Trouble viewing this email? Read it on the Web here.
Get To The Point from MarketingProfs

Make Nice With Bloggers

Getting a well-established blogger to cover your product or service can be a marketing coup that raises your company’s visibility and leads to sales. But before you dash off stream-of-consciousness pitches to various online celebrities, consider the advice of Toby Bloomberg, who writes the Diva Marketing Blog.

Here are some rules from her recent primer on pitching etiquette:

Read the blog. Almost nothing annoys bloggers (or, indeed, anyone in the media) more than a pitch that makes it clear you barely read what they write. Get familiar with the blogger’s work and tailor your pitch accordingly. An extra tip: Find a relevant angle with the background info and particular interests the bloggers provide on their “About” page.

Say hello. Let the blogger know who you are, and say a little about your company. Make it easy for the blogger to research the topic with links to your Web site and offers of further information. Ask if it's okay to send follow-up emails. If the answer is no, take the blogger off your mailing list immediately.

Schmooze. Take the time to comment on blog posts, or email a note about something they wrote. It’s a give-and-take world: If you take an interest in the blogger’s subject, the blogger will be more inclined to take an interest in yours.

The Po!nt: A blogger might not run with your item, but almost all are receptive to a polite, relevant pitch.

Source: For more information, read Diva Marketing Blog.

Previous Articles

How to Help Customers Remember Your Brand
Would a Rose by Any Other Name Smell as Sweet?
More articles

 

Add a Comment
Share This: http://www.marketingprofs.com/short-articles/96/make-nice-with-bloggers

Vol. 1, No. 46    July 23, 2007

MarketingProfs, LLC | 5315 B FM 1960 W #191 | Houston TX 77069

This email was sent to (%%email%%). To ensure that you continue receiving our emails,
please add us to your address book or safe list.

manage your preferences | opt out by going here.
Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails.
Copyright © 2000-2009 MarketingProfs, LLC All Rights Reserved.