Time’s Running Out to Land the #Blogchat Sponsorship in December |
| Time’s Running Out to Land the #Blogchat Sponsorship in December Posted: 20 Nov 2013 08:55 AM PST
1 – December has 5 Sundays, so that means 5 #Blogchats. So you are effectively getting 25% more #Blogchat for your money! 2 – Rates will increase by 33% starting in January. Due to constant demand for sponsorships, the monthly rate starting in 2014 will increase from $1,500.00 a month to $2.000.00 a month. So I wanted to make sure you have a chance to get the $1,500.00 rate before it disappears. You can get full details here on what’s included in the sponsorship. One area I wanted to cover here is that when you sign on as a sponsor of #Blogchat, I’ll work with you to make sure you get as much bang for your buck as possible. We’ll work together to determine what you need to happen as a result of the sponsorship in order for it to be a success for your brand. I don’t want this to just be a box you check off, I want you to see positive gains to your business from this partnership. Also, please keep in mind that all potential sponsors are vetted. I want to make sure that the sponsorship makes sense to you, and makes sense to #Blogchat. In fact I have turned down three requests to sponsor #Blogchat just in the last week because I didn’t feel that the company would be a good fit for #Blogchat, or vice versa. One of the first questions most potential sponsors have is ‘Will we have a say in the topics chosen for #Blogchat?’ The answer is ‘yes’, to a degree. Obviously, I want to make sure that we cover topics that are relevant to you as the sponsor. At the same time, I want to make sure the topics are relevant to the #Blogchat community as well. Don’t worry, I am pretty creative in setting topics that create value for everyone, and here’s some examples of topics that were set for previous #Blogchat sponsors. By the numbers, #Blogchat is one of the biggest if not the biggest Twitter chat around. Each week 20-30 Million impressions of the #Blogchat hashtag are generated, and usually 2,000-3,000 tweets during the week. Typically 1,200-1,500 tweets are generated during the hour of #Blogchat, Sunday at 8pm Central. That’s an average of a new tweet every 2-3 seconds! Additionally, I did a survey of #Blogchat participants early last year, and you can see the results here. In general, about 1,000 people follow the #blogchat hashtag each week, half of those people blog for a company, typically a small B2B company. And the majority of the participants are female. If you’d like to sponsor #Blogchat in December, the rate is $1,500.00. The sponsorship will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis, and if you are interested please email me and we’ll go from there! Also if you know a company that would be a good fit to sponsor #Blogchat or one you would like to see sponsor #Blogchat, please share this post with them. Thank you!
|
| Which Needle Are You Moving? How to Tell If Your Business Blog Is Working Posted: 20 Nov 2013 06:00 AM PST
First, a caveat: We are talking very small numbers and very inconclusive data at this point. After another 2 months or so, I should have some decent numbers and trends I can look at and tell if my efforts are paying off. The goal here isn’t to pass judgement on my efforts after less than a month. What I want to do is walk you through my thought process in measuring and tracking my efforts so you can apply this same formula to your own business blog to help decide if your efforts are working. Traffic. When it comes to blogging, traffic is likely the first metric that you’ll look at. But traffic is often a ‘feel good’ metric that doesn’t always translate into actual business value. For example, typical daily traffic here from Monday-Friday prior to October 20th was 700-800 visitors a day. Now it’s 1,100-1,200 visitors a day. That’s about a 50% increase in less than a month and sounds nice. But my main goal from blogging more isn’t to get more traffic, it’s to get more qualified leads. Now there are some ancillary benefits to increasing traffic. For example, increasing traffic drives up readership and that makes sponsorships here or as part of a #Blogchat sponsorship more appealing to potential sponsors. So What Metrics Should You Track to Tell If Your Business Blog is Working? First, you need to consider what action you want visitors to your blog to take. For example, if you ultimately want to sell a particular product on your blog, then the metrics to track could be: 1 – Actual sales from blog visitors 2 – Visits to the product page on the blog 3 – Signups for a free trial of the product Again, traffic to the blog doesn’t really matter unless that traffic is engaging in the actions that you want. For me, I want visitors to engage in one of three different actions (ranked in terms of priority): 1 – Contact me about working with me. 2 – Visit pages related to working with me, such as my Work With Me page, or Speaking page, or Bio 3 – Share my content online The idea is that if they aren’t contacting me directly about possibly working with me, I want them to either check out my info here, or at least share my content with other people so that they might be interested in working with me. But it’s important to note that the type of engagement that’s likely to be the easiest to get (sharing my content) is the least valuable of the three. This is common with blogging. For example I can tell anyone how to get more traffic to their blog; Write more posts. But just because you can easily get more traffic doesn’t mean that traffic by itself has any real value for you. Sure, it can make your ego feel good to see that needle moving, but is that meaningful? So when you are tracking your blog’s efforts, follow this process: 1 – Figure out what you want visitors to do on your blog. What’s the one most important thing that a visitor could do on your blog? Order a product? Sign up for your newsletter? Share your content? 2 – Track metrics that lead back to that most important goal. If possible, you want a straight line from the metric you are measuring to the goal. Prioritize your metrics so that you are tracking the one that most directly leads to your goal for your blog first. 3 – Only track metrics that feed back to your goal for the blog, either directly or indirectly. If a metric doesn’t impact your ability to reach your goal then don’t track it. |
| You are subscribed to email updates from MackCollier.com - Social Media Training and Consulting To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
| Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 | |






0 comments:
Post a Comment