Author Archives: Amrit Hallan

About Amrit Hallan

Amrit Hallan is a professional content writer who helps businesses improve their conversion rate through credible and compelling content writing. His main strength lies in writing search engine optimized content without compromizing quality and meaningfulness.

16 highly effective email writing tips

Highly effective email writing tips

Highly effective email writing tips.

You use emails every day. You use them in your office. You use them for email marketing. Students and teachers these days are heavily using emails to communicate with each other.

How to make your email writing effective?

You make your email writing effectively by

  1. Writing clear-cut subject lines.
  2. Using the opening sentence convincingly.
  3. Using personal greetings instead of nameless greetings.
  4. Identifying yourself clearly.
  5. Keeping your message short and crisp.
  6. Proofreading your email writing multiple times.
  7. Being regular with your email writing.
  8. Not bombarding the recipients with too many messages.
  9. Keeping your messages scannable and easy to read quickly.
  10. Avoiding using too friendly a tone.
  11. Briefly introducing yourself if people don’t know you.
  12. Avoiding sending one-liners.
  13. Avoiding words in your subject line that can get you marked as a spammer.
  14. Always having a “why” for sending out the email message.
  15. Avoiding clichés and hackneyed words and expressions.
  16. Not forgetting to include call to action.

Since email is used for communication, and since you are not present in front of the person, your email message must accomplish the entire job of communicating effectively and convincingly.

You may like to check out Pro-email writing services for your everyday email writing needs.

Here are 10 highly effective email writing tips you can use to make sure that your email is delivered the message you want them to deliver.

1. Write a clear-cut subject line

You do not have to bother with the subject line if you are writing to your relatives or friends because they are anyway going to open your email.

Your subject line matters when you’re sending emails to people who may not open your message because their priorities are different or maybe they are distracted or they are totally indifferent towards your email.

In such a case scenario, it is very important to write an unambiguous subject line. Clearly state what is inside the email message and what is the purpose of your message.

Keep your subject line short and succinct. Make it convincing if it is a marketing message.

Avoid using spammy words.

2. Use a convincing first sentence

Your first sentence is going to decide if people are going to read your message. Make it as convincing as possible.

How do you write a convincing first sentence? Address the problem that your email intends to solve or mention the issue your email intends to raise.

Cut to the chase.

3. Use a personal greeting

“Hello Sophie” or “Dear Sophie” is much better than “Hey there!” or “Dear friend”.

Of course, if you don’t know the name of the person you can’t use his or her name. All the more necessary that when you are sending out emails, at least know their names.

4. Identify yourself clearly

Identifying yourself clearly solves many purposes. Even if people know you and they would open your message no matter what you write, they may inadvertently miss it simply because you fail to identify yourself clearly.

Although this is less to do with writing and more to do with your email setting, if people can clearly see “From Amrit Hallan” there will be a better chance of them opening the message because they will know that the message is coming from an awesome content writer.

If they remotely remember you it will help them recognize your name and if they associate your name with a product or a service or some brand and if they want to receive messages about that product or service or brand, your name will prompt them to open your message.

You may also like to read Define your brand voice with quality content writing.

5. Keep your message short

Writing short messages is a very important part of writing effective emails. These days most of your recipients open your messages on their mobile phones and on mobile phones, often it is difficult to read and comprehend long messages.

Even if you are sure that most of your audience constitutes of people who use computers and laptops, it is better to keep your messages short and focused.

This way your readers don’t get distracted.

6. Proofread multiple times

In the times of social media, the quality of writing has drastically deteriorated. It is often stressed that it is not the quality of your writing but the message that counts.

While this may be true when you are writing among your friends and relatives, when it comes to writing professional emails or even among your colleagues and co-workers, how you write and what is the quality of your writing matter a lot.

Your prospective customer may think that if you don’t even care about how you write, how are you going to care about your customers?

Typos and spelling and grammar mistakes reek of carelessness and disrespect.

Hence, proofread your email message after writing initially, multiple times.

