Category Archives: Content Marketing

How to measure the success of your content

Measuring-success-of-your-contentMany people wonder how to measure the success of their content, especially when they have to spend money and time on getting content for their website or blog.

Just like any other aspect of your life, success can be measured in terms of tangible returns. The success of your content is not as esoteric and vague as it is made out to be by some content writers and content marketers. Solid results can be obtained from your content and the metrics of success can be as clearly defined as in any other marketing field, or for that matter, even better.

Whenever you need to measure the success of an event or an effort, you need “before” and “after” data. If you haven’t yet started your content marketing and you haven’t yet started publishing content on your website or blog, you must make note of your current situation. Gather data on

  1. How much traffic you are getting from search engines
  2. How much traffic you are getting from social media and social networking websites
  3. How much traffic you are getting from your email marketing campaigns
  4. How many people are subscribing to your email updates on a daily basis
  5. What is the engagement level on your website (how many people leave comments on your blog posts and online forums)
  6. How much time people are currently spending on your website
  7. How many back links you have got
  8. How much you are part of conversations happening on other websites and blogs
  9. How your primary and secondary keywords are performing right now
  10. How many business queries you are getting on a daily or weekly basis
  11. How much business you are generating currently

The list can have more attributes but this can give you a fair idea of the data that you should make note of before beginning to publish regular content on your website or blog and initiate your content marketing strategy.

Unless due to some fluke or unless you have got a ton of money to spend on marketing, your content won’t give you success in a few days or even a few weeks. You will have to observe the performance of your content for a few months before you can see the signs of success.

What are the signs?

Content marketing is very scientific whether one realizes it or not. The sort of content that you publish on your website or blog is going to decide how success manifests.

Depending on what sort of content you use in your content marketing strategy you may experience more traffic from search engines, more people talking about your brand on websites like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn, more people clicking the links in your email marketing campaigns, more people linking back to your website or individual webpages, more people spending more time on your website and eventually, more people doing business with you.

The greatest measure of success of your content is that people begin to trust you. They begin to recognize you. People trust you if through your content, you deliver value and they perceived the value of your content.

After publishing content and using the available channels to distribute your content you will need to revisit the 11 metrics mentioned above and see if they have improved or not.

  1. Has your search engine traffic increased?
  2. Has traffic from social media and social networking websites increased?
  3. Are you getting more clicks from your email marketing campaigns?
  4. Are greater number of people subscribing to your email campaigns?
  5. Has engagement on your website or blog increased and its quality improved?
  6. Are people spending more time on your website?
  7. Compared to the time when you had just started your content marketing, has the number of back links to your website or blog increased?
  8. Are more conversations taking place about your website or your brand on other websites and blogs?
  9. Has search engine traffic for your primary and secondary keywords (keywords that you are using in your content) increased?
  10. Are you getting more business queries on daily and weekly basis?
  11. Has your overall business increased ever since you started content marketing?

I would say, if the answers to even 2-3 questions above are yes, it can give you enough data to measure the success of your content.

Content marketing for local business

Local businesses can use content marketing to their great advantage but unfortunately, most of the local businesses aren’t even aware of the concept. I’ll give a personal example.

The housing society where I live has a Facebook page. The page was created so that the residents could exchange ideas and although, the exchange of ideas does happen, people mostly post messages to promote their local businesses, and one of such businesses is a small catering business that is perhaps run from within one of the apartments in another housing society.

In the beginning, when they hadn’t yet created a nuisance on our housing society’s Facebook page, I had contacted them because I was interested in getting early breakfast from them (which, they don’t provide, but promote anyway). Now I don’t remember how I shared my phone number with them, they also included me in a WhatsApp group. Later on I had to block their number because they were sending 5-10 messages every day about what a great catering service they have and what are their offerings for the day.

As I am always excited about helping new businesses in the beginning I advised them to register themselves with Google Local. I also told them not to spam the Facebook page and the WhatsApp group but, although, they didn’t know how to set up themselves in Google Local and I provided them step-by-step instruction, they didn’t take me seriously when I told them that continuously posting senseless messages is going to be counter-productive. Eventually people started complaining about them on the Facebook page and like me, many blocked them on WhatsApp.

Although the catering service is using the available content distribution channels like Facebook and WhatsApp, they are not providing any value through their content. They’re overdoing it by posting their menu multiple times in a day. They are not making personal connections. I help them with the Google Local listing, I initially showed interest in their service and even interacted with them multiple times but even with me, they have never tried to make a connection. They were simply crowding my timeline with their menus and photographs of the food they are cooking. They never even thanked me for the Google Local listing help. And the worst part is, when I eventually tried to order breakfast, they informed me that they couldn’t deliver, and that was the last straw.

