Wednesday, September 18, 2013

The Art of the Blog Giveaway: Case Study #2 (The Success)

So this case study is of a non-traditional giveaway I have done that worked out very well, creating a win-win-win situation for me, my bloggers and multiple brands!

This one is kind of lengthy so I suggest you go through it either in parts or when you have a minute!

So here’s the basic profile of the promotion:

Promo Name:  The Bariatric Foodie Pledge (here's the abstract post I did for the promo in 2013)
Timeline:         This is an annual promotion I do every February
Sponsored by: Lots of companies (I’ll explain in a minute)

Background

As I’ve said a few times here, my main blog, Bariatric Foodie, is a monetized blog that served the needs of people who are having, or have had, bariatric (weight loss) surgery. This particular promotion was born of things I learned from social media.

One of those things came from simply paying attention to what works and what doesn’t. What works, on my Facebook and Twitter pages, for instance, is posting general discussion topics about life after weight loss surgery, as opposed to only posting topics related to food or my recipes. This keeps engagement on my page fairly high and so when I do post recipes, there are people active in my little community to click through to them.

A big need my readers identified is help with setting and keeping goals. It’s a big topic for anyone trying to lose weight. So I began to think about a way that I could make that happen through a promotion. My initial idea was that I should find a way to encourage people to make and keep goals.

My second thought on the matter was about timing. We all are great at making and keeping goals in January. But come February we are either about to give up or we already have. So I knew I wanted to do this in February. The month also provided something that gave way to even more ideas – exactly four weeks!

Thus the Bariatric Foodie Pledge was born. I won’t take you through my other thought processes BUT I will say the contest works like this.
  • At the beginning of each week, people who wish to participate can “pledge” a goal. It can be any goal they want, although I do give some background education on S.M.A.R.T. goals.
  • Throughout the week, on Facebook and Twitter, we encourage each other to keep up with our goals and stay accountable.
  • At the end of each week, I call for people to “check-in” their goals by answering three questions: Did you achieve your goal? What challenged or inspired you? How will you keep this goal going?
  •  At the end of each week everyone who pledged a goal and checked got put into a drawing to win a prize.
  • For people who pledged and checked in all four weeks, there was a drawing for a grand prize.


Prizes

My first year doing The Pledge I didn’t have a very impressive audience nor did I know half the things I know now about marketing yourself to brands! So I bought all the prizes that I gave away (I would never, ever, ever recommend you do this in any giveaway you do. Bloggers are a relatively cheap and effective mode of promotion for brands and very likely they are willing to give you something. It’s just up to you to make the right ask to the right person.)

The second year, I had learned a bit more and so I invited companies to sponsor a week of the Pledge on one of two levels: weekly sponsor (providing weekly prizes) or a grand sponsor (providing a grand prize). There were requirements at each level. A weekly sponsor had to provide three prizes of at least $25 in value. They had to ship the prizes directly to the winner.

In exchange for sponsoring a week of the pledge, the sponsoring company got a free badge-sized ad on my blog for their sponsorship week and mentions in my social media related to the Pledge that week.

In the second year there was only one grand prize sponsor and that sponsor agreed to ship a prize of at least $50 in value, in exchange for a banner-sized ad for the length of the pledge.

After each sponsor’s pledge week was over, I emailed them the prize winners name, thanking them for their sponsorship and trying to entice them to buy a blog ad with a small advertising discount.

Challenges

In 2014 I’ll run this promotion for the fourth time. Each year seems to bring new challenges, many of them associated with audience growth. Here are just a few.

Logistics

This has by far been one of the banes of my existence. In my first year, when barely 100 people participated, I did it all manually. Folks could pledge their goal by leaving blog comment, posting it on Facebook or Tweeting it. From there I made a spreadsheet of pledgers. Same deal with checking-in. 

This was both time and labor intensive, especially (and this sounds bad) for something I wasn’t being paid for.

