It was a good Wall Street Journal Today.  Page R10 has a nice piece called "Mistakes Marketers Make".  The article punches some holes in accepted marketing wisdom on things like: "Loyal Customers are the Most Valuable", but my favorite was the section titled:  "Marketing is all about hunting and capturing clients."

"No, not anymore. These days, in the Internet Age, marketing is sometimes about the company being the prey.

The role of marketers has long been to hunt out clients and, with the aid of salespeople, capture this prey. However, particularly with the maturation of the Internet, the tide is turning. For instance, in the vacation market now, many people hunt out the holiday they want themselves. They use the Internet to find and then make choices, sometimes interrogating potential sellers online. In industries like this, the role of marketing is to make sure that a company's products or services are easily found online, and that the company responds effectively to potential customers."

This is what I'm talking about when I advocate for data-driven corporate blogging.  A blog page is the most search optimized page you can possibly have to target a single phrase.   The key to search success is to have as many blog pages as possible targeting as many terms as possible.   It's the marketers job, not to hunt, but to be found.   Blog best practices require that you target as many potential keywords as possible.