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The arcane art of cold emailing bloggers

36 pointsby benjlangabout 12 years ago

3 comments

Swizecabout 12 years ago
As a blogger, I can say you'll get very far by just not being formulaic. Most of the "can you write about me" email I get looks like somebody followed a "5 ways to get noticed by bloggers" blogpost when writing the email.<p>Be human. That's all it takes.
jlgaddisabout 12 years ago
I haven't written much in the last year or so, but I have a somewhat popular blog. The number of "cold e-mails" I receive have went down, but I still receive at least one or two a week.<p>Many of the companies I hear from have a "press release" type of "blog post" already written up that they simply want me to post, verbatim. More times than not, these companies and their products have nothing to do with my field (networking) and are not the types of things that I would write about or that "my readers" would expect to see on my web site.<p>That doesn't stop them, though. It's like they came across my web site and thought, "hey, here's a blog, let's e-mail them" without regard to "my audience".<p>Primarily as a result of some events I've been invited to/a part of, I've had the opportunity to visit and get to know many people in the networking industry in the Bay area (I'm just a networking guy from the midwest). While visiting and meeting up w/ folks from Cisco and Juniper is cool, I'd much rather read and write stuff about start-ups.<p>Basically, if you want me to write about your product, get it in my hands. Whether it's a web app, mobile app, or physical product, I, amazingly enough, want to actually <i>use it</i> for a while and form my own opinion. If you expect me to simply regurgitate the great things you've said in your "press release", you're mistaken.
uladzislauabout 12 years ago
From my experience unless you can outline exactly what's in it for the blogger personally or his/her readers - cold emails are useless.<p>What could be the right incentive? Exclusive data (for bigger blogs), early access, promo codes, discount codes, free subscription, valuable content as a guest post, the list goes on.<p>Just asking for review regardless how cool is your project is not enough.