Blog to Foster the Human Connection in the Digital Age

??????????????????????????????????????????????Have you ever wondered why handmade items are looked upon as superior, while machine made pieces are often deemed inferior? And is that still true?

“Perhaps it used to matter if a dress was handmade or machine made, at least in haute couture, but now things are complete different,” said Karl Lagerfield at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute Spring 2016 exhibition.

Not everyone agrees. Julie Heller, owner of an appointment-only designer vintage store EraLuxe gallery, admits that the scope of what makes a garment valuable is changing. As technology advances, handmade pieces will be associated with added value – mostly because, she says, of “society’s nostalgia for the craftsmanship of the past”.

Hazel Clark, research chair of fashion at Parsons, agrees. “We are seeking connection in many walks of life – including in our clothes, says.  That sense of the individual in the process is important, a sense of a relationship with the person who has made the item.

Does this discussion about creating connection relate to blog marketing? In every way. “How would most people describe their relationship with your company?” asks Corey Wainwright of hubspot.com. Is the relationship purely transactional, make you just a place they go to get something they need, or do you elicit more personal feelings? “When your audience is reminded there are real life humans behind the scenes,” it becomes easier for them to trust your product or service, Wainright concludes..

On your website and in your blog, you can get your point across really well with clear, concise, straightforward copy.  But, Wainright explains, if you can get your point across and humanize your brand, you have the potential to delight readers. Two ways, among others, to achieve that effect, he says:

  • Infuse a sense of humor into your content once in a while.
  • Publish photos of your team being themselves.

One interesting perspective on the work we do as professional bloggers is that we translate clients’ corporate message into human, people-to-people terms.  People tend to buy when they see themselves in the picture and relate emotionally to the person bringing them the message.

Blog readers may be connecting with you digitally, but it’s up to you to foster the human connection!

 

 

 

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Are You Suffering Your Blog Action or Performing It?

For Or Against Signpost Showing Pros And Cons

“What is passive voice and why are we often told to avoid it?” novelist and Writer’s Workshop Senior Editor Emma Darwin asks her students. Here’s Darwin’s simple explanation:

  • When the action of the sentence is being performed by the subject of the sentence, it’s in active voice.
  • When the action is being done to the subject of the sentence by someone or something else, the sentence is in passive voice.

In general, explains Brandon Royal in The Little Red Writing Book, the active voice is preferred, because it is:

  1. more action oriented
  2. more direct
  3. less verbose, cutting down on the number of needed words.

Since one of the very purposes of business blog writing is to showcase the accomplishments of the business owners, as a general rule we bloggers need to focus on “staying active” in our content using sentences that have energy and directness.

Is there ever a time when the passive voice would be the most effective way to write? Yes, when the performer of the action is unknown or unimportant, Royal explains. “The world’s largest pearl was discovered in the Philipines in 1934.” (The discovery is important, but the discoverer is unknown.).

Let’s practice…

Choose two pieces of information about your business or practice. First, select on where you or one of your employees performed a special service. Write an active voice sentence about that.

Then, choose a fact that is important or interesting for your readers to learn about but which does not highlight any particular person. Write a passive voice sentence about that.

Here are my two examples from the blogging world: (Can you tell which is which?)

“6.7 million people blog on blogging sites and 12 million people blog via social networks.”

“Today blogging is used widely by businesses as part of their marketing strategy.”

Are you suffering your blog action, or performing it?

 

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Interview Format – the Combo Form of Blogging for Hire

interview
The “brutally honest truth,” says Demian Farnworth of raventools.com, is that, from the writer’s point of view, there are three basic types of ghostwriting:

  • Their ideas and words

You listen to business owners talk about their business or they send you content and you turn it into a book (or blog posts).

  • Their ideas, your words

You’re paid to write from an outline they’ve given you.  You do all the research, they approve the final draft.

  • Your ideas and your words

You’re paid to come up with the ideas yourself, create the outlines, and write the book or articles (or blog posts). Their only involvement is to approve.

As a blog-content-writer-for-hire by business owners and professional practitioners, I’ve found, there’s a fourth way to get the job done: use a combination of the three types of ghostwriting – the interview format.

In a face-to-face (or Skype) interview with a business owner or executive (or professional practitioner), I am able to capture their ideas and some of their words, then add “framing” with my own questions and introductions, to create a blog post more compelling and “real” than the typical narrative text.

What makes for a good blog interview? “Interviews should be broken up into questions and answers, but should lead with informative headers that describe the person you’re interviewing, link to their profile or business, and then get into the nitty gritty of the interview,” says Erin Ollila of buzzfarmers.com “A great interview template ends with a list of takeaways,,” she adds.