7. Be regular with your email writing

This is for those who want to carry out email marketing campaigns. You can carry out highly effective email marketing campaigns if your recipients are familiar with your messages.

Although many people say that “familiarity breeds contempt”, it also breeds a kinship if you become a regular part of people’s lives.

Regularly send them useful information they can benefit from.

Always be sincere.

Remember that when you’re sending out emails, it is for the benefit of the recipients. Even if in the process you are increasing your business, ultimately, people will be receptive to your messages if you can convince them you’re sending them for their sake and not your sake.

Having said that, regularity can be very effective.

8. Don’t bombard them with messages

Just as writing emails regularly can be effective, going overboard can be counter-productive and may end up annoying the recipients.

Usually, one message every day is more than enough. If you can keep them a couple of times in a week, even better.

This is for regular email marketing. If you simply need to communicate regularly with your office colleagues then frequency doesn’t matter, it is always need-based.

9. Keep your messages scannable

Sometimes you can’t help writing longer email messages. If this is the case, you can make it easier for your recipients to read them by making them scannable.

What does writing scannable email messages mean?

Use headings and subheadings to highlight important points.

Use bulleted lists of very short sentences to sum up the main points.

Write one sentence per paragraph.

If formatting is possible, you can even use different colors to highlight different messages, but then, don’t overdo it.

10. Avoid using too friendly a tone

Being extra friendly in your email messages may creep some people out, especially if you’re not close enough to them. You can use whatever tone you feel like when you are writing to friends and family, but when you are writing to your colleagues you need to be a little less informal.

11. Introduce yourself if people don’t know you

Don’t just assume that they are familiar with you.

Although if you’re sending multiple messages you can’t be introducing yourself in complete detail in every message because this may turn off people who check your messages regularly, a one-liner about what you do and what you can deliver can go a long way in keeping people interested in you and developing a sense of familiarity.

12. Avoid sending one-liners

Email clients like Gmail these days allow you to send one-liners by suggesting what to type.

Although these suggestions help you respond quickly especially when conversations are happening in real time, if it has been a few hours since your last communication or the message you are replying to was sent a couple of days ago, write complete sentences so that the recipient can recall what you are writing about. Don’t simply reply with a “Thanks” or a “fine”.

13. Avoid words in the subject line that can get you mistaken for spam

Using all-caps can get you marked as a spammer by email services like Gmail and even Outlook. Expressions like “Earn money” or “Make money” or the dollar sign, can send your message directly to the spam folder.

14. Always have a strong “why” behind why you are writing

Want to give people a reason to open and read your email messages? Then include a strong “why” behind why they should read or pay attention to your message. Give them a compelling reason.

15. Avoid using clichés

Clichés are the common expressions that either we get too used to writing in our email messages and we don’t even realize, or sometimes we use them to sound uber and cool.

For example, whenever I am sending a completed document to my clients I simply write “PFA”. I don’t even write “Please find attached”. Although I do it with my regular clients and not with my recently acquired clients, if possible, you should avoid clichés such as

  • Thank you in advance.
  • I look forward to hearing from you.
  • As per our conversation.
  • To whom it may concern.
  • Sorry for the late reply.

16. Don’t forget to use call to action

Your “call to action” is the action you want people to perform when they have gone through your email message.

If you want them to buy from you, use “buy now”. If you want them to click a link and download your e-book, specifically mention “download my e-book”. If you want them to contact you, write “contact me now”.

It may seem strange, sometimes people don’t perform the action you want them to perform because you haven’t asked them to.

Concluding remarks

Frankly, to be able to write highly effective emails, you must have a compelling reason to write. People are too busy these days.

Although it is fine to write emails just to keep in touch, when you don’t know them personally, it is always better to write when you have something really valuable to offer.

In most of the cases, when you are convincing, when you are excited about what you are communicating, even with little effort you can write highly effective emails.

How to improve search engine rankings of your old content

Improving SEO of your old content

Improving SEO of your old content

In this blog post you are going to learn some ways you can use your old content – content that you have already published – to improve your SEO.

