Green App Machine
Posts mit dem Label Content werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Content werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Content Inc.: How Entrepreneurs Use Content to Build Massive Audiences and Create Radically Successful Businesses

The NEW Rulebook for Entrepreneurial Success



What’s the surest way to startup failure? Follow old, outdated rules. 

In Content Inc., one of today’s most sought-after content-marketing strategists reveals a new model for entrepreneurial success. Simply put, it’s about developing valuable content, building an audience around that content, and then creating a product for that audience.
Notice a shift? 

Author Joe Pulizzi flips the traditional entrepreneurial approach of first creating a product and then trying to find customers. It’s a brilliant reverse-engineering of a model that rarely succeeds.

The radical six-step business-building process revealed in this book is smart, simple, practical, and cost-effective. And best of all, it works. It’s a strategy Pulizzi used to build his own successful company, Content Marketing Institute, which has landed on Inc. magazine’s list of fastest growing private companies for three years straight.  It’s also a strategy countless other entrepreneurs use to build their own multi-million dollar companies.  Build an audience and you’ll be able to sell pretty much anything you want.

Today’s markets are more dynamic and customers are more fickle than ever before. Why would you put all your eggs in one basket before securing a loyal customer base? Content Inc. shows you how to get customers first and develop products later. It’s the best way to build a solid, long-lasting business positioned for today’s content-driven world.  This is the simple but profoundly successful entrepreneurial approach of one of today’s most creative business minds.

A pioneer of content marketing, Pulizzi has cracked the code when it comes to the power of content in a world where marketers still hold fast to traditional models that no longer work. In Content Inc., he breaks down the business-startup process into six steps, making it simple for you to visualize, launch, and monetize your own business. These steps are:



  • The “Sweet Spot”: Identify the intersection of your unique competency and your personal passion

  • Content Tilting: Determine how you can “tilt” your sweet spot to find a place where little or no competition exists

  • Building the Base: Establish your number-one channel for disseminating content (blog, podcast, YouTube, etc.)

  • Harvesting Audience: Use social-media and SEO to convert one-time visitors into long-term subscribers

  • Diversification: Grow your business by expanding into multiple delivery channels

  • Monetization: Now that your expertise is established, you can begin charging money for your products or services 


This model has worked wonders for Pulizzi and countless other examples detailed in the book. Connect these six pieces like a puzzle, and before you know it, you’ll be running your own profitable, scalable business. 

Pulizzi walks you step by step through the process, based on his own success (and failures) and real-world multi-million dollar examples from multiple industries and countries. Whether you’re seeking to start a brand-new business or drive innovation in an existing one, Content Inc. provides everything you need to reverse-engineer the traditional entrepreneurial model for better, more sustainable success. 

Joe Pulizzi is an entrepreneur, professional speaker, and podcaster. He is the founder of several startups, including the Content Marketing Institute (CMI), recognized as the fastest growing business media company by Inc. Magazine in 2014. CMI produces Content Marketing World, the world’s largest content marketing event, and publishes the leading content marketing magazine, Chief Content Officer. Pulizzi’s book Epic Content Marketing was named one of Fortune magazine’s Five Must Read Business Books of the Year.

check out For More Information



Content Inc.: How Entrepreneurs Use Content to Build Massive Audiences and Create Radically Successful Businesses

Affiliate marketing offers alternative to crowded content marketplace



Money

Money



Inside Chanel video details 130-hour haute couture process
French fashion house Chanel is taking consumers inside the house for the thirteenth time to cultivate exclusivity and mystery.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Chinese buying power makes big opportunity of Lunar New Year
With Lunar New Year just around the corner, retailers realize this is a chance to establish relationships with high-value clientele.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Barneys showcases hometown pride in exuberant spring campaign
Department store chain Barneys New York is paying tribute to the eccentric personalities that make up New York in its spring 2016 campaign.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Affiliate marketing offers alternative to crowded content marketplace: Forrester
Industry shifts have led to a breakthrough in affiliate marketing, according to a new report by Forrester and Rakuten Marketing.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


David Yurman builds emotional appeal for Valentine’s Day gifting through love stories
Jeweler David Yurman is celebrating the diverse ways in which affection can blossom to make consumers consider their own love story around Valentine’s Day.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Retailers’ mobile experiences should be as inspirational as their stores: report
Retailers frequently overlook the true value of mobile, which is to connect the brand experience across channels and continually engage with customers, according to a new report from Razur Agency.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Announcing Mcommerce Summit 2016 New York May 5
Register now for the nation’s No. 1 conference focused on how retailers are tapping mobile for driving on-device and in-store transactions and how mobile commerce will immensely influence consumer shopping decisions in 2016. Hear speakers from Walmart, Walgreens, IKEA, Staples, Google and Boston Retail Partners share mcommerce strategy and best practice.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Hong Kong, Ralph Lauren, London real estate and Bergdorf Goodman – News briefs
Today in luxury marketing – Is Hong Kong still a “cool” place for luxury shopping?; Ralph Lauren shares tumble after company cuts its forecast; Crises spoil Chinese, Russian appetite for luxury London property; Bergdorf Goodman recommits to Gucci with major in-store real estate.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Inviting opinion pieces on luxury marketing, retail and media
Luxury Daily is inviting opinion pieces on luxury advertising, marketing, media and retail issues that affect marketers as they run multichannel programs for branding as well as customer acquisition, retention and reactivation.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Book excerpt: What do HENRYs want? The new style of luxury status symbols
Quoting comedian Rodney Dangerfield, HENRYs “get no respect” in luxury circles. They are the lower-income, mass-affluents. HENRYs (High Earners Not Rich Yet) have incomes from $100,000 to $249,999, and they number nearly 24 million households, as compared with 3.3 million in the ranks of the ultra-affluents.
Click here to read the entire article on Luxury Daily


Sign up to receive Mobile Marketer Daily. The premier mobile marketing publication. Free!




Affiliate marketing offers alternative to crowded content marketplace

Pilot to Profit: Navigating Modern Entrepreneurship to Build Your Business Using Online Marketing, Social Media, Content Marketing and Sales

Seatbelts fastened. Business dreams in the upright position. Entrepreneurs, prepare for takeoff.


Ready to generate sales, build brand buzz, and watch your cash flow soar? “Pilot to Profit” clears up the confusion of modern entrepreneurship—so you can build a smart, successful and sustainable business with sky-high returns.


Do I really need to be on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter? How do these other people command such high fees (and how can I?) How do I double my profits this year without doubling the work?


