Connecting European Business Marketeers
To keep a blog or a community alive, its critical mass has to be sufficiently high. After one year of activity, we however remarked that the effort being put into B2bridge was still provided by the same persons as in the beginning. Without a team of involved contributors, B2bridge can hardly evolve to a lively community. That’s why we decided to put this project on hold.
We have however built up valuable expertise through this experience and we hope you have learnt something from our contributions too. Thanks to all who have visited the B2bridge website.
Read the recent posts on our home page, or browse our various marketing topics for valuable information, and create a free user account for commenting and joining the free discussions on industrial marketing.
Thanks to Jon and Joe, we now have 2 'ultimate lists' of business marketing blogs, which complement each other very nicely.
Many of you will already know Jon Miller (Marketo)'s big list of b2b marketing blogs. With its recent addition of 50, it lists 138 b2b blogs. But best of all, Jon also offers an up-to-date OPML file allowing you to subscribe to this list in your reader with a few clicks.
Big List of B2B Marketing Blogs | Modern B2B Marketing Blog | Marketo
50 New B2B Marketing Blogs | Modern B2B Marketing Blog | Marketo
Another year’s gone, and the time-sheets are processed. Hereby a few benchmarks for the blogs we run at Leonardo ENERGY.
The length of our posts varies between 100 and 500 words, and takes us between 0.5 and 6 hours, depending on the amount of fact checking needed (as well as insight checking) and how straightforward it is to structure the story. Taking a median of 2 hours per post and 2 weekly posts consumes half a day per week for content.
As a general rule I believe that an external blog that is bound by a "corporate message" and a "corporate tone-of-voice" is a dead blog. The nature of a blog is close to that of a real life conversation. Professional people want to talk with professional people, real people of flesh and blood that radiate competence, not ready-made messages. Real people are less one-dimensional, more subtle, less easy to see through, less easy to laugh at.
So a blogger should not be told to express a corporate message, he should be your corporate message. Instead of picking out some assistant that happens to have some time and moulding her/him to the wishes of Corporate Communications, a better idea would be to choose a blogger that you can give free play in all confidence. And if you can’t find people like that in your organisation, my advice would be to forget about starting an external blog. But if that is the case, who do you send to your clients?
About one year has passed since Jan Lagast sketched the first lines of B2bridge. I will not call it a real first anniversary yet, because B2bridge wasn’t online until December 2006. But I think it’s already a good occasion for a little reflection. Our website is beginning to fill up: new topics, an image gallery, a directory with publications, associations, web sites, and so on (which reminds me that I urgently have to continue adding content to these lists). An increasing number of users are finding their way to B2bridge too.
But this doesn’t mean we are there. Not at all...
B2Bridge aims to connect business marketeers. Which other web communities do you use to ask questions and have online discussions?
Suppose you are looking for the sales arguments for a new technological innovation. Maybe you want to organize a brainstorm session with a couple of commercial people from within your company, and let creativity boost. Even without having a customer attend the brainstorm, you can find a lot of arguments that trigger the attention of customers. On condition, that is, you ask the right question to begin with.
Welcome to the November edition of this carnival. This month, we've received 56 contributions demonstrating the breadth and depth of our topic. Fourty of these are presented below in 6 themes:
This time round, I would appreciate some feedback on this carnival. What expectations do you have? What themes would you like to see covered more? What other themes need to be included?
Issue #5 of the carnival is planned for early December. Contributions welcome from now.
The 3C pricing model suggests that defining the right price is a difficult balancing exercice that uses three main references.