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Marketing Roadmaps

Susan Getgood

Rambling down my road: random-ish thoughts on blogger relations and expertise

May 29, 2010 by Susan Getgood

For the past few months, I’ve been head down working on Professional Blogging For Dummies, and there just hasn’t been a lot of time to write blog posts. A few things were just too important to let slide, like the FTC/Ann Taylor Loft story, but for the most part I’ve had to let many juicy stories go.

Like the pitch for an FDA approved douche sent to bloggers of both genders. Or the one for a snake repellent sent to mom bloggers in Manhattan. Seriously, outside of the zoo, how often do you see a snake of the reptilian variety in New York City?

Then there are the brand ambassador programs that seem to be multiplying like rabbits. For example, the Sears Outlet brand ambassador program with the laundry list of requirements for the bloggers but zero compensation.

Somehow, we’ve lost the distinction between public relations, which relies on a compelling story to “earn” the placement in the media outlet (hence the term “earned media,” more about that below), and promotion, which is a sales-related activity closely related to advertising. Many blogger programs are really about promotion, but they offer little or no compensation to the bloggers for what is essentially advertising space. Read Liz Gumbinner’s posts for more on this: Nothing is free, except it seems, a mommyblogger and In defense of PR.

And then there was last week’s dust-up between a blogger who took umbrage at, and posted about, a specific pitch, and a pretty strong response from the mentioned agency. I haven’t looked at the specifics of the post or program in question, but my immediate reaction reading the agency’s post was a certain amount of amazement that the author didn’t seem  realize that the very questions she was raising in her post have been circling around the blogosphere for years. Read Julie Pippert’s The elephant in the room? Not so much for more about this specific post and its aftermath.

Earned media is a dinosaur
I participated in my first conference panel on blogger relations at BlogHer Business in 2007. More than 3 years later, I often feel like we haven’t moved forward at all. We’re still arguing about the same things — Are the pitches good, targeted and relevant? Are bloggers journalists? And so on. Blah Blah Blah.

This discussion is old and tired, and it’s not going anywhere except down a rathole. We need to move on. As Julie (@jpippert)  and I discussed on Twitter after I read her post, earned media is a dinosaur. We need a new model.

One that understands that the blogger is also a customer, not just a reporter. That the old forms of engagement don’t work anymore. And that both sides — PR and bloggers — need to look at the relationship through a new lens. Companies and their PR agents aren’t doing bloggers “a favor” by including them in their programs. There’s an expected business benefit. And bloggers aren’t entitled to anything. If you want to participate in blogger relations or advertising programs, you’ve got to build a compelling blog that attracts an audience that the companies and advertisers want to reach.

The successful approach for reaching out to bloggers integrates public relations and advertising to achieve marketing objectives. If the story is compelling, PR outreach. If the company wants to control a message, advertising.

This flies in the face of the typical corporate organization and certainly agency alignments, and absolutely requires a change in the way we look at our marketing task. I’ve been writing about this changing model for some time now, and will continue to write about it here and at Shamable.com.

Expertise

True expertise is less about knowing how to do something than understanding why you’re doing it. Always start by asking Why? Then worry about How?  Check out Toby Bloomberg’s e-book Social Media Marketing GPS for advice from 40 social media experts that truly understand the why and the how. I was doubly privileged with regard to this book — I was one of the people Toby interviewed on Twitter for the book and I was in Atlanta the day she launched, so I got to celebrate with her in person.

Also on my radar screen (and bound to be the topics of upcoming posts): more on measurement, including some thoughts on the importance of sentiment, and another look at Facebook after the privacy dilemmas of the past month. What are the implication for marketers and consumers?

Finally, thank you to the folks at Ignite Social Media for including Marketing Roadmaps (and me) on their list of 50 Women Bloggers You Should Be Reading. I’m not a terrific fan of lists, but feel privileged to be included in this company.

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Filed Under: Blogger relations, Blogging, PR Tagged With: Advertising, BlogHer, Business, Public relations

May movie trailer madness: Robin Hood

May 14, 2010 by Susan Getgood

Robin Hood starts today and I suspect we’ll be seeing it in the very near future.

Filed Under: Movie trailers

May movie trailer madness: Shrek Forever After

May 13, 2010 by Susan Getgood

I suppose you could argue that all of the films on my “must see” list are cartoons of one sort or another.

More Shrek goodness at the film website.

Filed Under: Movie trailers

You have not reached Good Technology customer support when you call me!

May 13, 2010 by Susan Getgood

If you’ve been reading Marketing Roadmaps for a while, you are familiar with the Good Technology saga.

Basically, they have a website: get.good.com. I have a website: getgood.com

Sometimes  their customers get confused and call me for support. Yeah, it’s a bit borked. If you are a new reader, you can catch up with these posts:

  • From 2007:  one and two
  • From 2006:  one and two

Since Fall 2007 (the second post linked above), things quieted down quite a bit. I know people were still hitting my site looking for Good based on the search terms they used, but only an occasional call.

Until this month. They’re back, and once again it appears that someone in the chain is handing out MY PHONE NUMBER for support.

Below is the text of the email I sent to Good’s PR contact this morning. I’ll let you know if I hear back.

—

Dear Ms. O’Connell:

My name is Susan Getgood, and I own the domain getgood.com. For the last 5 years, ever since I began using the domain for a business website, I have regularly gotten calls for support on your technology. People confused about get.good.com versus getgood.com.

Now I am not sure why people land on my site and DO NOT realize that I am not a mobile phone software company, but it happens. To help with the issue,  I believe people at Good even worked with Google to make sure that your site comes up first in a search for “getgood.” I also have notices on my contact page that provide your contact information, which I know helps, as I have had about 60 hits to my site this month from key words like get.good.com  and “get good” but only a few calls per week.

Nevertheless, I can always tell when something has changed in your product because the calls do pick up again. At all hours of the day. The latest one (at 10pm Monday), however, was a bit disturbing. According to the caller, my PHONE NUMBER, which is both a home and business line,  is being provided by AT&T iPhone support to call with problems with your software.

This is not the first time I have heard this comment – that mobile phone companies are giving out my phone number. Once one even connected a caller directly.

Can you please look into this, and if AT&T is indeed providing my phone number to people, get it stopped?

Sincerely,

Susan Getgood

Please note: I have been documenting this issue on my blog Marketing Roadmaps, getgood.com/roadmaps, since the problems began. This email and any response I receive from you will be posted in its entirety.

Filed Under: Blogging, Customer Service Tagged With: get.good.com, Good Technology

Worth

May 12, 2010 by Susan Getgood

Liz Gumbinner (Mom 101) wrote a tremendous post this morning about the importance of properly compensating bloggers for their work: Nothing in life is free. Except, it seems, a mommyblogger. If you haven’t read her post and are in any way shape or form involved in blogger relations, social media marketing or online advertising, go read it now.

If you are coming over here from her post (as she was kind enough to link to me), here are a few links to posts that I’ve written on the topic. I thought that might make a wee bit more sense than my movie trailer madness post about the A-team movie 🙂 Although come to think of it, maybe we should get the A-team on this problem….

  • The blogger relations category
  • The secret sauce for the perfect pitch
  • Blogger outreach, shared values and cotton swabs?

Filed Under: Blogger relations, Social media

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