As you turn the pages, you’ll uncover answers to the questions that have kept you stuck. And, proven strategies to help your business get found and turn connections into paying customers—whether you’re an established enterprise or just


What can you expect? A stronger money mindset that no longer sabotages your ability to be paid what you’re worth for the work you do. Expect your money-making “radar” to be on high alert. A clearly defined business model that maximizes what comes in, with less effort put out. Ease finding the right channels to grow your business so that you can reach more people. An understanding of how to create content that raises your credibility and puts you on the map. (Because without great content, your business might never be found.) Not only will you learn about turning out content that begs to be clicked on, but you’ll gain powerful strategies for sharing that content through email and social media, so it gets devoured and grows your fan base. Lastly, you’ll walk away understanding how to sell what you do, whom to sell it to, and precisely how to find and connect with those people. This book uncovers every step you need on your journey to building a successful, profitable business you love. With “Pilot to Profit,” you’re officially cleared for takeoff.


visit the website



Pilot to Profit: Navigating Modern Entrepreneurship to Build Your Business Using Online Marketing, Social Media, Content Marketing and Sales

10 guidelines for your content marketing in 2016 – 2017

Check out my new slide deck to discover the 10 guidelines for content marketing in 2016 – 2017


1. More purpose-driven than ever


Starbucks is setting up a partnership with a former journalist for the Washington post. The goal is to make content about global issues the world needs to address. Starbucks is not just about selling coffee. Starbucks is about connecting people one coffee at a time, one neighborhood at a time. By setting up this partnership they want to push their content marketing to the next level and make it more purpose-driven.  The ambition of SpaceX (Elon Musk’s second company next to Tesla) is to colonize Mars. Their partnership with Nasa is almost like a means to an end. Their content is about their ambition, about their purpose. Since both Starbucks and SpaceX have lofty goals, everyone talks about them and shares them.


The more purpose-driven the content, the better. Nowadays most people understand that content marketing is not about selling, but rather about selling without selling. You’re trying to get people excited about your story. Instead of thinking think about what you’re trying to sell, you should be looking for ways to enthuse people. In the long run, it’s more valuable to excite people with the story of your brand purpose than with a hyped one-shot viral movie.



2. More consumer value driven than ever


A few years ago there was this company that sold swimming pools. During the financial crisis, business was down. The sector as a whole was suffering but there was one company that kept on growing. Their secret? A brilliant marketing strategy: answering consumer questions. The owner of the company listed the 200 most frequently asked questions and answered all of them in blog posts on his site. Because of this strategy, everyone who still had money to buy a pool ended up on this company’s website. It made a huge difference. It kept his company alive.


The first guideline was about the story you want to share as a brand, about what you think is important. This guideline concerns the questions consumers ask themselves.  This part is about being relevant. It focuses on what people think is important.  If you know what consumers are wondering about, all you need to do is answer them and they will find your content. Make a list of all the questions people could possibly have about your sector, your passion, your products, your business, your people. And then answer these questions in blog posts, videos and infographics. Remember to use consumer terminology instead of technical jargon. The popularity of this content will depend on the search behavior of consumers.


In the long run, this content can create a bigger business impact than purpose-driven content as it represents extreme value for consumers.


Invest most of your efforts in this type of content. Being customer-centric implies thinking about content from a consumer point of view. Give them value and it will pay off eventually.



3. More engaging than ever


Almost every week there are new possibilities to engage with people on social media. This is a huge opportunity for companies to connect with their audience. Engaging is about giving attention back to the market. If someone shares your content, if someone asks you a question, they are giving you one of the most valuable things in life: their attention. The best way to leverage that attention is by giving attention back.


If someone tweets something nice, most brands favorite that tweet. It’s a one-second investment. What if you were to change that into something more engaging? Try out the video replies on Twitter and record a 5-second video to thank people in a more engaging way. Let your marketing team and/or general management team spend 10 minutes a week on sending engaging replies to customers. Make 5- to 15-second thank-you movies for fans and see what happens. This is a lot more conversation worthy than a favorite because your movie will win hearts. Winning a heart every day is something I truly believe in.



4. Micro content rules: it’s a volume game


The biggest privately owned e-commerce store in the world is a Dutch company named Coolblue. Founded 15 years ago, it is still 100% owned by its three founders. It is a profitable company that generates close to half a billion in annual sales. Coolblue are experts in using YouTube as a content channel. Every week they post anywhere between 50 to 100 new videos, all based on the ‘more-consumer-value-driven-than-ever’ principle. All videos feature employees explaining how to insert a SIM card in an iPhone or what the difference is between an iPhone and a Samsung Galaxy. Over the last 12 months, Coolblue racked up 20 million views on this channel. And all content is Dutch spoken, so the total market is something like 22 million people. According to their CEO, “the secret of our YouTube channel is not to achieve this one hit video with millions of views. No, it is a volume game. The more movies, the more views.”


As a content marketer, it is important to maintain a certain content frequency. It is better to create 10 small pieces of content than a single huge piece. Creating these smaller content items makes it possible to maintain a presence on every channel while changing precious little in the way of content. Micro content is about having a certain direction to your story and then fragmenting it into as many small pieces of content as possible.  When posting a message on a blog, you can also make a short accompanying video, crate some visuals, provide expert feedback on the post, etc. This one post suddenly becomes a series of micro content pieces that can be shared via the most suited channel.



5. Question and demand philosophy


Most marketers look for the medium with the biggest reach. For this reason (and others), Facebook is still the most popular medium among marketers even though the value of reach depends on what stage a medium is in. Right now, 1000 followers on Instagram is worth more than 1000 likes on Facebook or 1000 followers on Twitter. It’s all a question of supply and demand. The more branded content there is on a certain channel, the harder it becomes to catch the attention of your audience. Facebook and Twitter are very blurred channels. This doesn’t mean you should stop using them; it just means you need a larger follower base to achieve your goals. Or you need to pay more. Instagram still contains less branded content than Facebook and Twitter, making it easier to grab the attention of your followers on Instagram. Right now, Snapchat is probably the channel with the highest value per follower. Brands are still discovering Snapchat. Companies that start early on a new medium undeniably have a fast mover advantage. It builds up the relationship in an early stage so you attract more followers early on. Once the medium is saturated, you will need less effort (read: money) to achieve your goals. Invest in the channels that will be REALLY hot 3 years from now. Other brands won’t because they only look at absolute reach and ignore relative reach. Thanks to this, you will be one up on those brands in the near future.



6. Create in the moment


80% of your content can be planned upfront. As a marketer, you know what to say weeks and sometimes even months in advance so it’s pretty easy to make a planning based on your own plans. The other 20% of the content should be about what is happening in your customer’s world.  Content marketing requires a certain level of flexibility and creativity to play with what is happening in the world of the consumer. This does not mean you have to jump on everything that’s trending on social media. Instead you should look for elements in your customer’s world that fit with yours. See if you can add value. There’s more to it than making a funny remark about something that happened in the Super Bowl – which is great – but it is about using your knowledge to help consumers. Too many brands use this approach in an opportunistic way. It’s much better to use your creativity to add value in a debate you are knowledgeable in. Imagine you are in the real estate business and the entire country is talking about some changes in real estate law. If so, this is not the time to make jokes; this is when you share your knowledge in a blog post or a video. This proves your expertise to the market and it adds value. While being funny in the moment is fine, adding value in the moment is even better.


