Being a Chameleon Blog Writer
Creating blogs for someone else or their company website can be challenging. Writing blogs isn't always the easiest thing to do even if you are writing them for yourself.
Over the years I've written a vast library of blogs both as myself and as a ghost writer for clients. Blogging is a vital marketing tool that showcases knowledge, experience and understanding. The best part, it helps raise the online profile of a business through SEO. I've always taken great pride in my ability to be the chameleon blog writer. Getting to know my clients, their quirks, personality and bringing their identity and tone throughout a piece of written work.
Here are my key tips for writing a great blog for someone else:
- Get to know your client. This is really important. How can you write something in their style and personality if you don't know much about them. It's also important to your client that what your write replicates how they come across in real life. Imbed their personality into your written work.
- Ask for a list of potential subjects to cover, but also come up with your own list. You want range and depth of knowledge.
- Keep to your subject in a blog, don't confuse the reader with cross purpose.
- Don't just go for the safe subjects, go with the challenging ones that push you, add research if necessary.
- Always reference your source points.
- Talk through your clients monthly marketing plans, get ideas from their focus points and write blogs that compliment this. It will bolster their marketing plan, and your client will appreciate it.
- Guide your client on best practice and allow them to make changes. Its their blog at the end of the day and any tweaks they make will add the final touch to imbed their tone of voice.
- If your client returns a blog to you heavily re-written, don't let this dis-hearten you. Talk it through, where did you go wrong, what did you misunderstand. Use it as a lesson well learnt and evolve your style as a result.
- Get a great proof reader. I'm very lucky that one of my brothers is an English teacher, he's hot on grammar, spelling and tone, and is an invaluable part of writing a great blog. This is so important, your blog will be going out into the public eye. You want to ensure your clients are happy and not having to correct you, but also if it does go out with mistakes it's representative of your client foremost. Human error is inevitable, just look to reduce this as much as possible. And of course a well written blog with excellent grammar and spelling ensures SEO is working for the client through super content.
Kate Baines
kate@virtualprestige.co.uk





