Blog Networks
May 19th, 2009 - Posted in Luxury SectoreMarketer predicts by 2011, user-generated content sites will attract 101 million people in the U.S, that’s a pretty big figure when you consider that the US online audience is just over 300 million.
With this in mind you can understand the numerous blogger outreach programmes that are launching, making a good little penny from providing access to these influential environments. As this offering sits somewhere between display, PR and in some respects SEO enhancement it’s interesting that there aren’t more sector specific blog networks. I would presume that this would not be cost efficient? Just concentrating on one sector probably won’t hit revenues conducive to a company staying afloat, however when you consider that these blogger outreach programmes have to build up relationships with the bloggers and then make sure that the advertisers they use don’t devalue the blogs it makes sense for them to be sector specific.
With this in mind I believe that publishers and sector specific media agencies have the opportunity to fill this niche, due to their contextual relevance and a business model that does not just rely on social media outreach. Publishers generally have an existing relationship with bloggers, where bloggers reference and support their posts with a publisher’s content, relying on the publisher’s heritage and standing within its verticle. With this trust established and the list of publisher’s advertisers suiting the audience and context of the blog, this makes for a great business model. The relationship is mutually beneficial, with the publisher extending their commercial offering and the blogger benefitting from exclusives from the publisher, invites to events, mentions of the blog on the publishers site and commission/cash money!
With sector specific agencies offering access to the right brands, this relationship makes sense for sector specific blogs, as the agency work as a PR company providing relevant exclusives and stories for the blog and its audience. Include to this social media work the fact the agency will also look after the clients, SEO, SEM and display activity, a completely cohesive digital strategy is established, where all elements of the digital communication mutually enhance, providing the most efficient use of the clients budget.
It will be interesting to see if this is an area that publishers move into, as ad revenues drop and competition is upped from these blog networks, which generally trade on very low CPMs, will the big publishers and niche publsihers look at their most influential verticles and concentrate on building blog networks to that specific interest?





