Senior Living Companies: You Must Blog Now!

What? Why?

If there’s one thing every senior living company needs to have on their Website right now, its a blog. Why? First, a blog allows you to easily post dynamic content to your site, broadcast it across the Web for free, and puts your company on the social media grid. Second, your competitors are doing it. Third, your customers are all over it. Forth, done right, your blog will supercharge your SEO, establish you as a trusted resource, and drive prospects, potential partners, and potential employees to your Website. If you want proof, check out this interview with SeniorsforLiving.com. And finally, without one, you will become invisible online.

Explain.

Every day, boomers with elderly parents, caregivers seeking senior living or eldercare solutions, and skilled employees looking for a good company to work for use the social Web and new media to search for answers and opportunities. Your blog is the place that can (and should) provide them with the information, advice, tips, resources, knowledge, skills, help, support, and opportunities they need. Unless your Website has social components (like a blog), its basically an online brochure with nothing more than canned marketing messages, fancy photos, and information about you. These days, that’s not enough. You need more, and a good place to start is a blog.

How?

Setting up a blog is fairly easy. For companies on a serious budget, I recommend using WordPress, a free blogging platform that has all the features a company needs to get started. The more challenging aspect of having a blog, of course, is the blogging itself. Blogging takes time and has to be done right. But in this new world of social media, you can’t afford not to do it.

Here are 14 tips to help you succeed with a company blog:

  1. Pick the “Main Blogger.” Someone in the company has to be responsible for posting to and maintaining the blog. That person should be someone who you trust to be the online voice of your company or organization. Staff like your conceirge, activity director, or marketer may be a good choice. Senior executives should contribute to the blog at least monthly. If you can get your department heads to post one article a month, that would be ideal.
  2. Be human. Write as though you’re writing to a family member, not a faceless mass of people. Use your postings to connect with
    your audience through your own (or your company’s) style and personality. Let YOU come through. Write in the first person, using “I” and
    write almost like you’re having a conversation. Speak to your specific
    audience and always keep them in mind as you write.
  3. Be Helpful. I hate to say it, but nobody really cares about the fancy messaging on your company Website. Every senior living company Website says pretty much the same thing. So on your company blog, you want to give people fresh, honest, unique content and actionable information they can use today to make informed decisions and get stuff done.
  4. Break information into chunks. People typically don’t like to read long
    drawn-out paragraphs.  Break up your
    paragraphs, use bullet points, use lists, and stay on topic.  If you want to cover other topics, it’s
    better to write new posts covering those other topics.
  5. Use a captivating title. Your title should prompt people to want to read
    the post.  Use calls to action like, “Three
    Must-Read Books On Healthy Aging For 2009″ or lists like, “15 Ways To Stay Connected To Family
    In Assisted Living.”  Use all caps in the
    title.
  6. Post from experience. Boomers and seniors love stories and first-hand accounts. If you have personal experience in certain aspects
    of care giving for example, write about it. Use case studies; tell readers how you or your company solved a
    particular problem. This shows readers
    that you know what you’re talking about and you’re trust worthy. It can also begin to position you and your
    company as an authority on the subject.
  7. Write well. This cannot be taken for granted. I don’t care how salient your
    post is, if it’s poorly written, you will not be taken seriously. In fact, you
    can even damage your online reputation.
  8. Use images. Always try to place an “intro image” at the beginning
    of a
    post. The image should have something to
    do with your content.
    Be mindful of copyright issues. Try to use images licensed under
    creative
    commons licensing. You can find a lot of
    these on Flikr.
  9. Post regularly. Readers are more likely to read your blog if you have a
    regular posting schedule. Post at least
    once per week, and stick to it.
  10. Market your blog. Syndicate your content out to other social media sites
    like LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter. Put a link to your blog in your email signature and on business
    cards.
  11. Create a “sneeze page.” A sneeze page is a blog post that reviews your
    previous blog posts and provides links to them. You can do this one a week or once a month, depending on how often you
    post.
  12. Link out. Whenever you reference something or someone that can be found on
    the internet, make it a link. Always give others credit for their work and
    link to their sites. At the bottom of
    your post, add your name, title, and a link to your main Website.
  13. Don’t sell. People who read blogs don’t want to be sold to.  They want interesting and informative
    content. Help your readers by providing
    them with this, not by trying to tell them on how great you your company is. If you provide great content, it will be a
    reflection of your company and will help you sell your brand organically.
  14. Don’t give up. Blogging requires commitment and focus. While most of the time it’s great fun, it can get tedious and time consuming sometimes. Don’t let that stop you. Just push through and keep
    blogging. Your audience will appreciate
    it.

For senior living companies that want to go beyond just a blog to fully tap into the social web, I recommend setting up a branded online community, which combines a blog with other social media tools like member profiles, discussion forums, event calendars, photo galleries, and much more. You can learn more about the benefits of blogs, social media, and online communities at http://carenetworks.com/benefits.

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Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician,
consultant, educator, blogger, online community manager and the founder
of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and
would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook.

This entry was posted in Blogging, Inbound Marketing, Online Communities, Senior Living, Social Media. Bookmark the permalink.

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