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Posted: 17 Jun 2011 04:47 AM PDT ![]() I was most interested in how Molly talked a lot of the importance of an athlete’s brand and how she helps her athletes develop and establish a brand that goes beyond the 2.7 year average career of a professional football player. Turning your Twitter and other social media tools into a marketing machine. Being strategic with your message and building relationships to establish sponsorship and other partnerships all with the help of social media. Considering branding and channels long after your professional career ends. Something I think bloggers particularly mommy bloggers can learn a thing or two about. Including myself. As someone who has been a business blogger long before I became a mom to Ryleigh, I’m fascinated and often disgusted with the industry. And if you are a mommy blogger you may hate the fact that I’m writing this post but that goes for daddy bloggers, blogger bloggers, business bloggers, and everyone else in between, myself included. By reviewing products and services for free or for little to no compensation, we are allowing ourselves to be taken advantage. We are feeding the cheap marketing extravaganza. Feeding the marketing monster And for that I’m ashamed. You may remember when I drove a car that rhymes with” heavy” as part of a blogger promotion. I watched as the third party PR and marketing company made thousands of dollars while me and my blogging counterparts sold our souls for a free ride and a couple measly gift certificates. My breaking point came when several members of the PR team went on separate out of country beach vacations. Celebrating their new big contract while the rest of us were left to do the dirty work. You may get a call to review an iphone app for employee appreciation like I did this week. Or maybe you received a free blender for a product review. Theses promotions and trinkets will likely not make millions or a millionaire, a thousandaire, or even a hundredaire. They will in fact not likely pay the bills, and I am frustrated with those that nickel and dime in exchange for a blogger utopia filled with fame, fortune, and an occasional coupon clipping class at Wal-Mart. But before we can expect PR and corporate marketing reps to change their illusive and cheap pitching ways, it starts with us. The mommy bloggers, the daddy bloggers, the business bloggers, and every blogger needs to be more, demand more, and act more. Saying no and changing perspectives and expectations before we can begin to say yes and be treated like an actual marketing opportunity instead of selling our soul. I’m just taking a page from Molly Fletcher and her own playbook. Her words really resonated with me and I wonder if we can be and do more as what I believe is part of this new information revolution. Are you with me? Photo Credit Kimberly Kinrade. |
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