Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Content Marketing Institute Acquired by UBM

CMI_UBM-01I’m beyond excited to announce that Content Marketing Institute has been acquired by UBM. For those of you not familiar with UBM, they are the No. 1 B2B events organizer in the U.S. and Asia, with a large business globally in many verticals. After many discussions with the executive team at UBM, it was clear that both UBM and CMI share the same passion for the content marketing industry and its growing community.

CMI and Content Marketing World will become part of UBM’s technology events group and it is an exciting expansion for UBM into the fast-growth world of content marketing and marketing technology. This decision will help us at CMI take our vision of advancing the approach of content marketing to more marketers in the U.S. and around the world.

If you are reading this, you are probably thinking “is this a good thing?” It’s a valid question. Acquisitions are sometimes good and sometimes bad. In this case, this is a very good thing for both CMI and the industry. Long story short, we are ready to expand and grow to continue our mission of education, training, and serving the content marketing community.

Let’s be honest

As a CMI community member, you know I’ve never been one to hold back on my feelings, so I’d like to put it all out there in this post.

Even though we always imagined selling the business at some point, this was an incredibly difficult decision. We would never decide to sell the business if our vision would be compromised in any way. One of the reasons UBM decided to make this purchase is because of the passion of the CMI team and the community. Continuing that is critical to our ongoing success. Simply put, I’m more passionate than ever about what’s going on in content marketing and in people like you who are making change happen around the world.

There are literally countless people to thank who helped us get to this point. But for this moment, I’d simply like to thank the members of the CMI team. The individuals that comprise the CMI team are the most amazing people I have ever known. They not only are extremely talented, they are family. It was critical that any change in CMI had to be good for them. I’m happy to say that every single member of the CMI team is continuing in their roles at CMI.

What’s changing?

Nothing. We are continuing to execute the vision we feel so passionate about. At the same time, we believe that UBM can help us better realize that vision. So while I’m sure there will be some changes in the future, we are simply continuing our commitment to you, our community.

Content marketing works

On April 26th, 2007, I wrote my first blog post, titled Why Content Marketing? From that moment on, we began to execute a strategy employing all the basics of content marketing strategy. For the first three years, we built a loyal audience through our blog. In January of 2011, we launched Chief Content Officer magazine. In September of 2011, we produced the first Content Marketing World. That first year we had hoped to attract between 100 and 150 marketers to Cleveland. However, 660 of you showed up. In 2016, for our 6th Content Marketing World, over 4,000 will attend the September event, coming from more than 60 countries. Then came the monthly webinars (now three times per month), the ongoing master classes, Content Marketing University, the This Old Marketing podcast and a number of other initiatives.

It’s so meta, but we’ve used the tenets of content marketing to grow this business up to this point, and we will continue to do so.

This community is special

Just a few weeks ago, I was in Amsterdam having a great conversation with Doug Kessler from Velocity Partners. Doug and I were commenting on how truly amazing the content marketing community is (and it is). From the rock stars to the thought leaders to the enterprise marketers to our sponsors that support us … every person is so giving to each other. It’s been an honor to be part of it. Here and now, in what I consider to be the most innovative time in the history of marketing, what an opportunity we have to make change happen.

If you have any questions, please post them in the comments below. Other than this post, you aren’t going to hear much more about this. It’s a special day, but we have plenty to do.

I’m looking forward to talking with many of you and definitely to seeing you at Content Marketing World in September.

It’s been an honor. Thank you for inspiring me to be better.

Yours in Content,
Joe

The post Content Marketing Institute Acquired by UBM appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

3 Earned Media Strategies to Incorporate Into Your Content Marketing Plan

3 Earned Media Strategies

Earned media is that one component of content marketing that is MIA for too many marketers.

If you are just hoping that people will publish or share your great content, well, that’s like stepping up to the plate without a bat. Generating earned media today must be the clean-up hitter in your content marketing strategy lineup.


Not having an earned media strategy is like stepping up to the plate without a bat says @BrianKolb
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Earned, owned, and paid media

To understand earned media’s role in your content marketing strategy, we first need to look at the three types of media – owned, paid, and earned.

Earned-Owned-Paid- Media

You likely spend a lot of time on your owned media – the content and distribution channels that you control such as your websites, white papers, newsletters, and social media accounts. For example, if you want to share your insights on the latest trend in your industry, you write a blog post, publish it on your website, and let your followers know through your social media accounts.

With paid media, you buy access in the form of social ads, PPC programs, etc. to promote your content. For example, you conduct pay-per-click campaigns for keywords around that trending topic to gain additional visitors to your website.

With owned and paid media, you are in control of the content – after all, both types of media involve your brand’s dollars.

Earned media, though, is free. But first, you must attract the interest of the gatekeepers – influencers, media brands, or your fans – who hold the key to accessing their audiences and talking about your company and publishing your content. In our industry-trend example, a media outlet would quote your expert in an article on the topic.

Why earned media is important

With multiple firehoses gushing information at us all the time, your audiences need an effective filter or they’ll drown. If you gain earned media, you are more likely to get through your audience’s filters. Earned media gives you third-party credibility – someone who isn’t paid by your company believes enough in your products, insights, etc. to mention, quote, or promote your brand’s content.

Earned media also enables your brand to reach a wider audience – an audience that may not know about you but can benefit from your content, products, or services.

Simply said, earned media may take more work because you are not in control of the process and decision-making, but it should be a major component of your content marketing strategy.

