With BlogHer just folding up and new tickets already for sale, TypeAMomCon just around the corner and the upcoming Mom 2 Summit, bloggers are all abuzz about sponsorships, scholarships, and partnerships with companies to help pave the costly way.
I wanted to bring in a few ways to work with Public Relations and companies in order to secure sponsorships for the conferences that would benefit both parties. Do not kid yourself. Sponsorships are work. They do not come with a signed check for you to do what you want, but instead are based on an exchange and terms of the sponsorship.
Here are a few key points to assist you in your journey.
1) Sponsorships are about relationships: Repeat after me “Sponsorships are about RELATIONSHIPS.” If you cold call a company and ask them for $1000, they are going to respond with “huh?” and rightfully so. Bloggers that are sponsored to events generally have a long standing or strong relationships with a provider. They know what you offer in terms of your site, you have proven your worth to them in the past via reviews, giveaways, or articles, and more often then not, they want to continue their relationship with you. Companies that are willing to do sponsorships are generally into social media and are interested in expanding or remaining a part of that.
When deciding on which companies to approach for a sponsorship, immediately specific names of public relations or brands should come to mind. Who have you provided for in the past? Who have you completed projects for? Is there a brand you work with over and over again? Is there a PR rep that you work with on a continuous basis? Those are the individuals you should be reaching out to.
The cold hard truth is if you do not have a prior relationship with a company, your barking up the wrong alley and need to start saving.
2) A sponsorship is a two way street: Yes, Companies love to work with bloggers. Yes, PR love to work with bloggers. But don’t think that just because your a blogger you deserve a free ride. Conferences for bloggers generally benefit the blogger so you have to decide what type of service you are going to give back to the company in exchange. Have your plan together prior to contacting them. Some suggestions are:
- Ads on your site for a specific time
- Mentions on your radio show as a sponsor
- Twitter backgrounds or tweets
- Passing out business cards/swag at the event
- Wearing company logos (i.e. shirts, etc) at the event
- Come up with something unique
Figure out what your comfort level is in exchange for sponsorship and approach them with a proposal. Companies generally think in facts and numbers, so provide them with as much information as possible to save yourself countless emails back and forth. I think its easy to fall into a trap of wanting to do anything to get to a conference without paying for it, but be careful not to “sell your soul” in exchange for a few hundred dollars. Find what you are willing to do and write it up and submit. Its OK to turn down a company offer and vice versa. Both sides have to be comfortable in order for the relationship to work. I think I would draw the line at dressing up in a chicken suit, kwim?
3) Think in terms of partial sponsorships: Often times I see bloggers seeking large dollar sponsorships, but I believe its much easier working with several (non-competing) companies in order to assist you to a conference. Its much easier to approach a company on a $200 sponsorship versus a $1200 sponsorship. I imagine there will be a lot of closed doors on anything over $300 at one time. By breaking it up, you keep your responsibilities for each company lower, provide a way for a company to be involved even with a stricter budget, and have the ability to work with smaller companies (not just corporations).
When we approached companies for a BlogHer sponsorship, we took sponsorships for as low as $100 in exchange for longer termed advertising on our site. I contacted companies I had relationships with and specifically asked them for X amount to fund a ticket purchase in exchange for fill in the blank. It was helpful for companies to know exactly where their funding was going and who they were providing it to.
4) Be patient, but follow up. Lots of bloggers are also seeking sponsorships, so it pays to be proactive. My general rule would be an inquiry letter and then a follow up phone call or email in about a week to 10 days to answer any additional questions they may have. Its OK to be rejected. Sometimes its not the right fit for the company or in the budget. Do not get discouraged. Continue building your relationship with that vendor for the future.
5) Know why you want to represent that company at a conference. Be prepare to answer questions like:
- How will this help you?
- How will this help us?
- What is the conference about?
- Why is the conference important?
- Why do you want to work with us?
- What about our product do you like?
Now many people use small letters to judge interest, but I am someone that puts it out there immediately to save the company time. I want to respect that they are busy and let the letter go to the direct contact without a lot of back and forth. Be prepared for a phone call as well. I know you’re a blogger and hate to talk on the phone, but when you’re looking for a sponsorship and representation for a company, be prepared to have a few follow up meetings.
Example letter I sent out (please do not plagiarize me). This letter serves as a GUIDE ONLY. Companies are going to read it here and know its mine, so just be careful to design something that fits who you are. This letter is from January 2008 and may have outdated information in it. It has also been cut to fit here and does not contain all of my information.
A) Open the conversation up by introducing yourself. No matter if a company knows you (and if you read point #1, they should!) the letter may go to someone in the firm that hasn’t met you yet. If this is too formal for a relationship I am sending this to, i preempt it with a paragraph that is a little more laid back.
