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Blogging4business

Monday, October 30th, 2006

On Wednesday I presented at a fascinating training morning run by e-Consultancy’s Craig Hanna along with Blogging4business’s Matthew Yeomans. The agenda was to educate the audience about blogging as a phenomenon and to give them a sense of what it could teach them about their own customers and how they could use blogging and other social media tools in marketing.

The speakers were Andy Budd of Clearleft, Heather Hopkins of Hitwise, Debbie Weil, author of The Corporate Blogging Book.

There were some great case studies presented and interesting stories from the floor. Heather wrote it up here. I am afraid I missed Andy Budd’s presentation, but my favourite moments were:

Heather’s account of the huge impact of social networks on e-Commerce (it is as important as search) and her observation that 2% of Amazon purchase traffic comes from blogs. It doesn’t sound like much, but Yahoo! only provides 3%.

Debbie’s account of how marketeers are trying to use social media, sometimes well and sometimes poorly … she used an hilarious parody GM Chevy Tahoe ad, which was submitted in response to an online promotion. (Can’t find a link, but here is an ABC report) I talked about how brand messages are mediated by search, and how that means that the brand has to compete for thought space with journalists, competitors, regulators and bloggers. Thus …

Brand communications

The upshot is that you have as a brand a central duty to find out the words that are being used about you, particularly in the context of links, and try to make them as relevant to your core brand promise as possible.

BTW: After I read what Heather had written about what I said, I sent her the following mail, explaining the points I had been trying to make about links:

I wanted to shine a little light on the point I was making about how online reputation can be measured.
Online reputation is about authority.
Authority is not a function of the number of links to you.
Authority is subject specific. You may be very authoritative on cars, but have no authority on motorbikes.
Your authority is a function of who links to you in the context of a topic in which you seek authority.
Your authority is a function of how many of those who have authority in that topic choose to link to you.
Your authority is a function of the words other authorities choose when they link to you.
That is why Technorati’s “authority” measure is not about authority. It is about popularity. It is the AltaVista model of search circa 1999 where links equated to prominence in results - a throwback to the pre-Google world.
Our advice to brands and marketeers is
a) find out who is authoritative in the field in which you seek authority;
b) find out who they are and how they think;
c) try to get them to notice you, to talk about you and (ideally) to endorse you.
These ideas are not new, they are very much accepted in the academic world, where citation analysis is used as a way of evaluating academic rewards. What is new is that we are applying them to the web,





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