Blog Marketing & Pay Per Post: They’re Not The Same

The vitamin supplement company Berocca has been engaged in a vaguely interesting piece of blog marketing over here in the UK. Taking their cue from the recent New York Times article suggesting that blogging can be highly stressful, they have put together a blogger relief pack which consists of a number of ‘stress-busting’ desk toys […]

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The vitamin supplement company Berocca has been engaged in a vaguely interesting piece of blog marketing over here in the UK. Taking their cue from the recent New York Times article suggesting that blogging can be highly stressful, they have put together a blogger relief pack which consists of a number of ‘stress-busting’ desk toys and, of course, a pack of Berocca. In a nice nod to the community-lead nature of blogging, the mini-site always has a link to one of the blogs that is taking part in the campaign.

This campaign, which is hardly revolutionary in its nature, probably wouldn’t deserve a mention on these hallowed pages were it not for a post written by Michael Gray recently. In this post, Michael asked whether Guy Kawasaki, who frequently reviews products he is sent and links to the manufacturers’ sites, should be the subject of a penalty in the same way that sites which operated ‘pay per post’ systems were*.


Now, Michael does go on to say that he’s well aware that the practice of getting people to review products, is a common PR tool and that he simply wants to see Google setting a fair playing field when it comes to handing down penalties. Whilst I’d agree with him that Google could be much better at explaining exactly what it will, or won’t, tolerate, I still don’t see this sort of activity as being the same as pay-per-post or paid links.

For me, the primary point of blog marketing is not to get links. Just as with viral marketing, as opposed to linkbait, links are simply a nice side-benefit to the real pay-back for activity of this sort, which is to generate conversation. As anyone who has read The Tipping Point, and accepted the premise behind it, (which I know Michael has) will know, there is a belief that there are certain people who can enable word of mouth marketing by talking about your product.

Of course social media, with its inherent bias towards conversations, is the perfect place for anyone wanting to try out this theory. And because social media and blogging in particular rely on a sense of openness, it makes it less likely that people will review products they don’t actually like: otherwise whatever reputation they may have built up is likely to be very quickly lost.

So when companies like the ones that Kawasaki has promoted, Berocca, or any companies that we have run similar campaigns for, contact bloggers and send them products, tickets to events, or anything similar, it’s not necessarily because they’re looking for links (or at least it certainly isn’t in our case and I can only assume it’s not in most other cases either). It’s because they want real people, preferably influencers, to talk about their products. And if what Google wants are links on editorial judgements, then should these campaigns result in links it strikes me that they couldn’t be any more editorially based.

*Michael has since updated his post to remove any suggestion that Kawasaki was blogging because he’d received products.

Ciarán is the SEO & Social Media Director for British full-service digital marketing agency Altogether. He joined Altogether after working in online marketing for 7 years at two of the UK’s biggest publishing companies in roles covering everything from branding to online PR to, obviously, search.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Ciarán Norris
Contributor
Ciarán Norris is the Head of Digital for Mindshare Ireland, as well as holding a global role for the media agency as Director, Emerging Media. At Mindshare he works with both local & multinational clients, helping them to integrate on & offline, and to utilise search, social, mobile & video in their broader marketing mix.

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