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Why Tech Writers Should Stay Away from the HubSpot VC Story

 

Stay Out of Inbound MarketingSince Tuesday evening the social media world and blogosphere has been blowing up with the news that Google, Salesforce.com and Sequoia invested $32 million in HubSpot. Most of everything I’ve read has been positive too. However, yesterday evening I came across an article by Matt Rosoff, Silicon Alley Insider’s West Coast Editor and contributor to BusinessInsider.com.  The article was titled, “Google Just Invested in a Startup that Helps Companies Show Up Higher in Search Results.”

The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

The article has some good information on the funding itself, Google’s recent JC Penny and Overstock.com debacle and the potential consequences of the fiasco. However, the title and premise of the article is misleading and has deviant intent. If a reader wasn’t familiar with HubSpot, Internet marketing and/or SEO they would be led to believe that Google is helping a company game their algorithms. This is because HubSpot is characterized as an SEO company that “helps companies show up higher in search results.”

The Truth

This is a gross mischaracterization of what HubSpot does. I know this because HubSpot customers hire us to do their SEO. HubSpot merely offers a resource library of Internet marketing best practices and a content management system (CMS) with reporting tools that report known SEO metrics. It’s very similar to a score board. Does knowing your “SEO score” make you come up higher in Google? Does knowing how many points you scored in a basketball game make you a better player? Of course not.

What HubSpot Really Does

HubSpot software allows businesses to streamline the management of their Internet marketing efforts by bringing content marketing, email marketing, lead nurturing, blogging, social media, analytics, SEO reporting, sales reporting, etc. under one consolidated roof. The alternative is to use 10+ different systems while attempting to manage all of the massive amounts of data required to be successful online.

Why Tech Writers aren't Marketing Writers

If Matt was a marketing writer and not a technology writer he would have known the above. Internet marketing does not fall under technology. It falls under marketing. Technology is merely the tool used to communicate the marketing message. Should stories about billboards be listed under the architecture section of a publication? Of course not, and the story shouldn’t be written by an architect either. So, if you’re a technology writer consider sticking to your iPad, Microsoft, smart phone and video game stories.

Image Credit:  publicenergy



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Comments

@Chad...spot on lad! the number of clients tho, up here in canuckland who truly "believe" that HubSpot IS an SEO firm, who claim to have quotes from them on an SEO Campaign tho is pretty staggering. Most of the clients up at the enterprise level always offer that statement when we get called in to meet with their Dir of Marketing...they seem to "use" that claim like a "badge" in that this somehow seperates them from the rest of the "chaff" out there... 
 
 
 
And nope, I never ever correct them and offer up the truth...but quote none-the-less and close some... 
 
 
 
But yup, up here it's the same incorrect thinking! HubSpot is VERY talented at what they do "do"....but SEO aint one of them, eh! 
 
 
 
:-( 
 
 
 
Jim
Posted @ Friday, March 11, 2011 7:15 AM by Jim Rudnick
Jim: 
 
What I find strange is that HubSpot doesn't even position themselves as an SEO company, but yet it was so easy for that tech writer to position them as one in order to make an untrue point in his article. Google investing in HubSpot is a great thing. As an SEO purest myself I have no worries at all that the transaction is tainted and I look forward to the future innovations to come out of HubSpot. 
 
@CPollittIU
Posted @ Friday, March 11, 2011 7:24 AM by Chad H. Pollitt
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