The success of Meerkat (a very popular live streaming app) and the arrival of Twitter’s alternative Periscope proves once again that ‘in the moment’ is one of the key trends. With Meerkat and Periscope anyone can live stream an event from anywhere in the world. This will enhance the “it’s happening now” feeling even more in the social world. The content market can jump on this wagon.



7. Use the blurring world in a smart way


Michelle phan is one of the most influential people in the make-up industry. She is a beautiful young woman with a very popular YouTube channel. She has more than 7 million subscribers and her videos have racked up more than 1 billion views. Impressive. Michelle seems like a smart business woman as well. She published a book that sold very well. She also started an offline service. Her fans can subscribe to her Glam bag. If you pay 10$ per month, you receive a small bag with the samples of the make-up Michelle uses in her shows. More than 700,000 people subscribed to her business concept. Michelle is an online superstar who is very savvy about how to present herself in the offline world, once again proving that there is no difference anymore between online and offline.


As content marketers we should also stop distinguishing between the two. A lot of the work a brand does online could have an offline link. Everyone is talking about digital first, but in the content/advertising world, most companies still put offline first. This will change over the next few years. The online channel will prevail and will look for ways to get offline exposure. One of the goals of every content marketer should be to get as much free PR as possible. Good, added value content is very relevant to the offline media. Today’s newspapers are filled with yesterday’s tweets. The same could and should happen with your content a few times a year. Make that a concrete objective.



8. It’s about scenarios


Pieces of content are very often stand-alone pieces of content. Successful content is created through scenarios. Pretend that your content plan is the scenario for a TV show. A never-ending TV show. A successful TV show has suspense and surprises, there are emotions and different characters, and there are happy moments and sad moments. Stories evolve and fade into the background, it’s almost like real life. One of the most fun brainstorms is to write the scenario for your brand. By doing so, you will see that the impact of each small piece of content increases because it leads to something, viz. to the next step in the scenario, a new piece of the puzzle.


Over the last few years, Lego has implemented the extreme version of this philosophy. Lego created real movies and short videos in which Lego toys play a central role. The climax of this concept was the Lego film which was released in 2014. Millions of people went to see a movie consisting of 100% product placement by one single brand. They wrote a scenario for their brand. A company that does really well in this respect is Google. Google takes us along on their journey of Google X. Every week we read about some new idea, invention or failed concept. It’s exciting, it’s new, it’s emotional, sometimes it’s good news and sometimes it’s bad news. We all watch the Google movie, almost on a daily basis.



9. Don’t forget to use your hook


Hubspot was one of the first brands to become successful with content marketing. As their business is selling inbound marketing software, it was pretty smart to show the market how it should be done. Hubspot posts about 5 to 7 blogs a day. They write about how to increase your inbound marketing performance. They are not selling the audience anything, they are showing them tricks within their field of expertise. Good content marketing. Hubspot is also very smart when it comes to using their hook to catch some leads. A lot of content marketing is simply about fantastic bait. You create a beautiful piece of content, people like it and that’s it – they move on to the next beautiful piece of content. Once in a while, it is smart to use your hook. If you create a brilliant piece of content then try to acquire the consumer’s data. For instance, by collecting e-mail addresses you can connect with clients and enhance the relationship. If you keep producing top content, after a while you will have created enough goodwill to ask something back from your followers. If you give 90% of the time, you are allowed to ask 10% of the time. This does not mean that all content should be shared from a platform where you use your hook. Just remember to use your hook on occasion because it’s a smart thing to do.



10. Make it personal


Use real stories and real people in your content marketing. I meet so many marketers who are afraid of making their own people the stars of their content marketing. Traditionally schooled marketers still feel that online content should be created like a 30-second commercial. Expensive, big, takes time, fake, not personal… for online content marketing, the goal is to achieve the exact opposite. “Making it personal” is a crucial aspect. As we all live in a digital world, many clients hardly have any contact with actual people working for the companies they buy from. Using real people in content marketing says to the market that you are a real company with real people. It is also a source of pride for employees. Consumers feel as if they are getting to know you on a more personal level. Use more videos with real people in them instead of animated videos. Use fewer actors and let your staff play the starring role. If you are tweeting from a corporate account then mention the name of the person behind the account. The same goes for Facebook. Blog posts should be written by employees. You are bound to have employees who know their way around a camera so let them shoot the footage. Everyone should be able to choose their own preferred channel for sharing their expertise. Of course, it’s still a good idea to let a content marketer oversee the entire process.



Anything missing?


These are my 10 guidelines for content marketing in 2015 and 2016. Please let me know what you think and which guidelines you would like to add. It would be great if we could come up with 20 guidelines based on your feedback and expertise. I would love that.


Thanks for reading. Thanks for sharing. Thanks for adding your guideline(s) to this blog and deck.



10 guidelines for your content marketing in 2016 – 2017

How To Improve the ROI Of Your Content Marketing

While 30% of all marketers reported that their efforts were effective, this … to research done by Small Business Trends and Online Marketing Coach, …



How To Improve the ROI Of Your Content Marketing

How to Find More & Better Content Ideas with Media Monitoring

Oh, the dreaded blank page, the taunting blink of the cursor!


As a marketer, one of your greatest challenges is to continuously come up with great content that resonates with your audience — whether you’re writing blog posts, email campaigns and newsletter copy, marketing page messages, or social media updates. When you feel like your main job is to always be producing new content, it’s easy to forget to stop and listen to the people for whom you’re creating it.


You might be wondering, “How does this help me?” Well, we’ll get there.


Getting to know and understand your audience is the best way to connect with them. What problems do do they face? What topics, questions, people, and products do they find interesting? How do their thoughts and opinions relate to your marketing and business goals?


The key to creating successful content is to be relevant and engaging — and one of the most powerful ways to do that is to be helpful and provide value. This kind of giving mentality works to build the trust and relationships you’ll need to attract, convince, convert, and retain your community and customers.



Recommended for YouWebcast: Seizing the Data Crush Opportunity with Customer Identity Management



Media monitoring gives you the ability to gain insight into how to identify that value. People-watching or keeping your ears perked up in a crowd is a well-known tactic for gaining creative writing inspiration — and media monitoring is much the same way. You get to learn about people and what makes them tick, on their terms, and then use that intelligence to get creative, reach more people, and build deeper relationships.


Here are three ways to use media monitoring to come up with successful content ideas that make an impact.


Monitor keywords for topic ideas that will help your readers succeed


Make the content unique


Get to know your audience by monitoring general keywords and then deducing specific trends of interest. Set up alerts for key terms, topics, and hashtags that are in line with your brand and industry with tools like Mention. Or do manual searches on social media channels like Twitter and tools like BuzzSumo.


By tracking broader terms like “email marketing” and “lifecycle email,” we’ve discovered that people are hungry for guidance through best practices and tips. That gives us a choice to play into that trend or differentiate ourselves from the crowd by diving deeper into topics, with more specific treatments as well as concrete, real-life examples.


