Tools of Digital Marketing
Content Marketing is a strategic marketing approach focused on creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and retain a clearly-defined audience — and, ultimately, to drive profitable customer action.
What Should You Learn?
# Know Your Audience:
For brands, knowing and understanding your
audience will allow you to build the foundation of your content marketing
strategy. To get that knowledge, here are a few tactics to use:
• Perform keyword research: Keyword
research not only uncovers the search volume behind your most important
keywords, but it can also offer insights into keyword opportunities and search
intent. In addition, perform your own searches for various keywords and look
through the results to see who’s ranking at the top.
• Conduct a competitive analysis. Research
your top three to five competitors through their website, social media pages,
news articles and search results. How does your brand stack up?
• Dig into data and analytics: Get
familiar with your website’s analytics to gain insights about the users you’ve
already managed to attract to your site. Look at the most popular pages, the
pages with the highest bounce rate, and the pages with the best and worst
conversion rates.
#
Strive to Be the Best Answer:
For brands, being the best answer means providing
relevant, quality content wherever and whenever their audience is searching for
it. Use the research you’ve done to identify where those content opportunities
lie. In addition, don’t be afraid to engage your existing audience. Use social
media to pose questions or send out a current customer survey to get feedback
and insight. The more you know, the better you’ll be at providing the right
information.
#Write for the Reader
Content is organized to help readers easily flow through the article and photos are often used to add a visual element to the story. Long-form pieces are often broken down into sections with headers, which is more pleasing to the eye and helps with scan-ability. In addition, content is written in a way that tells a story—not in a way to please search engines.
For brands, the bottom line here is to create content that’s a good experience for your audience to read. SEO is important, but usability and user experience is more important.
#Mind the “5Ws and H”
Who, What, Where, When, Why and How—the 5 Ws and the H. These are the foundation of every article a journalist will ever write. And they can certainly be applied to your content marketing strategy.
As you map out your strategy, ask the following questions for each piece you plan to create:
• Who is my audience?
• What does my audience want to know?
• Where am I going to publish and
disseminate?
• When am I going to publish and
disseminate?
• Why am I writing this? (Drive traffic?
Increase brand awareness?)
. How will I
measure results?
#Follow the Story
Brands should use their audience knowledge, keyword research, and their website data to hone in on their content strengths and opportunities. Choose a handful of topical areas to get started with—and create as much content around that topic as possible. This will allow you to begin showcasing yourself as an expert in specific areas and eventually you’ll be able to expand that to new areas.
#Add Perspective
The best news articles have a face and provide
perspective. Journalists use people close to the story and expert sources to
give their articles credibility and depth. Brands can do the same with their
content by working with influences. Influences not only lend expertise and
authority to content, but they can also help that content reach a larger audience.
Don’t just reach out to your influences in times
of need. Engage with them on their social platforms. Share their content. Shoot
them an email to check in. Just as a journalist works hard to build a network
of credible sources, brands should remember that building a relationship with
influences is an ongoing journey and there needs to be value for everyone.
Career Benefits of Content
Marketing
Most obviously, a marketer's career in content (or
a content creator's career in marketing) can take the form of being a writer.
You could establish yourself as a jack of all trades -- not a bad place to
begin if you're just getting started and trying to find your super power -- but
as your career progresses, you might consider specializing if you want to stay
in a writing function. This specialty could take a few forms; here are some of
the most popular:
• Short-Form Content: things like blog
posts, tip sheets, copy for emails, newsletters
• Long-Form Content: things like
whitepapers, e-books, or even real books
(the ones you can hold in your hands ... or download on your tablet)
• Content for an Industry or Persons:
specializing in a certain audience, like the C-Suite, or analysts, or perhaps
gaining expertise around a particular industry, like manufacturing, insurance,
or pharma
• Content Format Types: Carving out a
niche in specific content format types, like e-books and whitepapers, research
reports, or webinars
Whether you choose to be a generalist or a
specialist, focus on creating the
highest quality content. While cranking out a
high volume is certainly important
- dilly dallying around doesn't cut it when
a bottom line is at stake -- it doesn't
matter how much you create if the
quality is poor.
THANK YOU
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