Why Blogging is No Longer Optional if You Do Business Online

bloggingMany of you already have a blog and understand how important it is for gaining visibility for your business.  But I know many others are still resistant to it.

You think it takes too much time and effort, you don’t feel you are a good enough writer, you’re not sure how to set one up, you don’t have a clue what to write about….I get all of the reasons that might be holding you back.

If you already have a traditional, “brochure” style website for your business, then great. Keep it as a place for prospects to visit and find out more about what you offer.  I use my blog as my main site, and don’t have a separate, static website.  It’s a personal choice. Many people have both, with the blog being linked to from the main site.

Don’t have a blog? There are several important reasons why you should:

Visibility

If you are doing even just some of your business using the web then obviously you need an online presence. Having a blog that you post to regularly is a wonderful way to capture and keep the attention of potential clients and customers.  When they see that you are writing consistent content, they are more likely to return.

Community Building

Having comments on your posts encourages feedback and promotes conversation. It can help you to find out what your target market wants from you.  This feedback can even help you come up with ideas for future posts.

Positions You as the Expert

Once you begin posting useful content regularly and attracting readers, you become seen as a thought leader in your niche.  This leads to more relationships, business and opportunities.  It’s one of the best ways to communicate the value of your offerings to prospective clients and customers.

Search Engine Optimization

This doesn’t mean you need to become an SEO guru.  But blogs by their very nature are dynamic.  In the eyes of Google, this is a very good thing.  They want their users to get updated information. A blog can help get your business ranked well in the search engines.

Personality Sharing

Blogging gives you a chance to be seen as a real person behind the business. Don’t be afraid to express opinions and share things about yourself.  This will go a long way towards humanizing you in others eyes.

The best thing about blogging is how easy and quick it is to send out a post at the push of a button.  It’s also great to be able to track exactly who is coming to your site and from where. Use Google’s free Analytics tool and you can see detailed statistics on your traffic and visitors.

Just get it going.  Try to set a goal of one post a week.  They don’t have to be long and they don’t have to be earth-shattering.  Just like anything, you’ll get better at writing the more you do it.  Jot down any ideas for posts as as they come to you.  I keep a file of ideas and find this helpful to refer to if I get stuck for what to write.

Just as you would any other marketing activity, blogging should be something you carve out time for.  Really feel you would have nothing to say to people who may want to hire or buy from you? Maybe it is just not for you. But I encourage all small business owners who are doing business online to give it a shot. Who knows, maybe there are people out there just waiting to hear your voice.

What about you?  Would you agree that blogging has become one of those must-dos for biz owners?  Do you have any tips for those who are still feeling intimidated?  Please do share.

Photo Credit: Annie Mole

How Can Twitter Benefit Me as a Small Business Owner?

foodistablogTwitter is defined as a social networking and micro-blogging service.  If you aren’t on Twitter yet your first question might actually be “What the heck is micro-blogging?”

According to the all-knowing Wikipedia, “Micro-blogging is a form of blogging that allows users to write brief text updates (usually 140 characters) and publish them, either to be viewed by anyone or by a restricted group which can be chosen by the user. These messages can be submitted by a variety of means, including text messaging, instant messaging, email, MP3 or the web.”

That’s really it in a nutshell.  The best way to understand what the fuss is about is to actually use it for yourself.

Platforms available include Twitter, identi.ca and Yammer among others.  Twitter is one of the most popular services and the one I personally use. I have been “twittering” daily for about a year now and have to say, it’s pretty darn addicting.  At first I wondered, as I suspect others do when they first use it, “what’s the point?”  After using instant messenger for ten years I didn’t really get it.

As I used it more it started making sense from a small business perspective.  Twitter’s been out over two years now but I still know lots of people who look at me funny when I start raving about it.  I don’t quite believe it’s gone completely mainstream yet, but I highly recommend it as another great way to get the word out about your products or services.

Here are my top five reasons for using Twitter as a part of your overall business strategy:

They Say it’s All About Relationships

1) Communication: How many times have we heard that people do business with those they know, like and trust?  Keeping in line with what social networking is all about, Twitter promotes conversation–in nice little bite-size chunks.

