Dissertation for MBA
I submitted my dissertation in July and have just heard that it's been accepted. So I'd like to say a huge "thank you" to all the bloggers who helped me by agreeing to be interviewed. When I started work on this project just over a year ago, I had no idea just how big a cultural phenomenon blogging was going to become. Will blogs now become an essential business tool? Download the dissertation to find out more:Interview with Wigley , blog coach
Northfield, Minnesota, must have the largest concentration of small business blogs anywhere
in the world. This is due to one man, Griff Wigley, who has coached over 20
small business owners in the art of blogging (see Griff's company for the complete client blogroll). Griff has
recently returned from a trip to the UK
where he shared expertise in the area of civic leader blogging. We talked about
blogging over the phone.
JH What does a
blogging coach do ?
GW I think the dilemma of
the small business person in a weblog is how do I keep my website up-to-date in
a cost-effective way. If that’s all it was going to be, there probably wouldn’t
be any need for a coach because most of them can see how to put little blurbs
in their blog that update people about their products and services, but they
tend to do it in what I call PR lingo. They tend to write in press release
language; they’ll write in the third person, “Our company is pleased to
announce that…” - that sort of language and there’s a whole other array of
types of blogs posts that never really occurs to them. So my role as a coach is
firstly to get them to write in a language that is more appealing to their site
visitors and secondly to get them to consider the wider range of posts and then
to do it. One of the ways I build a coaching relationship with them is to help
them with some of the technical stuff. I’ve got a couple of bloggers who are
doing audioblogging, so I’ve taught them that. I’ve got a couple that are
wanting to use their camera phones to post photos to the blog. So there’s a
two-pole coaching role that I take – the technical and then the content.
JH What
benefits can a blog bring to the type of small businesses that you coach?
GW I think the one that
seems to resonate with them is bringing a voice of authenticity to a medium
that they have typically thought of as a brochure. The stock-in-trade of small
business owners – it helps them compete with much bigger rivals - is their
personal approach. This whole personal touch that they bring to their business
dealings typically goes out the window with the website. The website is this
dry, impersonal brochure that it just sitting there. So I think the voice of authenticity
and keeping the site current are probably the two main benefits. I also think a
lot of them are surprised when they see how low they come up in a simple Google
search for some of their products or services. So another benefit is that
Google and the other major search engines now key in on weblogs because weblogs
are typically full of links. So once you let Google know you’ve got a blog on
your site and you post to it regularly, its spider comes back frequently. A lot
of these businesses are small enough where they’re not about to buy a Google
text ad, let alone pay somebody to optimize their site for search engines, so
another major benefit that I pitch is that once you add a weblog to your site,
it’s much more search engine friendly.
JH Do you think
that anyone can do it, given a minimum amount of coaching?
GW One of the things I've
started to do more regularly when I pitch a blog to a business owner is ask
them to show me their typing skills because that's a major inhibitor. I think that
that would probably be something I would assess more regularly right up front
and say 'Right, are you more comfortable with the keyboard or are you more
comfortable with the telephone?' and get them comfortable with audioblogging if
they're not comfortable with the keyboard.
JH Do you think
that all small businesses should be blogging?
GW I don't know. I've seen
some of that discussion lately and it's hard for me to endorse everybody always
in every case without really thinking it through. Likewise, it's equally hard
for me to see why this would not work for a small business. I think, all things
being equal in this age of spin and press release and canned promotional
materials, that the general consumer out there would appreciate a voice of authenticity
on a small business website so I'm sort of torn about it. I'm reluctant to be
proselytising to the point that everyone should have one. On the other hand,
it's hard to see what the drawbacks are. I think that time-wise the major
hurdle is spending the time to do it and what gets them over the hump is the
feedback that they get, whether it's from employees or people in the community
or customers or citizens; but unless you get that serendipitous feedback be it
via e-mail, telephone or face-to-face, it's easy to stay in the mental mode of
thinking of blogging as one more busy work task.
JH You talked
about audioblogs before, podcasting. Do you think these will be adopted readily
by small businesses?
GW Yes I do. Text is just so
convenient and easy to scan for users, site visitors, but I think people are
surprised at how easy audioblogging is. I think the next one that I'm waiting
to try is v-logging, with video. There's a hundred dollar v-log software
package that should be out in month or so. I don't know that small businesses
will use it a lot but I think for them to say "I'm going to make this
quick little one-minute video clip that explains my product or service. I'm
going to put that up on my blog." To be able to do that over and over
again for very little money, I think that's going to be a common usage of blogs
in the next year or two.
JH How much
time do you spend on your own blogs?
GW I try to put something up
there once or twice a week. I've actually got another interview today with a
guy who's doing a blogging book and I said to him via e-mail that my blog is
not one you'd want to profile in your book about notable blogs. It's my own
Wigley Associates Consulting Practice and I profile my new clients or things
that existing clients are doing that I find interesting. I've got my companion
book sites leadershipblogging.com and smallbusinessblogging.com that I try and
update with little tidbits here and there but my Wigley Associates site's been
very good for me. It's not so much I get local businesses contacting me - it's
not as if a local retailer would stumble on Wigley Associates on the Internet
and contact me that way. Virtually all my local business clients are gotten
just through word of mouth and me approaching people here in town. It brings me
national and international contacts in ways that are always surprising, so I
get more speaking engagement invitations, I get article/interview requests and
all of that helps to get the word out about my coaching.
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