Main topics covered in this blog post

If search engine traffic matters to your business, you must always be thinking how to the improve search engine optimization of your website or blog. You constantly need to work on improving your search engine rankings. For that, often you add new content such as blog posts, web pages and articles.

Why fresh content is constantly needed for better search engine rankings? Why does fresh content improve SEO ranking?

You may like to read: Why it is important to publish fresh content regularly on your website.

There are multiple reasons. Whenever you buy something, you want the latest. The search engines want the same thing for their users. They want to provide them the latest possible information available on the topic they are searching for.

Even people want the latest information. When you want to learn about content marketing or digital marketing, do you want to read what people were doing back in 2014 or you want to know what people are doing in 2020?

Hence, this tendency — both in humans and machines — to constantly look for new content makes it necessary that you regularly add fresh content to your website or blog.

Although adding highly targeted fresh content is always a good and recommended strategy, do you know that you can also improve your search engine rankings by making changes to your existing content. Your old content can also help you improve your SEO.

In this post I’m going to discuss how.

How your old content is invaluable for your SEO

Old content is valuable for your SEO

Old content is valuable for your SEO.

If you don’t want to spend money on writing and publishing fresh content on your website, you can increase as your ranking for free by improving the quality of your existing content.

Remember that whatever SEO you enjoy right now, it has been built on the foundation of your old content, your existing content.

If your website is a few years old and you have been regularly adding new content to your website, you already have a repository with you.

When you had just posted those blog posts and web pages, they may have enjoyed higher search engine rankings but as they got old and as the others published better versions or fresher versions, your high-ranking content got relegated to lower rankings during the proceeding months and years.

The problem sometimes is, you have already covered some important topics in your old content. If you want to write again on these topics, you may end up writing and publishing duplicate content.

Sure, the content will not be exactly similar, but you may have a similar headline or title and most of the information may already be existing in older blog posts and articles.

As a result, you feel bound and constraint. You want to improve rankings for those keywords but since you have already covered them in older blog posts, you do not want to take chances with newer blog posts.

You can be creative with the same ideas. I have multiple times written how you can re-purpose your old content and how you can rejuvenate it and I’m still writing this blog post.

Anyway, the point is, your old content is already indexed and ranked. All you have to do is, spruce it up with updated information, more data, better use of primary and secondary keywords and various other things.

Here are a few things you can do to improve your SEO using your old content:

Choose blog posts or web pages you want to improve for better SEO for chosen keywords

Choose blog posts and web pages that need improvements

Choose blog posts and web pages that need improvements.

Which keyword rankings you want to improve? In which blog posts and web pages you have already covered those keywords?

If you use a content management system like WordPress you can easily search your existing posts and find out titles that match your keyword/keywords.

Quickly search on Google how they currently rank. If they are not ranking well, you can add them to an Excel sheet.

In case you’re using a tool like SEMRush you can quickly run your links through its system and find out what sort of content better ranking links are publishing.

Take note of the information, the number of words, the use of keywords in the title and other attributes of those links.

This will give you an idea of how to change your own web pages and blog posts.

As a less expensive alternative you can also use Serpstat that gives you more or less the same information but without overwhelming you with excessive data and overbearing expense.

Anyway, the point is knowing which pieces of your old content ranking are lower than they were ranking previously for your chosen keywords and what improvements are needed.

Add more content to thin content

Add more content to thin content for better SEO

Add more content to thin content for better SEO.

I’m not crazy about creating long pieces of blog posts and web pages just for the sake of improving SEO, but the size does matter if you’re not regular.

Have you added small blog posts and web pages (300-400 words) thinking that the sheer number would improve your SEO?

They may have given you the initial push and a false sense of security, but ultimately Google seems to prefer long form content, anywhere between 1500-3500 words.

You may like to read: Is longform content always better compared to shorter pieces?

Google aims to provide as much information as possible through a single link so that the user doesn’t have to waste lots of time hopping from one link to another.

If a user finds your link on Google, clicks it, comes to your website, goes through your content, and then comes back on Google and carries out the same search, Google assumes that she didn’t find what she was looking for.

