Friday, September 30, 2016

Brand Museums: How Companies Tell Their Stories

brand-museums-companies-tell-stories

As brands seek new ways to tell their stories, some are finding value in creating brand museums to showcase their company history and heritage. Whether it’s a dedicated space in a flagship store or global headquarters, or a standalone venue such as the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee or the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Germany, nostalgic on-site visitor experiences can be an effective form of content marketing.


Nostalgic on-site visitor experiences can be an effective form of #contentmarketing says @dawnpapandrea.
Click To Tweet


“Heritage plays really well with audiences,” says Jason Dressel, managing director of client strategy and development for The History Factory, a heritage-management agency that recently helped launch the New Balance Global Headquarters Visitor Engagement Center and museum display, among many other projects. “There’s a reason why there’s ‘throwback Thursday’ and ‘flashback Friday’ on social media. People respond favorably to this kind of content,” he says.


Heritage plays well w/ audiences. There’s a reason why there’s #TBT on #socialmedia says @HistoryFactory.
Click To Tweet


The idea is to preserve and promote heritage as a competitive advantage by creating meaningful connections with visitors. As Dressel says, “If you have the opportunity to reinforce and tell your story, why wouldn’t you leverage that?”

AT&T’s Jonathan Lander, director of visual merchandising and retail brand marketing, says, “Brands that have a rich history and have authenticity really have license for this kind of undertaking.” Under his watch, the brand recently launched the Journey of Innovation environment in its flagship store in Chicago. “When you do something like this you don’t want to just pat yourself on the back. You have to be very careful to show how it benefits the consumer and the world, and not just yourself,” he says.

Take an in-depth look at how AT&T and New Balance are effectively telling their brand stories by looking into their past, and what went into these content-rich projects.

Project: New Balance Global Headquarters Visitor Engagement Center

Opened Sept. 16, 2015

When New Balance began building its new global headquarters in Boston, the plans included a visitor engagement center in the atrium that would appeal to a variety of people. “We knew visitors would include athletes, global collaborators, and even customers. But first and foremost we thought of our associates (employees),” says Christine Madigan, vice president of responsible leadership at New Balance. The goal was to focus on the company’s culture, and how its history helped shape its products, its people and its philanthropy.

new-balance-brand-museum

A marathon of planning and content discovery

Madigan says the first big challenge was finding relevant content. “The History Factory had great ideas. We were moving out of our old building so we held contests and asked people to look at what was underneath their desks or hidden in closets at home. We knew generally what we wanted to say, but we spent a good amount of time figuring out what we had so we could showcase and tell those stories,” she says.

In fact, they engaged associates from around the world. “The outreach for artifacts and story ideas wasn’t just with the 600 people here, but with the 5,000-plus associates around the world,” says Madigan.

By targeting some long-term staffers, they gathered scores of interesting items, such as an associate’s passport showing all the places he traveled to for business — demonstrating the company’s global growth. Focus groups and interviews with senior leadership drove story arcs and helped the team decide what to prioritize, says Madigan.

Of course, the museum also houses items that appeal to athletes and running enthusiasts, such as Jenny Simpson’s 2011 Track & Field World Championships gold medal for her 1,500-meter win.

“We made sure that we paid attention to big-picture goals, but also every little detail,” says Madigan.

Telling a story through design

New Balance began as a company that engineered insert soles for footwear, which were inspired by the three-clawed chicken foot, that allows for a perfectly balanced step. That piece of brand iconography influenced the 3D tripod design of the atrium.

“We were working with a unique space — narrow, but long and tall. It was great to be able to use the tripod design, which also represents New Balance’s three core values: integrity, teamwork, and total customer satisfaction,” says Madigan. Within each “leg” are smaller triangles that tell individual stories.

In addition to the visually appealing structure, there are digital kiosks for visitors who want to learn more and showcases featuring company artifacts. “We offer a variety of experiences. Some visitors might be waiting for a while and have time to peruse, but others might only have a few minutes,” says Madigan.

Overall, whether they are prospective employees, current brand associates, or brand loyalists fascinated by the company’s history, visitors have shared positive feedback. “When press comes through, the atrium seems to make it into every article. That’s a nice testament to how engaging it is,” says Madigan. “And, it’s also my favorite part of the whole building.”

Project: The Journey of Innovation, AT&T flagship store, Chicago

Opened March 10, 2015, the 139th anniversary of the first telephone call

When AT&T launched its 10,000-square-foot flagship store in September 2012, the intent was to connect with the consumer. Selling smartphones was not the first goal, says Jonathan Lander, director of visual merchandising and retail brand marketing at AT&T. The space in the rear of the store was being used as an art gallery showcasing local artists, but it wasn’t luring in visitors and engaging them.

After struggling with how to make that area productive, Lander and his team realized that the space would be the perfect platform to display AT&T’s latest technology (something that already interested leadership). The challenge: How to showcase ideas? “So much of what we do is intangible,” Lander says. “How do you wrap your head around telling a story of innovation?”

att-brand-museum

Where analog and digital worlds collide

Lander brought in a retail-design agency to think through the ideas AT&T wanted to communicate. “Innovation isn’t a singular moment in time or a unique item, but takes place over 100 years at AT&T, starting with Alexander Graham Bell. Without giving that foundation of history, we really couldn’t tell the story of today and the future,” he says.