According to Mi Muba of beamoneyblogger.com, the five most common objectives of publishing an interview blog post are:

  • To help your readers learn from the expertise of interviewee
  • To inspire your readers with the success story of the interviewee
  • To practically guide your readers how to succeed in a given field
  • To provide your readers the chance to interact with interviewee through commenting
  • To add variety to your content after several simply descriptive posts

An interview format is the ultimate combo form of blogging for hire!

 

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Raise Your Hand If You’ve Had Doubts About Blogging

Hand raising for vote isolated on white background with clipping pathAsked to “Raise your hand if you’ve asked yourself this question: ’Do we still need a company blog?’”, marketing strategist Alex Honeysett  says “My hand is up there, too.” With Facebook and Twitter and all the other social media platforms, we actively use,” Honeysett says, it feels like we’re connecting with our audience, creating great content, and building communities the same way we used to with blogs.”

So, do we still need to keep cramming blog posts into our jam-packed editorial calendars? In Honeysett’s opinion, we do. Why?

  • Unlike Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest, your blog sits directly on your website.  So if you do a great job of keeping the blog compelling and updated, that increases the amount of time people are staying on the website, Honeysett observes.
  • Furthermore, (and this is the part of Honeysett’s post which, as a long time blog content writer, I particularly appreciate), “the introduction of social media has forced us to say things too quickly and efficiently…but some topics and musings need more than a few sentences to be fully explored.” On a blog, Honeysett explains, “you’ll have more room to expand on those thoughts.”
  • With Google having changed its algorithm a gazillion times, SEO experts told her, “the most effective way to increase your search ranking is to give your community relevant content that they will engage with and share. It is both that simple and that hard.”

Jason Lippman of jelmarketingstrategies.com addresses the same question: Will blogging still work in 2016? Absolutely, Lippman says, but you need to be aware of the changing landscape, with a new emphasis on personal branding as opposed to corporate branding.

For most businesses, a social media presence – even the most robust kind – cannot substitute for a blog presence, asserts Steve Baldwin, Editor-in-Chief at Didit. Baldwin offers several reasons why social media can’t replace blogging:

  • Link juice: domains and pages accumulate page rank and social media URLs do not.
  • Branding: social media platforms force you into their format; on your own website you have more freedom to tell your brand story.
  • Your blog is on your own “land”; on social media, you’re a “sharecropper”.

You can put your hand down now!

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Blogging to Bolster Your Point of View

perspektive

“Indiana is growing – but we can’t neglect transit as a quality of life and economic development priority,” Michael Huber CEO of the Indy Chamber and Steve Sullivan, CEO of MIBOR Realtor Association agree. Both are in favor of raising taxes in Marion County to improve transit  services.  Huber and Sullivan use several tactics to strengthen their argument in favor of our investing in a transit system:

Offering details and explanations of the proposed plan:

  • New rapid-transit lines
  • All-day, high-frequency bus service
  • Weekend and crosstown service
  • Tax would be an additional 25 cents for every $100 of income, less than $10 a month for the average household
  • Who will benefit? Low-income households, senior citizens, people with disabilities, healthcare and hospitality workers who have evening and weekend hours, employers who want to attract employees

Statistics:

  • Marion Country gained 4000 residents in 2015
  • Indianapolis is the nation’s 14th largest city, but our bus fleet ranks 84th
  • Brookings Institute ranks Indy as 64th out of the 100 largest metros in transit services

Motivational statements:

  • “It’s a vote to bring new investment to struggling neighborhoods…”
  • “Better service connects people and jobs, and creates self-sufficiency.”
  • “Transit creates upward mobility and independence for those who rely on it most.”

“I just do not get it,” says Mitch Roob, Executive VP of Keramida Environmental, taking a stand on the other side of the debate. “How would a train-like bus benefit more than a very small portion of the community?  Is it equitable to charge someone for a service they likely never will use or for that matter even see?”
To bolster his argument against taxing Indy residents to fund a rapid transit system, Roob employs three tactics:

Statistics: 
Dallas invested more than $8.2 billion in a system that today carries only 4% of the area’s daily work commuters
Atlanta’s transit system ridership is down 15% from 2001

Turning opponents’ arguments against their case:
“Advocates suggest that “transit-oriented development” will spur development in the proximity of the transit corridor”. If so, says Roob, transit will add value to real estate, and the incremental property tax can pay for the service.

Emotional appeal – painting a picture:
“Trains and buses are not happy places.  Somber, hurried passengers cast their wary glance away from the strangers next to them whose personal space they have inadvertently but necessarily invaded.”

Which side makes a more powerful statement.  Truth is, both articles are impactful because both sides take a stand on the issue and then use various tactics to bolster their stance in the eyes of readers. Whether it’s business-to-business blog writing or business to consumer blog writing, the blog content itself needs to use opinion to clarify what differentiates that business, that professional practice, or that organization from its peers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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