Pendle Hill in Lancashire UK
7 Ways to
Improve Your Content Marketing Strategy
John Rampton
If you're engaging in any type of content marketing -
social media, blogging, eBooks, etc.
- you have a
content marketing strategy. While it may not be an official, documented
strategy,
you likely aren't just producing content for content's
sake.
You likely have content goals (if only vague ones),
a loose publishing schedule and a general idea of the types of
content you plan to publish.
If you're doing any of these, I believe you have a
content marketing strategy.
Now, let's make that strategy even better. Here are
seven ways to improve your content marketing strategy to make it more
intentional and more effective.
1.
Document your strategy.
It doesn't have to be anything fancy. Even a three-page document
that lays out your content marketing goals and plans is better than nothing.
According to the Content Marketing Institute, 53
percent of the most effective B2B content marketers have a documented
strategy. Marketers who don't document their strategy
are more likely to report that content marketing just isn't effective
for them.
If you want to get the best results from your efforts, take the
time to write down your strategy.
If you're not sure where to start, here are some excellent
resources you can use:
The Moz Content Strategy
Hubspot's Content Planning Template
Buffer's Content Marketing Strategy Template
My personal: Content Marketing Guide
2. Meet
with your team more often.
Whether you have a dedicated content marketing team or not,
it's
important to meet regularly with those responsible for your content creation and promotion.
We know that the most effective marketers meet either daily
or weekly.
If you're meeting with your team less often,
there's a good chance that important
tasks are falling through the cracks.
Wondering what to talk about in these meetings?
Discuss any new content that was created since the last meeting.
Was it effective? What could you do better?
Look to the week or month ahead and divvy up content
marketing tasks or responsibilities.
Talk about what your competitors have been up to, and how you can
improve on their content.
Brainstorm topic ideas, or discuss trending topics that could be
covered by upcoming content.
3. Have
specific business goals for your content.
When I ask business owners what they hope to accomplish from their
content,
nine times out of 10 they say, "Increased sales". But
the reality is that there are few times
when a single piece of content can be
directly tied to revenue.
So, what realistic business goals can you set out for your
content?
Some of the most common are increased leads, brand awareness
(keeping
your company top of mind) and customer retention.
Keep in mind that some business goals can be a little lofty -
and difficult to track.
For instance, who doesn't want increased brand awareness? But if
you're going to state this
as a goal for your content marketing efforts, how
are you going to know if you've achieved it?
This is where tracking specific metrics come in.
4. Know
which metrics you're going to track.
Monitoring the performance of your content will help you determine
whether it's helping you
meet your goals (see #3). Relevant content marketing metrics could
include hard metrics
like leads, traffic and sales, or soft ones like social
media engagement.
In his post, The 4 Types of Content Metrics That Matter,
Jay
Behr lays out a great framework for deciding which metrics to track:
Consumption metrics: Pageviews, downloads, visits, etc.
Sharing metrics: How many times is your content shared on
social media?
Lead generation metrics:
How often do visitors opt-in to your
list, submit a form or request a quote?
Sales metrics: How often do leads turn into actual sales?
Your content marketing strategy should clearly articulate which
metrics you're going to track,
and how you're going to track them. Otherwise, you have no way of
knowing
if your efforts are working...or which efforts are working.
5. Become
more buyer-centric.
Your content marketing strategy needs to be about more than you or
your business.
Yes, you need to track relevant metrics and have business goals.
But just as your actual content needs to be customer-centric, so
does your content strategy.
Understanding how your readers, customers and clients want and
need to interact with you
is key. Carlos Hidalgo of Chief Content Office
Magazine lays out
3 elements of a buyer-centric content strategy:
Understanding what motivates buying behavior among your audience
Knowing which types of content your audience prefers,
and how and
where they want to access it
Understanding your visitors' path to purchase...
and then using your content to move visitors through this path
Paying close attention to your website analytics will be key to
figuring out
each of these three elements.
6. Know
how you'll promote and distribute your content.
It's common for business owners to spend the majority of their
time on content creation.
While it's true that content marketing can't work without
high-quality content, that's only one piece of the puzzle. Having a plan
for how to get your content in front of your audience is key.
This is where a solid content distribution plan comes in.
Unfortunately, many businesses struggle with this. According
to research from Altimeter,
while 53 percent of business owners know they need a content
distribution strategy,
only 26 percent actually invest in one.
Instead of creating content and hoping for the best, have a plan
for how, when and where
you're going to promote and distribute each new piece of content
you create.
7.
Use a consistent ROI calculation.
How will you know if your content marketing is successful?
This is where many content marketing strategies fall short.
You can track goals and metrics all you want, but if you don't
have a calculation in place
to measure content marketing costs and revenues,
you'll never know if your efforts are actually worthwhile.
How you calculate content marketing ROI is far less important
than just being consistent about it. Choose a calculation that work for you,
and then use it consistently.
Here are some methods you can use to calculate your ROI:
A Simple Method to Measure Content Marketing ROI
How We Calculate the ROI of Our Content Marketing
The Ultimate Guide to Measuring the ROI of Content Marketing
There is no one-size-fits-all template or formula you need to use
for your content marketing strategy. Simply documenting your
content marketing plans and goals
is a great first step...and will undoubtedly help boost the
effectiveness of your efforts.
https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/274622
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