For instance, we noticed a recent uptick in interest around deliverability and spam filtering, but saw most of the content provided vague tips. So we published a post walking through specific steps to keep your emails out of the spam folder.


monitoring content


Social content-sharing forums and news sites, where community members can vote on articles and posts — like GrowthHackers, Inbound, Hacker News, and Quibb — not only reveal what people find interesting, but also have a built-in distribution network. Monitor trends in relevant topics and then use that networking power.


content marketing monitoring


By using this approach to track the most popular email marketing content, we saw that people wanted templates and blueprints that they could then adapt and use. So we came up with some blog posts that provided copy templates for different types of emails. (Now depending on the month, sites like GrowthHackers and Inbound are among the top 5 largest drivers of traffic to our blog.)


Key takeaway: Use keyword and topic monitoring to identify trends and opportunities to stand out in a crowd.


Uncover specific problems by listening to what people are saying


With keyword monitoring, you get a sense of the forest of what people are interested in. But when you start paying attention to what specific people, community members, customers, and influencers are saying — not just sharing and upvoting — you get a sense of the trees, the specific questions and issues people are facing.


People pose questions in forums and social media and chances are, if a few folks have spoken up about something, there are many others wondering and working through the same issues.


Here are 3 quick ways to listen in a more targeted way:


1. Pay attention and respond to direct questions.


This is probably an obvious tactic, but just remember not to undervalue when people reach out to you. Here’s a question, unrelated to our product, from a Twitter follower, regarding a new tool from Gmail.


monitoring engagement


That sparked an internal discussion about trying the tool ourselves and seeing if we could come up with interesting insights to share.


2. Curate groups and lists of experts and influencers.


Find out what experts and practitioners are going through and listen to them talking shop. This is a great way to gain focus and efficiency in your media monitoring.


twitter list monitoring


For instance, I created a list of awesome email marketers and learn about industry-relevant news, events, issues, and informed opinions about problems and trends.


3. Tap into people’s emotions.


On social sharing and monitoring tools, you can search and filter by sentiment or whether people are expressing generally positive or negative opinions. These tools aren’t perfect, but can give you a lot of insight into when people have strong feelings about something.


Here’s a sample Twitter search of the hashtag topic #emailmarketing, in English, expressing negative sentiment:


monitoring sentiment


With this tactic, we’ve been able to learn more about how people often feel frustrated with email marketing, both on the receiving and sending end, because things don’t work the way they’re supposed to. There’s a gulf that people experience in how the care that gets put into building products and businesses often doesn’t extend to how email is treated. This inspired one of our most popular posts about how email is actually part of the user experience.


Key takeaway: Make your listening targeted and efficient by paying attention to particular audience members, experts, and strong emotions.


Talk to people, plain and simple.


Just as product managers must get out there and talk to users and customers to do their job well, so should marketers. Your product is your content and copy, and talking to your audience is the best way to get feedback and new ideas.


A great opening into a conversation with people is when they share your content. In the optimal case, say thanks and express gratitude, but don’t just stop there. Be proactive about continuing the conversation. Here’s a more content/product-focused interchange: where the reply back to a “Thanks for sharing!” message paves the way to introduce our newsletter:


twitter lead gen card


More importantly: ask questions based on their initial tweet or around the content they’ve just shared. It’s a real opportunity to learn from others, increase understanding, and prompt creative ideas.


twitter content ideas


A tip: don’t just track your Twitter handle for content shares. Remember to set up alerts for brand names without an @ symbol. According to Mention, “30.72% of tweets containing company names don’t include their Twitter handle.” And that becomes even more important when you’re looking to start a conversation with someone who has shared your content but didn’t directly include an “@“ mention.


Finally, email is one of the best ways to talk with people because it’s a more personal, one-to-one communication channel. This is easy to overlook, given common (but not best!) practices like having no-reply email addresses or treating messages as a one-way, outbound street. Whether it’s with your newsletter, feature announcements, or lifecycle emails: keep the conversation going, because this is your core audience.


Key takeaway: Use media monitoring to not just start but also develop an ongoing conversation by asking questions.


Putting this into action


  • Set up alerts in your media monitoring tool and track topics in community content-sharing forums to identify recurring themes, questions, and trends.

  • Look for specific questions and challenges posed by your followers, customers, and community members as well as influencers on social media and forums.

  • Pay attention to signals of strong emotion that will suggest ideas for strongly resonant messages.

  • Listen and keep the conversation going with your audience and community, instead of thinking of marketing as a one-way, outbound channel.

mention-academy



How to Find More & Better Content Ideas with Media Monitoring

Everybody Writes: Your Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content

Finally a go-to guide to creating and publishing the kind of content that will make your business thrive.


Everybody Writes is a go-to guide to attracting and retaining customers through stellar online communication, because in our content-driven world, every one of us is, in fact, a writer.


If you have a web site, you are a publisher. If you are on social media, you are in marketing. And that means that we are all relying on our words to carry our marketing messages. We are all writers.


Yeah, but who cares about writing anymore? In a time-challenged world dominated by short and snappy, by click-bait headlines and Twitter streams and Instagram feeds and gifs and video and Snapchat and YOLO and LOL and #tbt. . . does the idea of focusing on writing seem pedantic and ordinary?


Actually, writing matters more now, not less. Our online words are our currency; they tell our customers who we are.


Our writing can make us look smart or it can make us look stupid. It can make us seem fun, or warm, or competent, or trustworthy. But it can also make us seem humdrum or discombobulated or flat-out boring.


That means you’ve got to choose words well, and write with economy and the style and honest empathy for your customers. And it means you put a new value on an often-overlooked skill in content marketing: How to write, and how to tell a true story really, really well. That’s true whether you’re writing a listicle or the words on a Slideshare deck or the words you’re reading right here, right now…


And so being able to communicate well in writing isn’t just nice; it’s necessity. And it’s also the oft-overlooked cornerstone of nearly all our content marketing.


In Everybody Writes, top marketing veteran Ann Handley gives expert guidance and insight into the process and strategy of content creation, production and publishing, with actionable how-to advice designed to get results.


These lessons and rules apply across all of your online assets — like web pages, home page, landing pages, blogs, email, marketing offers, and on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and other social media. Ann deconstructs the strategy and delivers a practical approach to create ridiculously compelling and competent content. It’s designed to be the go-to guide for anyone creating or publishing any kind of online content — whether you’re a big brand or you’re small and solo.


Sections include:


  • How to write better. (Or, for “adult-onset writers”: How to hate writing less.)

  • Easy grammar and usage rules tailored for business in a fun, memorable way. (Enough to keep you looking sharp, but not too much to overwhelm you.)

  • Giving your audience the gift of your true story, told well. Empathy and humanity and inspiration are key here, so the book covers that, too.

  • Best practices for creating credible, trustworthy content steeped in some time-honored rules of solid journalism. Because publishing content and talking directly to your customers is, at its heart, a privilege.

