Category Archives: Content Marketing

5 ways to make your content social media friendly

5 ways to make your content social media friendly

5 ways to make your content social media friendly

Do you often worry that your content is not being shared on social media and social networking websites?

Aren’t people paying attention to your content or they are not motivated to share it on their social media timelines?

If this is the problem, are you publishing social media friendly content?

What exactly do we mean by “social media friendly” content?

Although it is very important that people abundant share your content on social media, before going ahead with sharing my other thoughts with you, I would like to stress that don’t overtly worry about the social media. Write and publish useful content and make it easy for people to share it and the rest automatically.

There was a time when people knew of Internet by email.

Many people thought that if you were checking email, you were “Interneting”.

Yes, they were familiar with the concept of websites, but it was mostly email.

The same happens with social media these days.

It is so prevalent that many people, people who haven’t used the Internet much before, think that it’s Facebook, Twitter and YouTube that are Internet rather than millions of websites.

In rural India, shopkeepers selling Mobile Sim cards or people running mobile repair shops are charging Rs. 50 to install Facebook on mobile phones and many think that Facebook itself is the Internet. They access the web for the first time through Facebook.

This means that social media and social networking websites have grown into a totally separate entity and for the purpose of content marketing ignoring these websites is like ignoring the telephone or the email while trying to do business in the contemporary world.

Just as you need good search engine rankings to promote your content, you also need to optimize your content for social media and this is what you mean by making your content “social media friendly”.

Your content is social media friendly when

  • People feel like sharing it on their timelines (Facebook, Twitter, Google+ or LinkedIn)
  • They don’t need to modify your headlines and descriptions in order to share your links
  • Sharing your content is just a matter of a couple of clicks

Why do these traits matter? Why do they make a big difference in the way people share your content on social media and social networking websites?

Most of the sharing on social media is instinctive. Sure, professionals like me take extra pains to share stuff even when it is unfriendly and difficult to share, but a normal user doesn’t take extra pains.

Hence, your content should be very easily shareable, preferably, just through a single or a couple of clicks or taps.

Previously I used to think that why bother with people who don’t want to make much effort to share your content, but then I realized that it is not about these individuals.

Even if they themselves are not interested enough to go to extra lengths, your content gets visibility and it may reach people who are more serious about what you have to say.

Why it is important for your content to get social media visibility?

Take for example Facebook. There are more than 2.45 billion monthly active users over there. On daily basis, 1.62 million people use Facebook actively. 7 in 10 US adults use Facebook (source). 89% marketers use Facebook for brand marketing (source).

LinkedIn has more than 575 million users and 260 million monthly active users (source).

On an average, people spend 3 hours on social media and social networking websites. 54% consumers use social media to research products before buying (source).

Many social networking companies, including Facebook, are taking measures that when people switch on their phones, they log into Facebook in the beginning itself so that whatever activities they carry out, they do them within the Facebook ecosystem.

I’m not saying I endorse such developments, but it shows that an increasing number of people might be doing most of their activities, including communication, newsgathering, product evaluation and buying and selling, within social networking ecosystems.

Advertising and PPC campaigns are always an option, but you can increase your reach by writing and publishing social media friendly content on a regular basis. Interactive posting of content, especially created by brands and businesses themselves, get more attention from social media users compared to advertisements.

For a very long time I have been thinking of dabbling with infographics.

I recently tried to work with a neighborhood graphic designer but although she is good at using image manipulation tools like Photoshop and Illustrator, she was terribly lacking on the creative side.

We were working on a project and I had to tell her practically everything.

The only blessing was that whatever I told her she was able to accomplish it.

Anyway, this is the infographic that I have created titled 5 ways to make your content social media friendly. It isn’t much but it’s definitely a beginning.

5 ways to make your content social media friendly

The five ways are:

  1. Create compelling headlines: Your headlines are, as far as optimizing your content for social media goes, the most important aspects of your content.Compelling in this context means they should invoke strong feelings, so strong that people should be driven to share your content on their timelines.
  2. Publish irresistible content: In my daughter’s social sciences book there is a headline that goes something like this, “one man’s garbage is another’s treasure”.It is about the garbage collectors who make money off the garbage we throw away so thoughtlessly.

    So what is irresistible and what is not, depends on individual need, but catering to your niche, create content that is highly useful and valuable.

    It should solve some purpose and this is why people will share your content.

    When sharing your content people must feel that they are doing a service to their friends and followers.

    Always think: why would people share what you’re writing?

  3. Use social buttons: It’s easier to share content when you just have to click a button.I like the way you can share certain portions of blog posts and articles published on Medium.

    The relevant, share-worthy portions have a Twitter icon nearby. You just need to click the icon to broadcast that particular sentence.

  4. Use social optimization tags: These tags normally reside in the header area of your web page.In a typical web page there are already title, description and keywords tags.

