According to Keywords Everywhere, 880 people are looking for the answer to the question, "why blog?" every single month, which tells us that blogging is one of the fastest, easiest, and most scalable ways to increase your SEO. Blogging can be a highly-targeted way to increase traffic and reach the right people with the right message. Who wouldn't want to do that?
We all turn to the search bar for answers and blogging gives your company a direct medium to connect with their curious customers by creating really useful information that applies specifically to your prospect's search terms.
People don't want to be sold to anymore. So, nine times out of ten, creating relevant and educational content will certainly be more advantageous than optimizing a site page or product page to rank for those keywords.
Have you ever clicked on a promising search result and it takes you to a nicely optimized, but barely related site page? Yet that's how too many business content strategies seem to work. Creating interesting, relevant, and useful content is hard work. However, creating a website page is easy, but that doesn't mean it will help you create meaningful relationships with your prospects online.
Source of ConfusionPerhaps the problem starts with the way blogging has changed over the years. The term "blog" started out as shorthand for "weblog." So, there may still be some confusion left over from those early days when blogs were really just personal journals. Back then, you could joke about blogs just being the place where people posted food pics, creative writing, personal journal entries, and random thoughts.
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Since then, Twitter, Facebook, Foursquare, Instagram, Pinterest, and Snapchat all took their turns as the "post a pic" site people joked about. Meanwhile, major content creators and businesses hopped on the blogging train. Blogs have evolved as places for people to showcase their expertise on a topic and places for companies to own their own messages.
Sure, there are still plenty of businesses that just post press releases or sales-centric promotional posts on their blogs, and many others that don't blog at all, but businesses that blog strategically are getting the well-targeted search traffic they deserve. In fact, 84% of businesses report that their blog delivers "strong or some results."
How Blogging WorksRemember, even though it appears in your blogroll, each new blog is a new site page of its own. It has it's own URL and gets indexed separately, so each blog becomes a chance to rank for a new keyword. How well that works is up to you.
Takeaway: Why blog? Why not? Smart, well-targeted blogs are an opportunity to showcase your thought leadership and bring in extra organic traffic. And we have the numbers to prove it.
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