What Entrepreneurs Should Avoid Sharing on Their Company Blog

by / ⠀Entrepreneurship / March 27, 2014

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Sharing isn’t always caring when it comes to social media. This is something we see every day through lengthy status rants on Facebook, detailed dirty laundry blog posts, and 24 hours of a sick day chronicled entirely on Instagram. For entrepreneurs running their own businesses, sharing via social outlets needs to be a somewhat more calculated process. Brands are backed with a unique voice and that voice will ultimately translate to how successful and recognizable they are in the long run. As such, these voices need to be savvy and smart, but also know how to toe the line between what constitutes as sharing versus oversharing in the kind of content they publish on their company blog.

1) Potential partner name dropping before anything happens

When an established business takes the first steps to partner alongside your start-up, it’s easy to get excited about the big news and feel inclined to jump the gun on how you’ll be working with xyz major brand. But that’s the thing about the first steps – they’re the earliest possible stages in working together. Until you sign on the dotted line, everything is subject to change and the partner can still bow out. Wait until you have all agreements between both parties signed before making your big announcement, and have a plan of action as to how, exactly, you want to announce the partnership as the other brand may have a strategy of their own they’d like to implement. Never put the cart before the horse in this area, unless you want egg on your face when a friend asks whatever happened with the big partner you prematurely blogged about having.

2) Your financial information

“How much money is your start-up really making?” Maybe you’ll receive this question in the form of an anonymous comment on your blog or maybe it will come from a person with an identity that they make public. Or maybe you’ll feel like you’ve run out of things to blog about and the last ditch-effort to keep people around and interested is to tell them the nitty-gritty about your financial statements. Avoid spilling the beans about your finances and personal life if you don’t want them made public because once you blog and tweet about it, trust me – it’s out there. Your blog is what you make it to be and if there’s something you don’t feel comfortable sharing, don’t.

3) Yourself, on an endless loop

Keep your WIWT and GPOY selfies limited to your personal blog – the company blog is not your diary and you shouldn’t be its sole focus. If you are, for a short time being, the main attraction of your blog, find a way to make the content speak to the audience and relate back to them. A post on mistakes you made and learned from is a lot more effective than recapping just how brilliant you are at every turn.

4) Your secret formula

A magician never reveals his secrets and neither should your business. We may live in an age where information is readily accessible at every turn, but don’t tell all about your success. A little intrigue goes a long way in maintaining and sustaining the magic behind your brand!

Deborah Sweeney is the CEO of MyCorporation.com. MyCorporation is a leader in online legal filing services for entrepreneurs and businesses, providing start-up bundles that include corporation and LLC formation, registered agent, DBA, and trademark & copyright filing services. MyCorporation does all the work, making the business formation and maintenance quick and painless, so business owners can focus on what they do best. Follow her on Google+ and on Twitter @mycorporation.

Image Credit: Shutterstock.com

About The Author

Matt Wilson

Matt Wilson is Co-Founder of Under30Experiences, a travel company for young people ages 21-35. He is the original Co-founder of Under30CEO (Acquired 2016). Matt is the Host of the Live Different Podcast and has 50+ Five Star iTunes Ratings on Health, Fitness, Business and Travel. He brings a unique, uncensored approach to his interviews and writing. His work is published on Under30CEO.com, Forbes, Inc. Magazine, Huffington Post, Reuters, and many others. Matt hosts yoga and fitness retreats in his free time and buys all his food from an organic farm in the jungle of Costa Rica where he lives. He is a shareholder of the Green Bay Packers.

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