  • “Things Marketers Write”: The fundamentals of 17 specific kinds of content that marketers are often tasked with crafting.

  • Content Tools: The sharpest tools you need to get the job done.

Traditional marketing techniques are no longer enough. Everybody Writes is a field guide for the smartest businesses who know that great content is the key to thriving in this digital world.


Product Features


  • Business & Money

  • Marketing & Sales

  • Communications

  • Marketing

Click Here For More Information



Everybody Writes: Your Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content

Ovation TV Taps John Malkin to Head Cross-Platform Content Strategy

Arts-focused network Ovation TV announced today that it has appointed John Malkin to EVP of content distribution for both its linear TV and digital platforms.


Malkin replaces Brad Samuels, who recently joined Bloomberg TV.  Malkin will report to Ovation CEO Charles Segars, and Ovation’s SVP of content distribution and partnerships Mike Pons and VP of Affiliate Marketing Randy Rovegno will report to Malkin.


“John joins our network at a pivotal time in our industry, as well as in Ovation’s evolution,” said Segars in a statement. “While being an independent network comes with its challenges, it also affords us the opportunity to move quickly, try new strategies and reach out to our passionate, arts-loving community to create new, exciting ways to develop and distribute content.”


Malkin comes to Ovation from the NFL Network, where he was VP of affiliate distribution, managing key components of the NFL’s television networks, NFLN and NFL RedZone, including affiliate sales, TV Everywhere and content distribution on both linear and OTT platforms.


Earlier, Malkin held positions at Fox News, where, as VP of affiliate marketing and local sales, he oversaw the marketing of Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network across affiliate and consumer platforms. He has also done stints at E! Entertainment Television, MTV Networks, and Times Mirror Magazines.


The news of Malkin’s hire comes as Ovation prepares to unveil the half-hour, cross-platform special “Holiday Entertaining with Kin Community.” Produced in collaboration with multi-channel network Kin Community, it will premiere on Ovation TV tonight at 10 p.m. ET and be available in various formats on YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter. Following its U.S. premiere, it will air in Canada on Corus Entertainment’s women’s channels, including W Network and CosmoTV.


Tags: ,



Ovation TV Taps John Malkin to Head Cross-Platform Content Strategy

5 ways to improve your content marketing on Facebook

The “Boost Your Business” event presented by Facebook is a nirvana for small business owners and those with entrepreneurial aspirations. With Facebook director of small business Jonathan Czaja as the lead guest speaker this year, the event provided advice on how to advertise and find your target audience using the popular social media platform.


According to Czaja, 40 million businesses have an active Facebook page, while 2 million businesses actively advertise on Facebook. The world is going mobile, and Czaja said Facebook accounts for 20 percent of time people spend on mobile devices. Let’s face it; your customers will be one their smartphone’s Facebook app at some point during the day.


Click here to read the September 2015 edition of Business Review USA!


Below, Czaja provided five ways to improve your content while marketing your business on Facebook.


Lesson 1: Tell your authentic story


Understand that people want to do business with those they can trust. You want to be able to build trust with your community. Czaja believes content is the hardest part of marketing, but his golden rule is being original. “Owners should have their own authentic voice and consistently use that voice to communication with your customers,” Czaja said. “Authenticity is what works well on Facebook. Your post will be showing up in between a picture of my son and a picture of my wife. It’s a private space, so you really want to treat that with respect.”


RELATED TOPIC: The 5 principles of engagement marketing: engage people as individuals


Lesson 2: Boost your posts


After you’ve created some authentic content, now is the time to start reaching people on Facebook. The easiest way to start that is by boosting your posts. Here, you can select the audience you want to send your posts to, as well as create a budget. What creating a budget does, is indicate the number of people who will see that post. This can create tremendous success.


Lesson 3: Reach the people that matter to you


The beauty of Facebook is not only can you reach a large number of people, but more importantly, you can reach exactly the people you want to reach. The key is not wasting your money advertising on Facebook to people who don’t care about the products and services you provide. It’s like watching a commercial on TV that you care absolutely nothing about. Part of this is also targeting people in certain geographical areas. It’s a very powerful way to reach people who live down the street from your store.


RELATED TOPIC: Tips to replatform your business website


Lesson 4: Used advanced targeting


This means bringing your website data to Facebook in order to further advance your targeting capability. This allows you to upload your email lists or website visitors to Facebook and, in a privacy protected way of course, find those people on Facebook and target them in your advertising. “This is a very productive way to re-market to your existing customers,” Czaja said. “You can reach your existing customers on Facebook.”


Lesson 5: Measure your results


This is crucial. There are several ways to measure your performance on Facebook, and one good way is tracking the number of purchases made on your e-commerce website that are attributable to your ad on Facebook. With a conversion pixel, which can be installed on your website, it enables you to measure the actual sales generated by your investment in Facebook. It’s very important, because after that, you’ll know if your marketing tactics are working.


This article was originally published by our sister brand,  Business Review Australia, and can be found here


Let’s connect!  



5 ways to improve your content marketing on Facebook

Jump-Start Your Content Marketing With These 4 Strategies

ss-man-jumpingYou’ve probably heard this before: “Content marketing is hard…Content marketing takes a long time.”


Sorry to say, I’m not here to tell you that’s wrong: It is hard, and it does take time.


But that doesn’t mean content marketing doesn’t work. It does. It just takes consistency, dedication and yes, time, before you see results.


In the meantime, however, you’re going to be sad. You might even get mad. Hell, you may even be full-on depressed. You might offer a cry up to the heavens: “Why is my content not worrrrrrrking!!!” And you hear no booming answers in return.


This, my friend, is called the content slog, as coined by Chris Bird of Vertical Measures (my employer) here. It’s that gap of disappointment where you’ve put in a good amount of time and effort into your content marketing strategy, and you aren’t seeing a return on your investment.


This principle rings true for other digital media, too, and is where this content slog idea originated. In particular, Moz’s Rand Fishkin and BuzzMaven Labs’ Scott Clark both talk about this idea in terms of SEO and its “lengthy period of diminishing returns” (per Fishkin).


Content marketing takes consistency, dedication and yes, time, before you see results.

We repurposed this idea to fit with our experience in content marketing and came up with this graph below. It shows the rate of investment required vs. returns generated, and where that slog occurs.


Content Marketing Slog


So what’s are content marketers to do when they are in an uphill battle between time and effort toward the top of Results Mountain? Follow the four strategies listed on the graph and outlined in the rest of this article to get quick wins that will jump-start your content marketing NOW.


Email Marketing


The oldest digital strategy in the playbook: email marketing. We’ve all been building lists since the dawn of the interwebs, so it makes sense this is where you should start while you’re waiting for your content marketing to kick in.


Take advantage of the list you already have, and start or amp up your email marketing strategies. You may need to prune your list or clean it up if it has been sitting there for a while, but these are people who have expressed interest in wanting to hear from you, so let them!


