"I had another organization call us and wanted to use some of our blogs. Could we let them use some of them if they gave us credit or linked back to our site? And how would that affect our SEO? What is your opinion on this?"
Since this issue affects businesses and nonprofits across the board, I thought I'd share my answers to these questions here, including:
First, it's a great sign when others in your field like your content enough to want to use it! Republishing can contribute to your nonprofit content marketing strategy, and it should be one of your goals to receive offers/requests to republish your content in quality venues.
Most republishing offers are the opposite of what's going to help your organization—people looking to have you republish their content and drive traffic to their site. If you're getting genuine offers that promote your content, you're doing something right.
That said, the first thing you need to do when receiving a request to republish your content is to evaluate whether it is a "quality venue" by asking yourself these questions:
It's a pretty obvious point, but having your content on your competitor's website only helps them compete with you. In the case of our client, the organization asking to republish their content offered the same type of services, but in a geographic territory that our client didn't serve, so they were not a competitor.
A good republishing partnership from a competition standpoint could be with an organization that is:
If they're not a competitor, having an organization republish your content could be a great opportunity to get additional exposure among people who match your ideal buyer/supporter personas. Along with their own personas, they could be attracting yours as visitors to their website—and sending that traffic to you via links in your republished content.
If they're doing what you do, and competing for your audience, they're most likely not going to be asking to republish your content, and if they do, they most likely won't agree to your terms (see below, What the Republisher Needs to Do).
You should be, even if that compensation is nonmonetary. You invested in creating the content. If your compensation is intended to be you getting traffic to your site, that will happen if the other content on their site (not your blogs) attracts visitors who would be a good audience for you. This all assumes canonical URLs are going to be used by the republisher—see below. If they are not proposing to use canonical URLs, your answer should be no.
If, based on answers to the above questions, this republishing partnership is a good fit, there are some key actions that the republisher needs to take to protect your SEO rankings, ownership of the content, investment in your content strategy, and interest in the partnership. These should be agreed to in writing before anything is republished.
And let me reemphasize that these things need to be agreed to in writing:
Republishing is a great way to get more mileage out of the content you've worked so hard to create. When it's done right, it can lead to productive partnerships with others in your field or sector and help make your marketing more sustainable!