily list of links that 'logged' his travels across the web." He's a little scary looking, dontcha think?
Pete Blackshaw's Web 2.0 Buzzword Forecast for 2008
Pete Blackshaw's Official 2008 Web 2.0 Buzzword Forecast is quite funny. Friendiligence means doing due diligence on all those "friend requests" you get on Facebook.
Harvard Management Best Of's (free)
The Best of HarvardBusiness.org includes blog posts, video, podcasts, an interactive tool and an interactive case study. All free.
Blogging is a key piece of Web 2.0 or the Social Web, as it's called. The Social Web means crowdsourcing: looking to your customers and fans for knowledge and smarts. It means that painstaking creation of static, stuffy, stilted Web pages is out. Blogs (interactive) are in. Here are my Top 8 Tips to launch an effective corporate blogging program in 2008.
I don't mean funny ha ha. Poke fun at yourself. Be self-deprecating. Readers love it. It may be the #1 way to make your blog appear human and to strip the corporate edge from your voice.
New for 2008! Click here for my Corporate Blogging in a Day in-house workshop. Book before Jan. 25, 2008 to get 15% off.
Who said every blog entry has to be a magnum opus? Short (150 - 300 words) can be very effective. When something happens in the news that mentions your company or product, professional or trade association, jump on it. Create a blog entry with the relevant links. Add a few sentences of commentary. You're done.
Do I sound like a broken record? The best way to get your blog noticed by readers, bloggers and the media - not to mention blog ranking tools like Technorati, Bloglines and Techmeme - is to blog consistently.
Grit your teeth and do it. Otherwise you're not credible.
If you can't hire somebody, identify your internal blogging enthusiast (or evangelist) and appoint him/her to oversee regular posting to the blog. It helps if this person has a knack for bloggy writing style and can also proofread for typos. If not, then appoint two people - one a copyeditor and the other a more senior person. More about blog editors.
See above. But this applies more specifically to getting approval for each blog post. Set up your blog program so that you have two senior managers responsible for okaying each blog entry. Since either one can do it, you're more likely to get through to one of them when you're in a hurry. Read about Southwest Airlines' blog approval process.
I have no affiliation with the corporate Blog Council (paid membership) but by all accounts it seems to be a great idea. The brainchild of Andy Sernovitz, founder of WOMMA (Word of Mouth Marketing Association), the mission of the council is to:
Function as a collective voice in support of responsible, ethics-based corporate blogs. Other issues the Council will address include:
Founding members include Cisco Systems, Coca-Cola, Dell, Gemstar-TV Guide, General Motors, Kaiser Permanente, Microsoft, Nokia, SAP and Wells Fargo. Learn more here.
More and more companies and organizations are waking up to the idea of using a blog - an informal, interactive Web site - as a key piece of their online strategy. I can't offer you any precise statistics on the number of company, employee or corporate blogs (nobody has done an official tally). But I can tell you that the pendulum has swung.
As of Dec. 9, 2007, 9.2% of Fortune 500s are blogging, according to the Fortune 500 Business Blogging Wiki.
Your customers or constituencies expect to be heard. They want to be listened to and they want you to talk back with corporate-speak stripped out. A blog is one of the most powerful ways to monitor the chatter about your brand, bring it back to your own turf and shape the discussion. Not control it per se. But demonstrate that you know people are talking and you have something useful to add.
Here are some books for your social media bookshelf:
Meatball Sundae by Seth Godin
Naked Conversations by Robert Scoble and Shel Israel
Now Is Gone by Geoff Livingston with Brian Solis
The Corporate Blogging Book by Debbie Weil
The New Influencers by Paul Gillin
The New Rules of Marketing and PR by David Meerman Scott
My holiday gift to you, dear reader, is dressed up in a smartly packaged PDF. It's an enhanced transcript of the teleconference I did for the Personal Branding Telesummit marking the 10th anniversary of Tom Peters' now iconic article: The Brand Called You. You can also listen to the audio recording of this session.
Download the PDF: How to Write a Great Business Blog
Download the MP3 audio recording of this teleconference.
In this one-hour audio conference we touched on the distinction between personal and business blogs, writing for search engines, blog writing tricks, inviting conversation with readers, blogs vs. e-newsletters, how to handle controversy, measuring success and more.
The Personal Branding Global Telesummit celebrated the 10th anniversary of the publication of Tom Peters' article: The Brand Called You with round-the-click teleconferences by dozens of speakers including William Arruda, Krishna De, Kirsten Dixson, John Jantsch, David Meerman Scott, Guy Kawasaki, Andy Sernovitz and many others.
2008 will be the year of corporate blogging
Want to get your group ready to blog, internally or externally? See page 3 of the PDF (or below) for my special offer on a customized one-day in-house workshop: Corporate Blogging in a Day. Note: I can only do three of these workshops so call right away if you're interested.
You provide the computers, Internet access and conference or training room. I will train your group (up to 20 people) in one day how to write an engaging, useful blog for your company or organization. It can be an internal or public-facing blog. You will learn:
► How to write blog-style in a warm, conversational voice and yet still be substantive
► How to write Google-friendly titles for your blog entries
► What to write about, what to link to and how to find material for your blog
► How to publicize your blog (internally or externally)
► How to handle controversial topics
► How to keep your blog fresh and topical
► What the role of a blog editor is and how to designate (or hire) one
► How to craft a Comments policy
► How to insert photos and images
► How to insert video clips
► Everything you need to know about the technical aspects of running your blog
At the end of the day you and your group will have learned how to blog. You will have created a fully-functional, attractive blog filled with enough content to convince your boss or other decision-maker to take the next steps to launch an internal or external blog program.
Included: 10 copies of The Corporate Blogging Book, workbook and handouts. Follow-up consulting by phone and email for four months beyond the engagement date.
Fee: 15% off regular fee of $10,000 (plus travel expenses). Offer good until Jan. 25, 2008. Engagement must be booked by the deadline but can be scheduled for a later date. Be sure to mention you are a subscriber to WordBiz Report.
Reach Debbie at +1 202.364.5705 Eastern or by email at debbie.weil@gmail.com or use Contact form.
The Corporate Blogging Book
Chapter 7 of The Corporate Blogging Book focuses on blog writing tips for multiple author and executive blogs. It contains examples, tips and checklists you won't find anywhere else. It's also one of my favorite chapters in the book. You can order TCBB on Amazon, Barnes & Noble or 800-CEO-Read.
PDF and Audio Recording: Content Strategy
Also available for purchase and instant download: How to Create a Content Strategy for Your Corporate Blog (MP3 audio recording and enhanced PDF transcript including screenshots).
| December 13, 2007 | ||
| 1:00 pm | to | 2:30 pm |
Audio conference for Bulldog Reporter's PR University: Write Like a Journalist: Newsroom Vets and PR Wordsmiths Reveal How to Write Compelling, Credible Copy That Sells.
Other panelists are Joan Stewart of Publicity Hound fame, Paul Furiga of Wordwrite Communications and Sandra Allen of Columbia College Chicago.
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