7 types of opportunities bloggers should avoid
Bloggers are often offered "opportunities" or better put, unpaid workload nicely packaged as an "Opportunity". Many bloggers fall for this trap, accepting unpaid promotional activities, hoping that this will open doors to much bigger opportunities in future or simply because they fear saying No to PRs/brands. When you were a kid, a chocolate or two would have been enough reward to make you run some errands or do some work. But as you grow up, you learn to value your time, skills and efforts. Today you won't run the same errands for someone else just for few chocolates. Same when you're growing as a blogger. At some point of time you need to start valuing your time and effort and start saying No to workload that doesn't respect your time and effort. Here're I am listing some common traps bloggers are often tricked into. Read on to find out which are they and how to overcome such potential traps.
1. Barter system/Honorary Mention/Promotion of blog in brand’s pages:
Many brands and agencies try to get some work done for free but package it so nicely, to make it appear as if it is a great opportunity for the blogger to work with the brand even if not a penny is going to be paid. Typical tone is that brand will give lots of publicity to blogger on their social media channels- this is outright lie. If a brand has huge follower-ship and engagement and ability to reach their prospective customers, then they don’t need bloggers in the first place.
Many brands and agencies try to get some work done for free but package it so nicely, to make it appear as if it is a great opportunity for the blogger to work with the brand even if not a penny is going to be paid. Typical tone is that brand will give lots of publicity to blogger on their social media channels- this is outright lie. If a brand has huge follower-ship and engagement and ability to reach their prospective customers, then they don’t need bloggers in the first place.
Working for free is fine sometimes-if you’re very new to blogging and need lots of brand lables to fill your profile or the brand is highly reputable and you seriously believe this free work will open lots of opportunities in future. Most small to medium range brands/PR firms won’t be able to give you that. (You will only get demand for more free work) Be vary of situations where PR firms charge a bomb to brands but try to get work done for free from unsuspecting bloggers.
How to deal:
- Ask for samples of how much they have promoted any other blogger in the past
- Check how engaging their updates are on the page- how many likes, comments, shares
- Ask the brand to confirm in writing that you will have unlimited rights to use their logo and brand name in any kind of promotional activity/materials for free.
2 Blogger Ambassador trap:
Few brands go one step further and ask you to be their blogger Ambassador and promote them for free. Unless you're the sole blogger they will be working with, it is an abuse of the term Ambassador
Ever seen a brand hiring dozen celebrities as Ambassador? Will a country assign dozens of Ambassadors to another country? Ambassador should be unique. If not it is just another trap to get free work.
3 Guest Post Trap:
Many individuals who can’t run their own blogs have made it a full time business to sell links to 3rdparty sites, which they cleverly insert into the articles they write and offer to bloggers as “Guest Post”. Most of these posts are churned out sitting at home without any personal touch or expertise or value add. Avoid entertaining such guest post requests.
Many individuals who can’t run their own blogs have made it a full time business to sell links to 3rdparty sites, which they cleverly insert into the articles they write and offer to bloggers as “Guest Post”. Most of these posts are churned out sitting at home without any personal touch or expertise or value add. Avoid entertaining such guest post requests.
How do deal:
- Say that all links will be nofollowed- this eliminates most of the prospects
- Ask if the post has commercial interests or is based on their personal experience
4 Press releases:
Never a good idea to dump entire press release on your readers. 90% of content in a press release is self-praise or corporate info which no one cares. Unless you can extract the key essence of the press release and summarize or add value with your personal expertise or experience visiting the press meet, don’t publish press releases to please brands. For them it is only a count (in how many publications the release got a mention). You will only be dumped with more press releases and nothing more.
Never a good idea to dump entire press release on your readers. 90% of content in a press release is self-praise or corporate info which no one cares. Unless you can extract the key essence of the press release and summarize or add value with your personal expertise or experience visiting the press meet, don’t publish press releases to please brands. For them it is only a count (in how many publications the release got a mention). You will only be dumped with more press releases and nothing more.
How to deal:
- If the news/topic is really interesting, summarize the release and share a useful extract, along with your personal opinion/analysis/experience
- If the topic is not worth yours and you reader’s time and effort, simply ignore.
5. Promoting top blogger lists: For many new sites, an easy way to publicity is publishing a top blogger list. Bloggers featured in the list happily share the list, giving them free publicity and link. Even I am guilty of doing this at times. While it is good to be mentioned in some top blog lists, you need to check credibility of the source, selection criteria used (if any). If the website listing top bloggers has good reach and credibility on its own, then the list makes sense. If their only way to publicity is through promotions done by top bloggers who got listed, then the site has no value add and your getting featured there is a mere publicity stunt. Exercise some caution while entertaining such lists.
How to deal:
- Check the authority of host site, how long they’ve been operational and other original contents on the site. If not found credible enough, ignore such top lists.
- Ask the source on the criteria used for selection and see if the answer is convincing.
6. Buying followers:
Many influencers find their short cut to fame by buying followers on twitter and Instagram, so that they can influence brands to give more campaigns or pay more. This party will not last for long. There’re apps that can detect what % of your followers are fake, what % of your followers engage on an update by liking, retweeting etc. Sooner or later brands will find a way to weed out influencers who have unnatural % fake followers.
Many influencers find their short cut to fame by buying followers on twitter and Instagram, so that they can influence brands to give more campaigns or pay more. This party will not last for long. There’re apps that can detect what % of your followers are fake, what % of your followers engage on an update by liking, retweeting etc. Sooner or later brands will find a way to weed out influencers who have unnatural % fake followers.
How to deal:
- Try organic ways to grow your followers, resist temptations to buy
- Use tools to check others who you feel have had sudden surge in followership, do share such findings so that those who are guilty get the message
7. Trying to grab every opportunity out there.
Don’t try to grab every deal from Rs 250 to 25000. Identify a price range that represents your time & effort and the value you provide, identify kind of brands and campaigns you would like to associate with, stay around these. Don’t dilute your pricing and theme for every small deal that emerges. There’s always someone who can do it cheaper, so you can never fight on pricing alone. If something is not worth your time and effort, say No.
Don’t try to grab every deal from Rs 250 to 25000. Identify a price range that represents your time & effort and the value you provide, identify kind of brands and campaigns you would like to associate with, stay around these. Don’t dilute your pricing and theme for every small deal that emerges. There’s always someone who can do it cheaper, so you can never fight on pricing alone. If something is not worth your time and effort, say No.
How to deal:
- Identify a price below which you will not work no matter what. Reject offers below this price range.
- Over time, try to increase your price range, focusing on better brands and bigger deals. Cut time spent on low value deals
0 Response to "7 types of opportunities bloggers should avoid"
Post a Comment