3 ways to generate earned media

1. Cultivate influencer marketing

We hear quite a bit about influencer marketing and the importance of building relationships with those industry leaders who reach your target audience. If you can get an influencer to publish your content or talk about your content, that’s earned media. In turn, the influencer’s audience has the potential to become your audience.

Of course, you likely aren’t the first or the last to reach out to your industry’s influencers. Thus, you need to make sure your outreach stands out. Before ever contacting the influencer, research what topics they write about, what they share on social media, what channels they use, how they interact with their followers, etc.

With that information, you can craft a pitch that shows you know who this influencer is and how they communicate with their audience. Show how your brand and content would be valuable and helpful to their audiences.

TIPS: Check your LinkedIn connections. Perhaps one of your targeted influencers is a connection of someone in your network. Ask that shared connection to introduce you. That personal relationship can make all the difference.

Don’t limit yourself to individual influencers. Identify other influencers, such as industry associations, non-competing brands that publish great content and have their own audiences, etc.

2. Participate in industry trade shows

One of the best ways to get people talking about your brand and sharing your content is to be present at industry events attended by your audience – you likely already know this. The Content Marketing Institute’s B2B research revealed that 81% of marketers use live events as a tactic in their content marketing strategy, and 75% of users rate them as effective. In fact, more marketers cited live events as an effective tactic than any other tactic. But showing up on the exhibit floor isn’t enough. You need to create and distribute your content – in text, visuals, video, and in person throughout the event.


81% of marketers use live events in their #contentmarketing strategy; 75% rate them effective by @cmicontent
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As early as possible, explore whether someone from your organization could present on a topic that’s relevant to your brand and helpful to the event’s audience. If you do speak, ensure that your slides and handouts include your Twitter handles, proper hashtags, and links to make it easier for your audience to share the presentation’s content. Don’t forget to promote this appearance to media organizations that may cover the topic or the event.

Identify pre-show opportunities to impart your brand’s wisdom or insight through the event organizer’s media channels (blog, newsletters, social). During the show, get involved with the social conversation. Don’t just ask people on your social media channels to stop by your booth. Instead, use your social accounts to connect with event-goers. For example, tweet a favorite quote from a speaker using the event hashtag and see how many people retweet that content – that’s a great way to earn media at a show.

TIP: During or after the event, respond to the influencers, media, and others who talked about your brand and shared your content. For example, if someone tweeted one of your presentation slides, reply with a “thanks” and offer a link or visual that elaborates on that same topic. You also should look at their profiles, websites, etc. to see whether they would be a valuable addition to your influencer contact list or if they offer an outlet to distribute content from you.

3. Engage your fans and advocates

Strengthen your relationships with the people who are talking about your brand, sharing your content, etc. (Don’t forget that your employees can be fans/advocates too.) First, add a segment or category called fans/advocates to your media contact lists. Then add them to your media-monitoring or social listening trackers.


Strengthen your relationships with people who are talking about your brand, sharing #content via @BrianKolb
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If someone on that fan/advocate list mentions or shares your content, interact with them. For example, if someone quotes or shares your content on Facebook, make a comment to thank the person and ask what part of the content she thought was most helpful.

You also should initiate contact with this group – similar to how you would reach out to traditional media – and encourage them to talk about or share news about your brand, whether it’s a new research report, your latest award, or something else. These individuals may be more receptive than traditional media to sharing your news or content word for word, or adding their positive opinion to the news.

For example, Buddy Scalera, a comic-book writer, editor, and photographer tapped into his fan/advocate database when he launched his recent book, Comic Artist’s Essential Photo Reference. He shared the news with his contacts and asked them to share the news with their audiences.

BuddyonTwitter JPG

Fans and advocates of your well-respected brand often are honored that you have asked them for something and are willing to share because it shows they’re connected closely to a reputable company. That enhances their audience’s perception of them as an influencer in your industry – and at the same time grows your brand’s reach.

TIP: Share your news and wins with your traditional media contacts too. Even if they don’t write or talk about what you want them to, it’s an opportunity to remind them that your brand is a quality company and credible third parties recognize that value.

Other ways to use earned media

Given that earned media isn’t a one-and-done event, you should plan how to leverage it once you get it. While you’re only limited by your imagination, here are some of the more common ways to expand the benefits of your earned media:

  • Reprint the content in hard copy for distribution at on-site events or as mailers to prospects.
  • Publish excerpts from the earned media on your owned media, such as your blog.
  • Share the earned media with your sales team and incorporate it into sales presentations.
  • “Like,” repost, and share it on your social media channels.
  • Use any true endorsements of your brand by incorporating its logo on your marketing materials and even your product packaging.
  • Pull quotes from earned media to post on pop-up displays.
  • Include earned media details in marketing and PR award applications.

Get authorization

Earned media might be free for your brand, but it’s not necessarily free to use and it takes time to build these relationships. Remember that you’ll need to obtain permission to use earned media content and you may need to pay a licensing fee. You certainly don’t want to run afoul of copyright laws. You often can determine republishing or logo use parameters on the earned media’s website. If you can’t find the repurposing parameters, make sure to contact the individual or brand that first published the content.

TIP: Make sure to budget for licensing fees.

Conclusion

Earned media should have an important place in your content marketing strategy. That way you’re not just hoping others will find and talk about your brand. You are deliberately and strategically taking the steps to make this happen. As your efforts begin to bear fruit, you’ll start seeing measurable results that will boost your web traffic, search rankings, leads, sales, and brand equity.

