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Why Content Marketing is Like a Chuck E. Cheese Inflatable Ball Pit

 

Explaining all of the benefits content marketing can provide an online marketing campaign can be a daunting task for one blog post.  However, this analogy is a good start at truly spelling out why content marketing is so important for inbound marketing, search engine optimization (SEO), and social media marketing.

If you were a child would you rather play in the bathtub below with only a few inflatable balls. . .

Content Marketing Balls1

Or would you rather play in this bathtub with a whole bunch of inflatable balls?

Content Marketing Balls2

If you’re not sure what the answer is you can trust my 20 month old twin daughters – they love it!

Inbound Marketing Princesses

How does content marketing fit in this analogy?

Chuck E Cheese Content MarketingImagine the bathtubs above as websites, the inflatable balls as web pages with content, and the children as adults surfing the web.  When people are looking for answers to their questions or to be entertained they want to have access to the best, most valuable and timely content they can in order to help them solve their problems.  The more of this type of content is available the better the experience is for the web surfer.

SEO & Content Marketing

Parents know which bathtub their children would prefer just like Google knows which websites their users would prefer.  Their whole Panda/Farmer update is centered on the idea of rewarding valuable unique content.  The more content a website has the more opportunities it has to rank for the keywords on those content pages.  The more frequently content is published on a website the more often Google has to come back to the website in order to index the new content. 

As more and more content is published more people will naturally be exposed to the website’s brand which typically results in a significant increase in branded searches. This is substantiated by dozens of clients’ analytics.  Additionally, Google’s webmaster guidance communicates that little or no original content is a detriment to a website’s ability to rank well.  After looking at SEOmoz’s 2011 Search Engine Ranking Factors Report, a full 82% of the SEO factors mentioned would be positively impacted by content marketing.

Social Media & Content Marketing  

The more content a business has to distribute across social media channels the more potential conversations can take place.  When new content is produced frequently and pushed out to friends, followers and fans the number of sharing opportunities increase.  With social media playing a bigger role in SEO, content marketing with social media distribution will help support a website’s search engine optimization campaign.  Having lots of good content to talk about, share and build a community around is critical to a successful social media marketing campaign.


For hard data and numbers which validate the above please see How Much Does it Cost a Company to Stop Blogging - ROI Revealed.  This is a small case study which shows two companies that use blogs for their content marketing campaign.  The effects of content marketing on their business is clear.  For help turning a blog into a content marketing machine download the Blog Post Optimization Cheat Sheet




Learn How to Make Twitter an Important Part of Your Inbound Marketing Mix

Learn How to Make Twitter an Important Part of Your Inbound Marketing Mix



Comments

Something just doesn't jive though. I read the article about the company that stopped blogging for six months. It wasn't the case that their traffic ceased to increase ... it DROPPED, back to pre-blogging levels. So what happened to all that content they wrote in the first six months? Did Google, uh, forget it? Purge it? No, they didn't. So why did their traffic not just level off but actually DROP? It's obviously not as simple as "write more content, and Google will send more traffic your way." Somehow, the freshness of the content is relevant, and nobody is explaining why.
Posted @ Thursday, July 14, 2011 10:56 AM by Sean
Sean: 
 
I'm glad you brought this up. It is definitely an important topic to discuss and yes - we do firmly believe "fresh" content very important. It has long been known that Google has different algorithms for different types of content - even different verticals. Here are three good examples: 
 
Press Releases: Google is well aware that the timeliness (freshness) of a press release showing up in the SERPs is important. Therefore, they decrease the importance of backlinks for PR rankings. However, they also drop from the SERPs very quickly (a few days). 
 
Vertical Algorithms: Try and do a local search (any city) for web design (i.e. NYC web design, web design Dallas, etc.). You'll notice not a single Google Local listing in the organic SERPs. Why is this? It's because Google has different algorithms for different industries. 
 
Blogs: Google recognizes a blog when it spiders one and treats them similar to a PR. However, their staying power is much greater then a PR, but over time they do indeed become stale. The exception is for blog posts that have lots of quality backlinks. They tend to stay ranked well. 
 
The example you mentioned from yesterday is a little more nuanced than your characterization above because the traffic includes social media, direct, organic and referrals. If you look at the second graph (only organic) you'll see that after the company started blogging for the second time the organic traffic produced many more leads. This suggests that growth momentum builds over time as a factor of content. Unfortunately, I don't have the time to create 20+ case studies to demonstrate this, but I see these trends across dozens of clients and industries.  
 
If you'd like several more examples feel free to watch our blogging video - it looks at many more. 
 
http://www.kunocreative.com/building-leads-with-blogging/ 
 
Hope that clarifies things a little bit. . .  
 
@CPollittIU 
Posted @ Thursday, July 14, 2011 12:27 PM by Chad H. Pollitt
Chad, loved the creative analogy (we linked to it from our blog today). 
Seems like your analogy extends to the quality of the content as well: if all the balls in your tub are grey or deflated, the kids might go looking for another tub. There are a lot of tubs out there. The best, most valuable, and timely information is a great caveat.
Posted @ Thursday, July 14, 2011 1:24 PM by Elizabeth
Elizabeth: 
 
Ahh perfect! Thanks for chiming in. . .  
 
That does indeed complete the analogy and makes it better. By the way, thanks for linking to this post. We always love a new fresh link. Can you send us the link? We've been known to reciprocate links from time to time :) 
 
@CPollittIU
Posted @ Thursday, July 14, 2011 1:44 PM by Chad H. Pollitt
Of course! 
http://www.contentping.com/2011/07/14/seo-for-kids-facebook-for-retailers-and-correct-spelling-for-everyone/
Posted @ Thursday, July 14, 2011 1:55 PM by Elizabeth
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