Business
Blogging is Coming – Are You Ready?
Deeper Into R. Soble's and S. Irael's
Naked Conversations
David Dalka, September 2006
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Robert Scoble and Shel Israel have written a unique,
research driven work of art. Naked Conversations contains excerpts
of hundreds of interviews about both the best practices and mistakes
of corporate blogs. It is a refined read that comes from multiple
and diverse perspectives and tells interesting stories of both success
and failure.
Important interrelated success blogging tips include:
talk - don’t sell, post often and be interesting, write on
issues you know and are passionate about, blogging saves money but
costs time, and you get smarter by listening to what people tell
you. Blogs are also democratizing the media, driving increased corporate
transparency and are rendering traditional corporate PR practices
obsolete.
Why is this book vital to your business? If you aren’t
blogging and listening to your customers, you are losing an opportunity
to innovate, increase brand loyalty and positive word of mouth.
In addition, the odds are increasing that your competitors will
be gaining competitive advantages through blogging.
The book’s best tip is “read a bunch of
blogs before you start.” I couldn’t agree more. You
learn about how to name your blog and find your voice, keep it simple
and showing your passion and authority for a topic. Blogs that would
be similar to yours are easy to find by searching key words on blog
search engines like Technorati, Sphere or IceRocket.
Peter Drucker one stated that “Businesses are
not paid to reform customers. They are paid to satisfy customers.”
Blogs may transform strategy pushes to a place where customer listening
drives relevant just in time innovation. The foreword of the book
is by Tom Peters, I do not consider this an accident as we appear
to be at the dawn of a significant period of disruptive, yet positive,
change management. Blogging is already breaking down layers between
the customer and senior executive in companies that have adopted
proper blog etiquette. Soon quality may again be defined in terms
of actual customer satisfaction and not in shaving pennies off of
the cost of providing a product or service.
A critical theme of the book is
how the blogosphere builds trust. I emailed Shel Israel and
discussed that the Internet’ foundation is trust and the publisher
counted that the word trust is mentioned in the book over 70 times
– about once every three pages! The world craves and wants
trust in all of its transactions. Shel responded, “I think
you are right in that what's going on is all about trust/not trust.
I just didn't realize that point fully when we were writing the
book.” This shows we are all still learning and innovating
from the conversation, won’t you please come join us?
_______
Author
David Dalka is a marketing evangelist that has created revenue and
retention in exponential growth organizations which thrived on learning
from their customers and has experience driving marketing and sales
force change in Fortune 500 organizations. David is always seeking
opportunities to learn about organizations in detail and broaden
his network, especially in ecommerce, mobile search, search engine
marketing and interactive advertising. David can be reachedd via
or via daviddalka.com.
See Robert Scoble’s keynote speech at the 10th
Annual Strategic Public Relations Conference in Chicago on September
21, 2006 - www.ragan.com/pr2006
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