Enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz
Ted Demopoulos Ted's contact info
Ted lives in Durham, New Hampshire, USA, with his wife Margaret, children Jamie, Amelia, Anastasia, and dog Tyler. He consults and gives keynotes on Technology, Security, and Business. He loves flyfishing, ham radio, and great food and wine.

Main Website

Keynote Speeches

Free Articles

securITy Newsletter

More about Ted

Atom/RSS feed

Add to My Yahoo!

Subscribe with Bloglines

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

•Profitable College Speaking Bootcamp

•Striped Bass Fly Fishing

•College Speaker

•Shopping Carts for Blogs and Websites

•Book Reviews

•SANS Network Security 2008

•Need a Shopping Cart?

•Security Laboratory

•Become a Published Author and Public Speaker

•SANS Security Training

•Geekonomics

•Security Thought Leader

Should Executives Blog?

Many executives should considering blogging. It helps publicize company news as well as executive viewpoints and opinions, and adds to a company’s personality. Executives can blog extremely effectively as their thoughts are usually well regarded and trusted, and their blogs tend to get an instant large readership. Executives who blog include Bob Lutz, Vice Chairman of General Motors, Randey Baseler, VP of Marketing, Boeing, and many others.

Not everyone is suited to blogging. Some executives may also not be comfortable publicly expressing their views on a regular basis. Blogs also need to be in a written in a personal and conversational style in order to be seen as authentic, and many executives have difficulty writing in such an informal style.

Executives often have time constraints and an executive blog that is rarely updated will quickly lose its popularity and readers. A "group blog" with several authors and an occasional insightful blog post by an executive can successfully retain interested readers and popularity. This allows an executive to contribute as time permits.

Some executives default to having their blogs ghostwritten or "produced" by PR. "Light" ghost writing and editing can be useful but a blog entirely produced and scripted is not going to be effective; the thoughts and opinions in the blog must be authentic.

Blogging may be difficult or impossible to do effectively in some organizations. If company policy requires statements to be approved before being made public, perhaps by several layers of bureaucracy, the immediacy and relevance of a blog and its chances of success can be severely compromised. In any industry where running afoul of regulations may be an issue, confer with legal counsel for guidelines.

Read More Articles

Comments on "Should Executives Blog?"

 

post a comment

      
      

Most Internet users have been targeted by criminal phishing emails, yet less than one third have any idea what phishing is, and only 3.5% have changed their habits due to the threat of phishing!

Risks include Identity Theft, Credit Card fraud, and more.

Download Results (pdf)