Lander refrains from calling the space a gallery or museum. “It’s primarily an environment with new innovations, but with a very healthy dose of reverence for what AT&T was born from,” he says.

The planning involved a year of research, poring through archival material and hours of digital content that dated to the 1930s. Among the popular artifacts chosen for display are the first transistor and Bell’s notebook. “People are fascinated by that,” says Lander. And the huge letters on the 12-foot wall that say, “Come here I want you” (Bell’s first spoken words on the telephone), draw visitors to the once-ignored space.

Alongside the artifacts are five touch-screen columns where visitors can learn about the present and future of communications. Perhaps the most popular spot is the wiki wall, which features 80-plus photo disks. Guests can interact with the wall using virtual reality; aim an iPad toward a photo on the wall to learn the story behind it. “Each (photo) tells a story of how AT&T participates in the global community,” says Lander.

Mobilizing the brand content

“Not a week goes by without tour groups and school groups coming through,” says Lander. And by encouraging the #attmichavenue hashtag on signage throughout the store and outside, AT&T brings the in-person experience to digital platforms. The space has earned AT&T a lot of media coverage, and won industry awards for Lander’s team. “It’s been a real feather in our caps,” he says.

How to make a brand museum come to life: do’s and don’ts

Emily O’Hara, senior exhibit content developer at the Museum of Science in Boston, shares her museum-storytelling best practices:

Do ample audience research before and during development. “We do a lot of prototyping and research at every stage. Before we flesh anything out, we talk to visitors about what they already know about the content to find out where they’re coming from so we can build on their previous knowledge,” says O’Hara.

Consider the different types of visitors you will have. When developing the museum’s most recent exhibit, the Yawkey Gallery on the Charles River, O’Hara says it was important to mix hands-on interactions with sections that would allow for some reflection. “There are different personalities. One person may want to engage physically, while another wants to read more of the descriptions,” she says. Offering a range of things in proximity to each other allows groups to be together, but individuals can do the things that appeal to them.

Experiment. It’s important to test your exhibit. “If you’re going to add interaction or physical manipulation, make it durable. People will use items in ways you never expected,” she says.

Evaluate and tweak after your launch. When exhibits open, O’Hara’s team is on the lookout for any immediate changes that may be needed, such as flow issues that aren’t discovered until a crowd enters the space. “Once it’s open, look back at original goals and measure yourself against that,” she says. “Look and see how visitors are using the space — is it as you intended?”

Be thoughtful about technology. All clients are looking to have a technology component integrated into these experiences to reinforce that they’re forward-looking, says Dressel. But the hardware and software need to make sense in relation to what you’re communicating. “A common pitfall is investing in expensive big screens or software systems before thinking through the intended visitor experience, the content strategy, and the best way to deploy it.”

Don’t let the coolest artifacts distract from your message. Many times there’s a disconnect between the content brands begin with, and the content needed to communicate the intended message, says Dressel. For instance, one of his railroad company clients that wanted to spotlight its safety innovations ultimately scrapped an exhibit that focused on its early passenger rail services. “The company had beautiful artifacts we could have included from their bygone era of passenger rail, but we mutually concluded it was irrelevant to their communications goals for the museum,” he says.

Have a strong plan to execute against. As obvious as it sounds, be clear about your objectives at the outset. Everything — your staffing model, budget, facility space, and content and design strategies — should be driven by what you’re looking to accomplish. Clients are often inspired by ideas they see in history museums or other cultural institutions, but those organizations generally have a very different mission than the objectives of a company or brand.

This article originally appeared in the August 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 Brand Museums: How Companies Tell Their Stories appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

6 Steps (And One Tool) to Clean Up Content Messes

clean-up-content-messes“Do our content reviews need to take so long?”

“Why do our writers keep reinventing the wheel?”

“Why do the articles in the same part of our website take such different approaches?”

If you’re up against questions like these, you have content messes on your hands. And you can bet that your prospects and customers get frustrated trying to find what they need hidden in those messes.

You’re not alone. We hear these things almost every time we revamp a website. A company has built a huge inventory of content, often created by multiple authors. What might have started as useful, usable content created in a consistent way has turned into a mess, which is made worse when the website’s sections are owned by multiple teams. Inconsistency reigns, and the content experience suffers — either for the whole site or for a section where a visitor might expect every page to deliver the same type of information in the same way.

What can you do?

Identify the types of content your audience needs most. Then, for each type of content, create a fill-in-the-blank template that all authors can use. A template like that — basically a form or a descriptive outline — improves the consistency and quality of your content assets. A content template is a tool your teams can use to clean up content messes.

In this article, I describe six steps to create your own content templates.

What is a content template?