Don’t forget that Tuesday, May 31, is the last day to get the great early-bird savings for Content Marketing World. Register today and use code BLOG100 to save an additional $100.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post 3 Earned Media Strategies to Incorporate Into Your Content Marketing Plan appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Monday, May 30, 2016

Documentary Storytelling: 6 Examples From Brands That Nail It

Documentary Storytelling

You would be hard pressed to find a marketer in 2016 who doesn’t believe that publishing content is as important or more important than paying for advertising. Yet somewhere in the race to publish more, hit more channels, and optimize reach, we’ve lost sight of the art of great content creation and the returns from more ambitious projects.

In my mind there is not a more powerful – and more underused – medium than the documentary film. Brands rarely take on artistically complex video projects because they require a level of creative and technical talent that most brands (and even many of the agencies that serve them) don’t have access to. Of course there are some that pull it off beautifully. Brands like Patagonia are master documentary storytellers. These brands are immersed in the visual world and have a clear point of view to share with their audiences.

What about brands that don’t have such a rich source of stories to pull from? Or brands you would not associate with artistic film projects? What can we learn from the projects they launch?

All about the drumsticks

In 2015, Church’s Chicken teamed up with World’s Fastest Drummer (an event that invites drummers to play the most single strokes in 60 seconds). But rather than just sponsor the event, Church’s Chicken produced an eight-episode documentary that explores the lives of those who vie for the title of world’s fastest drummer. (In case you’re wondering about the connection between fried chicken and drumming … it’s drumsticks of course.)

truestories_ChurchsWFD-1

The documentary, Fast Company, captures the quirky but oddly compelling world of speed drumming. At the heart of the documentary is Boo McAfee, speed drumming champion and inventor of the Drumometer (the machine that counts the number of strokes per minute). The series also includes vignettes with other unlikely characters – from young, fast-rising speed drummers to the guy with the fastest drumming feet. Each two-minute episode follows a condensed hero’s journey, exposing the hard work and passion required to reach the top echelons of speed drumming. The series concludes at the semi-finals of the World’s Fastest Drumming championships, teeing up the finals in Nashville, Tennessee.

The idea was the brainchild of Church’s Chicken Chief Marketing Officer Mark Snyder, who wanted to reach a new audience: young men. When Snyder’s team researched the type of content young men gravitated to, high on the list were achievement-based videos. The world of competitive speed drumming was a perfect fit, thought Snyder.

“When you step back and look at the results, you’d be hard pressed to figure out how to grow engagement with customers online and how to grow a broader customer set if you don’t get into this type of storytelling,” says Snyder.

In total, the eight webisodes generated 5 million views and 18 million impressions. The buzz from the events and films also drove a 12 percent increase in sales in a single weekend in Atlanta (where the national speed drumming event took place), and an 18 percent uptick in Nashville (where the world championships for speed drumming take place).

Why such a powerful reception? Barry Poltermann, founder of About Face Media, the documentary film group that produced the Church’s Chicken series, puts it this way: “Documentaries have huge audience appeal – just click on your Netflix menu to prove it. Documentaries also happen to be a practical and affordable way to communicate with an audience. Having said that, you should experiment with all different types of video projects, not just documentaries. You want to consider and explore any video content and video channels people voluntarily engage with.”


Documentaries have huge audience appeal & are a practical way to communicate via @onionbap #visualcontent
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Nearly a year after the multi-episode documentary was completed, Church’s is still seeding content to its channels, telling the story of speed drumming. Well-crafted stories aren’t simply about the art of storytelling, they also deliver on the science of content reuse and reach.


Well-crafted stories also deliver on the science of #content reuse & reach via @soloportfolio #storytelling
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Telling the right story

Milwaukee-based About Face Media is an agency that specializes in documentary films. Documentarian Poltermann has edited a number of feature films, including the Sundance-winning American Movie (for which he was also the producer) and the upcoming Raiders!: The Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made.

He says that while documentaries are a powerful format for brands to reach new audiences, brands should understand the difference between true documentaries versus reality-style programming. “Authentic documentary stories are not the same as ‘real-people’ or even ‘documentary-style’ marketing pieces,” says Poltermann. “What moves people are genuine documentaries, not marketing pieces crafted to feel like documentaries.”


What moves people are genuine documentaries, not marketing pieces crafted to feel like them via @onionbap
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Poltermann says his agency uses a lengthy process to unearth stories that both appeal to the brand’s audience and capture the brand’s point of view and identity. As part of that process of digging for stories, he says there are critical ingredients absolutely essential to get the project right:

Story landscape is the setting in which a brand has both the credibility and expertise to tell a great story. “When Stella Artois chose to tell a story about hand-painted billboard artists, the brand’s commitment to traditional craftsmanship gave it the permission to talk about that topic,” explains Poltermann.

Story hero is a single person or a group striving toward a common goal. The most powerful documentaries focus on someone who has a goal or quest and ceaselessly strives for it, and for whom something big is at stake. That person’s journey should intersect in some way with your brand’s mission or area of interest.

Brand documentaries: From somber to silly

Up There: The brewer Stella Artois funded a documentary that became the source material for an ad campaign about the disappearing art of hand-painted advertisements. Through poignant interviews with artists, Up There takes a loving look at the history of hand-painted billboards, and the few who still paint beautiful murals on buildings in New York City.

Stella Artois “Up There” from Visual Catch on Vimeo.

Spent: American Express created a long-form documentary as part of a larger program to teach its audience about financially underserved communities in the United States. The documentary exposes the underbelly of the U.S. financial system: payday lending, check-cashing services, and other short-term, high-interest loans marketed to those without access to traditional banking services. It shows both the heavy toll it exacts on working-class families, as well as the ways in which both the financial services industry and government can help those at risk.