It’s like, she has a problem, she is looking for a solution, Google suggested your link, she visited your link and since she carried out the same search Google assumes that its suggestion wasn’t appropriate and then uses this action to decide your ranking.

The more such incidents take place, the lower your rankings become.

Hence, for every keyword or title, put in as much information as possible.

Consider refurbishing of every piece of your old content as a full-fledged project. Don’t make it into a rush job.

Carry out a thorough auditing. Make note of where you can add new content. Research data. Organize your content in such a manner that your visitors can easily find the information they are looking for.

  1. Increase the length beyond 1500 words.
  2. Organize the text under headings and subheadings.

See if you can improve the title and the description

Re-write title and description of your old content

Re-write title and description of your old content.

Your title and description, the meta information, has a significant impact on your SEO. After all your title appears as a hyperlink in the search results and the hyperlink is followed by the description.

Data has shown that if the search term a user has just used appears in your title as hyperlink, she is more prone to clicking the link.

So, when you are modifying your old content, try to incorporate your main keyword into the title of your blog post or web page and also mention it once, with variations and alternative words, within the description.

Maybe initially you were not very SEO-savvy and you ignored this part of search engine optimization, but now you can make these improvements.

Use images under different sections and headlines

Use images for different sections and headings

Use images for different sections and headings.

I have seen that this has a positive impact on your search engine rankings.

Creating quality images for different sections and headlines can be a time-consuming undertaking, but it is worth your time.

You can use the images to incorporate your keywords but make sure you don’t unnecessarily stuff your keywords otherwise it can have a negative effect on your SEO.

Images also improve your rankings in Google Images.

Use your main keywords within the top 100 words

Use your keywords within the first 100 words

Use your keywords within the first 100 words.

There is a reason for that. It involves both humans and machines.

Humans are in a hurry. They want you to talk about the real thing as soon as possible. The real thing is contained within your keywords assuming your using appropriate keywords.

For example, in this blog post, I’m telling you how to use your old content to improve your SEO.

I have used words like “old content”, “improve SEO” and “search engine optimization” within the 100-word-bracket.

You don’t have to force it. In the beginning of every blog post or web page, just write a small intro of what you’re going to achieve through this blog post or web page. If you do that, you will be automatically covering your primary keywords.

When search engine crawlers crawl your content, sometimes they leave midway due to 100+ reasons. They draw conclusions about your content based on whatever information they were able to glean while partially crawling your content.

This way, if they have crawled even a single paragraph of your link, they will be gathering the relevant keywords from your content and using that information to rank your content.

Place your keywords strategically across the body text of your blog post or web page

Strategically use keywords across your body text

Strategically use keywords across your body text.

Google can easily make out if you are using your keywords just to improve your SEO.

Hence, do not repeat unnecessarily. Spread your keywords over the entire length and breadth of your blog post or web page.

I follow two rules:

  1. Use your keywords every 150-200 words and not less.
  2. Use different variations of your keywords.

For example, I don’t always have to use SEO. I can use search engine optimization. I can use higher rankings. I can use ranking high. I can use better search results. I can use Google rankings. I can use top search results.

These are called LSI keywords – Latent Semantic Indexing.

They give Google an overall idea of what you are talking about in a diverse manner. The algorithm can draw meaning through contextually stringing together your words and sentences for better rankings.

Aim for Featured snippets optimization for better SEO

Example of Google featured snippet

Example of Google featured snippet

Featured snippets are the highlighted, non-sponsored, search results you sometimes see at the top of the search results page.

This Search Engine Land blog post says that if your content gets shown in the Featured snippets section, there can be great SEO gains.

You may like to read: Google’s Featured Snippets: How to rank at #1 with strategic content writing.

The key is, providing the most appropriate answer to the question being asked by the Google user.

Use your keywords in headlines and bulleted lists

Use your keywords in headlines and bulleted lists

Use your keywords in headlines and bulleted lists.

It is important to use your keywords in the page elements that are used to quickly scan your content.

Search engine crawlers give great credence to your text contained within your headlines and bulleted lists.

