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The Secret to a Successful Business Blog: Sell without Selling

 
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There is a problem with business blogs. The content and the approach to business blogging seems to fall into two categories: overselling and underselling. What you want is to sell without selling at all.

It can be done, but before we talk about how, let’s make sure we understand the problem.

Overselling

money faceThe overselling business blog is easy to spot. Each blog post is another obvious hard sales pitch. You know the kind. When you read them, you picture a smarmy used-car salesman type or the voice you hear in your mind’s ear as you read sounds like a commercial voice-over announcer.

The overseller offers the reader nothing of any real value. There is no helpful content. There is no reason to subscribe to such a blog. What at first appears to be genuine content is really just another sales pitch designed to string you along to the next sales pitch, and so forth.

Well-meaning companies can easily fall into this trap. Why does it happen? I suspect it’s because a marketing person (which to most people is something like an evil magician) told them all about how blogs were Great Marketing and that they Need to Get a Blog Now. Neither the business owner nor the marketer truly understand blogging at all.

The result of the overselling approach is that the blog’s traffic eventually dies down to nothing, because there’s nothing useful on it. The business owner denounces blogs as just a fad, a buzzword, and that’s the end of that.

Underselling

money face 2The underselling blog doesn’t appear to be a business at all, and that is its problem. The underselling blog has free and perhaps useful content. But the content has a very weak connection to the business’ service or product offerings.

The insidious nature of the problem with underselling blogs is that they appear to be doing everything right: they are following all the best advice out there on how to blog successfully. The problem is that the people involved don’t think there’s a problem! After all: traffic is up, RSS subscribers are up, email subscribers are up, people leave comments and love the free content. But… they never become customers.

What is the purpose of the blog and how does that relate to the purpose of the business? The business reaps no reward for blogging. The blog was created because some people “got” blogging (which is great, don’t get me wrong) and so it was thought that having a blog would help the business.

But there was no real understanding of how to run a blog that does that. The model we’re all expected to live up to is ideal for personal blogs, meta-blogs (blogs about blogging itself), and make-money blogs, but it doesn’t serve the needs of business blogs very well.

The end result of an underselling blog is that it’s a money sink when it should be revenue source. Attempts to fix the problem risk turning an underselling blog into an overselling blog, killing off the traffic.

Sell without selling: the way to a successful business (blog)

Overselling and underselling both lead to dangerous ends for a business blog, which can in turn lead to dangerous ends for the business itself. You might be tempted to think that figuring out a way to strike a balance is what’s needed, but I don’t believe that’s the case. What’s needed is to not sell at all, but to change the way you create content for the blog. You need to sell without selling.

What is the purpose of a business blog? To further the objectives of the business. The main objective of any business (whether it’s one person strong or a whole company) is to provide value in exchange for money at a profit. It usually provides this value in the form of products or services which are purchased for a fee. A business blog serves two groups of people: current and future customers. The content of the blog needs to serve these two groups of people or it will fail.

Put simply, a business blog needs to bring in business. And while there is no question that gonzo amounts of firehose traffic can turn this into nothing more than a numbers game, I believe it’s better to work smarter, not harder. When it comes to generating leads and acquiring new customers, it’s quality that matters much more than quantity.

The better the blog serves current customers, the more a casual visitor will take notice of this and become inclined to be a customer, too. By using the blog as a means to serve current and future customers, you are selling without selling. You avoid the trap of overselling, in which the blog content is too pushy, too much like a commercial; and you avoid the pitfalls of your blog becoming a waste of time and money with no return on investment from underselling.

Easier said than done, but I’m working on it

money face 3So how does a business blog serve current and future customers? Part of the answer came to me when my thinking led me to create my ten types of business blog posts. I began to take a serious look at business blogging and what its special needs are. My thinking evolved rapidly and was confirmed and enhanced by people in my network with whom I discussed this. It has become what I call Gateway Blogging. I’m developing a vision of what Gateway Blogging will be, and I see it as nothing less than the new way to frame and think about business blogging. More than that, it’s developing into an actionable system that anyone can learn and follow.

