TYSONS CORNER, Virginia: When Dexter the cocker spaniel tore a ligament in his hind leg a few weeks ago, he didn’t suffer in silence. Instead, his owner wrote a blog post.
“The vet told me my dog needed surgery, and I thought, ‘You know, there’s got to be something else’,” said Carol Bryant, who writes a “canine-centric online magazine” called A Fidose of Reality.
Responding to her blog entries, readers told Bryant that Dexter didn’t have to go under the knife. He had options, like laser therapy and a leg brace he’ll be wearing for the next six months.
So good is his progress that Dexter has come with Bryant from rural Pennsylvania to this Washington suburb for the biggest US gathering ever of pet bloggers — people who embrace social media to rave about pets.
The Fifth Annual BlogPaws Conference, with 500 participants and perhaps as many critters, is a chance to network, swap ideas and maybe win a coveted Nose-to-Nose Pet Blogging and Social Media award (for which The Intrepid Pup, about a peripatetic Vizsla called Tavish, is nominated in three categories).
Workshops include a primer on using Google Analytics to gauge online readership, building bridges between bloggers and veterinarians, and Schmitty the Weather Dog demonstrating a just-released Sony canine video harness.
In its online community, BlogPaws has 2,200 members, said co-founder Yvonne DiVita, who writes about her cat and three dogs in Colorado on a blog titled Scratchings and Sniffings. “I would guess we’re going to hit close to 3,000 by the end of the year,” she said as bloggers (predominantly female) and their pets (predominantly dogs) took over the lobby of the Sheraton hotel on Thursday.
With Americans spending $53.33bn on their pets last year, according to the American Pet Products Association, and 62 percent of households owning a pet, the pet care industry is taking the bloggers seriously.
In an exhibition hall, big hitters like pet food maker Nestle Purina rub shoulders with upstarts like the Spoiled Pup Boutique, a New York area canine couturier, wooing bloggers to test and endorse their products. “The followers and readers of pet blogs are so loyal, and they trust the word of bloggers,” said Bridget Evans, a San Diego publicist attending BlogPaws for VetIQ, a newcomer to the pet medication and health supplements business.
It’s come to the point, DiVita said, where some popular bloggers with solid track records and substantial followings can give up their day jobs and earn a good middle-class income — or better — through online advertising.
“I know bloggers that are making upwards of six figures,” she said, while others are content with just a few hundred dollars.
“We’re kind of the rock stars of the pet industry,” added Bryant, who cautions that the key to blogging success is finding a unique voice and then keeping it real:
AFP