Here are some email types you can start creating right away:


  • Monthly newsletter

  • Product or service updates

  • Point of view/opinion pieces

  • Special promotions or discounts

  • Repurposed content

Take advantage of the list you already have, and start or amp up your email marketing strategies.

Second, focus on your subscription strategies to continue to build your list. You’ll seriously thank yourself in the future when you’re ready to publish new content and already have fresh contacts to send it to.


I learned this lesson the hard way. After migrating the Vertical Measures website, we lost our prominent call-to-action to subscribe to the blog.


What we were left with was a tiny RSS button at the top of the site, mixed in with our other social icons. Hardly an appealing or even apparent way to receive our weekly blog updates.


So finally, 10 months after our migration and adding a sidebar subscription button that didn’t do anything, we got ourselves in gear to design and develop a subscription form that no one could miss:


blog-cta


The results have been astounding and should be big wake-up call for anyone in the throes of content slog agony. We saw a 581 percent increase in the number of subscriptions in the the first 2.5 months the call-to-action was live compared with the previous 10 months after our site migration. Let me repeat: 581 percent increase in two months compared with the previous 10 months.


If that’s not a quick win, I don’t know what is.


To wrap this up, focus on three things with your email marketing:


  1. Take advantage of the list you already have.

  2. Create a subscription strategy NOW.

  3. Bonus! Test your emails to get the most out of them with a few simple hacks outlined in my previous article.

Pay Per Click


PPC isn’t always uttered in the same breath as content marketing, but they can work well together. Whereas much of content development is targeted at organic traffic and rankings, PPC is a direct line to drawing in traffic, leads and possibly more business.


Plus, it’s predictable. You know how much you want to spend, where you want to spend it, and exactly what results you need for a positive ROI.


Don’t shy away from PPC; embrace it during the slog! Take advantage of AdWords if you have some keywords you can competitively bid on, and even more importantly, start to increase your budget for content promotion on social networks.


I’ve seen companies get major returns through Facebook Ads or Sponsored Tweets, so get your feet wet with optimizing your ads and audiences while you’re churning out great content that will soon be published.


Conversion Rate Optimization


Conversion Rate Optimization, otherwise known as CRO, is a form of testing and tweaking until you see the results you want. CRO can often go hand-in-hand with your active PPC campaigns, as mentioned above, where you are optimizing your landing pages for the most completions.


The way I like to look at it comes from Vertical Measures’ Zach Etten, who is a PPC whiz and overall testing guru. The way he explains it is this, as illustrated by some hard numbers:


  1. This is your current situation. You want to increase your sales twofold.

CRO


  1. You think you need to double sales to double your traffic. But doubling traffic doesn’t happen overnight. In fact, it could take a year’s worth of hard work to build up content to point to your landing page, or a large budget for your PPC ads.

CRO


  1. Solution: Instead of doubling traffic, double your conversion rate! This produces the same outcome, but it’s something that takes a lot less work, with a quicker turnaround.

CRO


CRO is the simplest hack you can start doing now, while you’re working on your content strategies. Test everything — your headline, your form placement, how many fields you require, colors, font size, everything. It all affects how easily someone is willing to give up their information on a landing page.


For example, the team at Vertical Measures did some PPC landing page optimization for a law firm client of ours. The before and after may not look like a drastic overhaul visually, but the results say something different.


The client saw a 77 percent increase in conversions, and what’s even more staggering is that their cost per lead decreased by 32 percent. Do CRO. It matters.


law firm CRO


Test everything — your headline, your form placement, how many fields you require, colors, font size, everything.

Hub and Spoke Content 


If you haven’t jumped on the hub-and-spoke train, welcome aboard. This is probably my favorite type of content model for a few reasons:


  1. Hubs drive traffic.

  2. Hubs drive leads.

  3. Hubs are great pieces of evergreen content.

This is especially true when you’re new to content marketing and working on many projects in the background, but you have yet to publish much content. If you shift your mindset to creating a hub right off the bat, you’ll see results quickly.


So what’s a hub? A hub is a larger piece of content that usually hides behind a gated form. It requires the interested visitor to provide some information to obtain that piece of content — maybe it’s a PDF download or multiple files. The visitor shows intent and interest, and you get some of his or her personal information in exchange.


And what’s a spoke? Spokes are pieces of content that point back to your hub. Oftentimes, they can be repurposed sections of your hub content or something related to the topic you cover. Spokes always link back to the hub or integrate a strong CTA.


Spokes can take the form of blog posts, press releases, videos, graphics, emails, on and on. Spokes have one singular goal: to point the content consumers back to your hub so they will then convert.


As an example, here’s an illustration of how a hub-and-spoke model can work. This is for the Google Penalty Recovery Kit that Vertical Measures put together to assist people in the midst of a website penalty.


The hub itself contained a free guide with an overview of penalty recovery, an example Disavow file to use in Google and a spreadsheet to help with backlink analysis. The spokes were varied and scheduled out even before we created the hub, all with the goal to push people back to the download.


The hub is where all your other quick wins come together and spark results.

Hub and spoke content marketing


The hub is where all your other quick wins come together and spark results. You create the hub, announce it to your list with email marketing, run some PPC ads to drive traffic to your download, and of course, test and tweak your landing page with CRO for best results.


If you can’t get to the spokes yet, just focus on creating them when you can, and focus on driving people toward your hub.


Conclusion


I know you want your content marketing to work, and so do I. So utilize these four strategies (and any more that you can come up with) to get a jump-start on driving real content marketing results.


If convincing your boss to even start content marketing was half the battle, then producing results sooner rather than later is vital to the longevity of your content marketing program.



Some opinions expressed in this article may be those of a guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.





(Some images used under license from Shutterstock.com.)


Jump-Start Your Content Marketing With These 4 Strategies

Firms in Brazil Embrace Content Marketing - eMarketer

Nearly seven in 10 professionals plan to up content marketing spending


July 24, 2015 | Advertising & Marketing

Content marketing has reached a majority of firms in a range of industries in Brazil, according to research from Rock Content conducted in June 2015. More than two-thirds of ecommerce firms, nearly seven in 10 manufacturers, and eight in 10 marketing companies were using the technique.


Metrics Used to Measuring Content Marketing Success According to Professionals in Brazil, June 2015 (% of respondents)


As is common in many markets, content marketing still takes up a small portion of marketing budgets in Brazil. A majority of respondents told Rock Content they were spending less than a quarter of their budget doing content. But that may be set to change: 69% reported planned increases in content marketing spending over the next 12 months.


Most practitioners are creating just a few pieces of content each month, though a solid share are more prolific. As many as 16% of respondents said they created more than 20 pieces of content each month for marketing purposes. Facebook is the top distribution channel for content marketing pieces and has a solid lead over second-place blogs, at 95% vs. 61%. Fewer than half of respondents were using Twitter to distribute content marketing.


