Posts tagged benefits of blogging
Five unexpected benefits of blogging
Sep 4th
I generally focus on the business benefits of social media but a recent conversation with my friend (and uber blogger) Jeff Bullas revealed that we had both received benefits from blogging that reached beyond mere dollars and cents. For both of us, blogging had changed our lives in some unexpected ways.
To provide some balance to the discussion, I thought I would feature some of the benefits that we don’t often talk about on our blog posts:
Blogging heals
… and by this I mean literally physically and psychologically heals. I discovered that both Jeff and I had started to blog at the same time following tragedies in our lives. During this difficult time, blogging allowed me to connect with people in ways that lifted me out of the darkness. And I found that the act of blogging lowered my blood pressure during a very stressful period. Writing every day was an important part of healing both my mind and body.
Blogging connects
I am not the kind of person who has dozens of friends. I have few close friends that I have held onto through the years. Yet so many people on the blog have have become legitimate, close friends in such a short period of time. And not just “Facebook friends” but “come over for dinner friends.” When I visited Sweden, Jon Buscall was there to greet me and show me around his lovely city of Stockholm. When I landed in Estonia, Kimmo Linkama took the day off to show me around this beautiful country. And when I visit Ireland this month, Ian Cleary will be organizing a celebratory Tweet-up with my new friends in Dublin. How would this have ever happened without blogging?
Blogging defines
Where do you stand on issues in the industry? Is Facebook on the decline or on the rise? What is the best way to measure the success of social media programs? What does Google + need to do to break-out? How do you integrate social media with traditional media? How do small businesses find the time to create meaningful content for the web?
Blogging helps you think through these topics and help clarify your — and your business’s positions — on vital industry topics. Blogging gets my mind organized.
Blogging teaches
And by this I mean, it teaches ME. Here’s a secret. I rarely have the answers. But I do have some good questions! Many of my blog posts are incomplete. I may be thinking about an idea or a theory that I’m not sure about. So I’ll throw something out there and let the community hash it out. I learn something from the community every day and I’ve incorporated these learnings into my classroom teaching, future blog posts, and even my books.
Blogging Inspires
Two years ago, we had our first Social Slam conference in Knoxville, TN. It was basically a gathering of the {grow} community and hundreds of the people who have come to know each other through the blog made the pilgrimage. They came from every corner of the country and overcame many difficulties to get here. They wanted to meet each other, these new connections and friends. I’ve had a great career but this was a real highlight. In inspires me to see a blog as a force that brings people together in a small but meaningful way.
I know this isn’t the kind of blog post you can take to your boss and say, “see, we should do this too!” But I did want to show that from a personal side, there are other benefits that you might not read about in the business blogging books.
What about you? What do you get out of your personal blogging?
How One Book Changed My Life
Feb 16th
This is a special week for a couple of reasons. Yesterday, for the first time, I held my newly-minted book Return On Influence for the first time (What’s that? You want to see a picture? Well … OK.) And today marks the one-year anniversary of my first book, The Tao of Twitter.
No matter what else happens in my life, “Tao” will hold a very special place in my heart. The book has defied the embarrassingly small amount of marketing I put into it to become a global sensation that is touching thousands of lives. I knew this book could help people but I never dreamed the profound influence it would have. Nearly every day I receive a message with some story about how the book has impacted a life.
So I think it is only fitting to commemorate the little book’s birthday by shining the light on somebody else — one of the book’s many fans, Tony Dowling. Tony is a Welsh businessman and entrepreneur. I had never heard of him before he sent this unsolicited message to me last week entitled “How One Book Changed My Life.” Here’s Tony …
There I was, minding my own business.
Raising my family, working hard and generally trying to enjoy life, when along came an amazing book, a book that has changed my life. Not in some scarily enormous unbelievable way, but in small and elegant and permanent ways. I read The Tao of Twitter, and things started to happen. Things that were good.
I’m 42 years old and consider myself the luckiest guy in the world. I run a commercial radio station in the UK, a pretty big and successful one. I have an amazing wife, we have been together for 20 odd years, and still feel like we did when we first met. I also have two amazing children and largely because of those two little guys I thought life couldn’t be better.
Turns out I was wrong.
I read the Tao of Twitter around three months ago and was immediately inspired. As a media owner I like to keep up with the changes in the world of marketing, advertising, and communications, so I devour books like “Tao” and regularly, but never has one struck me so deeply and so quickly.
A flash and a jolt
I had a flash of inspiration — a genuine, physical feeling — that hit me around the part of the book that talks about “authentic helpfulness.” I decided that I was going to try to follow this path, to stop selling and be selfless … to give back to the universe.
I was going to start out in social media, build a blog, and use Tao as my guide.
I decided to blog about what I know, and freely give away all the knowledge I had. My blog is literally called “Completely Free Sales Advice.” I put my heart into it and created a lot of content quickly — a collection of my thoughts about selling, advertising, and marketing. Readers started to appear, as if by magic.
Using techniques lifted directly from the book, I slowly built an audience for the blog and that audience started to become a community, becoming more and more involved in the discussions.
At first, many of my existing contacts came forward and asked for help. Then, they started to encourage others to join in. After only a few dozen blogs I had around 15 “clients” forming a community around “Completely Free Sales Advice.”
Over the months, word continued to spread, through Twitter of course, and Facebook too. And more and more readers are becoming active in the community — and we are all helping each other! Every one is taking part.
Perfect predictions and business benefits
What has amazed me the most, is the almost perfect predictions the book makes about the journey I have undertaken.
The people following the blog are slowly but surely melding into a genuine community — Interested only in helping each other out. Some of these people have become my good friends, people who have challenged me, and inspired me through their own authentic helpfulness.