By simply scanning through your headlines and bulleted lists, people must be able to get the gist of what you are trying to communicate.

Using this logic, search engine algorithms analyse your content based on the scannable elements of your web page or blog post – headlines and bulleted lists.

Improve the overall quality

Improve overall quality of old content to improve SEO

Improve overall quality of old content to improve SEO.

You can add more links as references. If the existing images in these blog posts and web pages are very heavy, you can reduce their size.

In case there are some spelling mistakes you can take care of them. Think of all the ways you can improve the overall quality of your blog posts and web pages.

Make your content mobile friendly

Make your content mobile friendly

Make your content mobile friendly.

Do you know Google ranks your content based on how it looks on mobile devices? If your content does not fit well on mobile devices, it loses its rankings.

You do not have to worry if you have a liquid layout, which means it easily fits on various screen sizes. If this is not the case, you seriously need to consider revamping your website layout.

People on mobile phones do not read long sentences and heavy paragraphs.

Use small paragraphs. Rarely go beyond two sentences in each paragraph.

Use smaller sentences. Smaller sentences are easier to interpret both for humans and search engine algorithms.

No matter how advanced AI gets, if you create overly complicated sentence structures, it becomes difficult for the algorithms to understand what you are trying to say.

Hence, mobile and user-friendly content means

  1. Use shorter sentences.
  2. Use shorter paragraphs – not more than two sentences.
  3. Keep a simple sentence structure.
  4. Don’t digress from your main topic.
  5. Don’t use ambiguous, confusing words just for fun sake.

 

Use your keywords in the last paragraph

Use keywords in the last paragraph

Use keywords in the last paragraph.

Your last paragraph is like the last thoughts that people have after going through your blog post or web page.

You can sum up everything you have described in the blog post. This gives you an opportunity to use your keywords in the last paragraph.

Conclusion about using your old content to improve your rankings

In the race to continuously add fresh content sometimes we end up ignoring our old content, which can be a gold mine.

My experience also tells me that it is easier to revamp existing content than to come up with new content writing ideas.

You already have the material in front of you. In many cases all the needed thoughts are already there. The title is already there. All you have to do is, improve it.

In fact, before publishing your next, new blog post or web page, go through your existing content and make all possible improvements.

This is why your content marketing is not working

Why your content marketing is not working

Why your content marketing is not working

ReadWrite has published 6 reasons why your content marketing might not be working.

You know what? Content marketing is like any other undertaking in your life – it is replete with unpredictable outcomes. Hence, if you have been publishing blog post after blog post and have been keeping yourself busy (or one of your representatives) on social media and still haven’t experienced any significant improvement in your targeted traffic, some signs of disappointment and disenchantment are understandable.

The above post rightly says that “in the majority of the cases, it is not the content that is to be blamed. It is rather the content strategy.”

What exactly is content strategy?

It is

  1. What content you need to publish.
  2. Whom you should target.
  3. Which format of content gives you the biggest leverage.
  4. What platforms you should nurture to promote your content.

The author also says that most people wanting to use content marketing to promote their businesses do the bare minimum. They will just write 300 words because this is what Google recommends (minimum). They will use keywords to “optimize” their content writing rather than writing something meaningful and then using the keywords contextually.

Should you always publish long content? The Post says that you should write at least 1890 words. This number was discovered by Backlinko after analysing 11.8 million Google search results.

How many words you write depends on how much competition your face. About 1 ½ years ago I was working with a client who had hired an SEO company in the UK and this company was using SEMRush to figure out what must be the titles of the web pages and how many words individual web page must have according to the competition faced by that particular keyword or title.

Due to some communication gap, for many webpages I ended up writing more than required. They were upset because they thought that the time was wasted because if those many words were not needed, I shouldn’t have spent time writing them. Whereas, I was focusing on the necessity of the information rather than the word limit.

Why I’m writing this here is because I want to say that how many words you use when writing content for your web pages and blog posts depends on many, and often, weird factors.