A very nice example of creating a presence through providing content (in the form of a low-cost service) is the hair-salon chain owner Habeeb. Although he runs a chain, at the micro level, what he is doing is, running a local business. Although in the conventional content marketing sense, it doesn’t use the Internet, but it definitely uses the “freemium” service to attract customers.

In the local malls, mostly in the basement lobby, he hires a small space and erects a temporary, mostly wooden structure. In the wooden box (with good interiors) a sleek, unisex salon is run. You can get a nice haircut at 20-30% of what you would normally pay to a nice salon in a mall or a posh market. The hairstylists (normally very young trainees) are very courteous and friendly and give you a basic haircut with all the modern gadgetry. Seats are always occupied and one only has to wait for his or her turn. The place makes good money, it is very affordable, it offers good service and the initial investment is very little. Then, after a couple of years, he opens the big saloon where you have to pay the normal posh-salon rates. Does brisk business.

He doesn’t have to spend on advertising; instead, he advertises round-the-clock in various malls. Everybody is familiar with the name because the box is always set up at the most crowded place. At a fraction of the cost of conventional advertising, he doesn’t just create a presence for himself, but also makes good money while laying ground for the bigger, five-star salon.

What has it got to do with content marketing for local business? I think many of you already know what I’m talking about.

He is basically indulging in content marketing as a local business. Instead of providing content in terms of text, video and audio, he is rendering the service at a highly affordable rate at strategic locations. In the local community, instead of stepping on everybody’s toes, he is providing a useful service. Those who don’t want to get a haircut at a roadside unkempt barbershop but also don’t want to spend a ton of money in a salon, are very thankful that there is a place that is clean, well-lit and efficient and all the hair stylists are neat and clean and courteous.

But not every local business can afford to provide such a service either for free or even at a lower cost. Such local businesses can use content marketing to their great advantage.

Local businesses can use content marketing channels like Facebook, YouTube and to an extent even WhatsApp to stay connected with their customers without annoying them with useless updates. As a customer, from a catering service, I don’t need an update on their daily menu, but I definitely need to know what sort of service they are running, whether they are reliable or not and what the others think of them. For that they can create a Facebook page and invite people in the neighbourhood to join. They can create a food channel on YouTube. They can start a blog detailing how they cook various items.

As long as content is relevant, it doesn’t always have to be something about your business. Yes, eventually, it is about your brand, would be useful. Be a part of a community through useful content. Encourage people to talk about your business on social networking websites, blogs and even YouTube videos. Make videos of your satisfied customers if they don’t mind and then post them on YouTube. Create an Instagram account or a Snapchat account if you want to post daily pics of your food items.

Stay tuned – in the coming days I will be publishing posts on how different local businesses can use content marketing to their advantage.

Create Great Content for Your Mobile Marketing Campaign to Get Customers Engaged with Your Brand

mobile-content-marketing-campaign-with-text-messagingTo engage customers with your brand, along with other platforms you also need to focus on your mobile marketing campaign. According to Search Engine Journal, “4.2 billion people access social media sites via mobile devices with 189 million Facebook users being ‘mobile only’.”

This means that your website must be optimized for mobile use, and the content you share needs to be short, to the point, and interesting to potential customers reading small pieces of content on their mobile devices.

To engage your target demography, you need to create content that has a message people want to share with their friends and family.

Concentrate on Your Target Demography When Creating Content

Your potential customers are using their mobile devices more than ever before. When you concentrate on your target demography and write content they find interesting, you need to make it easy for the content to be shared on social media platforms.

Keep your content focused on your message, and don’t create content that is boring. When your content is unfocused, it is going to fall flat no matter where you share it. When you are creating content, strive for quality over quantity every time.

Keep Your Content to the Point

When you are creating content for use on mobile devices, keep your content to the point. Your content should be broken up into readable portions, including:

  • The use of bullet points makes your content easier to read.
  • Content needs bold sub titles to break up long paragraphs.
  • Short, to the point sentences make your content easier to digest.

Increase Your Mobile Marketing with an SMS Texting Platform

SMS texting platforms offer you several opportunities to reach your customers where they spend their time the most, on their mobile devices. To use an SMS texting platform, you must create an opt-in campaign to get permission to send marketing messages to your customer base.

Once you have members signed up for your texting campaign, you can create valuable content and share it with your customers through text messaging. While text messages offer you a number of opportunities to engage with your customers, one is to send links to the blog posts you create for your website.

Texting Offers Instant Access to Your Customers

The ability to text your customers at a moment’s notice is invaluable when it comes to mobile content marketing strategies. You can offer deals that are time-limited, and you can target specific customers based on where they are located.

If you have multiple locations for your business, this is an excellent way to keep track of your customers and only send out messages to customers that will be able to cash in on your deal. An SMS texting software opens up a whole new avenue of mobile marketing, and it is essential in today’s competitive business world.

