How Much Business Does My Blog Generate?

by Peter Renton on May 13, 2010

Whether you have been blogging for five years or five weeks, if you’re a small business blogger you want to know the answer to this question. How is the blog impacting the bottom line for my business? It is a reasonable question but the answer is not always that simple.

Web Site Analytics are Absolutely Critical

Hopefully you will have some web site analytics setup on your entire site (including your blog). This is absolutely critical for every small business. If you don’t know that you have analytics installed then stop everything right now! Go and register for Google Analytics and install the tracking code on your site. If you are not measuring the visits to your site you will never be able to even guess whether your blog is generating revenue for your business.

Now, assuming you have some kind of analytics installed you can begin to study your online visitors. How many are coming to your blog first, as opposed to your main site. How long do they stay on your site? If you have a shopping cart, how many of them complete a sale? These are kinds of things you can learn by studying your analytics.

I will give you my own experience here as an example. I started blogging for Lightning Labels back in early 2006. Within a year I was getting around $500 in measurable new business a week from the blog. Now, the key word here is measurable. This doesn’t include all the people who came to our site, read the blog, decided they liked us and wanted to do business with us. It doesn’t include those people who found the blog and then called us to place an order. This amount only includes those people who found our company via the blog and then placed an online order. Based on customer conversations the actual dollar return was much higher than that – probably as much as five times higher. Within another year that number had doubled and now, over four years later it has increased further.

Looking Beyond the Hard Numbers

These numbers were satisfying to me but the hard numbers don’t tell the entire story. Because there is your existing customer base who will likely read your blog – what is the impact on them? Most likely regular readers of your blog who are also customers will be particularly loyal. Then there are those people who find your web site and then discover your blog. They might read a couple of articles before deciding to buy something but did your blog help them decide to buy? There is no way of knowing for sure but by looking at the analytics and talking with your customers you can get some idea.

So, as you can see the answer to the title of this post is not that simple. But if you keep your ear out as to how your new customers are finding you and also chat with your existing customers you can get a feel for how your blog is doing beyond just the numbers. And having said all that, if you enjoy writing your blog you should stick with it. There are really no negatives to having a blog and it really is great for your business brand if nothing else. But if you do it well, it is likely your blog is having a positive impact on your bottom line.

Photo courtesy of tobym

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A Must Read Blog for Small Business Bloggers

by Peter Renton on April 19, 2010

In my last post I gave you my top 10 list of must read blogs for small business owners. Now, if you have a blog or are thinking about launching a blog, there is one more to add to this list: ProBlogger. While it is targeted at professional bloggers (those people whose primary focus is making money from their blog), there is much to be learned for the small business blogger.

Take today’s post for example. Guest blogger Mark Hayward writes 9 Critical Tasks Before Launching Your Small Business Blog. This is great stuff, something that every prospective small business blogger should read. I would add just a couple of points.

1. Unless you really like writing and are very committed to blogging I would recommend you keep your blog under your business domain as he discusses in point 2. For most small businesses you will get the most bang for you buck by tying everything under your own website.

2. I would add one more point. Read successful blogs. You should research blogs in your own industry and subscribe to the best of them. Then read some of the most successful blogs in the world, such as those listed in my previous post.

You only get one chance to launch your blog. Be patient and do the background work and you can launch with a bang. A successful launch will help drive you to blogging success and be a key motivator as you move forward as a small business blogger.

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10 Must Read Blogs for Small Business Owners

April 9, 2010

As the owner of several small businesses over the years I have always known the importance of reading widely. It is still important to me to spend a part of my day (often over lunch) reading publications relevant to my business. These include industry-specific publications as well as business magazine like Inc. or Fast Company. [...]

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How Small Business Owners Should Use Twitter

March 31, 2010

I see it so often when people start using Twitter. They don’t bother to stop and learn how to utilize this new tool, they just treat it as another advertising medium. Bad idea.
Twitter is a community of people and if you barge in expecting everyone to pay attention to you because you have this great [...]

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Integrating Your Blog into Your Main Site

March 26, 2010

I have several clients right now who are in the process of overhauling their web sites. At the time they are looking to start a blog. It is an excellent time to start a small business blog when you are in the process of redoing your web site.
Done well, a blog should seamlessly integrate into [...]

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Guest Blog Post on Small Business Trends

March 22, 2010

A quick one today. This has nothing directly to do with blogging, but I have a new guest post up on Small Business Trends today. I believe everyone who owns a small business should think about positioning their business for sale even if they don’t have any intention of selling it.

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Getting Your Feet Wet With Blogging

March 17, 2010

I was having lunch with a friend of mine today who is thinking about starting a blog. She wants to get her feet wet but she is not sure whether blogging is really going to be a good fit for her. She doesn’t have a business, but she likes to write. She wanted to know [...]

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Regular Blog Features: Useful for You and Your Readers

March 12, 2010

When I read my Sunday newspaper (yes I still get the actual paper delivered…at least for now) I always turn first to read a couple of my favorite features. I like the Travel feature and the Wall Street Journal Sunday business section. These are regular features that are in the paper every Sunday.
In a similar [...]

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Make a Referral Week

March 10, 2010

This week has been dubbed Make a Referral Week by John Jantsch at Duct Tape Marketing. The idea is for people to provide referrals to the small businesses they like. It is very much focused on the giving of referrals, not the receiving.
So, here are two completely different businesses that I want to refer for [...]

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Why Should I Bother Commenting on Other Blogs?

March 8, 2010

Blog comments are the core of what makes blogging different from other media. Newspapers and magazines are static media. They can be valuable and they have their place but once the author or journalist has written his piece that is the end of it. There is usually no more conversation about the article, unless you [...]

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