Content Marketing
Institute’s 2017 content marketing research says that 85% of B2B marketers
ascribe Content creation as the No.1 reason for increased success in the last
year.
No wonder, 91% of top marketers are
going all in for content marketing.
But there are also some companies
which are stumbling in their content marketing activities. Sometimes badly. Why
is that?
While the intentions are pure and the
teams are ready to do the hard works, some basic but dangerous mistakes creep
in which takes you away from the promised land of success.
Identify these 7 mistakes in your
content marketing, dismantle them immediately and unleash the potent impact of
content marketing from your arsenal.
#1
Not Having a Content Marketing Strategy
Fire.Fire.Fire.
Endless rounds into deep dark space and then wondering why there is no bull’s
eye?
Content
marketing needs Strategy. The strategy does not mean you write a 5000-page tome
on what you will do. All you need is a clear picture of the Why, Who, What, How
and When and Where. I can’t stress how this is important. I see a lot of
startups chasing the new shiny thing or whining about algo changes in social
media.Techniques later, strategy first.
Having a
content marketing strategy helps in guiding your team’s efforts through the
minefield of distractions of new technologies and tactics.
Strategy
first means you map out the Why and How clearly so that every day you are
taking action which is focused and on target. You have made your strategy but
is it linked to your overall marketing strategy?
#2
Not Linking Content Marketing to the Overall Inbound or Total Marketing
Strategy
Just having
content marketing
strategy is not enough. Content marketing is an integral part of inbound
marketing but is only one part.
There are
several key components e.g. developing a buyer persona, doing SEO Audit and
making your audit SEO friendly, having a social media strategy; there are other
moving parts in your overall marketing strategy.
When your
content marketing strategy is not aligned with the overall marketing strategy,
then you run the risk of your efforts falling part. Why is that?
If different
parts of your marketing strategy are moving in different directions, then your
customers may get a confused picture.
Worse, those
customers who have started moving through your marketing funnel may drop out if
the funnel is not conversion optimized to move through to BOFU.
When the
content marketing strategy is developed, make sure you as a CMO get all the
team together to get everyone aligned. Have the sales representatives also at
the meeting. This is to make sure that the marketing qualified leads are passed
on smoothly to the sales for them to close the sales.
Handover the
written content marketing strategy to each one in the team.
You have a
documented content marketing strategy, haven’t you?
#3
Not Having a Documented Content Marketing Strategy
The ROI
difference between having a documented strategy and not having one is huge.
Documented
does not mean you print it in fancy photo paper and have a diamond-studded
cover.
It does mean
that the strategy, the steps and who is responsible for what and when are
clearly outlined. Having a checklist and roles clearly defined is a must.
This removes
any errors which may happen due to miscommunication. Also, a documented content
marketing strategy means that you will have a clear idea of what you are
testing and how you will measure it. Remember what you will measure, will
happen.
A written
content marketing strategy also means that you and everyone in the team will
have a content calendar to work out.
#4
Not Developing a Content Calendar
I cannot
emphasize how important this point. We all have a desk calendar, haven’t we? It
may be a pretty
physical calendar or a desktop calendar with alerts.
What is the
main function of this planner?
At one
glance, you can see how the week and month is going to unfold. Also, it shows
how the content calendar is aligned to your business calendar.
You may have
a launch coming up or a major UX overhaul or new modules which you are
offering. Seeing how the content amplifies these events or works around them
helps in the team being very clear about the big picture. The content
calendar also helps in planning and executing content which you love. Not
really!
#5
Not Bothering About Promotion
Derek
Halpern from Social
Triggers says that content marketing is 80% promotion and 20% content
Promotion
means you need to make sure that as many prospects get to see the content which
you have created for them. Are you ticking off all these promotion
possibilities?
·
Send content
on your owned media like your own twitter, facebook, LinkedIn, Google+ and
Pinterest to name a minimum
·
Create video
and visual content on YouTube, Pinterest and Instagram
·
Having a
cycle of promotion for your content. Be aware of changed rules for Twitter
where they don’t allow repeat content
·
Sending your
content to your email list is the minimum
·
As part of
your link building strategy, connecting with influencers and requesting them to
share your content on their networks
The road to
success is paved with mistakes. However, some mistakes are like deep pits. To
come back from them while your competition is racing is difficult. Avoid the
ones listed above and put your marketing machine into full throttle
#6
Falling in Love with One’s Content
I get it.
You put sweat and tears (hopefully no blood) into making your magnum opus ie
your content. And then you fall in love with your content. You post the content
and close your eyes waiting for the applause. Instead, you hear crickets,
no one is engaging or watching your content. It happens.
The next
step is critical. If you get angry (“they don’t know how to appreciate my
content”) or sad (“it's pointless, I will never get my voice across”) then you
are not a marketer but a failed writer.
What you
need to do is compare with other content which you have generated:
·
Check your
buyer persona - does your content reflect their problems and their journey?
·
Check
whether you have thrown too many ideas – it is better to have one thruline than
many unconnected ideas
·
Check if it
lacks emotional content – emotional content is engaging, data is boring if it
does not tell a story
·
Check the
day, time of the day – sometimes other events may have absorbed all the
attention or the time you are posting coincides with heavy workload and your
prospect is not online at that time
While you
may be right about the content, you should make sure you don’t obsess about
technology.
#7
Focus on Technology Instead of How Valuable It is
You bought the latest high-end
camera and just to be sure, even hired a videographer. You made sure the
lighting is straight out of a Spielberg movie, and the sound is worthy of an
Oscar.
You dressed like a diva and
delivered your content like Churchill. You had the best scheduling software
deliver the message right in front of your prospects noses. And the prospects
turned up their noses. Why? Oh, Why? Because it was not relevant to them.
Relevance trumps technology. Make
content which reflects the buyer’s journey and their problems and your proposed
solutions. Technology is only a support. Developing content with the right
technology is just the start, what is your promotion plan?
1 Comments
Thanks for the warning!
ReplyDeleteWill definitely avoid these mistakes
Online Business
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