The Story of Content: In a bid to explain the phenomenon of content marketing to newcomers, the Content Marketing Institute produced a 43-minute documentary highlighting content-focused brands and the marketers who fuel them.

Living off the Walls: Shoe company Vans is producing a series of documentaries that chronicle the lives of young artists and athletes who push boundaries and inspire others through their creative expression. Vans has a long history in documentary film; its original documentary about skateboarder culture in Southern California was released in 2001.

Kiss and Tell: A grooming-care company (among other things), Gillette offers a less-serious take on the medium. Clocking in at just under five minutes, the film explores the lost art of kissing … and blames facial hair as an obstacle to it. It’s a pretty hilarious look at what one participant describes as the “effort to look lazy” among young men, and the suffering that women endure by kissing men with too much stubble.

The end (or the beginning)

As our conversation ended, Church’s Chicken’s Snyder offered this advice for marketers interested in documentary storytelling: “If filmmaking is something you are trying to explore, make sure your idea is a big one and different from what people would expect of your brand.”

This article originally appeared in the April issue of Chief Content Officer. Sign up to receive your free subscription to our bimonthly print magazine.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post Documentary Storytelling: 6 Examples From Brands That Nail It appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Sunday, May 29, 2016

What Should Your Content Marketing Priorities Be in 2016?

content-marketing-priorities

A few months ago, I was cleaning the basement with my kids. The goal was to put the toys away so it could be vacuumed, dusted, etc.

I looked over, and my 8-year-old was erasing the whiteboard and chalkboard. When I asked her to help clean up, she explained that she was cleaning. The whiteboard obviously needed to be erased.

I lost my patience and said, “Just pick up your toys!”

While it wasn’t a proud parenting moment, it was an aha moment. How many of us spend time doing something that doesn’t help a goal (erasing the whiteboard) instead of doing something that truly needs to be done (picking up the toys)?

Don’t get me wrong: It’s often tough to figure out where to spend our time. (And honestly, sometimes we know but what we need to do is just too darn tough.)

Our annual content marketing research asks marketers to select their top five priorities from a list of 10. Below I look at all 10 and discuss when each may be something you may want to prioritize – and when it might not be.

My goal for this post isn’t to add more things to your list but to take some things off – or at the very least prioritize some of these activities lower on your list so you can focus on what is most important.

Your order may be a bit different, based on the maturity of your content marketing program. However, you can use this list, which starts with the activities most organizations should be prioritizing. However, what you rank as important in your organization may vary, so use this list as a guide so you can have conversations with your team on what you should prioritize so you are all working toward the same goals.

  • Better understanding your audience
  • Creating more-engaging content
  • Better understanding what is and isn’t effective
  • Finding more/better ways to repurpose content
  • Content optimization
  • Creating visual content
  • Becoming better storytellers
  • Becoming a stronger writer
  • Content curation
  • Content personalization

Bonus tip: If you are struggling to truly prioritize, consider using the Agile process. Andrea Fryrear answers some common questions to help.

understanding-audience

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Better understanding your audience

When this makes sense as a priority:

I’ll admit that these numbers surprised me. Why don’t all marketers make understanding their audiences a top priority? Is it because they already understand them so well? Of course, this may be the case with some people, but I think a more likely reason is that marketers know they can benefit from personas but don’t prioritize them because they don’t directly feed the content beast. Understanding the audience better also isn’t something marketers are directly measured on. (It’s easy to say, “Let’s work on what needs to get done, and we’ll do these tomorrow.”)

But that’s a vicious circle. If creating more-engaging content is a top priority, chances are that you need to spend more time understanding your audience and documenting what you learn in personas so everyone from your team is working from the same page.

When this doesn’t make sense as a priority:

Honestly, the only time that I would not prioritize this is if your company already has solid personas that are documented and shared throughout your team. (Though, I think this should still be a periodic priority to ensure that those personas are still valid.)

Ardath Albee suggests that you update them at least annually. She continues:

“However, there are a few things that could trigger a refresh sooner, such as:

  • Compliance or regulatory changes/updates that affect how your buyers would address them in relation to the solution you provide
  • Industry shifts that affect your customers’ go-to-market strategy
  • New roles are introduced or added to the buying committee – or existing personas are no longer involved in the same way they were when the personas were developed (salespeople are great info sources for this shift)
  • Content topics that were once high-performers are no longer drawing attention/engagement
  • New, adjacent technologies become available that change how your buyers may approach solving the problem.”

Creating more-engaging content

engaging-content

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When this makes sense as a priority:

In general, making your content more engaging should be a priority. As Jay Acunzo recently explained, we need to become truly creative to create more-engaging content. Engaging means creating content your audience will want to read. You can’t go wrong in honing your craft.


We need to become truly creative to create #content your audience will want to read via @jayacunzo
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When this doesn’t make sense as a priority:

Before you make creating more-engaging content a high priority, you need to understand what “engaging” means to your brand. More shares? Better readability? If your team doesn’t know your definition of engaging – and how to measure it – it will be tough to make headway. In this case, get clear on what success looks like for your team – that’s the higher priority.

If creating engaging content is a priority:
5 Engagement-Driven Elements You Should Add to Every Blog Post

content-effectiveness

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Better understanding what is and isn’t effective

When this makes sense as a priority:

Insanity is doing the same thing again and again, and expecting different results. If you aren’t measuring what’s working and what isn’t, you can’t know if you are making progress – or truly being that informative source for your audience.


