{"id":131594,"date":"2017-06-30T10:00:53","date_gmt":"2017-06-30T17:00:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/heartifb.com\/?p=131594"},"modified":"2024-10-03T03:48:18","modified_gmt":"2024-10-03T10:48:18","slug":"how-to-approach-brands-for-freebies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heartifb.com\/how-to-approach-brands-for-freebies\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Approach Brands for Freebies"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Many bloggers, fashion bloggers included, see freebies as a “perk” of running an even moderately successful site. Whether you describe such free items as “gifts,” “review samples,” “collaborations” or something else entirely, freebies can be either a huge burden or a massive benefit to your blog. Done well, samples give you access to product you may not have been able to try otherwise. In addition, honest reviews are a great way of introducing your readers to the pros and cons of a particular brand. Done poorly, freebies can create “bad blood” with both your readers and<\/em> with brands. Readers may feel betrayed by a dishonest review (or even the perception<\/em> of a dishonest review), and brands may feel like you were a poor investment for their product. Those feelings of disappointment or misfire can be magnified if you<\/em> were the person who approached the brand. IFB has a ton of great articles on product reviews and gifts<\/a>, but let's focus in on one specific part of that…approaching brands for samples. As a quick aside, my fellow IFB columnist Crosby Noricks wrote another excellent piece on approaching PR companies for samples<\/a> last year.<\/p>\n A quick note though, before we begin. It's totally okay if you don't want<\/em> to ask brands for freebies. In fact, on my blog, we have an editorial policy of never<\/em> approaching brands for samples, free product, gifts or anything else. If a brand offers, then we may accept (provided they agree with our review policies), but we don't ask. You may decide to do the same, officially or unofficially. However, if you do want to pitch a brand for free product, here a few things to keep in mind:<\/p>\n I've worked with several intimate apparel brands on selecting and screening bloggers for potential product reviews, and it always stands out (and not in a good way) when a blogger treats freebies as just a “nice thing” for a brand to do. No. These brands are businesses, and those products have an actual monetary value. Don't assume a brand is going to give you product out of the goodness of their heart. As a business, they need to be able to justify the expense. As a blogger, you should be able to explain why you're worth it.<\/p>\n I saw this a lot when working with lingerie brands. A blogger that had never written, tweeted, or even purchased the product before would send off an email asking for something for free. Brands check to see what you've said about them previously (if anything), and no one, not even companies, appreciates feeling used. If there's a product, you're interested in trying, spend a little time cultivating that relationship first. Brands are not your ticket to a wardrobe full of free things.<\/p>\nDon't ask for free product as a “favor.”<\/h2>\n
Avoid making your first contact with a brand a request for free product.<\/h2>\n