By 
Robert W. Bly
 
 
 
            
In a recent DM News column, I 
apparently offended a segment of the blogging community by suggesting that 
perhaps blogs might be “an utter waste of time … a pure vanity publication that 
won’t pay you back even one thin dime for your effort.”
            
Here’s what all the hoopla has taught me so far: bloggers are a 
tight-knit community that sticks together and are rabidly enthusiastic about 
their medium. Many are self-described blogging 
“evangelists.”
            
Their attitude toward new and untested marketing media and channels is 
probably a lot different than yours and mine (I assume that you, like me, are a 
direct marketer).
            
  I told virtually every 
blogger who said I had treated blogging unfairly the 
following….
            
“We direct marketers only care about one thing in marketing: ROI (return 
on investment). 
            
“Unless a dollar spent on a marketing test returns two or three dollars 
in revenues, we consider that test a failure – and cut off the 
promotion.”
            
For instance, there are direct marketers generating millions of dollars a 
year in direct product sales from e-zines and e-mail marketing campaigns. One I 
know produces upwards of $40 million in annual sales from their e-mail 
marketing.
            
I challenged the bloggers: “Can anyone out there show me even a single 
blog that produces one percent of that -- $400,000 annual 
sales?”
            
No takers, so far. Not a single blogger could produce evidence of a blog 
generating a significant, positive ROI (the cut-off figure for which I have 
chosen direct sales of $400,000 a year or more).
            
But what my challenge did 
produce was a bunch of passionate responses explaining to me why blogging is 
without question the next big thing in marketing despite its lack of discernible 
ROI.
            
“It’s all about the conversation,” writes Marc Orchant, feeding me The Cluetrain Manifesto’s party line. 
“That’s the point of the blog space. As a lifelong marketer myself, I find the 
DM industry behind the curve, generally speaking, when it comes to embracing 
disruptive technologies.” Reader B.L. Ochman says, “Blogs help develop a 
conversation between a company and its customers [and] have become an important 
part of the marketing mix.”
            
As direct marketers, I’m not sure our primary objective is to embrace 
disruptive technologies or have conversations. Isn’t it more about boosting 
response, generating a positive ROI, and beating the 
control?
            
“My argument is that blogging is more likely to raise brand awareness, 
but that the impact on direct sales will be more difficult to assess,” says Max 
Blumberg. “Therefore, I don’t think it is appropriate to look for a close 
relationship between blogging and direct sales.”
            
Some of the writers who contacted me were eager to compare blogging to 
direct mail and show me that DM is inferior. Blogger Yvonne Divita states, “The 
small business owner cannot hope to create and support a continuing successful 
direct mail campaign.” 
            
I’d recommend Yvonne start reading DM News; every issue is packed with 
stories of businesses large and small making healthy profits with both 
traditional direct mail as well as e-mail marketing.
            
Yvonne also told me that when she was a corporate assistant to the CEO of 
a good-sized company, “I threw all the direct mail in the circular file at my 
feet. The CEO didn’t want to see it. So, who’s really reading your client’s 
direct mail piece?” 
            
Yvonne seems unaware of the concepts of cost per thousand and break-even 
analysis, which let us direct marketers make a healthy profit even if 98 out of 
100 prospects toss our mailings away without a second glance. She comments, 
“When a direct mail piece can only assure the sender of approximately a 2% to 3% 
return, you can’t convince me the hundreds or thousands spent on it is worth 
it.” Tell that to Omaha Steaks, Covenant House, and Phillips! 
            
Jennifer Rice explains that comparing blogs with direct marketing is to 
look at blogs from the wrong angle: “Blogging is not a direct response vehicle. 
It’s an awareness, visibility, and promotion vehicle that happens to be terrific 
for those of us selling intellectual capital. It’s also extremely useful for 
corporations to use as a means to connect with customers and get 
feedback.”
            
Finally, a couple of resources to help you learn more about blogs (I 
recommend both highly).
            
First, Deb Weil’s “Business Blogging Starter Kit,” available at http://www.wordbiz.com/. Deb is a blogging 
evangelist, but her kit contains a lot of useful how-to guidance for anyone thinking about starting a 
blog.
            
Second, get B.L. Ochman’s special report, “What Can Your Company Do With 
a Blog." Like Deb’s, detailed, specific, and instructional. Available at http://www.what'snextonline.com/.
            
Recently Ms. Ochman asked me, “Do you still think blogs are baloney?” I 
replied: “I never thought or actually said they were baloney. I just said that, 
as a direct marketer, I don’t think blogging – a medium with unproven ROI and 
uneven quality – is something we should get excited about, as the blogosphere 
has.
            
“I think members of the blogosphere should be applauded for their 
pioneering spirit … but their evangelical enthusiasm is not yet supported by 
results.”
            
I’m still highly skeptical about the whole blogging thing, and I find the 
majority of blogs to be lacking in quality and content (to be fair, there are 
many exceptions here). But I do think the topic warrants further investigation 
on my part, which includes starting my own blog at www.bly.com/blog.htm. I’ll keep you 
posted and report periodically in this column – and of course, on my 
blog.
            
About the author:
            
Robert W. Bly is a freelance copywriter and the author of 60 books 
including The Complete Idiot’s Guide to 
Direct Marketing (Alpha). His e-mail address is rwbly@bly.com and his Web 
site address is http://www.bly.com/.
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