    You can also have dedicated tags for Facebook and Twitter to instruct various social media and social networking channels to automatically pick up customized headings and descriptions rather than using the default ones.

    If you are using WordPress to manage your website or blog, you can easily get plug-ins to achieve this.

  5. Choose publishing time carefully: You will need some time to figure out during what time of the day your target audience is most active on social media and social networking websites.Publish your content when there is greatest chance of it being noticed and shared.
  6. Publish different content for different social media platforms: Content consumption on different platforms have different patterns.Content that is suitable for LinkedIn may not be suitable for Facebook and content that is suitable for Facebook may not be suitable for Twitter. Repeated testing will tell you which type of content in your industry performs better on which social media platform.

 

10 benefits of hiring a content marketing agency

10 benefits of hiring a content marketing agency

Hiring a content marketing agency can immediately boost your brand presence on the Internet by streamlining your operations and giving you a more professional touch. Although the debate whether a business should hire in-house content writers or outsource content marketing to an outside agency has been going on since time immemorial (or at least since content marketing began to be known as a potent tool) the benefits of hiring a content marketing agency are so overwhelming that even big businesses who have all the resources at their hand to hire complete teams of content writers and content marketers, now and then work with outside agencies.

Why is there this debate about whether to hire a content marketing agency or to work with in-house content writers and content marketing specialists?

There is nothing special about this debate. It normally originates from bigger companies and as smaller companies have this tendency to follow big business, they also begin to get into this loop of indecision. Whether it makes sense to hire an in-house team of content writers and content marketers or not is a different issue, but the thing is, big businesses have enough money and resources to play around with various whims. They have complete departments costing them millions of dollars, practically doing nothing. Most of the big businesses are no different from government bureaucracies. So even if they hire a complete team of 50 people taking care of their content marketing needs and even if this team of people doesn’t show any tangible results for months and years, nobody is going to bother.

A small business on the other hand needs to be very careful about where it spends money and what results that spending brings. It cannot afford to first assemble a content marketing team and see how it performs, and if it fails to perform, then assemble another team. But there are many small businesses that want to emulate big businesses. They think that if the big businesses are doing something, it must be right. Yes, most of the big businesses know what they are doing, but since they have already crossed a particular threshold level, they can afford to commit mistakes, multiple times and still survive. This is something small businesses cannot do.

Here is a list of 10 benefits of hiring a content marketing agency

  1. You can avail the best talent in the field: This is one of the biggest benefit of hiring a content marketing agency rather than having your own in-house team. You don’t need to settle with what you have. You are not totally dependent upon the people you have hired. Aren’t satisfied with the performance of your current agency? It’s just a matter of moving on to someone else.
  2. You pay for what you get: You’re just paying for the services. Since people involved with content writing, content production and content marketing aren’t your employees, you don’t need to spend money on infrastructure, legalities and other benefits. You don’t have to arrange office space. You don’t need to buy new computers and new software. They won’t be using your electricity and your bandwidth.
  3. You save time: You can save a ton of time when you outsource your content marketing needs to another agency because then you can totally focus on your own work. You don’t need to worry about how many blog posts have been published, what sort of updates are going to social networking websites and whether your content is reaching the right people or not. All these issues are taken care of by the content marketing agency that you have hired. Just now and then you need to monitor the results and that’s it.
  4. You work with the professionals: People working in the content marketing agencies are not like the babes lost in the woods. They know their stuff. They have already carried out successive marketing campaigns for multiple companies and have gone through different situations. They have gotten opportunities to solve even the most complex problems while working for different agencies. They will bring all this experience to you when they come to work with you.
  5. You get the right content writers for you: Sometimes you need specialized writers. A content marketing agency may already have access to such writers. When you are hiring expert writers on your own many vested interests are involved and hence there is a great chance you may not able to hire someone you actually want. With the case of the content marketing agency all you need to bother about is telling them your requirement and then rest assured of a timely delivery.
  6. A business can understand a business:
    Most of the writers can be whimsical. They are not very professional and they don’t understand the demands of running a business. People working in an agency on the other hand know what all it takes to run a business. So they will be in a better position to understand your constraints and your requirements.
  7. A content marketing agency can give you a turnkey solution: Content marketing isn’t just about knowing how to write. It requires a mindset. It requires a certain comfort level with contemporary technologies and tools. What’s the use of having a prolific writer if he or she doesn’t know what he or she has to write about? Can he or she do data mining? Can he or she carry out extensive research? Can he or she come up with highly compelling topics that are really relevant to your business? Is he or she intelligent enough to align the demands of your business with the content that is being produced and distributed? What about using the right channels to broadcast your content? Maybe your business needs to focus on LinkedIn but the content writers that you have hired think that Twitter is more exciting or worse, Facebook. People working in a content marketing agency put their emotions aside and give you the best solution in terms of content production and content marketing.
  8. You get all the flexibility you need as a small business: Sometimes you have budget and time for content marketing and sometimes you don’t. The benefit of hiring a content marketing agency is you are not stuck with it. When you want to go into a hiatus (which is by the way, not advised) all you need to do is inform them, and there, you are not spending anything on content marketing. Then, after let us say five months, you can afford to resume your work, all you have to do is, contact your agency and it will be able to pick up things where you had left.
  9. Your content is continuously streamlined: As I have mentioned above, the content marketing agency brings you everything you need in order to make your campaign successful. Analytics is a big part of content marketing. What sort of keywords you are using right now? What sort of keywords you should be targeting? What sort of traffic is attracted to your website or blog? Are you producing the right sort of content? Are you targeting right people or wrong people? These are the issues, and many more, that can be understood using advanced web analytics tools. These tools are normally available with a content marketing agency.
  10. You can have uninterrupted content production: One of the biggest hurdles faced by businesses trying to implement a workable content marketing strategy is a regular, uninterrupted production of content. It is very difficult to produce quality content on an ongoing basis. It requires a dedicated team. It requires lots of exposure to niche content. For example, if yours is a realty business someone constantly needs to monitor relevant trends and topics and keep on creating content everyday if need be. A content marketing agency is in a better position to maintain an editorial calendar which is often not possible for an in-house team.

