Have you ever gotten stuck for ideas for content for your website or blog? I recently hit a wall and decided I'd share how I got around it.
I formulated some rules as to what content must be, such as
relevant to your niche
relevant to your community, yet
topical
newsworthy
shareable.
With these qualities in mind, content can be found with the aid of:
Google Alerts on your niche for up-to-the-minute news
Article sites such as www.alltop.com, www.ezinearticles.com, www.goarticles.com and www.articlebase.com will give inspiration.
Google Reader can be used to aggregate and curate blog content on a particular topics.
Ask colleagues and friends. Some may have ideas for a blog post, others may be looking for an opportunity to blog or simply just take relevant pictures that can be shared on Facebook. If you don't have any aspiring film producers in the office, you might need to farm this one out. Just remember video blogs can be made with an iPhone and they can be raw so long as they deliver relevant content.
New Business. Because of the routine nature of business, we forget that aquiring a new customer here, or delivering a solution there is news. If you cant give the name of the customer involved for whatever reason, just remember that its the people in your company that make it happen. Your audience wont know how you do things or what makes you stand out doing what you do, so report it via a blog.
Charity Or Social Events. If you are a company that sponsors a charity event make it a condition of sponsorship that someone writes an editorial on the event which can quickly turned into a blog post. You get great content and the event gets more PR, that's win-win. If you sponsor a number of charity events to increase your community involvement you need a more structured approach. You need to map everything out on an event planning calendar. You'll need to increase engagement before the event and report the success of the events afterwards. Remember contributors to a charity event wont just want to know how much money was raised but who benefited and how.
Ask your community what would they like to see future articles covering
Invite a guest blogger to post a blog. Allow him/her to include a contextual link and agree that you will reciprocate with a guest blog.
Report on trends in your industry. Statistics always draw interest. Infographics are a big help here
Review a product or even a book that is of interest to your audience. Remember to sell "the sizzle not the sausage".
Write a case study. Sometimes its the application of your product or service that needs to be written about. This can then be compared with different ways of doing thing. You can analyse which method gave the best results and why.
Mind Mapping. Map out what you have blogged about so far and then saw what areas you haven't yet covered to tie your blogging message together. See Tony Buzan's book on "Mind Mapping".
Keep a List. Just keep adding to a list of blog post ideas as you go along. If you don't write these titles down as they come to you, they will be lost.
Hope this clears any bloggers' block.
Showing posts with label Google Alerts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Alerts. Show all posts
30 September 2012
12 August 2012
Powerful Uses For Google Alerts
Google Alerts is a free tool that is easy to overlook. Think of it as a monitoring station, where you can track news, blogs, video, discussion and books on your keyword subject matter. You can set the frequency of the alert and have it delivered by email or RSS feed.
1. Monitor Your Brand
One of the first uses of Google Alerts I came across was to monitor for customer chatter on your own brand, goods or service. Find a conversation relevant to your company, product or service gives you the chance to jump in and engage with potential customers. In the worst case of someone damning your brand or service you can jump in and intervene.
2. Monitor Your Competitors
Google Alerts is an ideal way of keeping abreast of your competitors' latest product launches or news. It makes sense to know what your competition is doing.
3. Monitor For Customers
Keywords covering your product offering that your potential customers would be using can be monitored. Just select "discussions", "as it happens" and select the frequency of update.
If someone is looking for your product you have a chance to get in front of the customer. This is the core of inbound marketing, a social media strategy that drives lead generation.
4. Monitor Industry News
Google Alerts can be used to aggregate the best of the news in your industry sector. You have the option of hand picking bits of news or feeding the highlights to your Facebook page or Twitter. This can be done using the RSS feed selection. The trick here would be to interweave this newsfeed with more personalised posts. Blog aggregation can also be done with Google Alerts rather than Google Reader. Again this is a handy way of compiling all relevant information for a blog of your own or an industry related company newsletter.
Google Alerts

One of the first uses of Google Alerts I came across was to monitor for customer chatter on your own brand, goods or service. Find a conversation relevant to your company, product or service gives you the chance to jump in and engage with potential customers. In the worst case of someone damning your brand or service you can jump in and intervene.
2. Monitor Your Competitors
Google Alerts is an ideal way of keeping abreast of your competitors' latest product launches or news. It makes sense to know what your competition is doing.
3. Monitor For Customers
Keywords covering your product offering that your potential customers would be using can be monitored. Just select "discussions", "as it happens" and select the frequency of update.
If someone is looking for your product you have a chance to get in front of the customer. This is the core of inbound marketing, a social media strategy that drives lead generation.
4. Monitor Industry News
Google Alerts can be used to aggregate the best of the news in your industry sector. You have the option of hand picking bits of news or feeding the highlights to your Facebook page or Twitter. This can be done using the RSS feed selection. The trick here would be to interweave this newsfeed with more personalised posts. Blog aggregation can also be done with Google Alerts rather than Google Reader. Again this is a handy way of compiling all relevant information for a blog of your own or an industry related company newsletter.
Google Alerts
Labels:
aggregate,
aggregation,
blogs,
brand,
competiton,
competitors,
customers,
discussion,
Facebook,
Google Alerts,
Google Reader,
inbound marketing,
keyword,
news,
newsfeed,
RSS,
social media,
Twitter,
video
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