Forrester: disappointment in corporate blogs

A recent Forrester survey of 189 companies found that 38% rated blogging marginal to marketing and 15 % said blogs were irrelevant. My experience is that many who get into blogs have unrealistic expectations, set irrelevant measures and “ROI” goals, and view blogs as a campaign tactic, which they most definitely are not. (Another observation: many quickly run out of things to blog about, often a sign that they’re not passionate or knowledgeable about their field.)

The bigger point is that people today expect a more social, casual style of business communications. In writing style. And in being able to post a comment or talk back.

The value of blogging done right is that it breaks the old corporate speak iceberg. Soon there will no longer be a corporate Web site and separate blogs. Good business Web sites will be blog-like in style and the ability for people to comment.

However, this means that businesses need to be more interesting, provide more valuable content and ideas to people who take the time to go to their site/blogs, have a point of view on trends in their industries, and thoughtfully respond to comments.

It also means that many, many communications and marketing people have to relearn communications skills.

But if all this change helps customers more quickly get to know your company — making it easier for them to make a decision and buy — it’s well worth the change. And that’s where theĀ  real marketing payoff comes in.

PS - Thanks to my friend and Israeli management consultant Dov Gordon for the heads up on the Forrester study. Check out his new article, “Spitting in the Wind: A Single Obvious Insight to Sharpen and Focus Your Strategy.”

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7 Responses to “Forrester: disappointment in corporate blogs”

  1. 1. “Set irrelevant measures and ‘ROI’ goals?” Huh? We’re talking business right, i.e. invest in the expectation of return based on rigorous rationale. Right?

    2. “The bigger point is that people today expect a more social, casual style of business communications.” Says who? The majority of customers just want the damn product to work. They don’t wanna date let alone casual chit chat.

    3. “The value of blogging done right is that it breaks the old corporate speak iceberg.” Excuse me but that “iceberg” is a legal construct. God forbid laws thaw!

    Anyway… good luck with your book Lois.

    Kind regards,

    - Amanda

  2. [...] Lois Kelly’s Bloghound, via Marketing 2.0 [...]

  3. Lois Kelly Says:

    Hi Amanda,
    Always fun to hear from you. I’m with you about the product. The best marketing always has and always will be about a fab product or service experience. Period. Too much marketing is lipstick on scrawny pig.
    Lois

  4. Hey Lois,

    How are you! Hope you and the new endevour are doing well!

    Funny, I just got off a webcast with one of the lead Forrester analyst on blogging talking to our team at HP about blogging. We have a group blog in StorageWorks and are guilty as charged! It’s getting good traffic but not many people are engaging in our discussion.

    I’m hopeful that as we more forward, we’ll use more of the advice you gave us and encourage thought provoking conversations.

    All the best!
    Calvin

  5. Great blog, subscribed to your rss feed. Thanks.

  6. Once again, we discover that many organizations are too interested (versus a healthy interest) in what they can get.

    The essence of blogging is the “pouring out” of ideas the writer/organization is moved by. Without that, why bother reading or following?

  7. [...] at bloghound, Lois Kelly speculates that maybe businesses who got into blogging early on had unrealistic [...]

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