The Indianapolis Star calls tribute bands "a bunch of fakers", but adds, "They're just giving the people what they want." Copycat acts are making a big comeback these days, it seems. Here in Indianapolis where I live, there are dozens of tribute acts, imitating big names from Michael Jackson to Kiss and Guns and Roses. No, you'll never find me waving my arms in the front row at a rock or hip hop concert, but, as a professional ghost blogger, I'm getting a big kick out of this manifestation of substitution stardom. Interesting - just a month ago I was weighing in online, along with what seemed like hundreds of others, on the topic of whether Kanye West uses a ghost blogger, and if so, whether and how that matters (see Does Kanye West's Ghost Blogger Say It For Him?).
It gets more interesting. The Star article points to a potential legal issue: What happens if the tribute acts become so successful they infringe on the business of the original act? The Star follows up (I love this part!) by explaining that, so far, the famous bands aren't griping. "They want us out there," comments Posin' (think Poison) guitarist Loki Johanssen. "It keeps their music alive." In other words, seats are selling, music is selling - everyone's happy.
So, if there's a parallel between tribute bands and professional ghost bloggers, who wants us out there? Well, Google and friends, for one thing. Since most business owners do not have both the time to run their business and the time to blog about them, we ghosts are the ones feeding content to the search engines, and content's exactly what search engines need and love. Our business owner clients hire us to be out there on their behalf, bringing their message to potential clients and customers. Most of all, the online searchers want us out there, to lead them to the answers, the products, and the services they went online to find.
Right up there with the tribute bands as they continue to fill seats, professional ghost bloggers are driving traffic to websites. Yeah, tribute bands and professional business bloggers - not just fakin' it, man - I mean, makin' it!
owners put a whole lot of their time and money into creating a brand name, complete with a logo and other graphics, sometimes adding a motto or slogan. As a professional ghost blogger, I'm considered part of a company's marketing team, and so I'm always looking for ways to help reinforce each business client's brand.
As a professional ghost blogger, I've taken my "one giant step" into the digital world. But entering my fourth decade as a denizen of the business world, I find face-to-face encounters are still my favorite flavor. The other day I had a delightful personal encounter with none other than the encounter empress herself, 
A writer myself, I'm always interested in the doings of other writers, and I love reading pieces about the writing process itself. Since the success of business blogging is so very dependent on the sheer discipline of continually posting new content, I was especially interested in some advice for writers I found in The Autobiographer's Handbook. Author Anthony Swofford tells writers: "Wake up. Drink coffee. Write. Ignore phone, ignore email, ignore world. Write." Then he adds (I imagine with a rueful smile born of personal experience) the part I think is so absolutely apropos for business blogging: "Ignore everything, just don't ignore your lovers for too long. They might not stick around."
Finders develop new business - they're the rainmakers.
provide good client service." "We have a planning process." "We care about you." All of these are important statements to make, but how are they different? "The missed step here is thinking hard about what you do differently and then amplifying that in every way possible." The writer recommends several steps:
Indianapolis Business Journal, Tom Dickey, Vice President of Duke Realty, explained why. The housing slump has hurt retail shopping strip centers, and Duke's projects have felt the pinch along with all the other developers. But, says Dickey, "We're getting retailers to commit and come to our projects even in this down economy, when their numbers might not work out." And then he went on to explain why: "They want to save their spot."
No, Mensa isn't all about arcane trivia and solving puzzles, as I keep explaining to the high IQ-phobic among my friends. Mensa can be about - business! In fact, I found a wonderful article on the future of advertising in the August Mensa Bulletin, with commentary that's tailor-made for my efforts in
selling is the answer to someone's problem."
Those challenges, in essence, are what makes my work as a ghost blogger for business so satisfying. I actually get to help level the playing field a little, giving my small business owners a chance to compete with bigger guys, "win search", get found, and bring in new customers and clients. Through providing recent, relevant, and constantly changing content on the Web (and, with my help, doing it frequently), those "little ones" get a chance to be big, not only in the aggregate as part of that 98% of Hoosier businesses, but individually! At the very least, these small businesses can be bigger than one might imagine based on size alone. In the blogosphere, you see, small can be beautiful.
We’re all used to alliteration in slogans, meaning repeated sounds. This one used a “C” in “crafted” and “cranked”. But what makes for a great word tidbit is capturing, in just a couple of words, a number of ideas and then delivering those in an impactful way. These homes, I instantly understood, were carefully and lovingly devised by skilled artisans to be different and unique, in contrast to the “other guys'’” homes that were just cranked out cookie-cutter style. (Remember, I’m getting all this from just four little words!)
The “
In the book “What No One Ever Tells You About Blogging And Podcasting,” Mikal Belicove, ghost blogger and blog strategist, defends the practice of ghost blogging. As I explained in my earlier Say It For You blog,
Business owners on a budget can learn a useful lesson from Big Apple. Just like the city of New York, businesses need to generate power – marketing power. The cost of extensive print advertising and direct mail campaigns can be daunting for businesses struggling to grow market share in today’s economy. What’s needed is “wind power” to propel new customers and clients to the business without the owner needing to make extensive and inflexible upfront financial commitments. In business marketing, blogs can serve as the parallel to what New York is calling “eggbeater-like” wind turbine models. Blogs are small, shorter and more centered around just one idea than e-zines or newsletters. Like the proposed rooftop mini-turbines, which require less wind force and less set-up time than their standard-sized counterparts, blogs require less of business owners than major advertising and marketing thrusts.