I believe the stage is being set for a big surge in blogging in the near future. The first wave of blogging was personal blogs, the second wave was splogs (automated spam blogs), but the third wave will be widespread growth in business blogging. And yet there is a noticeable lack of good training and resources to help people with this. My vision is to help people achieve successful business blogs via Gateway Blogging techniques and principles.

Although I’m still developing its ideas and testing its methods, I feel that what I’ve outlined in this post offers a strong glimpse into real success for a business blog. Your take-aways from this are to avoid overselling and underselling, and instead focus providing content that appeals to current and future customers. In the future, I’m going to go into more depth about how to do just that. I’d like you to come along with me on this journey: to be sure you don’t miss the next post, please subscribe.

Photos: Jessica Shannon under CC license

24 Comments

  1. Posted December 8, 2007 at 2:02 pm | Permalink

    Thank you Michael! This one is really useful! Now I understand what I do wrong ;-)
    On a side note, I know a blog that already does that right, the dreamhost blog:
    http://www.dreamhoststatus.com/

  2. Posted December 8, 2007 at 3:35 pm | Permalink

    This is an interesting concept: sell without selling. I’d rather see it like sell to those who are ready and willing to buy. Provoke and spot opportunities, transform them into needs, then supply your audience with benefits which fulfill their needs, support your benefits with great, reliable features, and there you are! As you also said, this is much easier to say than to do, especially in the virtual space, where we are offended every minute with aggressive selling for things we don’t need. I get maybe 50 messages every day, inviting me to enlarge my manhood, despite the fact that I’d be really sad and worried if I woke up one day with one of those grown on my body. And still, I buy from smart sellers.
    Great article. I love the photos idea.

  3. Posted December 8, 2007 at 5:09 pm | Permalink

    End of the day, I agree. Sales is ultimate counter for business blog whether you have successful marketing blog or not.

  4. Michael Martine
    Posted December 8, 2007 at 8:11 pm | Permalink

    @Tad: How does a visitor to your blog know that you are for hire? Sometimes you make it known by what you say in a post, but that gets lost on anyone who isn’t subscribed and reading everything you write anyway. If you’re getting all the work you want at comfortable rates, then I guess all I have to say is congratulations. But otherwise you would be an underseller.

  5. Michael Martine
    Posted December 8, 2007 at 8:20 pm | Permalink

    @Simonne: Thanks for the thoughtful response. I’d like to address a point you made:

    I’d rather see it like sell to those who are ready and willing to buy.

    That would be nice, except that is only a small percentage of your visitors. I think it’s safe to say that over 90% of the people who visit Remarkablogger aren’t “ready and willing” to hire me. At least, not at the beginning. By providing content that increases my authority, shows my knowledge and experience, and that others find truly helpful and useful, I can help a person who is only slightly interested in the idea of having a blogging coach move closer towards making a serious inquiry about my services. That takes time to build up the trust. One of the main ways that I do that is by example. I wouldn’t be much of a blogging coach if my own blog wasn’t successful! :)

  6. Michael Martine
    Posted December 8, 2007 at 8:23 pm | Permalink

    @Ken: Yes, if it doesn’t help the business grow and make money, then what’s the point? The relationship between the blog and the revenue isn’t as clear-cut of a cause-and-effect as writing copy for a product description or doing A/B split testing on landing pages, but you’re right: at the end of the day, sales matter!

  7. Posted December 8, 2007 at 11:02 pm | Permalink

    Thanks for the great post. I would have to agree that overselling business blogs are extremely annoying and underselling ones are not very useful to the business. I do not have a business blog, but in a way it is a business to present my own brand and thoughts. I have a movie review blog, but I think what you have said here can be applied to my blog in a way. Thanks and I love the pictures by the way.

