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Blogger Relations 101
I receive PR and media pitches daily.
I receive a lot of bad pitches daily.
As a result of this, and my bloggy friends
having the same experience, I've developed this Blogger
101 primer. If you're a marketer
or a PR practitioner, please read and
absorb this before you contact me or any
other blogger. Questions, comments
or concerns?
Contact me.
Introduction
Before getting into how to work with
bloggers, there are few basic points
that need to be covered off.
-
PR is genuine two-way communication
between a company and its publics
and/or audiences.
-
Advertising is a paid message.
-
Blogs are two-way communication
vehicles.
-
Bloggers are people who have
audiences.
-
If you want to communicate with a
blogger's audiences, you must
understand how to build relationships
with bloggers.
I know the above is both PR and
Marketing 101 and most professional PR
practitioners know and understand this,
but it's worth stating here.
Most bloggers are hobbyists and
are employed, are in school or have
lives--sometimes a combination of any or
all three. For the most part, we
do not charge access fees to access our work.
Blogging is about sharing genuine,
personal experiences with people, things
and concepts, so to maintain veracity, many
of us do not accept a salary or payment
in exchange for posting content.
Many of us are social and have developed
offline relationships with our readers
and with other bloggers, as a result,
we talk amongst ourselves.
Before pitching to
a blogger
Communicating with
bloggers
-
Approach
bloggers similarly to journalists
-
Again, I have to repeat:
bloggers do not replace
journalists, but we want similar
things. Your pitch
should include the 5Ws + 1H (who,
what, when, why, where and how),
along with a person's name and
corporate contact information so we may
follow up if we want more
information. Remember, like
journalists, we decide our
content.
-
We will contact you if we are
interested in your pitch.
Please do not pester us with
multiple communications for the
same product or event. If we do
contact you for more information,
please reply quickly.
-
"What
makes a PR person and a journalist
form a relationship is exactly
what makes a PR person and a
blogger form a relationship."
-
Personalize
the approach
-
Watch your
tone, mister
-
Don't be arrogant or rude.
A flag goes up instantly when a
pitch tells us we will "want to
feature this fabulous product/idea
etc." in our blog. Why? We
decide what is worth posting to
our blogs--not a marketer or a PR
practitioner and we decide
if it truly is a fabulous
product/idea etc--not a marketer
or PR practitioner. Leave all
arrogance, ego, pompousness and
smarmy marketing talk out
of your communications--we don't like it.
If
your approach is particularly odious, some of
us will post your communications
to our sites and offer
ever-so-helpful advice as to how
to do your job effectively.
Do you
really want your boss, potential
clients or shareholders reading
how you represent your
company? Notice
how long this para is, in
comparison to the rest? Yup,
it's a problem.
-
Some of us are actually your
colleagues, in your field or are
journalists writing under a
pseudonym. Think of it as pixilated karma.
-
Don't presume we will fall all
over ourselves to make you happy
because you contacted us.
We're nice, but not that nice.
-
We hate spam
and don't think much of being put on
mailing lists without being asked
-
Spell-check
and grammar-check your
communications
Blogging events, product
reviews and media events

REALLY BIG NO-NOs
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