Content Marketing Plans | Lessons Learned

Lessons Learned From Creating Content Marketing Plans

By Kuno CreativeFeb 19 /2015

Unless you’re brand new to the internet, you’re probably aware content marketing is the weapon of choice among businesses with an online presence. But while creating material for your website or social media channels may sound simple, developing a comprehensive content marketing strategy can be a difficult, complicated process.

In fact, the ugly truth is that many companies fail at content marketing. According to a recent study, 66 percent of B2C brands surveyed reported failure with their efforts.

Without the proper investment of time and money, content marketing mistakes are easy to make. Dormant Facebook feeds, poorly written blogs, website copy that’s not optimized for SEO – these are just a few common signs of unsuccessful content. Whether you’re an enterprise level corporation or small business, every brand needs a thorough strategy behind their content.

To help focus your efforts, here are a couple of lessons I’ve personally learned from my experience working on content marketing plans.

Understand Your Target Audience

As with any form of marketing, you need to understand your target audience before advertising to it. What’s the age range and gender of your buyer personas? What are their interests? What do they want to read, see or watch?

Research is the cornerstone to all of your subsequent efforts. Once you can answer the fundamental questions about your target audience, start creating a plan. In addition to general information, pay attention to online behavior. For example, are people drawn to video, or do they prefer text? Implement your content and watch how users engage with it. Optimize as you go, replicating the types of posts that perform well, and nixing the ones that sink to the bottom of the internet.

2. Hire Professionals

For one reason or another, many companies assume content marketing is only a part-time task, or that it’s something to be done by interns. While the allocation of marketing budgets may prevent you from spending as much time as you’d like on your content, brands should understand that digital marketing will only be successful under the guidance of experienced, paid professionals. A well-coordinated marketing team is essential for executing a successful content marketing strategy. And even then you need to do your homework and be selective.

Figure out exactly what you want to accomplish from your content (brand awareness, more conversions on your website, sales, etc.), and hire someone who can demonstrate accomplishments in these particular areas. Don’t just hire someone who’s “good at Facebook,” and expect big ROI.

3. Emphasize Benefits Over Features

The age-old rule of advertising applies to online marketing as well: Your content should emphasize benefits over features. A successful content marketing strategy focuses on highlighting the benefits to engage and inspire the audience. This is your opportunity to think big. Sure, your discount jewelry store may provide pendants at a lower price than your competitors, but how does your offering enrich people’s lives? Nike advertises its gear of course, but much of its content marketing is centered on achieving greatness and pushing yourself to go farther than you thought possible.

By contrast, poor content marketing is dry and purely informational. You don’t just want to inform people about why your product or service is great; you want to use it as a launch point to inspire them.

4. Create a Community

Content marketing is a great opportunity to tell your brand’s story to the world. Brand storytelling is a way for a company to add a little personality and show a face to its business. Incorporating user-generated content can add authenticity and further engage your community. By using it, you give customers a human element with which they can relate.

Whether you post blogs in the voice of your brand, or create a social media presence demonstrating your business’ personality, unique, personalized content offers something to people other than traditional, canned marketing. It allows customers to participate in your brand.

For example, Ben & Jerry’s created an instagram campaign around the theme of “euphoric” experiences (not necessarily limited to ice cream). The company asked its followers to post their images documenting extremely awesome moments with the hashtag #CaptureEuphoria, and the highlights were then featured in official ads.

The outreach transcended fans’ love of ice cream and united them around a bigger human experience. In turn, Ben & Jerry’s created a compelling and unique story about its values.

5. Headlines are Everything

Because there’s a seemingly infinite volume of content online, yours needs to be scannable. Copy should be succinct and valuable (entertaining doesn’t hurt either, if appropriate). This all starts with your headline. Strong headlines are also prioritized by search engines, improving your content's visibility. Think about your own scrolling habits. Do you stop to read every single article in your RSS or Facebook feeds? Most likely what gets you to pause is a catchy headline.

But as anyone who’s ever tried to write a headline can tell you, it’s not easy. In fact, they’re a bit of an art form, which is why journalists work tirelessly to perfect them. Ideally, your headline should boil your topic down to its nut, and clearly state the stakes involved. If you’re struggling to nail it, try writing a headline 20 different ways. It’ll force you to get increasingly creative and eventually you’ll stumble on that magic combination of words that will greatly improve your chances of a click.

The reality is, without a well-worded headline, your content won’t be read, no matter good it is. If you’re trying to clamor for attention online, avoid boring, long or overly complicated headlines.

6. Include Evergreen Content

Content online can generally be separated into two categories: topical and evergreen. Being topical is a great way to join the conversation online about current events or trends. It may also earn you a short-term spike in traffic, which shouldn’t be discounted. A documented content marketing strategy can help in planning and maintaining evergreen content.

However, evergreen content pays off nicely over time. Typically this category addresses people’s ongoing, broad needs. Rather than being limited to a trending topic, it’s always relevant. To get meta for a moment, an article on tips for improving your content marketing is evergreen, as content marketing has been an important topic for several years and doesn’t look to be losing steam any time soon.

Evergreen content also has the added benefit of providing sources for future, related materials. You can re-purpose a blog and re-contextualize the information for a separate post.

Engage in Content Creation

Perhaps the most common mistake companies make with their social media accounts is failing to engage with their audiences. Engaging social media posts are crucial for interaction and building a community. Whether you’re running a Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn or other account, people expect you to not just post relevant content, but to follow up, as well.

Best practices dictate that community managers respond to people who engage with your content. In particular, thanking people who leave favorable comments is a great way to show you appreciate them. Social media is ideal for customer service, so you always want to put your best face forward and encourage responses around your content.

8. Offer Value

Promotional content is important. After all, you’re running a business, and your products and services aren’t going to advertise themselves. Effective content creation should focus on providing value to the audience. However, online audiences tend to be allergic to too much self-promotion. Over posting about your business in social media, or sending too many promotional newsletters will result in a steady decline of followers and subscribers.

Instead, the bulk of your content should provide value. Again, this goes back to the fundamental questions of what your audience wants to read, see and watch. In digital marketing, customers, not brands, drive interaction, so you want to give them information or an experience that’s relevant or useful to them. If you can prove yourself with valuable content, customers are more likely to invest in you.

9. Track Your Content

Creating compelling, useful content is crucial. A well-defined content strategy is essential for guiding the tracking and analysis process. Without it, your whole strategy will collapse. However, even the most incredible copy in the world is fairly useless if you just dump it online and don’t monitor it. You need to track the performance of every post, see what’s faring well versus what’s dying, and determine if your conversion goals are being met. Conversions simply refer to desired actions you want people to take (clicks, downloads, sales, etc.), and almost always result from the effectiveness of your content marketing efforts.

It’s important to remember here that you probably won’t win big right out of the gate. Because content marketing is relatively new, there are no iron-clad strategies. But tracking your efforts will allow you to tweak your strategy, and bring you closer to your goals.

Kuno Creative
The Author

Kuno Creative

Kuno Creative is more than an inbound marketing agency. We blend the best of inbound marketing with demand generation to achieve long-term growth with swift marketing results.
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