  8. Michael Martine
    Posted December 8, 2007 at 11:09 pm | Permalink

    @David: I’m glad you found it applicable even though your blog doesn’t fit the business blog type I’m describing in it. Luckily for you, there is a tremendous wealth of excellent advice for blogs that earn revenue via advertising. Nice blog, by the way. I like how you pick certain themes for your reviews during a month–great idea. :)

  9. Posted December 9, 2007 at 3:49 am | Permalink

    “I think it’s safe to say that over 90% of the people who visit Remarkablogger aren’t “ready and willing” to hire me.”
    That’s right, Michael, that was exactly my point. You don’t sell directly to those people, you just try to discover their needs and to make them aware, and only then you’ll pitch your services. Meanwhile, you build trust and authority, and you prove your skills with your blog, which is a must, indeed.

  10. Michael Martine
    Posted December 9, 2007 at 9:03 am | Permalink

    @Simonne: Ah, I think you and I are really talking about the same thing, but we have different understandings of the words. I’m talking about writing on your blog in a way that is designed to get more sales. In other words, blogging is selling.

    I’m not speaking of the actual transaction of money, as in a sale. I do not wait until someone says “now I am ready” to give my sales pitch. The entire blog is the sales pitch, all the time, do you follow? Every single thing I do is part of the sales pitch. The sales pitch is not whatever I say right before you make a “yes” decision to do business with me. The sales pitch has been going on in a low-key manner that didn’t seem like a sales pitch at all the whole time.

    I hope that clears things up. Like I said, I think we’re really thinking along the same lines. Hopefully I didn’t just confuse the issue more! :)

  11. Posted December 9, 2007 at 10:59 am | Permalink

    From a visitor point of view, I don’t really care if you are overselling or underselling. All I wanted to know is “what in it for me”.
    And I guess this is the point that your post is trying to bring across, am I right?

    Ultimately it is really the value of the contents (note the ’s’ behind the content, because it really take a great deal of content to establish its value) that make people coming back for more. Rather than focusing on selling products, a business blog can achieve more by focusing on selling value to their visitors, readers and maybe potential customers.

  12. Michael Martine
    Posted December 9, 2007 at 11:50 am | Permalink

    @Damien: Yes, that’s right. Everyone who visits a business blog is either an existing customer or a potential customer from the point of view of the blogger/business owner. The people who visit are concerned with getting value for their time and attention. However, if visitors never become customers, then the blog is underselling and wasting its own time. The blog has to bring in business, and it can’t do that if people don’t see a connection between the blog and the business. You’ll notice that on my blog are easy-to-spot links to my blog consulting services. Another good example of this is Chris Garret. The content of our blogs does not directly say “buy my services” but rather showcases our compentencies and experience. In some cases, we refer to our work, which also strengthens the connection between the business and the blog. This doesn’t detract at all from the value of our content, rather, it enhances it.

    Thanks for really thinking about the issue and for your contribution to this discussion! :)

  13. Posted December 12, 2007 at 7:25 am | Permalink

    Great useful post, I also find overselling blogs really irritating.

  14. Posted December 12, 2007 at 9:35 am | Permalink

    I am so looking forward to your Gateway Blogging system. You are so right on about both of these scenarios. Many of the businesses I see that are not effective with their blogs is due to the fact that they are underselling. One person even told me that they did not want to link to their site (even though it was completely appropriate for the informative post) because they didn’t want to seem to ’salesy.’ My next question was… what is the point of this blog then? Blogs can take a tremendous amount of resources to maintain. Wasting time and money on a business blog that does not have a purpose is just ridiculous. Believe me, when your Gateway Blogging program is complete, I will be passing around the link to most of my clients!

  15. Michael Martine
    Posted December 12, 2007 at 10:15 am | Permalink

    @Christine: Thanks! This post was an example of a Gateway Blogging technique called a vision post. Vision posts present a problem, a vision, and then a commitment to fulfill the vision–all without engaging in sales talk (overselling) but it doesn’t ignore that the blogger will fulfill the vision through business and services, so it doesn’t undersell, either. It’s an indirect way for the blogger connect to the business in a post that doesn’t push any product at all.