Measure your #content effectiveness so you can be an informative source for your audience via @michelelinn
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Understanding what is effective should be a priority if you need to convince your C-suite that the content marketing budget should increase. It also should be a priority when you’re looking to expand a certain tactic/part of your content marketing or to cut back on something.

When this doesn’t make sense as a priority:

Data is great, and applying lessons about what is working is always a good idea, but don’t get so stuck in the quantitative that you forget the qualitative. Said another way: Understand what is working, but don’t become so obsessed with the metrics that you stop thinking creatively and trying new things.

If understanding content effectiveness is a priority:
How to Uncover Critical Content Marketing Insights Using Google Analytics

Finding more/better ways to repurpose content

repurposing-content

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When this makes sense as a priority:

Content is an investment, so you want to get the most from it. Repurposing should be a high priority when you have a key piece of content that’s core to your story and can be broken out in multiple ways. It is also a good idea when your audience is on different platforms or they consume information differently. In these types of cases, repurposing your content in different ways is important.

When this doesn’t make sense as a priority:

I’m not a fan of repurposing content into other formats to simply check a box. For instance, before you rush to create a talking head video of your latest white paper, ask yourself if this format really helps get your message across/adds clarity.

If you have “meh” content, it doesn’t make sense to figure out more ways to get it out there. (Of course, none of us strives to create “meh” content, but it’s inevitable that some things will be better received than others.)

If repurposing content is a priority:
Content Reuse: A Super-Simple Way to Get Started

Content optimization

content-optimization

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When this makes sense as a priority:

You want to get more from the content you create. Optimizing includes everything from developing your SEO strategy, to A/B testing your landing pages, to running tests in email. In general, include optimization as a top priority in your ongoing work so you can continually improve your customer experience — as well as your bottom-line results.

When this doesn’t make sense as a priority:

Optimization can feel like a never-ending proposition. What do you optimize? Figure out your top two channels and optimize your content for those. Don’t try to optimize everything.

If optimizing your content is a priority:
9 Website Optimization Mistakes Even Smart Agencies Make

Creating visual content

visual-content

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When this makes sense as a priority:

Visuals can aid in comprehension, especially when you are explaining something complex. They also can increase visibility and shareability, which is especially important when social media is core to your strategy.

When this doesn’t make sense as a priority:

Ask yourself these questions:

  • Will the visual help explain something more clearly than you can do in text?
  • Are you sharing the content on a platform that relies on visuals?

If you answer no to both, then visuals do not need to be a high priority. Not everything you create needs to be translated into a graphic. Always remember to think about how form meets function. And does your audience really want another infographic in which data is spewed into a scrollable piece? (Hint: Use your metrics to see how your audience responded to similar infographics in the past.)

Becoming better storytellers

better-storyteller

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When this makes sense as a priority:

If creating more-engaging content is a high priority, becoming a better storyteller probably should be too. Storytelling is designed to engage your audience by humanizing your brand.

It can allow your content to stand out from everyone else’s. Remember this: No one has the combination of your experiences and knowledge, so use your personality instead of hiding it.

You also engage your audience for a longer time because you’ve crafted a story with a beginning, middle, and end.

Or you can use elements of storytelling to attract your readers and make your content more relatable (for instance: the anecdote at the beginning of this article [hopefully]).

When this doesn’t make sense as a priority:

Not all content needs to be a story. If your brand concentrates on how-to content, storytelling isn’t a high priority. If your audience responds well to straightforward explanations, storytelling probably isn’t that important. In all cases, though, clear, useful content should be your focus.

Becoming a stronger writer

strong-copywriter

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When this makes sense as a priority:

When our team reviewed the preliminary results of the research, we were dumbstruck that the last-ranked priority for many marketers is becoming a stronger writer. Really?

How can you have more-engaging content if you can’t write better? How can you become a better storyteller? We were so surprised by this, that we discussed it in depth at our research roundtables. The panelists were also stupefied by the priority ranking, but they offered many tips on how to improve one’s writing.

If you are trying to make your content more engaging, you need to prioritize becoming a better writer.

Why you may not want to make this a priority:

Not every job related to content marketing necessitates strong writing skills.

If becoming a stronger writer is a priority: 
48 Content Writing Examples, Tools, Tips and Resources

Content curation

content-curation

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When this makes sense as a priority:

If you are new in an industry or if you are in an industry replete with competition, curation may be a great bet. Instead of trying to add to the noise, figure out what makes the most sense for your readers and surface that. You can then be seen as a source of truly useful information.

Why you may not want to make this a priority:

If you can create content that is better and different than what is already available, spend your time on creating original content that provides an answer or a new way of looking at an issue.

Content personalization

content-personalization

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When this makes sense as a priority:

Personalization is definitely something that has been gaining interest and momentum, but it’s not for everyone. As explained in one of the takeaways that our team had from the Intelligent Content Conference:

If you can personalize your content in a way that people will appreciate, and if you can justify the expense, plan it and give it a try. Otherwise, save yourself the headache.

Why you may not want to make this a priority:

If you don’t have a good grasp of the more fundamental priorities such as understanding your audience and creating engaging content, chances are you don’t need to prioritize personalization just yet.

General conclusions

While priorities will vary depending on your content marketing program’s maturity and needs, review your documented content marketing strategy (the first and most important priority) to evaluate and rank your other priorities.

Here’s what I recommend for any brand’s top three priorities:

  • How are you going to create content that is different than what anyone else is creating (creating engaging content)
  • Your audience (understanding your audience)
  • How you measure success (understanding what is and is not effective)

Once you have handled these three priorities, you then can prioritize the more specific tasks to create even more-engaging content (storytelling, becoming a better writer, curating, visualizing) and to get the most from your best content (repurposing, optimizing, personalizing).