Getting People to Share Your Content

To get customers to share your content, it should have a strong message and say something about the person sharing it. For example, content that makes a statement is going to be shared more than content that doesn’t have anything new to share. While you don’t want to create content that is offensive, content that has an edginess to it is more likely to go viral. When you want your content to be shared, it should be interesting to read.

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10 types of content that make your content marketing successful

10-types-of-content-that-make-your-content-marketing-successfulOn what does the success of your content marketing depend? The success of your content marketing depends on two things:

  1. How relevant your content is
  2. How you make sure that your content reaches the right audience

Both these factors are interdependent. The second factor is self-explanatory. I mean, once you have created high-quality, relevant content, you need to use all the channels at your disposal to disseminate your content and make sure it reaches the right audience.

Before I proceed, how do you define a successful content marketing?

  1. You create high-quality, relevant content on an ongoing basis, for a long time
  2. Your content reaches the right audience
  3. Your content elicits the right response from the right audience

What’s the right response?

  1. People read/view your content
  2. People respond to your content
  3. People share your content on social media websites
  4. Your sales increase

Now we come to the moot topic of this post: 10 types of content that make your content marketing successful. Here they are:

  1. Content that creates a sense of urgency without misleading people.
  2. Content that makes people feel important.
  3. Content that tells an interesting story, especially with a lesson.
  4. Content that inspires us to take an action that can turn our lives for better.
  5. Content that reconfirms our beliefs without pandering to our misconceptions.
  6. Content that educates us and also entertains us at the same time.
  7. Content that challenges our beliefs without hurting our feelings, with hard facts.
  8. Content that throws at us an element of surprise.
  9. Content that gives us a fresh point of view.
  10. Content that elicits strong emotions, like sadness, happiness or joy.

These are the 10 types of content that make your content marketing successful.

How you can band content marketing and SEO together

Content Marketing and SEO

SEO is a big reason why most of my clients pursue content marketing. Even today I got a query from a German client asking for SEO content that will help them improve their search engine rankings and draw targeted traffic to their website.

SEO and content marketing are related to each other but the problem is most of the small business owners think that the sole purpose of publishing content on their website is to improve their SEO. On the surface there is nothing wrong in this perception, the problem arises when people completely focus on SEO, ignoring the inherent strength of publishing quality, engaging content on the website and elsewhere.

The basic purpose of publishing content and then distributing it using various channels available to you is to provide value to your target audience so that you can establish a long-lasting relationship with them. You need to provide them valuable information. They should hear from you regularly so that they begin to recognise you whenever they come across your content. The purpose of content marketing is creating a recognition space for you and your brand so that it becomes easier to find you, to relate to you and to feel like doing business with you because of a positive association.

Why people use content marketing solely to improve their SEO?

In the beginning content really helped you improve your search engine rankings. Back then the search engine ranking algorithms weren’t as complicated and choosy as they are today. Have 20 webpages talking about a particular topic (with different titles) using your keywords and you could rank well. For straight 2 years in 2004-2005 I used to rank on the 1st page of Google for the phrases “freelance content writer” and “online content writer” because I had published lots of articles on my website talking about these 2 phrases– it was my mistake that I couldn’t take advantage of this privilege and didn’t pay much attention to maintaining my rankings. Maintain an acceptable keyword density, use the keywords in your title and publish 20-30 blog posts and articles and you could enjoy good rankings.

Since then, much has changed, but people’s perception hasn’t. Firstly, they still think that indiscriminately using keywords in their blog posts and articles is going to get them higher search engine rankings and secondly, the confuse content marketing with SEO. Both are partly related and partly unrelated.

Search engines are constantly aiming at indexing high-quality content and while indexing and ranking high quality content, although they take note of the sort of language and words being used, more important is the relevance and the quality of content you are creating and publishing. How is it going to be useful to the search engine users, this is their primary concern. How do they find out whether a particular piece of content is of good quality? There are thousands of factors but the primary factors are:

  • How relevant is the title of the blog post or webpage you have just created
  • How well-written the content is
  • How the keywords have been used (yes, the keywords still matter)
  • How easy it is to access the content on the web page
  • How easy it is to view your content using different devices
  • How many influences are talking about your content
  • How many trustworthy inbound links your content attracts
  • How much buzz it is creating on social media websites
  • How frequently you publish quality content

All these attributes solely depend on the combination of quality, relevance and usability of your content. A well-meaning title naturally contains the subject you are handling. People naturally share content that is useful. Engaging content encourages people to talk about it through blog posts and social media updates. People link to your content if they like it.

All these factors are taken into consideration by the search engines while ranking your content.

So while it is important to take care of SEO (so that people who are meant to find your content can find it easily) this shouldn’t be the sole objective of your content marketing strategy. You use content marketing to improve your conversion rate and draw people to your website naturally.