In case you’re not sure what I mean by “content template,” let me tell you about one that my team developed for a private-equity firm for a certain type of content it creates over and over: the profile of a portfolio company. This particular content template includes elements like these:

  • Company logo
  • Company description
  • Company name
  • Date of investment
  • Team
  • Company website
  • Related media

The content template is a form that authors fill in. When content strategists talk about structured content, raw content, unconfigured content, or unformatted content, this is what they’re talking about. (In the image below, what look like multiple pages are, in fact, parts of the content template that I placed side by side to keep you from having to scroll.)

Example content template:

wayfair-raw-copy

Click to enlarge

Web pages based on the content template:

template-example

Click to enlarge

These three web pages were all created from the same content template. Even without reading the text, you can see that the same type of information — logo, a single-sentence description, the same six investment data points, etc. — appears in the same place, in the same format, at the same level of detail for each portfolio company. A visitor to any one of these pages knows exactly what to expect from every one of these pages.

Without a template in place, every portfolio company’s page would be a snowflake, varying with the idiosyncrasies of each author’s style, format, and structure choices.

A content template gives everyone a better experience.

  • It gives authors a better experience because it tells them exactly what content to provide.
  • It gives reviewers a better experience because it makes missing or inconsistent content easy to detect.
  • It gives readers a better experience because it results in content assets that have the same kind of information in the same place — patterns that make reading and skimming easier.

Technology helps, but content templates don’t require it

While my team often uses workflow and authoring tools when developing templates for our clients’ content, turning to technology is by no means necessary. If you’re just getting started, you can introduce content templates into your workflow without using digital tools at all; you could sketch out templates with pencil and paper. Content templates are easy for any organization to create, use, and refine, even in the absence of company-wide content management technologies.


You don’t need technology to create a useful content template, says @gregverdino. #contentstrategy
Click To Tweet


Of course, if you do have content management technology in your organization’s future, your templates will provide a useful specification for moving your workflow into your new systems. Technology takes content templates to the next level. For example, authoring software like GatherContent, and content workflow-management systems like Kapost, and many enterprise CMS like SiteCore enable organizations to set up and support — even enforce — a structured-authoring process within the platforms themselves. But if your team isn’t ready for this kind of investment, your templates alone will get you off to a good start.

Content templates make so much sense that you might wonder why everyone doesn’t use them. In some cases, content owners just don’t know how to get started. Fortunately, creating your own content templates may be simpler than you think.

How to create your own content templates

Whatever your content mess, content templates can help clean it up. Here’s how to create them:

  • Identify your most common types of content.
  • Outline the elements needed in each type of content.
  • Define the relevant metadata.
  • Establish guidelines for each element.
  • Capture the guidelines in a fill-in-the-blanks template.
  • Roll out the template, and keep refining it.

When people talk about getting started with structured content, this is what they’re talking about.

Step 1: Identify your most common types of content

You probably already have a sense of your own organization’s most common types of content (aka content types). If not, a quick tour of your own website, intranet, or content repository will help you identify specific types that you are called upon to create repeatedly or publish in a series.

Examples:

  • Blog posts
  • Slideshows or presentations
  • Customer newsletters
  • Case studies or success stories
  • E-books
  • Team bios
  • Industry or challenge-based solution overviews

List the types of content you create most often. You can expand to a more comprehensive list over time.

To help your team identify the types of content to put on your short list, consider questions like these:

  • If you were to put all your instances of one content type side by side — all your blog posts, all your newsletters, all your case studies, all your team bios, etc. — would they have a similar structure?
  • How consistent are those assets in terms of the elements of information they present, the logical flow of that information, and the level of depth provided?
  • Will visitors understand how to use those assets to get what they need based on their experience with other similar content you publish?
  • Are you concerned about whether your content meets an audience need completely and consistently?

Vet your list of key content types with stakeholders. Refine your list based on their feedback.

Step 2: Outline the elements needed in each type of content

For each type of content you’ve identified, list all the elements that make up that type just as you would outline the elements of a recipe (title, ingredients, photo, instructions, etc.). Outline not only what that content type looks like today; define its ideal structure. This is your opportunity to set a new standard for content excellence in your organization and move your content beyond “blobs” and into “chunks.”

Let’s consider one common type of content for B2B brands: the customer spotlight. This content type might include elements like these:

  • Headline or title
  • Subhead(s)
  • Main body of the story
  • Call-out quote(s)
  • Quote attribution (e.g., name and title)
  • Featured image(s)
  • Summary of key points
  • Call to action (and call-to-action link)

Think about the right level of granularity, breaking your content into the smallest logical chunks without (a warning here!) making your structure so cumbersome it distracts from the fundamental job of content creation.

content-template-image-1

Click to enlarge

Step 3. Define the relevant metadata

At this stage, it’s important to think about your metadata — the content behind the content. Your metadata makes it possible to deliver the right content to the right user at the right time.

You might want to create a consistent set of metadata tags that identify when, where, and how the content is relevant or how the content relates to other content you create. Going back to our customer spotlight example, we might tag each content asset of that type with the following metadata:

  • Relevant buyer persona the content speaks to
  • Stage of the purchase funnel it relates to
  • Regions where it’s relevant
  • Business unit it’s owned by
  • Author who wrote it
  • Products it supports

content-template-metadata

Click to enlarge

Step 4: Establish guidelines for each element

Letting the content creators across your organization know that each blog post must have a title is somewhat helpful. If you want to take your content to the next level, though, give guidelines on how to create that title.

