Showing posts with label content. Show all posts
Showing posts with label content. Show all posts

Thursday, July 28, 2016

How Often Should You Update Your Business's Blog?

Any business with a website should be aware that maintaining only a stagnant web presence isn’t good either for improving your reach or customer base, increasing interest in your products or services, or satisfying Google’s algorithm (and improving your chances of being found in Google searches). The shorter of version of this is: if you have a website, update it. Specifically, you should be putting out original, accessible content on your blog on at least a semi-regular basis.

Many small business owners don’t know what kind of content is appropriate, though. It’s more complicated when the business’s specialty isn’t general audience. A dermatologist can talk about skin and skin care for an infinite number of blog posts. All people have skin and have therefore experienced skin problems. A vendor that sells and installs engineering software can only write so many posts about why to purchase that engineering software from that company. Businesses with more targeted products or services must think outside the box more.

What makes a good blog post? This is what Corporate Conversions, a West Michigan marketing company, has to say:

A web post should:

  • Be at least 400 words long. SEO copywriting guidelines suggest 250 at a bare minimum, but unless a post has a number of pictures, you need four or so paragraphs to tell a story.
  • Center around topics within your industry that people have questions about. These can be news stories, how-to articles, or even items of controversy. People who Google topics involving your industry might find you via those new articles, and you may gain new customers.
  • Have pictures. Everyone loves them. The more original, interesting ones you can add, the better. If you can show your employees enjoying themselves or demonstrating what your company does, that’s great.
  • Highlight company changes, updates, or interactions with the community. If your company does volunteer work or raises money for a good cause, talk about it!
  • Include links - both outside and inside. Link to your own content so that new readers have exposure to it. Link to external articles that illustrate your points or give your readers more to explore.

These are the basics of what needs to be included, but the most important thing is to know your audience and write to engage it. The best blog pieces will be watercooler content - meaning, people will want to talk to other people about it because it either raises questions, is entertaining, puts forward an opinion that can be discussed, or otherwise captures some emotion. The more eyes you get on your blog content, the more people will know your name and what you do.

When you have persuaded people to talk about your content to others, then you have created truly successful, sometimes even viral, marketing. It doesn’t get any better than that. Word of mouth operates as both advertising and recommendation. It also builds trust in your company and your brand - if it’s positive. It’s your job to build and channel positive web content.

If you don’t know what to write, make a list of questions your clients or customers ask about, and address them one by one. It’s also helpful to bring up industry concerns or happenings, or successes your business has recently had. Focus on the practical ways your products or services benefit people. Those things are easy to discuss over the watercooler.

If you feel stumped about what to put on your blog, remember that something is better than nothing, and even simple posts with pictures will be interesting to many people. Talk about your business’s service ethic, highlight your employees’ skills, or link to interviews people have done with other publications. The name of the game is new content, updated regularly.




Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Make Sure Your Company's Website Doesn't Disappoint!

The fiasco that is HealthCare.gov is known far and wide now. Contractors who did the design and coding have found themselves answering questions from Congress, doing their best to recover from one of a handful of governmental flubs in recent history. Try to bring America into a new era of health care coverage and then drop the ball this hard--it's going to be difficult to recover from. But unlike a few weeks ago, we're not here to talk about health insurance for your small business or mistakes that the federal government has made: We're here to talk about the value of having a strong website.

You might be asking, "What makes a website strong?" Well, just like a new building, the most important thing is a solid infrastructure. This means making sure that there is no extraneous code; this means making sure that each and every link is unbroken; this means making sure that everything you want visitors to see and know is accessible. Each of these things can be easily overlooked by amateur website designers, making your site potentially unstable. Knowing what a company needs for its online presence is essential and experienced players are more likely to get it right on the first try. Once you have a reliable base, it's time to bring value to your site. This is easily done by generating quality content.

Remember how I mentioned keeping the important things accessible? This is essential both when developing code and content. If you ramble on your website, it's likely that potential customers (assuming you're looking to garner more) will leave--wordy pages can cause a website visitor to quickly jump ship. These visitors are looking for the vital information they are either already seeking or do not know that they need to know yet. So give them the information they want--usually things like your product or service, your location, your hours, and your contact information--as well as a reason to stay by posting content that is both interesting and relevant.

Imagine how much business these pandas could bring
you! | Source: Crochet Dreamz
For instance, if you are a grocery store, you could post recipes and dinner ideas, provided that you stock all of the ingredients. Doing small things like this can bring visitors and customers back to your website and back to your store over and over again--we all know that repeat business is a good sign for a company. Obviously, this means making a habit of posting such content. Customers often look to the companies they support for predictability, so this means being regular about such updates. If you put up a blog post with a recipe on Monday, make sure you do it every Monday. Or if you have a store that sells crafts and decide to give your readers the directions to crochet a cute animal-themed hat, perhaps make a themed day of the week a la Instagram (I'm looking at you #tbt also known as Throwback Thursday, when a users post old picture of themselves). Whatever your business is, regular content is needed to refresh your website. Not only does it give customers a reason to visit again, it also lends legitimacy to your search engine ranking by showing that your site is active.