How
Bylined Articles Yield Highly Qualified Leads
Writing bylined articles for trade journals is a time-honored
way to increase brand recognition and respect.
Bylined articles:
- Build industry recognition for your technology.
- Position your executives and engineers as experts
to your target audiences.
- Yield highly qualified leads that lead to sales.
All these good things can be had by submitting a
vendor-neutral bylined article on your technology to a trade journal
serving your targeted audience.
If it's vendor-neutral how can it work?
A vendor-neutral bylined article is not a brochure or a press release.
The only place your company will even be mentioned is the small
tagline at the end of the article and your product probably won't
be mentioned at all.
So what good is it?
It's good because the article strongly
positions the technology you are selling. Let's say your product
is called DiskEase, a software that tracks disk capacity, automatically
provisions another disk at a preset capacity threshold, and then
migrates data to the new disk. You can't mention DiskEase in the
article. But what you can do is position your provisioning technology
as the answer to a serious problem, simply by writing an informational
article on this valid and interesting technology. Then in the tagline
you put your company and contact information, usually a website.
Shift scene to an engineer has been losing sleep
at night because he can't provision his disks on time - leading
to network downtime and over-provisioning problems. He picks up
the magazine, reads the article, and goes to your website to see
if this technology will solve his problem. Of course it will and
he'll contact you.
Leveraging High-Tech Bylined
Articles
Another beauty of bylined articles is that you can
leverage them. Here are some possibilities:
1. Reprints
2. White papers
3. Booklets
4. Speech outline and handouts
Reprints
Reprints are good things: they significantly increase your exposure
to the market. Make sure you use the reprints anywhere you can including
press kits, presentation handouts and conference take-aways. Post
them on your site too. (Be sure to work out reprint rights with
the publishing magazine beforehand.)
White Paper
Don't use the as-is published article as a white paper, articles
are structured differently from white papers and you'll run into
copyright issues. Instead use the article text to form the technology
section of a white paper. Edit it to highlight customer benefits
since you don't have to be vendor-neutral for your own white paper,
and add white paper sections around it including executive summaries,
problem statements, in-depth product/technology information, etc.
(Click here for more information
about writing white papers.)
Booklets
One of the best press kits I ever saw included a sharp and informative
booklet on the vendor's technology. The booklet explained the general
technology's development and background, presented the vendor's
product, and listed clear customer advantages. It impressed both
journalists and customers in a way a press release or even a white
paper wouldn't have done. Booklets are labor-intensive, so use your
trade journal article as the basis for writing your own.
Speech Outline and Handouts
Use existing articles as the basis for client speeches, presentations
and handouts. Since trade journal articles are usually vendor-neutral,
they'll work for conference talks too. When the presentation is
about a product you can still use the article outline for the background
technology and analysis then add product details, customer case
studies, and Q&As.
Want to work with Christine to develop your own
bylined article program? Click
here to find out how!
The Christine
Taylor Company
P.O. Box 3499
Wrightwood, CA 92397
760-249-6071
(phone) 760-249-9988 (fax)
christine@ctaylor-co.com
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