Content templates give you the opportunity to establish the standards by which your authors should create content and by which your editors review and approve it. Here are some examples of guidelines for a given element in a template:

  • Character or word limits
  • Image requirements (file type, size, etc.)
  • Notes as to whether hyperlinks or multimedia can be embedded
  • Type of text (paragraphs, phrases, bullets, etc.)
  • Whether the element is mandatory

In fact, you might even want to explain why certain standards are in place. For instance, instead of simply stating that titles need to have 60 or fewer characters, you might explain that titles longer than 60 characters get truncated in search-engine results, leaving searchers to wonder what lies beyond the ellipsis and making your company look a bit less polished. Or you might describe a rationale for using short bullets in one section based on what you know about your audience’s preference for scanning snippets over reading a nuanced narrative. (These are just examples; your guidelines will vary.)

Your template is also a great place to point authors to your written tone of voice guidelines and editorial standards guide to help ensure consistency at that level, too.

Step 5: Capture the guidelines in a fill-in-the-blanks template

Now, bring it all together in a straightforward, easy-to-use content template, table or spec sheet that your authors can follow to produce complete, consistent, high-quality content every time.

Let’s look at a content template that we created for a client in the corporate-social-responsibility space. This client wanted to begin a web-based customer spotlight series that would also be used for nurture campaigns. The content team knew that this type of piece would be written by a variety of people: their own marketers, agency writers, even an occasional salesperson. We came up with a customer spotlight template that looks like this:

content-template-sample

Click to enlarge

Download a sample template here.

This content template includes elements that authors need to include in each customer spotlight (such as “content title”) as well as guidelines for each element (such as “Put the content title in title case” and “If possible, match the content title to the meta title”).

Step 6: Roll out the template, and keep refining it

Any tool is only as good as your team’s ability — and willingness — to use it. Train your people — your content creators and subject matter experts — on how they can use your templates to streamline and simplify the process of developing, reviewing, revising, and approving consistent, quality content. Make sure that the templates are easy to access.

And evolve your templates as you learn what works, what can be improved, and how your content can be structured to best meet the needs of your audiences and employees. Don’t expect to set and forget. Don’t live with an outdated template just because “the template is the template.” Your needs change. Templates should be living documents.

Should you apply new templates to your existing content? That’s up to you.

  • You might want to update every historical asset of a certain type to conform to a new template.
  • You might want to update popular assets only.
  • You might want to use the new template for new content only.

For example, while it might make sense to refresh a dozen case studies to align with a new case-study template, you probably wouldn’t rewrite 50 landing pages from 2007 to align with a new landing-page template.

Conclusion

Content templates improve both your content process and your content itself. Luckily, getting started is simple. And you have good reasons to start today:

  • Content templates make it easier for your content creators to do their job.
  • Content templates reduce the time it takes for your reviewers to do their job.
  • Content templates produce a more consistent experience for your audience, increasing the likelihood that they’ll engage with your content and, ultimately, take the actions you want them to take.

If you’re looking for a powerful tool that can help you clean up content messes — with or without the support of content management technology — give content templates a try.

Want more on managing your content strategically? Sign up for our Content Strategy for Marketers weekly email newsletter, which features exclusive insights from CMI Chief Content Adviser Robert Rose. If you’re like many other marketers we meet, you’ll come to look forward to his thoughts every Saturday.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post 6 Steps (And One Tool) to Clean Up Content Messes appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Content Marketing Takes a Turn for the Better: New 2017 Research

b2b-2017-research-coverIf you were able to join us at Content Marketing World — or have been following some of the coverage — you know that the tides are turning. While last year at this time we were facing the trough of disillusionment, the energy and momentum we are seeing right now are far more positive. In fact, our newest research, B2B Content Marketing 2017: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America, backs this up.

Sixty-two percent of B2B marketers in North America say that compared to one year ago, their organization’s overall approach to content marketing has been much more or somewhat more successful.

This was just one of the findings in Content Marketing Institute/MarketingProfs’ B2B Content Marketing 2017: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America sponsored by Brightcove.

b2b-marketers-rate-organizations-content-marketing-success

To what factors do marketers attribute this increased success? The top two factors are: doing a better job with content creation (85%) and developing or adjusting their content marketing strategy (72%).

b2b-factors-marketers-increased-success

In addition to asking marketers to identify why they are more successful, we also have research to identify what top performers are doing differently than their peers. Our study defined top performers as those who characterize their organization’s overall content marketing approach as extremely or very successful.

As we have seen in past years, successful marketers do a few things differently. They:

  • Document their content marketing strategy (Learn how.)

Top performing marketers document their #contentmarketing strategy via @cmicontent. #research
Click To Tweet



Top performing marketers have clarity of what #contentmarketing success looks like via @cmicontent. #research
Click To Tweet



Top performing marketers create differentiated #content via @cmicontent. #research
Click To Tweet


But, this year we have even more to reveal. In fact, we have more than 75 data points that explain what top performers are doing differently, which we’ll explore in depth over the coming months. (Shameless plug: Subscribe to our newsletter to get all of our new research reports plus the whys of our research.)

