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10 tips on how to engage bloggers

10 tips on how to engage bloggers

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Most PR campaigns usually have a blogger engagement strategy already but they tend to forget some crucial points when it comes to dealing with bloggers.

Have you ever wondered how to build a better relationship with bloggers in your market? Marketing caught up with Alvin Lim, founder of popular travel, food, lifestyle and entertainment blog Alvinology.com to find out the best ways that PR professionals can engage the blogging community.

At our very first ‘Bloggers Hub’ at PR Asia 2014, Lim will share on balancing objectivity with commercial realities and what PR professionals should take note of when engaging with the blogging community. To find out more about the conference, click here.

Meanwhile, here is a ten-point summary from him:

  1. Remember that blogging is not a job for most bloggers. Hence, avoid inviting bloggers to media events at office hours or calling them repeatedly when they are at work to do media pitches.
  2. I have to say this a second time: Remember, the majority of bloggers are not blogging on a full time basis. Schedule your media event for bloggers on weekday nights or weekend noon and you will find the turnout to be much better than scheduling them during office hours.
  3. Blogs are online. Therefore, media releases should be provided for easy online usage. Softcopy is preferred over hardcopy, and is better for the environment too. PDF’s are not preferred as they are hard to copy and paste for editing. Lots of hyperlinks are good.
  4. Experiences are more important for bloggers. Hence media invites work better than media releases to get coverage. If you send me a write-up about a new camera, but I don't get to feel or try it, how am I supposed to cover it from my point of view (which is what blogging is about)?
  5. Not all bloggers are the same. Some may have millions of views a day; others have less than 5 views a day. Some may be written professionally while others prefer a more casual approach. Do your research first to engage with bloggers who are most relevant to your brand instead of casting a wide net and hoping to catch a few prized fish along the way.
  6. Provide plenty of photo opportunities at your media event to get maximum coverage. Bloggers love to take photos of everything and share them on social media if it's interesting.
  7. Use hashtags for blogger engagement, but don't go overboard. If you're providing more than three hashtags for one event, do you think everyone will be able to remember all of them and use them when sharing? If possible, just have one.
  8. Do not treat bloggers as secondary targets to hit your media quota when not enough mainstream media responded to your pitch. If you want to do so, don't make it blatantly obvious. I have received invites which are just hours before the actual event. Obviously, I was treated as space filler or just an afterthought.
  9. Some bloggers are really young and may not be as media or PR savvy. Have a lot of patience when dealing with these bloggers. Mind you, some of them have even higher reach than some of the smaller mainstream media.
  10. Don't insult bloggers with cheap freebies like a $5 voucher. While there may be some bloggers who blog for freebies, many do so because they enjoy writing and sharing. If you consider the effort that goes into constructing blog posts, the "freebies" are not worth the time spent.

To register for PR Asia 2014 , please contact Joven Barcenas at jovenb@marketing-interactive.com or +65 6423 0329 or +65 9820 5195.

For sponsorship opportunities, please contact Che Winstrom at chew@marketing-interactive.com or +65 6423 0329.

To discuss the agenda, enquire about presenting or to suggest topics, please contact Preeti Varadarajan at preetiv@marketing-interactive.com or +65 6423 0329

 

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