2) Marketing: As long as you’re not self-promoting all day every day, it is perfectly acceptable to “tweet” about that new teleseminar or e-book you’ve cooked up. If you are regularly contributing to the conversation in other, non sales-y ways then the idea is that you’ll strike a nice balance.  I always say try to keep it to about 85% non-promotional to 15% promotional just to give a rough idea.

3) Branding: If you are following a healthy number of people and vice versa, you are in effect able to “touch” them several times a day.  From your avatar to the link to your website or blog, you can promote your brand through your profile and have people “get” what you’re about without forcing it down their throats. Your presence and tweets serve as impressions on your potential customers.

4) Knowledge Sharing: I’ve picked up quite a few good tips, recommendations and just plain nuggets of wisdom on Twitter.  It is another great channel for the exchange of ideas between entrepreneurs and small business owners.

5) Networking/Idol Worship: This is pretty obvious.  If you are following others in your industry or the industry you would like to be in, you can rub shoulders so to speak without even leaving your couch. I’ve exchanged a few direct messages with several people I really admire and think it’s pretty cool.  Besides, you never know if you’ll bump into them at a seminar or something and they’ll remember your exchanges.  You could end up pitching them your latest project or find that they’re looking for a JV partner you would be a good fit for.

Let’s connect:

Sign up for Twitter

Follow me on Twitter

Download the free Twitter client that I prefer, Tweetdeck

If you see any other benefits to Twitter that are not mentioned here, let me know in the comments.

Also, be sure to sign up for my free social media e-course if you haven’t already.

Photo Credit: Foodistablog

Perfectionism Has No Place in Small Business

Perfect TenThis was a hard lesson for me to learn. I’m not sure I was born with perfectionist tendencies but if I wasn’t, school definitely gave them to me.  So much so that when I entertained starting my first small business, breaking free of them involved a lot of kicking, screaming and banging my head against the wall.

Perfectionism may have its place in school because you are always aiming for that A+ grade, that 100%, that shiny little star sticker.  But when launching something new as an entrepreneur it can be deadly.  Sure, we all want to do our best work and be prepared and serve our clients as much as we possibly can.  Those things are a given.  But if it causes us to stay on the fence and never really get out there then that’s when it can become a major problem.

It’s more about fear than wanting it to be perfect.

One of my Twitter friends, the very cool Katherine Reschke of Passions That Pay brought up this point recently when I tweeted about writing this post.  I absolutely agree with her.  In fact this is why it was such a struggle for me.  The whole idea of “good is good enough” was extremely uncomfortable to me.  “But, but, but I still need to…I don’t think it’s completely ready to…I just want to tweak it a little bit more…”

Sound familiar?

Perfectionism in my case was just a form of procrastination.  I suspect this is common, especially among first time business owners and solopreneurs.  After all, it’s hard to argue with wanting to improve your product, service, article, blog, e-course, etc.  Who wouldn’t want to? But we would be wise to look at what is really keeping us from taking action and going live.

Are you afraid that once you put it out there it might not sell and you’ll be disappointed and stressed over it?  Are you afraid of what people think because you are constantly comparing yourself to others and how you stack up?  Fears and anxieties like these are all normal but how badly are you short-changing yourself by not jumping in and at least testing the waters?

The thing is, there are so many opportunities you may be missing out on by not going for it.  What if there are wonderful things waiting for you on the other side of your fears? The perfect time will never come, just like the perfect business doesn’t exist.

You don’t have to get it right, you just have to get it going.

No doubt this stuff is tough to overcome.  But like that oft-repeated tenet of being able to learn from our failures and mistakes, we can’t progress and improve if we don’t even give ourselves a chance.

By getting your product or service out there and knowing you’ve done a good enough job, you’ll start to see that momentum is on your side.  The universe rewards action.  Once you get this, you will wonder what you ever waited for.  You can always go back and update and improve but something is often better than nothing.

Many times just the awareness of how you use perfectionism to avoid the possibility of a negative outcome can go a long way toward re-training yourself to take action instead of obsessing over every detail.

So how will you overcome the perfectionist trap that’s holding you back?  How much more time will you waste hanging in the shadows?  Believe that there are people in the world who need what you have to offer and stop cheating them and yourself.

Photo Credit: Woodleywonderworks