Bridal Spectacular

How to become a great blogger

blog people 300 How to become a great bloggerStart by being a second or third rate blogger, and become great, over time.

Sound strange? Ponder this quotation.

Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly until you learn to do it well.

– Steve Brown

We get better at things with training, practice, and more repetition. Just like learning an instrument or playing tennis.

In the case of publishing a blog, if you do it effectively, it will be the single most powerful arrow in your wedding marketing quiver.

A great blog isn’t easy. If it was, everyone would have one. If you develop and maintain one, you will be heads above your competition, in many things, including search engine ranking and business image.

And once you’re out in front, you’ll find it’s easier to stay out in front.

That’s it, that’s all.

Andy Ebon
The Wedding Marketing Authority

LVWN Brides Panel #4: Connecting with a bride on Facebook

facebook username logo1 LVWN Brides Panel #4: Connecting with a bride on Facebook

This post is the fourth of a recap series about a meeting of the Las Vegas Wedding Network. Seven brides spoke and answered questions about their wedding planning experience.

Jazmine told a story about a vendor she met a bridal show who took the time to look up her Facebook profile, find out a little bit about her, and connected with her. The vendor was able to look her up, using the email address she provided.

One of the meeting attendees was aghast and agitated, shouting out her question: “Isn’t that stalking?”

Calmly, Jazmine responded with the following… paraphrasing:

“At the time, my profile was public, so anyone on Facebook could have seen my complete profile. I have since made much of my profile less public, until I’ve made a friend-connection. I thought it was ‘sweet’ that the vendor took a little time to learn a little about me, see I had a child from a previous marriage, and more. It showed me they were interested in me.”

More than once, during the evening, Jazmine pointed out the importance of people remembering names and faces, particularly at bridal shows and showcases. She remembered a specific instance where one exhibitor at a bridal show had shoved a business card at her, three separate times. Other people, seeing her on multiple occasions, remembered her by name.

Opinion – What to make of this: First of all, it’s not stalking. Not by a long shot. If some approaches you to friend them on Facebook, if you don’t want that to happen, just press ignore. If they persist, and annoy you, it’s one click to BLOCK them.

If you approached 100 brides via Facebook to follow your business group page or connect as a friend, some percentage would connect with you and others would not. Your approach might go like this:

Dear Jazmine,

Enjoyed meeting you at the Bridal Spectacular. I know you’re still in the decision making process, and thought you might want to follow my business fan page, and learn more about what my company is about, and see what we’re doing. Hope you’ll become a fan.

Andy

That’s a pretty benign approach, and, again, some brides will become a fan, others won’t. Don’t over analyze it. Having a soft Facebook strategy is a perfectly reasonable marketing move.

It’s important to remember that what YOU prefer as a customer, is not relevant when you are the business owner. Don’t project your likes and dislikes on the bride. This is an opt-in approach. Those brides that choose to follow you are exercising Permission Marketing.

Andy Ebon
The Wedding Marketing Blog