When writing for my own blog, I don’t get bogged down by the number of words I must write. Hence, sometimes my blog posts have more than 2000 words, and sometimes they have merely 500 words. It depends on what I want to say at that time.

Bigger content marketing companies come up with surveys, statistics and numbers to aim for because they make big bucks flaunting these numbers.

Personally, what I have experienced is that it is the regularity that matters, coupled with quality and relevance.

Your audience doesn’t respond if your content is not relevant to what they are expecting. I provide content writing services. Sometimes I get obsessed with SEO-related topics but if I write too much on SEO, I will end up attracting the wrong audience because I’m not offering search engine optimization services. For me, SEO is intertwined with quality and relevant content writing.

Regularity is very important because even if you provide great content people need to come across your content on an ongoing basis. Thousands of businesses are continuously publishing content. Even if it is not great content, this content manages to occupy space in people’s minds as well as on the web. Hence you need to remain visible.

Here is my personal advice:

  1. Don’t worry much about words and instead, focus on providing as much “useful” information as possible.
  2. Maintain quality and relevance and give it precedence over regularity.
  3. Be regular.

I know, explaining this to clients who want to pay according to the number of words their blog posts and web pages must have, can be difficult. Although most of them except that it is the quality that matters, they all aim for a certain number of words.

I can understand their worry. If they don’t give their content writer a “word-target” the writer may not spend much time on each topic.

Something to ponder on for me in the coming weeks.

How to use content to market your business during Covid-19

Using content for marketing during Covid-19

Using content for marketing during Covid-19.

Marketing budgets are being slashed all over the world. This Forrester research says that marketing budgets all over the world have definitely declined due to the Covid-19 outbreak, but they are expected to start going up by the end of 2020 and may recover by 2021.

But it depends on which side the unpredictable camel of the outbreak sits. Nothing is for sure right now. Many countries don’t even know what their current position vis-à-vis the outbreak is.

According to the above research, the CMO’s are taking the money out of out-of-home advertisements and moving the budgets to digital marketing for obvious reasons.

Despite the lunatics denying the severity of Covid-19, lesser number of people are moving out and are spending time working from home and consequently, being in front of the screen for longer durations.

Another thing many marketers are stressing is that, you shouldn’t stop marketing. A McGraw-Hill research of the 1981 and 82 recession found that businesses that marketed aggressively during the recession had 256% higher sales than those that did not.

But how do you market yourself if your business is making less money than before?

The answer is content marketing.

You spend less money than you spent on traditional advertisements, and it is far more effective. Especially now, when digital marketing is more effective than traditional marketing.

You can either publish original content or you can re-purpose your existing content, or you can do a mix of both.

The point is, now is the right time to let your customers and clients know that you are still in the game (you haven’t been destroyed by the Covid-19 outbreak) and you are still actively promoting yourself.

The dust is settling. In the early months of the year people were caught off-guard. Emotions were running high. People were scared and concerned. They were caught unaware.

Although the virus is widespread and a big part of the population is infected (in New Delhi right now 33% of the population is reported to have been infected by the virus), people are less worried. A lot has to do with the ignorance about the effects of the virus, but many businesses are getting back to their feet.

https://twitter.com/AmritHallan/status/1285550801151119361

During this time, it is nice if you set a healthy example and use content marketing and digital marketing to promote yourself. Here are a few things you can do with your content:

Repurpose existing content

If you feel you have already got lots of content on your website or blog but you need to add new content, you can consider repurposing your existing content.

You may like to read: How to re-purpose old content?

Repurposing your content means generating new formats of content out of your existing content pieces.

For example, if you have a detailed blog post on how to do content marketing on mobile phones, perhaps you can create a slideshow or a video. You can also create a PDF e-book that people can download.

Refocus on your email marketing

Email marketing is a big part of content marketing, in fact, the most effective aspect of it. When you send emails to your prospects, your message appears right in their inbox.

You may like to read 15 ultimate content writing hacks for successful email marketing.

Of course, before you can send them emails, you need to win their trust so that they regularly open your emails.