Being a content marketing agency it would be but natural for me to tilt towards hiring an outside agency but that’s not the case. Hiring in-house content writers and marketers has its merits but they cannot be outweighed by merits of going the other way.

Why your content marketing strategy might be failing

Wondering why your content marketing strategy isn’t working the way it should have? This Inc.com article uses some advice from Joe Pulizzi to throw some light on why many companies fail at their content marketing.

Content marketing, as Joe rightly puts it, isn’t just about creating content and publishing it indiscriminately on your own blog/website or on social networking websites. It means a regular broadcasting. It means ongoing interaction with your audience. Here are a few things that make your content marketing strategy click:

  • Let people subscribe to your updates: No matter how great your content is you cannot assume that people will come to access your content on their own. You need to remind them on an ongoing basis simply because there is too much content on the Internet to get their attention. This can be achieved by encouraging them to subscribe to your regular email updates. They can also like your Facebook page, or follow you on Twitter or even subscribe to your RSS feeds. The basic idea is, getting people to subscribe to your updates is an important ingredient of your content marketing strategy.
  • Create brand evangelists: Take for example Apple. Most of its business happens because it has got millions of brand evangelists. When you create brand evangelists for your content marketing strategy, people promote your content on their own. But of course, in order to create evangelists your primary focus must be not just creating high-value content but also making sure that the content reaches the right audience.
  • Help your content writers coordinate with each other: If your business employs or works with multiple content writers, make sure that there is coordination between them, otherwise they will end up producing lots of duplicate content or something totally irrelevant to your core content marketing strategy.
  • Content marketing, keep in mind, is a different specialty: Just because a person has had a career in advertising and marketing doesn’t mean that he or she knows a lot about content marketing. Content marketing is a totally different ball game. Rather than marketers, as the above-linked article says, put your trust into the hands of publishers because content marketing on the Internet is more about publishing and distributing high-quality content rather than stuffing it down people’s throats.

You can read the remaining points in the original article.

Content is king when it comes to improving your search engine rankings

You cannot improve your search engine rankings without your content so it’s not just in the field of conversion where your content rules the roost, it is also your SEO. So if you want to improve your SEO, the primary focus should be your content.

This infographics at Brafton.com uses the recent Content Marketing Institute study to graphically explain that when it comes to integrating SEO with content marketing, 88% B2B businesses put more stress to it. 82% businesses have, one way or another, acquired new customers through their blogs and 67% have been able to generate more leads. Here are some illuminating content marketing statistics I have written about in one of my previous blog posts.

Statistically, 347 blog posts are published every minute every day and 2 million blogs are written every 24 hours but this is not the reason why content becomes the king of the Kingdom of SEO. It is because high-quality content, content that is engaging and valuable, enjoys higher search engine rankings compared to use less content created just to boost SEO.

Content marketing thoroughly explained in the periodic table of content marketing

If I remember I came across this periodic table of content marketing last year but back then I was quite preoccupied so I couldn’t go through it properly. Now that I have had a look at it, so far it is the best collective information and content marketing I have ever come across. Kudo’s to the person who created this periodic table.

The content marketing periodic table

As it happens in the classic periodic table of elements, the content marketing elements in this periodic table are arranged according to the priority demanded by each aspect of content marketing. For example, the most important aspect of content marketing is strategy. How you are going to implement your content marketing strategy in order to achieve what? As the above-mentioned link correctly says, your strategy is the fundamental key to your success. It helps you plan and it gives you focus.