And together, we are beginning to collaborate and create new business benefits together. Pippa Davies (a blogger, a psychologist and creativity expert) and I have formed an informal alliance to help each other improve our writing, share best practices, and realize more traffic to both of our sites. My new social media friend has in turn introduced me to numerous contacts that have become invaluable business partners in my “proper’ job” at the radio station. And more amazingly, she has put me in contact with professionals that will help me with caring for my beautiful autistic little boy.
And there’s Dr. Sarah Bruton, an entrepreneur running a local spa business. She is beginning to keep a record of the measurable, positive differences we have made in revenue, genuine ROI, and other tangible benefits from the social media lessons we have learned from The Tao of Twitter. Sarah will be my first guest poster, as she details the benefits she has gained from taking part.
The Tao, The Path
The list goes on and on. All of this goodness seemed to come out of the blue. Learning the lessons of authentic helpfulness has immediately paid me back for whatever small help I have managed to provide to anyone else.
So thank you Mark. Thank you because the Tao of Twitter is changing my life every day in small ways, and is giving me the inspiration to change it in big ways too.
And thanks to any one reading this as well, because I’m sure that at some point in the future we’ll connect and help each other, too. Because that’s the way of things, you see. I read about it in a book.
Tony Dowling is a dad, husband, commercial radio station Managing Director specializing in Sales, Marketing, Social Media, Blogging, Golfing and Reading (not necessarily in that order). Follow his blog at http://www.completelyfreesalesadvice.wordpress.com
Have You Hugged Your Blogger Today?
Feb 12th
Over the past few years I have had the pleasure to get to know many of the great marketing bloggers I admire so much. And it is amazing how similar we are. We seem to thrive on the relentless pace and challenge of producing consistently great content. Most bloggers do the work out of love, passion, and a drive to make a difference … not for money. In fact, it is very, very difficult to directly monetize a blog.
I love blogging, but as you can imagine, it’s a ton of work. And we might plow hours of work into a piece we’re proud of only to have it considered “old” a week later!
That’s why it is so exhilarating to get an email like the one I received this week:
“I’m sure it’s difficult to know sometimes if you make a difference in this world. You did. Thank you.”
Now THAT is something to keep a blogger going!
You see, on our blogs, we may receive tons of comments, but rarely do we get any feedback. There’s a difference between “I agree with your point” and “Your work is appreciated” or “You are making a difference.”
When was the last time you gave a “virtual hug” to your blogger and tell him or her about your appreciation for their long hours and sacrifices to make their little piece of the world a better and more interesting place?
Valentine’s Day is this week and I think that’s a great time to take a moment, reach out to these hard-working folks, and show a blogger some love. Can we make this the first Hug a Blogger Week?
I’m going to take 10 minutes to drop a note to a few of my favorite bloggers today and just say “THANKS!” How about you?
25 Non-Financial Benefits of Business Blogging
Feb 7th
While the use of blogging as a marketing and communications platform continues to grow for many organizations, you still might be facing this question from your boss — “Why are we doing this?”
The most obvious answer is that you are ultimately trying to influence some behavior or attitude. You want your readers to buy, register, understand, donate, attend, etc. But there are many other tangible benefits of business blogging that might be more difficult to measure … but no less important. Here are 25 non-financial benefits of business blogging:
- Create a database of answers — Blog about customer questions. Use links to those posts to save time and answer future questions.
- Reward employees — Shine a spotlight on brilliant employees by featuring their ideas and accomplishments on your blog.
- Marketing integration — Turn content from your blog into sales and marketing materials.
- SEO — Having an active, relevant blog can have a powerful impact on search engine ranking.
- Point of differentiation — If your competitors don’t blog, is this an opportunity to stand out in your niche?
- Solidify POV — The act of blogging forces you to be clear on your company’s position on issues.
- Re-purpose the content — Your blog content can be cost-effectively re-purposed for newsletters, eBooks and other publications.
- Humanize your brand — There is probably no more powerful and cost-effective way to show the “soft” side of your business than storytelling through a blog.
- Sign of activity — A current blog confirms that your website is updated and relevant.
- PR — Tweets and Facebook status updates probably aren’t going to attract the attention of reporters. Helpful blog posts will.
- Internal communications — Don’t forget about the impact blogs have on your internal audience.
- Customer engagement — Creating a dialogue with your customers can lead to powerful business benefits. Why not have customers contribute posts?
- Solve problems — Some companies like Caterpillar are using blogs to crowd-source technical problem solving.
- New product development ideas — A hot trend is using the blog platform to deliver new product and service ideas.
- Voice of authority — Is your company the industry leader? What better way to demonstrate that than a voice of leadership on your blog?
- Market segmentation — Many companies (especially in high tech) have multiple blogs to reach customers by different interest, demographic or geography.
- Identify advocates — Blog readers may be among your brand’s most powerful fans.
- Constant customer connection — Calling on customers is expensive. But a blog post can be a little “sales call” every week.
- Test ideas — Need to take a position? Why not test it with the blog community first?
- Assemble chapters for a book — Many companies piece together blog posts to create larger publications.
- Research — Throw a question out there and use your blog as a cost-effective and rapid way to get feedback.
- Networking – Blog connections have led to finding interns, suppliers and partners for my business.
- Establish emotional connection — Blogging’s ability to connect through a story is powerful — especially for non-profits.
- Social Proof — Simply having a blog sends a message that your company “gets” social media.
- Crisis management – If you have a blog, you don’t have to rely on the press to get the story straight. Your blog can put the facts out there.
Is this list complete? What other benefits are you realizing from your blog?











You’re in marketing for one reason: Grow.
Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
-Mark Schaefer