Respondents to the survey indicated they were looking at hard, quantitative metrics for success, with site traffic and sales their main priorities.



Firms in Brazil Embrace Content Marketing - eMarketer

6 New Insights About Content Marketing Hiring Trends And Job Growth - Marketing Land

Content-Marketing-Job-Growth


If you’re looking for a content marketing job, you’re in luck. But if you’re trying to hire for content roles, you may find there’s a lot of competition for talent.


A recent study by Fractl (my employer) and Moz confirmed there is growing demand for content marketing skills. “The Inbound Marketing Economy” analyzed more than 75,000 job listings on Indeed.com containing digital marketing keywords, including content marketing terms.


To get a pulse on the current state of content marketing careers, I’ve compiled the study’s most compelling stats and gathered input from recruitment professionals. Read on to see how much content marketing has grown as a career field in recent years, how much content marketers are being paid, which states have the most job prospects, and more.


The Number Of Content Marketing Job Listings Has Grown Nearly 350% Since 2011


Between January 2011 and January 2015, the number of job listings on Indeed containing “content marketing” or “content strategy” grew by about 350%. This uptick in the number of job listings coincides with Google’s Panda update in February 2011, which shifted online marketers’ focus from quantity to quality content.


content-marketing-job-growth


And the upward trend doesn’t seem to be slowing down…


26% Of Marketing Executives Expect To Hire Content Marketing Roles This Year


“Compared to a year ago, we’re seeing greater demand for content strategists,” said Diane Domeyer, executive director of The Creative Group (TCG). According to TCG’s recent study on the hiring climate for creatives, 26% of marketing executives reported they expect to hire for content marketing roles in the second half of 2015. This was the third most common response, right after creative art direction and account services (27% each).


While this kind of growth is great news for content marketing job seekers, overall the volume of available content marketing jobs is still low compared to other inbound marketing jobs such as social media, digital marketing and SEO. This suggests that despite its surge in popularity in recent years, content marketing has yet to hit the same level of ubiquity as SEO and social media in an organization.


number-of-content-marketing-jobs


Additionally, a lack of hiring budget may be limiting the number of content marketing jobs. More than half of marketers surveyed in a recent study by Contently reported that a quarter or less of their 2015 marketing budget was dedicated to content marketing. We can expect more content marketing job growth if these budgets increase in the coming years.


Content Marketing Roles Have An Average Salary Range Between $60,000 And $74,000


According to “The Inbound Marketing Economy,” the average salary for job listings containing “content marketing” or “content strategy” is $61,000. (When content marketing is part of the job title, that amount jumps to $74,000.)


content-marketing-average-salaries


While this is lower compared to some of the other keywords in the study, it’s not exactly pauper’s pay. Other sources on content marketing salary data report similar findings in this range:


LinkedIn Profiles Containing “Content Marketing” Have Grown 168% Since 2013


Between June 2013 and June 2015, the number of LinkedIn profiles in the U.S. containing “content marketing” has increased by 168%. This is the largest growth among all of the terms analyzed in the study. However, as you can see in the graph below, content marketing still lacks the volume of other keywords.


content-marketing-linkedin-profiles


Massachusetts And New York Have The Highest Concentration Of Content Marketing Jobs


Content marketers have the greatest number of opportunities in the Northeast, with the highest concentration of jobs in Massachusetts (3.8 per capita) and New York (3.3 per capita). California is third on the list, with 2.8 content marketing job listings per capita. Many of the other states on the list have large metropolitan areas where corporate headquarters and marketing agencies are likely to be based.


content-marketing-jobs-top-states


content-marketing-jobs-top-states


Keep in mind, the study only looked at jobs containing the words “content marketing” and “content strategy.” In other words, this study didn’t account for every job opportunity for online content producers. If the map above shows your state is a content marketing desert, it may just be due to job listings using different terminology.


Plenty of job listings describe content marketing tasks without any mention of the phrase “content marketing.” If you’re using online job boards to find content marketing roles, include searches for phrases such as “online content” or even “content” to ensure you don’t overlook potential content marketing opportunities.


Soft Skills Still Have A Lot Of Value


While it’s important to showcase content marketing skills, recruiters also recommend that job seekers should show off the soft skills that make them a well-rounded employee. The three recruitment professionals I spoke with all mentioned that soft skills still have weight despite the increasingly technical nature of digital marketing roles.


“In addition to having the requisite technical skills for a job, employers are also placing greater emphasis on soft skills such as the ability to lead a team, solve problems, or negotiate,” said Domeyer. “Companies have to work harder to attract and retain professionals with these in-demand skills. Some are even hiring junior talent that they can train if the candidates have strong soft skills and fit in with the workplace culture.”


“In addition to having the requisite technical skills for a job, employers are also placing greater emphasis on soft skills such as the ability to lead a team, solve problems, or negotiate.”

TopSpot Internet Marketing agrees that technical marketing skills can be acquired with enough training; instead, their team focuses on soft skills during the talent search. Their Talent Retention Specialist, Abby Frizzell, says she looks for candidates with “great communication skills, a positive attitude and the desire to learn, which can’t be taught.”


Perhaps the most obvious skill you should display in an interview was pointed out by Ilene Bauer, senior recruiter at SapientNitro. She says not only do you need a solid portfolio for any creative role, but you also need the ability to talk about your samples of work.


To learn more, be sure to check out the full results from the study, which include data on other digital marketing career fields.


Do you have experience hiring for content marketing roles, or are you seeking a content marketing role? I’d love to hear how your experience aligns with what I’ve shared — please leave a comment below.



Some opinions expressed in this article may be those of a guest author and not necessarily Marketing Land. Staff authors are listed here.




Be a part of Search Engine Land. The robust agenda covers the latest tactics in paid search, SEO, mobile, analytics and more. Register today and save $300, or come as a team and save 10%-20%.




About The Author






Kerry Jones is the Inbound Marketing Manager at Frac.tl, a content marketing agency that specializes in the science behind viral marketing campaigns.





(Some images used under license from Shutterstock.com.)


6 New Insights About Content Marketing Hiring Trends And Job Growth - Marketing Land

Everybody Writes: Your Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content

Finally a go-to guide to creating and publishing the kind of content that will make your business thrive.


Everybody Writes is a go-to guide to attracting and retaining customers through stellar online communication, because in our content-driven world, every one of us is, in fact, a writer.


If you have a web site, you are a publisher. If you are on social media, you are in marketing. And that means that we are all relying on our words to carry our marketing messages. We are all writers.


Yeah, but who cares about writing anymore? In a time-challenged world dominated by short and snappy, by click-bait headlines and Twitter streams and Instagram feeds and gifs and video and Snapchat and YOLO and LOL and #tbt. . . does the idea of focusing on writing seem pedantic and ordinary?


Actually, writing matters more now, not less. Our online words are our currency; they tell our customers who we are.


Our writing can make us look smart or it can make us look stupid. It can make us seem fun, or warm, or competent, or trustworthy. But it can also make us seem humdrum or discombobulated or flat-out boring.