    In order to prevent perfect from becoming the enemy of good, I’m going to put up the Gateway Blogging site by end of this week. Greg and I need to take our discussion out into the public arena, and everyone will be welcome to join us.

  16. Posted December 14, 2007 at 4:20 am | Permalink

    wow, what a great article. I ahve been trying for quite some time to figure out this blogging thing and that really gave me some great direction. I really enjoyed the comments to this article to see what other people are doing. On my site http://www.vareficenter.com I thought I was “doing a blog” because I have a little news section with one post. Obviously I need to do more with that. Bye the way, does anybody know how I can create a forum on my site? Is there a an easy way versus a hard way of doing this? I think that it would really add value to my customers but I don’t really know where to start. Anybody have some advice for me?

  17. Posted December 15, 2007 at 5:19 pm | Permalink

    Michael
    Gateway blogging is just what I need. In my plan, I am currently underselling on purpose as I am interested in building a following and a relationship with my readers. I was postponing selling until I was more established. But in reading this post and Christine’s comments I am begining to wonder if I am missing an opportunity and should start selling sooner.

    I’ll have to give it some thought - and I look forward to the next installment of this series.

  18. Posted December 16, 2007 at 9:04 pm | Permalink

    There seems to be a bit of a Seth Godin influence here. That’s a good thing!

  19. Michael Martine
    Posted December 16, 2007 at 9:11 pm | Permalink

    @Mark: To say Seth Godin has had a bit of an influence on me would be like saying that the Atlantic Ocean has a bit of an influence on hurricane formation. :) And yes, it’s a very good thing.

  20. Posted December 18, 2007 at 3:45 pm | Permalink

    You need to find the balance between monetizing and producing quality information that is interesting for the readers.Not an easy task to do.Great article, thanks!

  21. Posted April 22, 2008 at 11:04 am | Permalink

    There was a great quote from Edelman in the Dallas Morning News the other day:

    “It’s clear that when it comes to traditional authority figures – whether they’re chief executives or heads of state – people trust them less,” says Mr. Edelman. “Employees are the new credible source of information. We have data that shows an employee blog is five times more credible than a CEO blog – and I say this as a CEO blogger.”

    To me the secret to successful business blogging starts with widespread employee blogging.

    To see the whole Edelman post you can see it here: http://blogging.compendiumblog.com/blog/blogs-in-business/0/0/people-dont-trust-ceos-they-trust-employees

    Best,

    Chris Baggott
    CEO
    Compendium Blogware
    http://www.compendiumblogware.com

  22. Posted April 22, 2008 at 12:45 pm | Permalink

    @ Chris Baggot - Thanks for sharing that awesome quote!

  23. Posted May 26, 2008 at 6:17 pm | Permalink

    Thanks Michael.

    I found this through your comment on Chris Garrett’s blog.

    I like this approach very much. I really hate overselling and think it will lead to bloggers being regarded as the sleazy used car salesmen of the 21st century. So, up ’til now I’ve probably gone for the underselling trap.

    I am so glad someone has figured a way of selling that I can live with. I am very grateful to you. Heartfelt thanks.

  24. Posted May 26, 2008 at 7:58 pm | Permalink

    @Evan - You’re quite welcome. Glad you found it so useful. :)

8 Trackbacks

  1. [...] (Source) I believe the stage is being set for a big surge in blogging in the near future. The first wave of blogging was personal blogs, the second wave was splogs (automated spam blogs), but the third wave will be widespread growth in business blogging. And yet there is a noticeable lack of good training and resources to help people with this. My vision is to help people achieve successful business blogs via Gateway Blogging techniques and principles. [...]

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  5. By » Carnival of Business and Entrepreneurship #3 on January 3, 2008 at 8:51 pm

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