Let us know your thoughts: What are your priorities? What would you like to take off your list?

Your top priority for today should be to register for Content Marketing World before early-bird savings ends May 31. Use code BLOG100 to save an additional $100.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post What Should Your Content Marketing Priorities Be in 2016? appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Saturday, May 28, 2016

This Week in Content Marketing: Get Ready for Content Studios to Become a ‘Thing’

content-studios-podcast

PNR: This Old Marketing with Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose can be found on both iTunes and Stitcher.

In this episode of This Old Marketing, Robert and I applaud Kohl’s for taking a risk and delivering Star Wars toys and gift cards to “the Chewbacca mom.” We agree that Facebook needs to tighten its policy to prevent stealing of content assets, which is happening with her record-breaking viral video. We’re both thrilled with PepsiCo’s decision to launch a content studio and love their innovative approach to it. Finally, we’re convinced that a grim, self-serving prognosis on the future of media, agencies, and brands by an outspoken executive isn’t accurate. Rants and raves include a must-read opinion column that calls for marketing to take on a more strategic role, the importance of developing a personal brand, and a digital publication that is the latest victim of the “rented land” phenomenon. This week’s This Old Marketing example: Playmobil.

This week’s show

(Recorded live May 22, 2016; Length: 1:05:12)

Download this week’s PNR This Old Marketing podcast.

If you enjoy our PNR podcasts, we would love if you would rate it, or post a review, on iTunes.

1. Content marketing in the news

  • Listener feedback on Facebook Trending Articles discussion (7:45): During last week’s show, Robert and I came to the conclusion that no one pays much attention to Facebook’s Trending Articles. Jaden Bales, a business student at the University of Oregon, sent us an email disagreeing with our assessment. He did an informal poll of the students in his class, and told us a majority of them use this feature. It’s a good reminder to avoid making assumptions about our audience!

  • Kohl’s sent Star Wars treasure trove to woman behind the Chewbacca video (11:18): When Candace Payne’s Facebook Live video went viral in an unprecedented way after she tried on a Chewbacca mask from the retailer, Kohl’s sent her family several more masks, a treasure trove of Star Wars merchandise, and $2,500 in gift cards. Robert and I applaud Kohl’s for taking a risk – something that too many brands avoid. Clearly, it had a plan and was ready to act when this opportunity arose. This article is paired with the next one from Scott Monty’s newsletter.

star-wars-candace-payne

Image source

  • Facebook needs to make it easier to report stolen videos (12:15): Scott Monty points out that some unscrupulous people have taken Candace Payne’s delightful Chewbacca mask video and have uploaded it to Facebook as their own. They’re getting millions of views from content that is not their intellectual property. To make matters worse, Facebook doesn’t make it easy to report copyright infringement. Robert and I agree this is an issue that Facebook needs to address.
  • Pepsi’s big bet on in-house content creation (22:28): PepsiCo has launched a new, state-of-the-art content studio in Manhattan called the Creators League. It will serve as an internal production arm for scripted series, films, music recordings, reality shows, and other content distributed for TV, online viewing, and services like Amazon Prime. Robert and I are both very excited that the studio is structured as a media company within PepsiCo, much like Red Bull Studio. I predict we’ll see a growing number of brands moving in this direction and looking for opportunities to syndicate their best content.
  • Interview with Shane Smith – CEO of Vice (32:17): In a recent interview with Digiday, Vice Media CEO Shane Smith predicts we’ll see a bloodbath in the next 12 months of digital, mobile, and terrestrial media, driven by the proliferation of screens and the continuing decline of brand advertising on traditional channels. He predicts this major disruption will have a big impact on agencies, brands, and media. Robert and I believe we’ll see a continued decline of ad revenue, but nothing as drastic as what Smith foresees. The big networks aren’t just sitting still – they’re also trying to evolve to survive and thrive in the fast-changing digital world order.

2. Sponsor (41:06)

  • GoToWebinar:  Webinars are consistently rated as the No. 1 marketer tactic for lead generation with over 60% of all marketers utilizing webinars, but many businesses still struggle with how to find their target audience and deliver the right message. Following a simple five-step plan, the keys to using webinars for successful lead generation go from daunting to doable. From finding your audience and developing engaging content to authentic interaction and webinar promotion, you’ll discover the “5 Steps to Attract Your Target Audience to Your Next Webinar.” Ready? Let’s do this! To read the e-book, visit http://cmi.media/pnr132.

Go ToWebinar-Sponsor

3. Rants and raves (42:56)

  • Robert’s rave and rant: Robert loves this article from MediaPost, which makes the case that large brands don’t consider marketing a core strategic competency. It covers issues such as the outsourcing of marketing’s core activities, CMO reporting relationships, low pay, and high turnover. It’s required reading!On the other hand, he really doesn’t like this article from Psychology Today, entitled Stop Trying to Build Your Personal Brand. It contains bad advice, especially for young people who are new to marketing. You have an opportunity to shape your aspirational value by the content you create and share. Why not take control of it, rather than leaving it to chance?
  • Joe’s rant: Stylist magazine is saying goodbye to its digital edition and blames its demise on the closure of Apple Newsstand, an online hub for publishers’ digital magazines. When you publish on someone else’s platform, you’re at their mercy. This is yet another sorry example of “building your house on rented land” and paying the price.

