This guest post is by Lina Nguyen of Words That Influence.
Influential bloggers are being paid top dollar to write sponsored posts (thousands of dollars per post is not unheard of). They’re gifted with luxury items, cars and overseas trips, and invited to events previously exclusive to A-List celebrities and long-established journalists.
Bloggers worldwide are proving to be fierce competition for mainstream media, as companies decide how to get the best return on investment for their marketing buck.
If you have the following seven things, then your blog and social media networks will be highly valuable digital assets, sought after by major companies.
Even if you don’t quite have the same reach and clout as some of these bloggers, you can still apply these principles to negotiate your own deals with smaller businesses in your niche.
ProBlogger Training Day event speakers Craig Makepeace and Caz Makepeace are travel bloggers who landed a corporate sponsorship deal with a major airline, to cover a high profile international sporting event. At the end of this post, we’ll see these seven points in action, as we take a look at their success in attracting sponsorship from a major brand.
1. Your audience is a profitable niche marketThe people in a profitable niche for major companies tend to be decision makers, consumers or influencers in the buying process, for either highly priced items (like cars, technology, travel or finance), or highly consumed items (like food, health products, household goods).
How do you know if your niche is profitable? Just take a look around in mainstream media. If companies are already paying big bucks to advertise to your audience on TV, radio, magazines and newspapers, then you’re in a profitable niche.
2. You’ve built a communityIf you’ve created a group of people who gather on your blog and social media networks, then what you’ve created has the potential to be extremely financially valuable.
Companies always want to know where their target market is hanging out and get in front of them. Trouble is, as outsiders, whose primary motivation is to sell, they’re not exactly welcomed.
That’s why they’re willing to pay to get access to your tightly formed online community, which has its very own culture, rules and etiquette. Your intimate knowledge of how your community thinks and behaves has a valuable price tag on it.
3. You have reachBeing in a commercially attractive niche and having impressive reach in numbers (in terms of blog traffic, subscribers and social media followers) makes your community really valuable. A big corporate client will be after the exposure you can give them.
What kind of numbers are valuable? That all depends.
Essentially, it comes down to the demand to reach your niche, how targeted your audience is and what other advertising avenues are available to the company to reach that specific audience.
The more profitable the niche, and the harder those communities are to access, the more money a company will be willing to pay you to get in front of them.
4. Your community is highly engagedThis is what makes a blogger much more appealing to companies for advertising potential than say, television, print media, billboards and flyers.
Bloggers engage with their audience, who eagerly share their thoughts and feelings. In addition, they actively give bloggers permission to communicate with them, by following or subscribing.
Engaged communities also show clear signs of activity, through comments, posts and tweets. This is valuable in the eyes of a potential marketer, because an active community gives the company a way to evaluate and measure a campaign’s success.
An indicator of a successful marketing campaign is one where the target market responds to it, hopefully positively (although a highly engaged negative response can also be seen as successful, depending on the company’s objectives).
5. You have influenceA blogger with a highly engaged and active community is more likely to have influence, which is what’s really going to make a company take notice.
A company will pay for your ability to help get the word out, your referral or your endorsement.
If you can do all three, to an audience who will listen to you and believe you, then you are in a very strong negotiating position to command a price.
A bigger company with a large marketing budget is most likely interested in building brand awareness, exposure and chipping away at a longer-term objective to improve market perception.
The good news for a blogger is that they’re unlikely to expect a huge spike in sales from working on a one-off campaign with you. This eases the pressure off you, relieving expectation that you’ll influence your readers to rush out and buy the product.
Having said that, if you do have the clout to change attitudes, beliefs and market perception about a particular product or service
View the Original article
No comments:
Post a Comment