Here are just a few highlights:

Top performers are “all in” with content marketing

As I explored in my opening keynote talk at Content Marketing World — and in this follow-up blog post — one of the biggest differences we see between marketers who are top performers and those who aren’t is level of commitment: 91% of top performers are extremely or very committed to content marketing, compared to 63% of the overall sample and 35% of the bottom performers (those who characterized their overall content marketing approach as minimally or not at all successful).

It’s just like being a parent or a driver: You can’t be “kind of” in and expect positive results. It simply doesn’t work that way. Make content marketing a priority or focus your efforts elsewhere.


Make #contentmarketing a priority or focus your efforts elsewhere says @joepulizzi.
Click To Tweet


Top performers are realistic about what content marketing can achieve — and how long results will take

Is content marketing a silver bullet to solve your marketing woes? Absolutely not. As I’ve discussed, it takes a differentiated story, delivered consistently over time. If you expect results overnight, you’ll be disappointed.

content-marketing-results-timeframe

Our research this year now supports this no-silver-bullet thinking — 91% of top performers indicate that their organizations are realistic about what content marketing can achieve, compared to 68% of the overall sample and 41% of bottom performers.

On top of this, 77% of top performers agree that leadership gives them ample time to succeed, compared to 52% of the overall sample and 26% of bottom performers.

Top performers deliver consistently

Just in case you missed one of the previously detailed keys: It’s critical to deliver consistently. Eight-five percent of top performers deliver content consistently, compared to 58% of the overall sample and 32% of bottom performers.


85% of top performing marketers deliver #content consistently over time via @cmicontent. #research
Click To Tweet


TIP: Does “consistently” mean daily or weekly? Absolutely not. As Robert Rose has advised in our newsletter, you should publish “as little as you can and still have the impact you desire.” But do so consistently. (Repurposing is a great way to do this.)

Top performers focus on measurement

Not only do top performers commit, stay realistic, and deliver consistently, they also continuously check on content marketing progress (sounds like the basics of any long-term commitment such as a marriage or even a workout program). Eighty-eight percent of the top performers measure content marketing ROI, compared to 72% of the overall sample and 56% of the bottom performers.


88% of top #marketing performers measure #contentmarketing ROI via @cmicontent. #research
Click To Tweet


Of course measurement is key because it enables you to understand what is working and focus on what is creating a return. Also, keeping your management informed of progress helps everyone stay realistic — and committed.

TIP: If you are looking for a simple way to get started checking on content marketing’s progress, look at this template that shows you how to report on key measures for your team.

These findings just scratch the surface of the insights coming out of this year’s research; thanks to all who participated.

We are so excited about all of the data coming out of this research as well as our upcoming reports. If you are as well, please sign up for our newsletter so you don’t miss a thing.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post Content Marketing Takes a Turn for the Better: New 2017 Research appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

11 Smart Marketing Examples That Nail Visual Content

marketing-examples-nail-visual-content

It’s no secret that visual content is powerful. Numerous studies show that our ability to recall information increases significantly when it’s presented as an image rather than plain text.

pictures-vs-text

Image source

That’s why infographics, despite the fact that they are everywhere, are still effective when done well.


Infographics are still effective when done well says @sujanpatel. #contentmarketing
Click To Tweet


What that means, as summarized by Jeff Bullas, is that an infographic (and visual content as a whole) should:

  • Blend seamlessly into the user experience
  • Fit the platform used to share it
  • Offer genuine value — never an aggressive attempt to sell
  • Be bite-sized — quick and easy to consume
  • Relate to the things your audience cares about
  • Be consistent in style and tone

Visual content isn’t going away. It always has played a critical role in marketing (and probably always will), as shown in these 10 examples.

1. One Day Without Shoes

TOMS’ #WithoutShoes campaign is designed to raise awareness of how an inability to afford or access shoes can affect a child’s quality of life, such as not being able to go to school.

Of course, TOMS is doing more than simply raising awareness. For each person who posts a unique image of bare feet with the hashtag #withoutshoes on Instagram on the designated day, TOMS donated a pair of shoes to a child.

Last year, more than 27,000 children in 10 countries received new shoes as a result of this campaign.

toms-without-shoes-campaign

The success of this campaign is due to the stunning-yet-evocative user-generated imagery that makes viewers take notice while drawing attention to a worthy cause.

2. Is a Barbie Body Possible?

Is a Barbie Body Possible? is a piece of visual content to accompany a lengthy post on Rehabs.com, an information and service referral source for people affected by substance abuse and behavioral addictions.

The article itself explores the media’s role in the prevalence of eating disorders in young girls. It’s a fascinating (yet scary) read that’s packed with sobering statistics. It’s also been linked to from more than 200 sites and shared more than 55,000 times.

Though the article is excellent, it wouldn’t have had the impact without the infographics.