4. This Old Marketing example of the week (57:12)

  • Playmobil: Hans Beck, the founder of Playmobil, started making small plastic figures in 1971. These toys were a big hit in Europe, where they helped children use their imaginations. Today, the company not only manufactures and markets its iconic plastic figures, but also complete lines of vehicles and buildings. Throughout its history, content has been a big part of getting these toys into the hands of children. In the late 1970s, it produced phonograph records that contained songs and stories. These were followed by comic books, coloring books, a Playmobil magazine, and a theme park in Germany. A TV series that has been broadcast in France, the U.K., and Germany for several years will soon be coming to the U.S. In addition, Playmobil has produced a feature film that has been shown in Europe; it, too, will receive U.S. distribution next year. In effect, Playmobil has created a complete content and experience ecosystem, much like Lego, but on a smaller scale. This innovative toy manufacturer is an excellent example of This Old Marketing.

playmobil

For a full list of PNR archives, go to the main This Old Marketing page.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

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The post This Week in Content Marketing: Get Ready for Content Studios to Become a ‘Thing’ appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Friday, May 27, 2016

Excel at SEO With This 15-Point Plan

excel-seo-plan

Search engine optimization (SEO) should be a linchpin in any successful content marketing plan. But with search engines updating algorithms and ranking factors on a frequent basis, how is a mortal content marketer supposed to keep up?

Tracy Gold wrote an invaluable Ultimate SEO Checklist in 2014, which did a fantastic job of covering SEO fundamentals from a content marketing perspective. However, considering how much search has evolved in just the last few years, I thought it would be useful to revisit the key points from Tracy’s original discussion and update them with fresh advice, insights, and resources that can help you keep your SEO efforts in top shape.

1. Document your SEO strategy

If you follow CMI at all, you should already know that documenting your content marketing strategy is essential for success. Since SEO is a key part of that strategy, you should start your efforts by documenting your plans for using this technique, i.e., what your priorities are, what methods you work with, how you measure your performance, and what goals you want SEO to ultimately help you achieve. Depending on how far along your company is, you may need to write a basic strategy first, and then revisit it once you’ve audited and analyzed your current SEO efforts and data (more on that later!).

2. View SEO and content marketing as partners, not opponents

You may have read or heard about a “debate” about SEO vs. content marketing. Agencies that specialize in one or the other may benefit from creating distance between SEO and content marketing. But this way of thinking can be detrimental to the success of your content. In fact, Barry Feldman goes so far as to call this siloed thinking “ridiculous.”

Besides, as Neil Patel smartly points out in his science-backed analysis of what makes content successful, Google cares about how expert, authoritative, and trustworthy the content is. If you stay focused on creating readable, high-quality content, your search rankings will naturally increase. With this in mind, stop wasting time wondering whether you should implement content marketing or SEO. These disciplines are melding together and will provide greater success if they are allowed to work in tandem.


If you create readable, high-quality content, your search rankings will naturally increase via @neilpatel #SEO
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3. Audit your SEO

A good first step for improving your SEO is to audit your progress. In an industry with rapidly changing algorithms, writes Amanda DiSilvestro, “Re-evaluating your SEO and your strategies is one of the only ways to stay on top of these changes and continue to move your website content forward.” Check out her post for steps and tools to audit your SEO.

  • Bonus tip: Need some help managing the audit process? Julia McCoy shares some setup and evaluation tips, along with nine analytics you should track in your audits.

You need to re-evaluate #SEO & strategies to keep moving your website #content forward via @ADiSilvestro
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4. Use owned, paid, and earned media in SEO

There’s no set “first page” of search results anymore, writes Christopher Baldock in his post on using an owned, paid, and earned strategy for SEO. Just as owned, paid, and earned media all factor into any good public relations and content marketing strategy, they can help content marketers navigate increasingly personalized search results.

5. Consider the 4 V’s of semantic search

As search becomes more focused on semantics (aka the context of a search) and the algorithms themselves get better at interpreting signals of user intent (see the sidebar, below), marketers need to readjust the way they evaluate SEO success.

For example, in his aforementioned post, Christopher Baldock argues that marketers should measure based on four components – volume, velocity, variety, and veracity – that he contends should be incorporated into how content marketers create and promote their efforts. Jump back over to his post for a more detailed breakdown of these terms, and specific metrics attached to them.

What is semantic search? 
Christopher Baldock defines semantic search (often used interchangeably with contextual search), as “how search engines discern context and user intent to return more definitive answers, rather than the hierarchical list of guesses Google presented previously. Simply, semantic search helps Google present better results for any given search.” Let’s break that down:
User Intent:
When search engines take user intent into account, that means two people searching for the exact same term could have completely different results. Results could be impacted by user location, search history, social media network, and “likes,” as well as many other factors, depending on the search engine’s particular algorithm.
Context:
In addition to the context of user intent, search engines are striving to incorporate the context of the content itself into search results. That means engines are moving even further away from simple keyword-driven search and into a more holistic view of content creation – such as using meta-data (like rich snippets), incorporating synonyms into search, and taking into account what other information appears on an entire site or page – to determine how relevant a result may be to the user’s intended search.
Better results:
“Better” results means more useful and relevant results. Search engines are hoping to anticipate user needs and provide answers, not just results. For example, I searched for “Weather in Culver City, CA,” and Google displayed an interactive chart that summarized the current weather in my city, along with a 7-day forecast of expected temperatures, wind speeds, and precipitation levels – all the information I needed, and I didn’t even have to click away from the search page to get it.

SEO better results

6. Choose the right keyword 

While keyword selection and optimization should take a back seat to creating high-quality content that your audience needs and wants, systematic keyword research will help improve the chances your epic content will reach those who will benefit most. To help get you started, Julia McCoy shares a brief but functional guide to finding the right keywords to meet your goals.

