Are you one of the thousands of businesses trying to force a freeware blog platform to operate as a marketing tool? Yes?
The most obvious question then is; How is that working out for the company? Is it driving lots of organic search traffic? Converting that traffic into qualified inbound leads? How much revenue have you generated directly from blog leads?
Well, those are all great business questions to consider. But what about an even more basic consideration than measurable results . . . what about:
Is your business blog more of corporate RISK rather than a useful marketing TOOL?
Just check out this recent post from Kyle Brady about a hack-in through a Wordpress blog. In case you don't want to read the entire article, here is what happened:
Doesn't that seem like a lot of work to fix a tool that most likely produces very few results? This is the second time just THIS WEEK that I've heard about similar security issues. I think that all businesses out there should be considering third generation corporate blogging. The differences are pretty simple:
The most obvious question then is; How is that working out for the company? Is it driving lots of organic search traffic? Converting that traffic into qualified inbound leads? How much revenue have you generated directly from blog leads?
Well, those are all great business questions to consider. But what about an even more basic consideration than measurable results . . . what about:
Is your business blog more of corporate RISK rather than a useful marketing TOOL?
Just check out this recent post from Kyle Brady about a hack-in through a Wordpress blog. In case you don't want to read the entire article, here is what happened:
- a list of hundreds of URLs to assorted pages, mostly porn, appeared after the </html> tag on all pages of the site
- for content created after the attack, it somehow embedded itself inside the Wordpress content, and all links redirected to a malware site – in addition to breaking the entire page
Doesn't that seem like a lot of work to fix a tool that most likely produces very few results? This is the second time just THIS WEEK that I've heard about similar security issues. I think that all businesses out there should be considering third generation corporate blogging. The differences are pretty simple:
- Security
- Automation
- Measurable Results








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