I've had a few questions sent my way thus far, including these: "Should a company blog be written by one person, or several, or by a faceless 'voice?' Should a company have one person as it's 'voice' in the market via various social media platforms?"


Allow me to respond to the first in this post followed by a response to the second tomorrow.
Single voice or many voices
There is ample precedent for either approach, but I think the choice comes down to a matter of a) the availability of personnel resources and b) the company culture.
For example, I work for a small software company with 30 employees. We've made a conscious decision to incorporate blogs and social media into our marketing paradigm. In fact, we're in the process of rolling out a new multi-blog site called User Friendly Thinking (yet to go live) and have nine employees contributing to it. Well, we are supposed to have nine contributors. The last time I checked, only three posts had been written.
That's not a castigation of either our employee contributors or the company. It is a statement of the fact that these people have other things to do and the time they have to blog is limited.
The lack of activity also speaks to the fact that our company has yet to fully embrace the mantra that "markets are conversations" and "participation is marketing." We're only now coming to grips with the philosophy that marketing is no longer relegated to the marketing department.
I suspect that's a mindset shared by many companies, large and small. Take into consideration that, according to Burson Marsteller, only 15 percent of Fortune 500s are making effective use of blogs and that percentage far exceeds the number of small businesses engaged in some form of social media marketing and my point is made.
Enough complaining Paul...answer the question!
Given that a company could commit personnel resources and has adopted a transparent, participatory mindset, if I had my druthers, I'd choose to have many voices speaking to the blogosphere rather than one.
The reasons are manifold:

  • For one, it gives the company much more Google juice, especially if the blogs are outside the company's own server/IP range.
  • Second, it increases the amount of content available for both search engines and humans to consume. That translates into the potential for higher traffic, a greater likelihood that others will link to the content, and improved SERPs.
  • Third, it gives the company many human touch points.
Take Microsoft for example. What started most famously with Robert Scoble has now spread across the vast expanse of the organization to include approximately 4000 employee bloggers, according to the Blog Council's Michael Rubin. The company has even created a portal to house them. (Some of them at least. Many employees maintain their own personal blogs.)
While it's still only a small percentage of the total employee base, it's not the number that's of greatest significance, but the philosophy that says rather than have one human touch point, why not have many.
Dell takes a similar approach. Their digital media team consists of 46 employees (yes, 46!) who contribute to a dozen blogs and who constantly monitor and engage the blogosphere and Twitterverse for mentions of Dell. (One of the team members well-known to many of you, Richard Binhammer, told me via Twitter that it's becoming "everyone's" job.)
Good for them, but I own a small business
I come back to my original premise. It's a matter of available personnel resources combined with company culture. Organizations who have adopted a mindset that social media is no longer merely the purview of the marketing or PR departments are succeeding at building a positive reputation and stronger brand online.
If a company's resources are limited to the degree they can only afford to dedicate one person, I say one is better than none. It's important to have a voice in the blogosphere, even if it's a soloist.
The question then arises, who should that person be? The marketing director? CEO? Customer service manager?
If you have someone at the helm like Michael Hyatt, President and CEO of Thomas Nelson Publishing, then absolutely the CEO. Michael has a transparent spirit and a unique, warm and engaging voice that's been honed over years of blogging. He has led his company to embrace blogging - including company blogs and book review blogs - to the point where it's part of their corporate DNA.
Unfortunately, not many companies are blessed with someone as well-suited to blogging as Mike Hyatt. In that case, I would suggest finding a person, up or down the line, who is already actively engaged in the social mediasphere and who understands the environment, regardless of their departmental affiliation or position. Give them a new title, Chief Blogger, or even a new job!
A great example of this is a New Orleans oilfield services company, Halo Supply. When Halo commissioned their new site they needed someone to maintain it and found an employee, Tyrus Smith, who worked, believe it or not, as a delivery truck driver. Tyrus had, on his own, learned HTML and Web design. One day he was driving a delivery truck and the next managing the company Web site. (You gotta love that!) Now, Tyrus is putting a number of social media forms into play, including YouTube videos, Picasa photo albums and, very soon, a company blog.
Finally, what about the "faceless voice?"
My answer is straightforward -- absolutely not! Both the blog and social mediaspheres are built on twin cornerstones of authenticity and transparency. Having a nameless, faceless "voice" in no way represents either of those ethics. Not only that, social media marketing is really "personality marketing." Just read Rohit Bhargava's new book Personality Not Included and you'll see what I mean.
Bottom line, if your company can devote multiple personnel to blogging and social media engagement, I encourage it. If not, commission at least one person to be your voice crying in the wilderness. And it doesn't have to be the CEO. Given Halo's example, it might be someone you'd never expect.
Tomorrow I'll answer the sequel question, "Should a company have one person as it's 'voice' in the market via various social media platforms?"
Got questions about the "how-tos" of blogging or social media? The handyman is here to help. Either leave a comment or email me at pchaney at gmail dot com. I'll be happy to address them.
(BTW - Sorry for the latency in posting of late, especially considering I just started. Not exactly a good precedent. However, New York City beckoned and my wife, Amie, and I had to heed the call.)


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Company Blog: Single Spokesperson or Many Voices?

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Paul Chaney

Paul Chaney is a veteran digital marketing consultant, trainer, writer, editor, and author of four books, including The Digital Handshake: Seven Proven Strategies to Grow Your Business Using Social Media. Reach him via pchaney@gmail.com.

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Twitter: @pchaney