Extendance
  • Extendance
  • |
  • Extendance Innovation
  • |
  • Extendance PR
  • Idea & Innovation Management
  • Business Development in ICT
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Rss Feeds
  • Social Networking Tools
  • Business Communities

Why blogging and advertising do not mix

Adrian Adrian McDermott February 6th, 2010
   Comments (0)


People read blogs because they are interested in the thoughts, experiences and knowledge that a blogger has. The best blogs also entertain, too. But what they do not do is paid editorial advertising - that’s for the banner ads. When a blog writer gets caught accepting payment for positive product mentions, what follows is a PR disaster, all the worse because other bloggers feel that their world has been tainted.

That’s why TechCrunch quickly made a big deal of it this week when an intern of theirs got caught being rewarded with a laptop for a post: he got fired and all his posts got wiped immediately. No names were given, and reaction seems to be that TechCrunch’s responded well and maintained their credibility. A few bloggers though, traced the guy’s identity and wondered who was willing to pay him - it’s a known rule of the game that any interests must be declared. The unfortunate thing is that innocent startups had posts about them removed and may also come under suspicion of bribery, too!

If a positive blog post is worth getting, it is prominent enough to get some scrutiny too. If the writer gets paid, the truth will comes out, readers will naturally react in three ways:

  1. Not to trust the writer again
  2. To assume a company paying for positive mentions could not get them any other way
  3. Not to trust such a company

This is something that has not really dawned on some European companies, who see blogging as a legitimate form of paid advertising - in fact, one Swiss social media marketing company, Trigami, bases its business on getting paid blogging coverage. It will eventually dawn on their customers, I think, that this is not what social media marketing really is. The fact that their business model is not big news in the blogosphere is probably simply because they are only doing it in German - if they start with English-language ones, wait for the storm! However, regardless of language, the basic rules of SMM - be open and helpful, and network for all you are worth - may mean hard work, but they are there for a reason!

Tags: Add new tag, blogging, TechCrunch, Trigami
Posted by Adrian McDermott in Blogging & media, Branding & reputation, The network effect at 14:34 | Comments (0) | Trackback




Recent Articles

  •  
  • The Most Influential Man on Twitter
  • Thursday, August 12 2010
  •  
  • Do you Doodle? A Swiss Startup Success Story
  • Wednesday, July 21 2010
  •  
  • Swiss: Informing Passengers through Facebook during the current Air Traffic Chaos in Europe
  • Wednesday, April 21 2010
  •  
  • Webinar: Business Social Communities - What are the Secrets that Make Them a Success?
  • Monday, April 19 2010
  •  
  • Russian Roulette with Video Chat
  • Wednesday, March 17 2010
  •  
  • Why blogging and advertising do not mix
  • Saturday, February 6 2010
  •  
  • How to successfully build a Social Community: German Radio Station SWR3 shows us how
  • Wednesday, December 2 2009
  •  
  • Baidu announces “box computing”
  • Wednesday, September 9 2009
  •  
  • Current state of Blogging in China
  • Monday, August 24 2009
  •  
  • Good Community Site in Switzerland: PostFinance - EventManager for Youths
  • Wednesday, August 19 2009
  •  
  • Social community comes to energy utility in Switzerland. Sort of, anyway.
  • Tuesday, August 18 2009
  •  
  • How to do social media promotions in China
  • Friday, August 14 2009
  •  
  • E-book “How to Market in ICT Today” now available in Chinese
  • Tuesday, August 11 2009
  •  
  • The Times Online to be paid access only — the beginning of the end?
  • Monday, August 10 2009
  •  
  • oPhone vs. iPhone - my views
  • Friday, August 7 2009
  •  
    Subscribe to Extendance Feed     Get all the posts on this site


Get daily updates by email:

Books Adrian Reads


Shelfari: Book reviews on your book blog


© 2001-2012 Extendance GmbH. All rights reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us