My name is Trisha Haas and I am the owner of www.MomDot.com and www.BLoggersGive.com. MomDot.com is a unique site that not only serves as a personal blog, but as a blogging community where users come to advertise their own links, contests, and find out information on the newest products and parenting information out there on the web. Since opening in July 2008, MomDot has quickly become a go to site for mommy bloggers to reach out to each other. We offer free listings for blogs, interviews for blogs and boutiques, have an entire review team of 8 bloggers that are continuously reviewing products (located on a sub domain at www.reviews.momdot.com) and have recently opened the first ever Blogging Charity.
B) Talk about your stats, traffic. You can ignore this if you feel that your stats are not strong enough. I dont believe stats should be the sole reason a company works with a blogger in the slightest. Instead focus on some of the content you write or projects/collaborations you have been a part of. Adjust all this for your needs. Mine was 3 paragraphs long, but I have cut that here for space reasons.
Right now, MomDot receives between 45-50K unique visitors a month with between 125-200K page views, depending on our content that month. We publish 4-8 articles daily and encompass over 15 writers that provide unique content for our pages, in the form of interviews, link backs to blogs, information on how to write, advertise, and receive visitors, and so much more.
C) Explain your costs:
As the owner and main representative of MomDot, I am looking for a sponsor to assist in plane ticket, conference fee, and hotel costs of the upcoming BlogHer convention in July 2009. A plane ticket from Mobile, Alabama to Chicago, IL at this time cost approximately $350, Early Bird convention fees available till Feb 28th for the Main Convention are $198, and Hotel costs at the Convention site are $199 per night (approx $600 plus taxes).
D) Explain what you are offering:
As a sponsor for Momdot, we would provide a partnership between our site and your company. There are plenty of options we can work out in terms of a sponsorship. We can offer 6 months worth of partnership sidebar advertising above the fold, which would provide upwards of 50,000 unique visitors a month in view. Additionally, we have the ability to interject footer links that appear at the bottom of ALL posts on MomDot and we would be happy to provide a link for 3 months that asks visitors to visit the sponsor.
*This is a good spot to talk about VLOGS you may do, youtube/newbaby videos, tweets, etc.
E) Explain the convention. Don’t just assume the business knows where you are going. I always provided links back to the sites that had more information:
BlogHer is one of the largest conventions for bloggers and businesses to network and create relationships. The BlogHer conference layout and agenda can be found here http://www.blogher.com/blogher_conference/conf/9/agenda/1 but encompasses speakers that share their expertise on leadership, micro logging, mommy blogging, social media, SEO, publishing, online networking and keynote speakers. The convention also has some down time where there are socializing events where bloggers and companies can meet together.
F) Why you want to go:
Going to this convention not only benefits MomDot in growing into a stronger community, but also is a great way to exchange informational learning, garner stronger and new relationships, and establish ourselves. Being able to network and attend conventions gives us a voice, a strong voice, not only for the companies we work with, but for our site and our community as a whole. For companies that find themselves out of place in this ever changing media, we can provide feedback on the convention, up and coming ideas, and an open relationship between us as bloggers and you as a company.
G) Closing. Include all your contact information
As you can see in that example, I did not layout a specific sponsorship cost but in other letters, we took paragraph C and talked about a specific cost and asked for a specific funding of $200 for that cost. We also changed out what we were offering each company. Be careful not to promise to wear the shirt of 5 companies at a convention..its impossible. Offer very calculated ideas and campaigns.
A few other ideas are to blog your interest so visitors to your site can check you out and see if they would be interested in working with you, get creative with a video, reach out to twitter, network with friends, and sell discounted advertising on your site to assist in your costs.
Remember, working with a company should be respected and treated in an ethical and business like manner. It should also be fun and beneficial for both parties. For more information or assistance, please feel free to apply at the MomDot.com blogger forums, where bloggers from all over the web exchange ideas and support to help you grow.
If this article has helped you, please thank me by taking my banner (right there on the side there..yep…there) and displaying on your site.
It makes me feel loved.
~Trisha



Great post! I really would love to devote my time entirely to representing one company, so I can really get the word out. But, I also understand the financial obligation it takes to ensure a full sponsorship. I think it boils down to what the company needs, a lot of quick interactions or more in depth representation of their product. Regardless, sponsorship is a unique marketing opportunity that brings products directly to the trend setters and the decision makers.
Thanks so much for this! I’m savvy about a lot of things, but PR definitely isn’t one of them
This is great info!