That means you’ve got to choose words well, and write with economy and the style and honest empathy for your customers. And it means you put a new value on an often-overlooked skill in content marketing: How to write, and how to tell a true story really, really well. That’s true whether you’re writing a listicle or the words on a Slideshare deck or the words you’re reading right here, right now…


And so being able to communicate well in writing isn’t just nice; it’s necessity. And it’s also the oft-overlooked cornerstone of nearly all our content marketing.


In Everybody Writes, top marketing veteran Ann Handley gives expert guidance and insight into the process and strategy of content creation, production and publishing, with actionable how-to advice designed to get results.


These lessons and rules apply across all of your online assets — like web pages, home page, landing pages, blogs, email, marketing offers, and on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and other social media. Ann deconstructs the strategy and delivers a practical approach to create ridiculously compelling and competent content. It’s designed to be the go-to guide for anyone creating or publishing any kind of online content — whether you’re a big brand or you’re small and solo.


Sections include:


  • How to write better. (Or, for “adult-onset writers”: How to hate writing less.)

  • Easy grammar and usage rules tailored for business in a fun, memorable way. (Enough to keep you looking sharp, but not too much to overwhelm you.)

  • Giving your audience the gift of your true story, told well. Empathy and humanity and inspiration are key here, so the book covers that, too.

  • Best practices for creating credible, trustworthy content steeped in some time-honored rules of solid journalism. Because publishing content and talking directly to your customers is, at its heart, a privilege.

  • “Things Marketers Write”: The fundamentals of 17 specific kinds of content that marketers are often tasked with crafting.

  • Content Tools: The sharpest tools you need to get the job done.

Traditional marketing techniques are no longer enough. Everybody Writes is a field guide for the smartest businesses who know that great content is the key to thriving in this digital world.


check out For More Information



Everybody Writes: Your Go-To Guide to Creating Ridiculously Good Content

Content Marketing by Connecting the Data Dots

One of the biggest challenges of marketing anything online is integrating data (i.e., managing, interpreting, connecting and efficiently acting on all data) you have access to in the quickest way possible to make the most of each of your investments. The challenge in managing online marketing lies in being able to connect one insight from one source to another insight from a different source to devise the best strategy possible.


Disjointed Data Creates a Jumbled Picture


Imagine you have high engagement for a twitter campaign in which you invested X dollars. You’ve acquired new followers on your Twitter account, so that’s one KPI, but what about clicks to your campaign’s landing page?


You can also see that Y number of people landed on the website by way of that Twitter campaign, so you’ve also increased traffic—another KPI.


But who are those people that visited? Have they visited before? What’s more, how do you retarget them? Via an email campaign? A message on LinkedIn or Twitter? Finally, how do you filter through the noise so that you do not waste resources on dead ends? And how do you do that without spending hours figuring it out?


There are a lot of tools out there that claim to do everything, and many of them have very complete systems—particularly when it comes to managing marketing automation. In many cases, however, such software carries pricey licenses, making it unfeasible for both small and large companies.


Moreover, most tools focus heavily on one particular strength—whether it’s listening, content curation, amplification, social media management, tracking users’ activity, identifying users or facilitating and automating email marketing.


So, as a marketer trying to build an efficient system whereby you’ll get the most out of your communication and marketing investments, how do you address these issues? Whether your company has a large budget to invest in a completely integrated system or you have to make due with previously purchased tools and build a system piece by piece on your own, the questions are the same:


  1. Where are you hemorrhaging data?

  2. Are you under-utilizing available resources?

  3. How easy is it to connect data from one tool to the next?

1. Make the Most of the Data You Have


No matter what type of campaign you’re executing, you need to track all the data associated with each element of communication for every channel you utilize.


Can you answer the following questions for each new content piece you create and distribute?


What kind of content works?


What are the tone, topic and format of your best content pieces? The answers give you an indication of which subjects are the most interesting for your audiences so that you can produce more in the same vein.


Where did you receive the most conversions?


Was it a social media campaign, AdWords or a display campaign? Paired with sentiment analysis above, you can discern two things: X content is really effective on Y channel. Next time, you will know what kind of content to promote and the best way/platform to share it.


Who did you attract?


This is the most challenging part, so you’ll need to rely on tools that combine tracking and databases to give you the best idea about who is coming to your site. The real challenge is figuring out which one best suits your business needs.


At the most basic level, you should track IP addresses to identify the companies visiting your site. If you have an internal database, you should also track at an individual level to further understand who they are (e.g. the CMO at Company X) and how best to reach them (e.g. email, social media or phone).


What was the reaction to your communication?


Listening tools are a powerful way to learn what’s trending and determine which topics to touch on in your content strategy. It’s also a nice way to gauge whether you are making an impression (positive or negative) within your target communities.


2. Encourage Employee Advocacy


Employee advocacy boosts your content marketing strategy by:


  • serving as a test pool for your contents’ appeal

  • increasing the organic reach of your content without spending more on paid media

  • increasing the trust associated with your content (because it is a form of word of mouth marketing)

Whether you are already engaged in employee advocacy or just getting started, the following steps are crucial to get the most out of your efforts: track, track and track. Make sure your employee advocacy tool can do the following:


  • Track the kinds of content being shared among employees, as well as end user audiences. This allows you to compare listening tool data with sharing data. It can also help refine the topics in your content calendar.

  • Track the reach and engagement generated by your employees.Celebrate the work of employees who continually write engaging posts that gain a lot of traction on social media. This not only rewards those who are succeeding, but also helps educate employees on the best tactics and practices.

  • Target your content to the right employees. Employees are more likely to share content that is relevant to them. Each business unit that is engaged in your employee advocacy initiative should be creating and sharing marketing content that makes sense to them and their respective job functions.

3. Connect the Data Dots


Before you take the time and effort to build a workflow around tools and the data they help manage, it’s essential that you understand how (if at all) they integrate with one with another.


Total integration isn’t always possible, but if you can at least connect a group of tools (e.g. social media campaigns that feed into lead tracking tools and CRM systems or listening tools and content marketing databases that connect with employee advocacy and amplification platforms) then you are almost there.


The idea is to track content from its point of origin to the point of engagement, which then triggers an outbound marketing treatment or kicks off a lead nurturing cycle. It’s better to determine that integration isn’t possible early on and avoid the tool altogether than to be knee-deep in a campaign with mountains of data that you can’t take action on.


Focus on the Big Picture


The most important point to draw from all of this is to make sure you build a system that makes sense for your workflow and your company’s current capacity—whether it’s in terms of human resources, budget or scope of marketing activity.


Don’t over-invest in tools you do not need, but rather look at what you are doing now and find out where you need to plug the data leaks. Power your current marketing activities by making sure you are making the most of every single click and potential lead by finding a way to collect, connect and evaluate your data. That’s the aim of the game.


premier relevance.com sponsor



Content Marketing by Connecting the Data Dots