Image source: Fractl and Rehabs

The graphic shows how Barbie’s vital stats measure up to those of the average American woman. The imagery is a natural accompaniment for the article. More importantly, the image boosts interest in sharing because the eye-catching content creates more questions than it answers. This increases its attractiveness because publishers can craft their own story around the visual content.

Of course, there’s much more to this content’s success than pretty visuals. It combines an instantly recognizable, often-controversial pop-culture icon and an issue that affects many.

In short, the graphics explore an emotional issue that we can all relate to in one way or another.

3. Domino’s emojis

Last year Domino’s launched an ingenious campaign designed to revolutionize the way people order pizza. To appeal to a younger generation, Domino’s allowed customers to text or tweet their orders.

That’s cool, but here’s the really interesting part: Customers don’t have to use words to order — they simply use emojis.

Emojis are a great example of the power of visual content. It’s easy for written communication to be misunderstood. Emojis (emoticons especially) help express the intent behind the words. They substitute facial expressions, which is vital to understanding.

Domino’s use of emojis goes beyond that. It shows that words aren’t really needed — visuals alone can express everything.


Words aren’t really needed; visuals alone can express everything says @sujanpatel. #visualcontent
Click To Tweet


The campaign makes perfect sense in an information-overloaded world in which the faster we can convey our message, the better.

It was also effective, earning huge amounts of media attention, with USA Today, Forbes, Good Morning America, and comedian Jimmy Fallon all picking up the story.

4. Movoto blog

Movoto’s real-estate blog shows the importance of two things:

  • Visual content
  • Repetition of a concept you know works

It’s packed with great content, but what really stands out for me is the blog’s category for novelty real estate. It takes buildings from popular culture and provides answers to pressing questions, like how much it would cost to buy them if they were real or how many Lego bricks it would take to build them.

Most articles in the series are accompanied by an infographic that provides context through illustration and explains how the final figure was calculated, such as this one about Harry Potter’s Hogwarts.

The Value of Hogwarts Castle

Image source: Fractl and Movoto

An article follows the infographic that adds credibility by explaining the calculations in finer detail.

Of course, while the information contained in the article is vital (without it, readers are just being fed figures without facts), it’s the infographic that’s key — simply because it makes the content so shareable.

The reality is that while some people crave all the facts, most of us prefer summaries in an easy-to-digest format. The combination used by Movoto satisfies both types of readers, while the infographic offers an additional benefit — it attracts links. The Hogwarts infographic secured links from Moz, PaperMag, and Pricey Pads.

5. Straight Outta Somewhere

In the lead-up to the release of NWA’s biopic movie Straight Outta Compton, Dr. Dre’s Beats brand partnered with Universal Pictures to design an interactive, digital campaign that wound up reaching more than 1.2 billion people.

The Straight Outta Somewhere campaign invited participants to celebrate their heritage by creating a personalized meme in the style of the movie’s title artwork.

straight-outta-somewhere-campaign

More than 9 million memes were created, and not just by the general public. A number of big brands and even the White House got involved, with the White House staff creating this meme to promote the government’s nuclear deal with Iran:

white-house-meme

The campaign shows how the impact of visual content can be amplified when you enable your audience to interact with it by personalizing the content in a manner that massages their own egos.

6. Liking Isn’t Helping

Crisis Relief Singapore’s Liking Isn’t Helping campaign used a series of shocking images with Photoshop treatment to illustrate how “liking” a picture or taking “action” on social media in general doesn’t actually do anything to help the cause in question.

liking-isnt-helping

Liking or even sharing an image on social media does little, if anything, to help the cause charities are working toward.

Seeing a distressing image may trigger an emotional response but that isn’t enough, as the Liking Isn’t Helping campaign shows.

By visually representing something that so many people do every day — without considering whether it has an impact, this award-winning campaign gives its audience much more to think about.

7. Someecards

Someecards is the site behind satirical cards like these:

someecards-example1

someecards-example2

It’s a free service designed to poke fun at the average greeting card. In this case, the product is the marketing campaign. The cards are unique and entertaining in large part because they depict relatable everyday situations. They also show how basic visuals can transform content and how the simplest ideas can be the most successful.


Basic visuals can transform #content & the simplest ideas can be the most successful says @sujanpatel.
Click To Tweet


When someecards launched in 2007, it was a service to send cards digitally. Here’s a (broken) shot of what the site looked like:

someecards-2007-launch

Today the site is populated with news and lifestyle content, and visitors create their own e-cards (identifiable by the “user card” stamp).

someecards-news-lifestyle-content

It also remains completely free; the site is monetized through ads.

The cards and their messages are brought to life by the understated illustrations. What’s clever is how the same illustrations can be replicated across multiple cards. It just goes to show how visual content doesn’t need to be elaborate to be effective.

8. Airbnb map

The Airbnb map is an interactive, real-time visual representation of where Airbnb guests are staying.

airbnb-map

The content is visually stunning and fully immersive.