Winning the trust of your email recipients is a different ballgame and requires a dedicated post, but for the time being, you need to understand that since most of the people are confined to their homes, they are more receptive to receiving valuable information through emails.

This Campaign Monitor study has revealed that more people are opening their emails than before. From February to March, businesses reported a 16% change in the open rate of emails.

This American Express blog post has shared some insights on the emerging email marketing trends during Covid-19 and what you can do to make your email marketing as effective as possible.

Accelerate your content publishing

Since more people are working from their homes, they are consuming targeted content with greater frequency than when they were going to their offices.

Also, while working in isolation, people are searching for relevant information to solve their day-to-day professional problems.

Basically, everything on the Internet is content. What you publish on your website, whether they are web pages or blog posts, is content. What you publish on social media, is content. When you send an email marketing campaign, you are broadcasting content.

To publish purposeful content during the outbreak, you first need to find out what your core audience is looking for.

For example, my clients want to improve their search engine visibility through quality content. These days, on my blog, I’m publishing lots of content that can help you improve your search engine rankings vis-à-vis the Covid-19 outbreak.

Information is another thing that people are constantly looking. They want to remain informed. Whatever business they are dealing with, they want to get the right information about whether the business can deliver or not.

You can also sail your content marketing boat on uncharted waters. If you have never published case studies, maybe now is the right time because they are a big confidence booster. If you have never published videos on your website, perhaps now is the right time.

Content marketing can help you in multiple ways during these trying times. For example, it can help you stay in front of your customers and clients. You can help them by providing them useful information and as a result, increase customer loyalty.

It was also set in motion your core content marketing strategy even after Covid is over.

B2B marketing content consumption increased during Covid-19

B2B content marketing has increased during Covid-19

B2B content marketing has increased during Covid-19

So says this PRWeb report. It is understandable. Since most of the people are confined to their homes, whether they are freelancers or full-time employees of some company, one of the best ways of reaching out to these people is through high-quality marketing content.

In-person, face-to-face meetings have been stopped or even banned at many places. Conferences and workshops stand cancelled for the foreseeable future. The B2B marketplace depends a lot on these communication channels.

You may like to read The relevance of storytelling when you’re writing content for the B2B market.

Not all findings notice an increase in the spending on content marketing especially in the B2B arena. For example, this McKinsey survey found mixed reactions among its responders.

Sales leaders are already moving quickly to navigate the crisis, with the best ones focusing on how to make targeted changes that help their businesses weather the storm and start preparing for the recovery. As we update this survey in the coming weeks, we will also share perspectives on planning for the recovery as well as reimagining the new normal for sales.

Many B2B companies are reducing their marketing spend but on the other hand, there are many companies who have increased or maintained their current budgets thinking that there is more reason to keep in touch with their core customer base in whichever way possible.

Digital interactions are obviously increasing whether they are through targeted content or video events.

90% marketing among the B2B circles is happening through video conferencing, mobile phones and other digital platforms.

This LinkedIn study reveals that 42% of the respondents faced budget cuts in marketing (whether conventional marketing or content marketing), which is a big challenge. 47% marketers said that they have increased focus on emotional and human-centric content during Covid-19. Consequently 19% confessed that there has been a drastic reduction in the product-focused content.

You may like to read The importance of quality content during the Coronavirus outbreak.

The author of the above LinkedIn report rightly comments that marketers have no idea how to deal with the current situation. They have a precedents with other market conditions such as the recession or the bursting of the dot-com bubble, but the Covid-19 outbreak is a completely new, unexpected phenomena that engulfed the entire world within a matter of a couple of weeks.

This Forbes article says:

The pandemic has led to nations limiting business activities, which has added immense pressure on business owners. While some organizations have closed, the remaining are left to deal with the harrowing aftermath. They are facing unprecedented challenges, including supply chain disruptions, a slump in customer demand, regulatory changes and increased uncertainty about the future.

The reality is that you cannot ignore marketing. Ad hoc responses don’t pay dividends. You need to put a strategy in place. I personally believe that the Covid-19 situation is going to last for a long time, and we need to prepare accordingly.