To help you track and manage your efforts, Mike Murray has also created a 12-step checklist (below), which you can print and use whenever you need to research keywords for a particular website page or other content initiative.

  • Bonus tip: Check out Ann Smarty’s suggestions of free keyword tools that will help with your research.

keyword-selection-checklist

7. Optimize your content for your selected keywords

Once you’ve identified your target keywords, you have to be sure that your content is optimized for them. Alex Chris outlines a helpful technique that can improve your page ranking for a specific keyword or phrase you are pursuing; while Neil Patel shares his recommendations on how to make every piece of content you create more SEO friendly.

8. Combine SEO and social media 

To succeed in the world of semantic search, your social media and SEO efforts should complement each other. Lee Odden breaks down why content marketers need both social and search to attract, engage, and convert customers.

9. Choose the right agency

Odden also covers the need to choose the right agency to manage SEO. He breaks down the difference between an SEO-driven and a social-driven agency in an easy-to-digest chart (below). As with SEO and content marketing, SEO and social media often are presented as opponents, scrambling for a bigger bite of the budget; in reality, they work best together. If your agency favors one discipline at the expense of the other, you could be jeopardizing your content marketing success. At the end of the day, writes Odden, both SEO and social media “rely on content to achieve success.”


At the end of the day, both #SEO & #socialmedia rely on #content to achieve success via @leeodden
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social-vs-search

10. Capitalize on inbound links from authoritative sites

Inbound links from earned, paid, and owned media are a huge part of SEO success. One way to generate the authority necessary to increase your inbound links is to take advantage of a surprising SEO giant, SlideShare. As Mark Sherbin explains, SlideShare is built to be extremely search friendly, which makes content posted on the site likely to rank highly on Google.


#Content posted on @SlideShare will likely rank highly on Google via @MarkSherbin #SEO
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Additionally, because presentations posted on SlideShare are automatically transcribed into text, search engines can surface relevant content more easily, than, say, slides that are posted on your own website with no transcription. Furthermore, SlideShare itself even offers basic SEO tools to help give your presentations an extra search boost. You can learn more about them in CMI’s e-book, on super-simple SlideShare tips for content marketing.

  • Bonus tip: Follow these six linking techniques Neil Patel recommends for getting your content ranked, found, and read.

11. Use rich snippets to increase clickability

Rich snippets are a way to provide search engines with more-detailed insights and information on your content, which they can use to enhance how your content is displayed on search engine results pages (SERPs). By making your content more appealing and more visible, rich snippets can help drive increased attention and click-throughs.

There are many types of rich snippets – video previews, images, product reviews, and ratings. As Aleh Barysevich mentions in his post on ways to boost search rankings, implementing rich snippets is as easy as adding a bit of code to mark up the data. But if you’d like to see the full process, Amanda DiSilvestro outlines it here.

12. Activate your employees for greater SEO power

Paul Shapiro calls employees a “sleeping giant for content marketing SEO.” Content marketers already strive to activate employees on social media, he says, so why shouldn’t we place the same emphasis on involving employees in SEO? In his post, Shapiro covers how to encourage employees to join in your SEO efforts, from initial training to the benefits both your employees and your marketing will see.


Employees are a sleeping giant for #contentmarketing #SEO says @fighto
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13. Measure your success

Though it may be difficult to measure success when there is no longer just one home page, there are ways to gauge search engine optimization success as it ties into your content marketing strategy. Arnie Kuenn walks through using one of the most popular (and free) tools, Google Analytics, to measure content marketing and SEO success. You can also jump back to Christopher Baldock’s post for specific metrics that remain meaningful even as search increasingly becomes semantics-focused.

14. Use SEO data to inform all aspects of content marketing

As frustrating as the ever-changing world of SEO can be, content marketers should rejoice about one aspect: There’s a wealth of data produced by SEO efforts that we can use to improve content marketing efforts. For example, check out Andy Crestodina’s guide on how to analyze the SEO insights provided by Google Analytics and apply your findings to improve your future content creation and distribution efforts. Furthermore, take a look at Jey Pandian’s post, in which he details a 10-step process for using search data to build more specific and practical buyer personas.

15. Keep learning about SEO

It would be naïve to think that the entire scope of SEO could be encompassed in any one post – or even in an amazingly thorough selection of posts (cough … those linked in this article, cough …) Not to mention that SEO is a highly dynamic field that is constantly evolving and improving its capabilities. In fact, experts are predicting that SEO may soon take on a whole new dimension through the use of smarter machines that can learn the nature and intent of a search – without engineers even having to reprogram them.

  • Bonus tip: To help you prepare for this shift, Wizard of Moz Rand Fishkin walks through five elements of next-generation SEO that content marketers should start paying attention to.
HANDPICKED RELATED CONTENT:
Creating Content for Google’s RankBrain

Of course, it’s always a good idea to keep up with all the latest SEO trends and techniques by doing some of your own research. The following list of blogs and resources can help give you a solid foundation upon which to build over time:

Blogs

Resources

Please feel free to add your resources and suggestions for search engine optimization in the comments.

In addition, to help you remember and follow the most critical SEO best practices, the CMI team has created a handy infographic you can use as a reference and share with your own content team.

SEO-Clue-header-image-600x238

Click to view the full infographic

Image courtesy of Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

It’s the last day for bigger savings for your Content Marketing World registration. Plus, your May registration will make you eligible for special CMW prize packages. Use code BLOG100 to save an additional $100.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post Excel at SEO With This 15-Point Plan appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.