More to the point, it makes otherwise boring information interesting. A list of the volume and whereabouts of Airbnb rentals would be as dull as it can get. No one would care. Presenting the information as an interactive map, however, changes the game. Seeing where Airbnb rentals are happening (and where they aren’t) at a glance provides a unique perspective on the world. It shows where tourism is most and least prevalent and, in a way, manages to make viewers feel closer to the rest of the world.

Its effectiveness as link bait is proof of how the right visuals can transform how people absorb and respond to information. Majestic SEO, a tool that monitors various SEO signals, is reporting 169 links to the map page from 54 domains.

majestic-measures-seo-signals

9. KLM Lost & Found

Dutch Airline KLM’s Lost & Found video is one of its most successful — at the time of this writing, it’s been viewed more than 22 million times.

That’s bound to have something to do with its star character — a beautiful little beagle — but there’s more to it than that. The video triggers an emotional response in its audience. It explores an issue most of us can relate to — losing important belongings while traveling — while managing to make us empathize with the employees who help reunite us with them.

That ability to evoke emotion in the audience is thanks to the video, which, while clearly low-budget, is well-made. The smiling employees, the happy customers, and of course the beagle all represent KLM’s message: that the airline is there for its customers, first and foremost.

10. Elf Yourself

Office Depot’s seasonal Elf Yourself campaign is another example of how much more impactful visual content can be when it’s personalized to your audience.

For anyone who hasn’t come across Elf Yourself before, it’s essentially a tool that lets you create an interactive e-card that turns you and your friends into dancing elves.

elf-yourself

I’m not entirely sure how Elf Yourself relates to Office Depot, but I don’t really think it matters. It’s great fun and satisfies our narcissistic side by making us the stars of the show.

It also ticks the boxes of being really easy to use and really easy to share. No wonder, then, that by the launch of the 2015 campaign, more than 1 billion elves had been created since its introduction in 2006.

11. The Best Job in the World

To me, the bright blue waters, clear skies, and pure white sand of a tropical island beach are some of the most beautiful sights in the world. I know I’m far from alone in that, which is why imagery like this is sure to turn heads:

best-job-in-the-world-campaign

The Best Job in The World is a campaign designed by the Queensland Tourism Body to promote Hamilton Island in Australia by seeking an island caretaker.

The job was real and eventually filled by Brit Ben Southall who beat out almost 35,000 other applicants.

Of course, while the job was real, its promotion was all part of a wider marketing plan designed to drive tourists to this incredible part of the world.

Luckily for the Queensland Tourism Body, such a stunning destination sells itself, but it’s still a lesson in the importance of visual content: The campaign, which was successful in part on account of its breathtaking imagery, drove 7 million visitors to the site.

Conclusion

Visuals are vital in all forms of marketing. They help to capture and keep attention, and illustrate points more effectively, all while making content easier to share.

Visuals are most effective, however, when they trigger an emotional response. That might be happiness, anger, or empathy. Whatever it is, your goal should be to ensure that all your marketing campaigns are enhanced with visuals that help people to feel.


Visuals are most effective when they trigger an emotional response says @sujanpatel.
Click To Tweet


What visual content have you found to be most effective? Share in the comments.

Want more inspiration to help your content marketing spark your audience to feel or do something? Subscribe to the free daily CMI newsletter.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post 11 Smart Marketing Examples That Nail Visual Content appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

Monday, September 26, 2016

3 Tips to More Accurately Measure Your Content Effort

3-tips-measure-content-effort

Many people jump into content marketing because they were inspired by all the success stories and case studies they read. You know what I’m talking about, the content marketing for content marketing.

But while content marketing seems straightforward, actually measuring its success can be challenging in practice. Customer journey mapping, attribution modeling, and segmentation can help you improve and more accurately measure your content marketing efforts.

1. Identify and document content goals with customer journey mapping

Before getting into the more technical aspects of measuring your content, it’s paramount that you create clear goals for benchmarking purposes. Without a system of measurement, you won’t be able to make data-informed decisions — and that’s simply no good.


Without a system of measurement, you won’t be able to make data-informed decisions says @jacobwarwick.
Click To Tweet


To identify your content goals, use a process called customer journey mapping.

Customer journey mapping is a technique that can help you better understand your customer’s experiences through their interactions and touchpoints with your brand, wherever the customer may be in the lead cycle. It also aligns your content efforts with personas and identifies gaps and optimization opportunities within your content.

First, document the five stages of your customer’s journey: awareness, interest, evaluation, decision, and retention. Using Microsoft Excel or Google Sheets should suffice.

document-customer-journey

Image source: Blast Analytics and Marketing: Customer Journey Mapping

Next, craft goals and key performance indicators (KPIs) for each stage.

For example, your overall goal could be to increase leads 15% or boost white paper downloads by 50%. Regardless, each stage of the customer journey can drive those goals and should have KPIs to keep you on track.

Consider tracking the following KPIs to get started:

  • Awarenesskeyword rankings, impressions, and overall search visibility
  • Interestwebinar registrations, white paper downloads, and marketing-qualified leads
  • Evaluation – quote requests, demos, and sales-qualified leads
  • Decision – conversions and total customers
  • Retention – shares, comments, subscription renewals, and social community engagement

tracking-kpis

Image Source: Blast Analytics and Marketing: An example of what to build in your customer journey map in Google Sheets

After documenting your goals and KPIs, audit your current content and assign it to the appropriate customer journey stage. This will help you create stronger and more realistic goals, while also helping identify gaps in your content coverage.