Wonderful and helpful info. Thanks very much Trisha and team
This is a great post, there is a convention coming up in October that I would love to go to. I had tons of questions about sponsorship and you answered them all. THANKS
Thank you so much for this helpful article! I have already purchased a ticket for BlogHer ‘10 but I am hoping to get some sponsorships to help with the costs of everything. Your advice is exactly the type of information I have been looking for on how to go about asking!
Thanks everyone!
Great post Trisha! Lots of great tips and info!
Awesome post, thanks for sharing!
Thank you so much for this! I was wondering about this and you seem to have read my mind!
Great insight. I think it is definitely a two way street. It is about the blogger having a sponsor and it’s also about company having a voice within the blogging community.
GREAT information! Thank you so much for putting it out there. I have a lot of work ahead of me!
Thanks for the valuable advice Trisha!
I’m hoping to obtain Sponsors so I can attend since I live in Connecticut & it’s a great opportunity to attend while BlogHer is in New York City in 2010.
I’ve linked to this post to share with my WAHM readers!
Thank you for taking the time to write this Trisha. As someone who is dertermined to take her family to Blogher next year, this has been a very helpful guide.
These are excellent tips. I have one more to add: check with the conference planners. I spoke to the BlogHer team about the best way to represent my sponsor. They steered me to a green way to promote my sponsor via business cards that had information on the back about the sponsor. And I was comfortable knowing that I was following the rules of the conference.
I also picked a sponsor that I loved. Medela sponsored my BlogHer pass. I was a Medela customer and purchased their products when I was breastfeeding. As a result, I absolutely felt comfortable wearing a badge saying Medela sponsored me and answering questions at BlogHer.
In addition to being a blogger, I also work in marketing. Trisha’s advice is good because marketers do need to show ROI for any expenditure. If you make it easier for them to do so, you have a better chance of getting sponsored.
Final piece of advice: if you want to be sponsored, keep your site clean. I’ve worked with Fortune500 companies as well as startups. It would be difficult to get an ad buy or sponsorship approved for a site with cursing or R-rated content unless the site has major traffic.
Great tips, but what happens when a blogger like me who has barely any PR relationships, wants sponsors?
I have a huge fear of cold calling companies because I am so completely unknown. Most companies want stats, good stats, and I don’t have those.
Thank you dear! I’m hoping to go to Type A this year and I’ve talked a little with Clarissa from Poshpreneur about how to go about it. The two of you have helped immensely! Thanks so much!
Ashley
Beauty4Moms.blogspot.com
Thank you so much for posting this. I am just starting out, and hoping to understand how to become involved in reviewing and advertising. I know this post will help so many people by instructing, encouraging, and empowering them!
Melissa Multitasking Mama wrote:
I think if you are referring to blogher, that its important to note to potential sponsors that each experience is unique to that person. BlogHer was unfortunately a little bit of (in my opinion) chaotic and over saturated with brands and hopefully the mistake was learned and future conferences will have more correction.
Also, smaller conferences will offer more one on one time. I think you should also stress that your advertising leading up to the conference you are intending to get sponsored will also include working on you (ie tweets, vlogs, advertorials, etc) and that part of your commitment will extend beyond just the two days from the actual meetup.
What are your suggestions for companies that find themselves disappointed with the lack of participation and commitment from a blogger they sponsored to such an event?
great post, thanks for putting it altogether! concisely!
As a fundraiser, I always was looking for sponsors for our special events. These are great tips. It would also be good to set up levels for sponsorship as well. Example: for $100 you get an ad, $500 gets ad, article on blog, collateral material handout at conference etc. That way potential sponsors get an idea of what you will do for them. Of course, everything is negotiable!!
This is just what I was looking for. I must bookmark this and work on creating relationships.
Great article. I appreciate your wisdom on this matter because I was clueless as to how to obtain sponsorship.
Wish me luck!
Thanks for the insight Trisha! As always you are full of good information.
Great tips Trisha! Thank you so much. I feel more confident now that I will be able to get sponsorship to BlogHer10!
@ Greg:
same here greg…we just came on the scene july 08 as well and got alicia and myself sponsored. Your ultra creative, so i dont forsee you having a problem.
Greg wrote:
Greg: I think there is plenty of time for you to begin new relationships before BlogHer 2010. My blog began in July of 2008 and I ended up completely sponsored for BlogHer 2009.
Thanks for the great information, Trisha! Oh, and your banner is already on my site!
Wonderful! Thanks for posting this.
Excellent insight but I think my job just got more difficult, lol, especially considering I don’t meet the (so crucial you said it twice) “relationships” criteria. I know a lot of people are going to find this helpful.
These are some great tips Trisha. As always you are so helpful. Thanks!