Bloggers: Don’t make visitors log in before commenting

Don’t you  hate it when you visit a blog, read a post, love the topic, and even before you get to the end, you know what comment you’re going to add?

Then you reach the bottom of the post and you see this:
   
Log in box at Fast Company blog

   
That’s what happened to me just now when I read the article 10 Ways to Amplify a B2B PR Campaign by Wendy Marx at Fast Company’s blog. I love her list! She invited comments. And I had four more ideas I wanted to add.

Sorry, but I’m not hanging around to log in because I can’t remember if I have a Fast Company account. I’d have to dig around for my login name and password. If I don’t have one, I’d have to register. And that’s way too much trouble.

So instead, I’m criticizing the magazine and its dumb policy here.

Media outlets, by the way, seem to be the worst offenders. Many newspapers, which are dying, force the few visitors they have left to create an account before commenting at their blogs or websites. I’m a former newspaper editor. Before I left the business 17 years ago, I was appalled by the “screw you” attitude and awful customer service that permeates the industry.

 

My Ideas for Publicizing Your Publicity

Here’s what I would have written at the Fast Company blog. These ideas work for any PR campaign, not just B2B:

  1. When you’ve gotten national publicity, let your local newspaper, weekly newspaper or business journal know by submitting a press release. Go one step further. Pitch yourself and offer to explain how you got national publicity. 
       
  2. Ditto for your college alumni publication.
       
  3. Speakers, photocopy the article, with permission, and add it to your handouts.
       
  4. Write a letter to the editor of the newspaper or magazine that just wrote about you. Discuss one or two points the reporter didn’t include, or elaborate on a specific issue within the overall story. You get in front of the same audience twice!  If readers missed reading the original article, they’ll see your name and company name in the letter.

Those are my ideas. Add yours to the list. Or explain why you think media outlets and others have idiotic policies that make readers log in.

 


A Tool That Can Help You

My Special Report #13: How to Recycle Your Publicity, has many more ideas on this topic. It was updated a few months ago. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fast Company tips and other tweets from this past week

twitter birdHere are my Top 10 tweets from this past week, great for retweeting! If you missed these, follow @PublicityHound on Twitter.

Twitter and Facebook tips for food trucks.  http://ow.ly/7MOeO RT@mysurveyexpert #foodtrucks

Are women in PR just grown up “mean girls”? Weigh in athttp://ow.ly/7LXGe

Want a story in Fast Company? Writer says you must answer these 4 questions first: http://ow.ly/7LaI1

How to bait your hook for retweets. http://ow.ly/7JrsU

Why You Can’t Read a Kindle During Take-off—4 Theories.http://ow.ly/7IWGf

7 reasons to embrace nasty comments at your blog.http://ow.ly/7HZZI #blogging

10 types of writer’s block and how to overcome them.http://ow.ly/7HdpL #writingtips

Top 15 tech bloggers and tweeters in 2011. (PR people, save this list.) http://ow.ly/7JS8m

Pitching journalists? Google their name. You’ll find valuable tidbits you can weave into yr pitch. #publicity

Website traffic shouldn’t be the goal of your blog. [I disagree! Read my comment] http://ow.ly/7MO6R #seo #blogs

So I’m in Fast Company this month? Big deal

I’d forgotten about Fast Company’s Influence Project until the tweets and emails started arriving last week, just after the November issue hit the streets.

“Congratulations! Your photo is in the third row of The Influencer Project!” a friend wrote.

I’d completely forgotten about the experiment, which started July 1, to identify the most influential person online.

I first learned about it from social media consultant Mari Smith, who emailed me and thousands of others on her list, asking us to click on a link, sign up, and then pass the link along to our followers and encourage them to do the same.

Each participant received a unique URL. Every time somebody clicked on Mari’s, she got credit.  If those clickers also decided to sign up as a participant, she received partial credit for any clicks they obtained. She also received credit for all of my followers who clicked and signed up under me. Sort of like a pyramid scheme.

Fast Company said everyone who participated would have their photos printed in the November issue. I checked periodically to see how I ranked, but became so frustrated with the slow load times, that I quickly forgot about it.

Almost from the start, Fast Company was chastised by bloggers who said the contest,a  link-bait gimmick, did nothing more than turn people into digital guinea pigs and confused ego with  influence.

So there I am, ranked #70  out of the 32,955 people who participated (Mari is #13) . The #1 slot goes to Jeremy Schoemaker, a blogger and entrepreneur. But to think I’m the #70th most influential person online—because I wrote about it in my ezine and sent a tweet or two—is absurb. My definition of true influence is the ability to persuade people to take action for the common good.

I’m not writing a press release, or using “as seen in Fast Company” in my email signature, or including the magazine’s cover in my online press room (if you’re part of the project, you shouldn’t either).  I’ll share it with my Facebook Fans and link to this post.

The Influence Project was fun for a day or two—nothing more—only because I was curious about how they’d fit everyone’s photos into the magazine.  Except for the several dozen photos of people who are recognizable, the remainder of the four-page foldout looks like the crowd at a football stadium while you’re watching TV.

Fast Company wants your photo for its November issue

Fast Company November 2010 coverFast Company magazine wants to include your photo in the November 2010 issue, as part of a neat project it calls the “2010 Most Influential People.”

This is a terrific chance to generate publicity from a magazine with a circulation of more than 538,000, as well as knowing how influential you really are.

If you’re patient and willing to wait a few minutes for the site to load,  go here now to get a unique URL which you can then share with your followers via email, at your website and blog, and on the social media sites.

It took me only a minute to sign up, insert my short bio and upload my photo.

After you’ve registered, you can track how your influence has grown and where you stand at any time on the site.  You’ll also get a welcome message from Fast Company telling you that your photo will be in the November issue.

Let’s see how many Publicity Hounds we can get into the magazine!