2. Apply attribution modeling to understand channel performance

Note: Before working with attribution, you must have implemented an analytics platform such as Adobe Analytics or Google Analytics 360 and have your content properly tagged using Google Tag Manager, Tealium, Ensighten, or another tag manager. Without tagging, your data will be insignificant.

The concept of attribution modeling is to assign a set of rules to determine how much credit a touchpoint should receive during your customer’s journey to complete a conversion. That can help you determine how valuable your marketing channels are.

A successful attribution model will help you see how your marketing channels work together to create a lead, conversion, or sale while ultimately identifying where you should invest resources.

Start by finding an attribution model that best meets your needs.

Some common attribution models include:

  • First-touch attribution – full credit is given to first customer touchpoint
  • Last-touch attribution – full credit is given to last customer touchpoint
  • Linear attribution – credit is evenly distributed among all customer touchpoints
  • Time-decay attribution – credit is given to each touchpoint based on the amount of time that passed between the first touchpoint and conversion
  • Participation attribution – full credit is given to each touchpoint that participated in a conversion
  • Position-based attribution – a majority of the credit is given to the first and last touchpoint and any remaining credit is distributed evenly amongst the middle touchpoints

The key is to find a model that balances the data you need without being too complex, which could cause analysis paralysis (particularly with less mature marketing and analytics teams).

For most content marketing strategies, I recommend staying away from first- or last-touch attribution because it doesn’t show the entire customer journey.

If you’re newer to attribution modeling, I would start with the linear or participation attribution model to get a general idea of what touchpoints your customers use before converting.

As your needs evolve and become more mature, you can use a more advanced attribution model such as time decay, position-based, or even a custom solution.

I personally like the position-based attribution model because it stresses the importance of both the first- and last-touch channel, while also considering the complementary channels that lead to conversion.

For example, the first touch could have come through an organic search result to your blog, second touch was a white-paper download, third touch from a social media link, fourth touch from another blog visit, and finally, last touch from a product-spec download. Position-based attribution gives credit to the assisting visits — and helps you identify the value of your channels.

multi-channel-attribution-modeling

Image source: Occam’s Razor, Multi-Channel Attribution Modeling – Avinash Kaushik

If you’re fortunate enough to work with an analytics team, ask them about attribution modeling and whether they have implemented a model of your organization. If you’re on your own, reference these guides for Adobe Analytics attribution modeling and Google Analytics attribution modeling to dive into the specifics. (Disclosure, I work at Blast Analytics and vouch for the content too.)

3. Use segmentation to understand content performance

This section builds a case for why you should use segmentation. For detailed how-to on segmentation, visit these guides for Google Analytics segmentation and Adobe Analytics segmentation.

Segments are subsets of your analytics data that can help you better examine your customer trends by drilling down into your data. You can segment each channel (e.g., only people who have converted, males over 40 who live in Australia), if that’s your prerogative.

Segmentation can become complex, so you should use it to answer specific business questions.

For example, say that you are developing a content marketing strategy for next quarter. The goal is to increase conversions 25% and you’re tasked with scheduling and creating high-converting content.

Start by segmenting visitors who have made a purchase and ask questions such as:

  • What channel(s) attracted these customers?
  • How old and what gender are these customers?
  • Are these customers using a desktop or a mobile device?
  • What content did they read before becoming a customer?

With segmentation, you can answer these questions, identify trends, and better inform your content marketing strategy moving forward.


Segmentation can answer ?'s, identify trends, & inform your #contentmarketing strategy says @jacobwarwick.
Click To Tweet


audience-overview

Image source: Google Analytics

Take notes of trends that you identify to inform your ongoing buyer persona research.

You should become intimately familiar with all of the segmentation options that your analytics platform provides so that you can understand what type of marketing questions you can answer with your data — even if you don’t use analytics in your day-to-day routine.

As you begin to mature with your analytics, you can evolve to use more complex segmentation techniques, such as recency, frequency, and monetary (RFM) analysis.

Again, attribution modeling and segmentation can get extremely complex; however, with a game plan and goals to meet, you can begin making more data-driven decisions with your content marketing efforts.

Do you have other methods to more accurately measure your content marketing efforts? Did I miss anything that you could expand upon? Please put your comments and links to helpful resources in the comments.

Want to connect with Jacob Warwick as he answers questions on the ROI of branded storytelling? Join the CMI Twitter Chat at 12 p.m. U.S. EDT Tuesday (Sept. 27). Simply follow the hashtag #CMWorld.

Cover image by publicdomainpictures.net via pixabay.com

Please note:  All tools included in our blog posts are suggested by authors, not the CMI editorial team.  No one post can provide all relevant tools in the space. Feel free to include additional tools in the comments (from your company or ones that you have used).

The post 3 Tips to More Accurately Measure Your Content Effort appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.