In the third year of The Pledge I attempted to use Rafflecopter to collect pledges but that quickly failed and I had to switch streams. I ended up making a form on Google Docs which folks could fill out when they pledged and checked-in. But glitches abounded! Some mobile users couldn’t see the form, others had trouble submitting it, while others still didn’t have a Google account and therefore ran into problems. About halfway through I figured out that if mobile users were able to download the Google Drive app, they had a much easier time of things.

Expectations

At the outset of this promotion, when my audience was smaller, it was easier to convey what this promotion was all about. This was mainly because most of my Facebook likes and Twitter followers came from a pool of people who actively read my blog.

Last year it became increasingly apparent that there is a generous population of people who interact with Bariatric Foodie who have not only never been to my blog but seem to have missed that the blog even exists!

All this boils down to the fact that there were mixed expectations. If you look at the way this contest works, it’s a lot. You have to make a goal, pledge it, work on it and report back. That’s far more than most blogs ask you to do for a prize. Last year  I got a lot of complaints, especially as I was experiencing growing pains with the whole desktop-to-mobile movement.

Brand Conversion

I never did do very well in converting Pledge sponsors into advertisers. This is partly because of a movement of brands toward affiliate marketing. It’s much cheaper for them to offer you an affiliate account than to constantly pay for dedicated advertising.

Last year, I began trying to incentivize advertising by making submission of a prize to The Pledge free for advertisers while there was a fee for non-advertisers. That didn’t work out so well either as I reliably call on a select number of brands that my readers love who are quite accustomed to not being charged to do this! So I faced an “either just take the prizes for free or get nothing” scenario. It was then that I decided this would be my big Good Samaritan (so to speak) act of the year. Although, it brought some successes I’ll discuss in a minute.

Limitation of the weekly/grand prize model

I figured out eventually that limiting the grand prize to one company or brand was a bad idea. Partly because with a bigger audience you need bigger prizes, but also because that meant I could only work with a total of five brands: four for weekly prizes and one grand prize.

So last year I switched to allowing multiple grand prize sponsors. As I start to think about The Pledge for 2014 (actually I’ve been thinking about it since it ended for 2013!), I think it’s also wise to open up the weekly sponsorships to more than one brand as well. I now have brands contacting me about getting in on this, which technically could give me more leverage to charge them, but again I resigned myself to this being a totally free act on my part! (Earning my way into the pearly gates, maybe?)

Successes

Where there were many challenges there has also been many, many, many successes!

Affiliate Conversions

While I don’t get paid from brands to feature their products as a weekly or grand prize sponsor, I made damn sure each of them was available through at least one of my affiliate accounts. So when I promoted their product, I was promoting it with my affiliate account link, which did, in turn, earn me money.

Google Adsense

You might remember AdSense is driven by traffic. The more eyeballs you can get on your site, the more likely they’ll click something and then you get the few pennies that result. Last year I started to pay attention to Google’s personalized tips for maximizing my AdSense returns and as a result saw much higher returns during the pledge.

Increased overall audience

This was good because I’d just published my first book “The Bariatric Foodie Guide to Perfect Protein Shakes” and the raised engagement gave me an opportunity to showcase that and bump up sales. 

Which was a plus!

Feel good vibes

Don’t ever underestimate the power of an audience that not only feels connected to you but also feels you are operating in their best interests. I care deeply for my readers and want them to be successful! This promotion exemplifies that feeling! By the end of it 13 people have won actual, physical prizes but everyone tends to express feeling like they got something out of this. That’s worth a lot.

So there you have it. One non-traditional giveaway that was a failure, and one that is working well.
My point in sharing these case studies is to encourage you to be innovative and think outside the box. It’s a critical skill for anyone who works on the web, but especially bloggers. The field changes every day. Expectations change every day. You have to stay up with, or ahead of, the curve.
To that end, if you read this blog, I’d love to help if I can to guide you toward promotions that have a win-win-win dynamic. Email me at bariatricfoodie@yahoo.com and I’ll be happy to give feedback on your ideas!




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