Finding your Blogs voice

posted on June 9, 2008

At this point in time there are plenty of people who realize the value of a blog and have ventured into the process of blogging (hopefully on a regular baises). However there is rarely enough thought into the mechanics of the blog and how it will be used to add value to a company or organization. One of the fundamental aspects of a blog is the voice that is used to speak to the readers, it can make or break a blog and often times it isn’t even an afterthought.

Blogs are conversational by nature, they tend to be more relaxed and casual… but they don’t have to be. Many corporate blogs chose not to have the relaxed and casual speaking voice, instead picking some medium between a PR voice and the casual voice that a personal blogger would adopt. This is OK in the right situations, even great. Some companies and industries wouldn’t benefit from a casual toned blog, they need that level of credibility and the authentic nature of a blog complements the credibility. However the point is that as a corporate blogger you need to know if that is the voice that will best suite the blog and your goals.

There are times where a more casual voice would provide the most value to a blog. Consider large consumer corporations, which feel like faceless monoliths. These corporations are often painted as evil bloodsucking money-grubbing voids, devoid of any real human characteristics despite the fact that they completely consist of people. It might be easy to try and create a blog that has shows no errors, no weaknesses, no additional areas for people to criticize and nit-pick. However what these corporations really need is a real and authentic voice, a feeling of being human. Consider the GM Fastlane blog, Bob Lutz doesn’t take the time to spell check, fix every grammatical error, and that is wonderful. Bob is a human, a person you could walk up and talk to, someone who has hopes and dreams for both himself and his company. Yet some many people see GM as a horrid faceless entity that lay’s off workers and steals pension plans. A squeaky clean blog written in marketing/pr speak would do nothing to combat this feeling, and it would have very little to add.

On the other hand, if you look at a company like AVL North America (a client of my other company) they would not benefit from a casual blog. They produce highly technical engine testing systems for use by large companies like GM, Cat, etc… Their audience doesn’t care that the people building these systems are regular guys like you and me, they want to make sure they select the best equipment to ensure they produce the best possible product they can. AVL would be better suited by a very technical in nature blog, that shows expertise and customer support. A completely different voice than that of GMs Fast Lane blog.

Tags: , , , , ,

Feedback and Comments

Comments (0)