Content going viral doesn’t always translate into money

As explained in this Buzz Feed News update about a content creator from Canada called Kevin Parry whose video generated millions of views on multiple platforms (15 million on Instagram, 28 million on TikTok and 30 million somewhere else).

Here is a tweet from him saying that he didn’t make a single penny directly from the video:

 

Intriguing, although, I’m not surprised. It depends on which platform you publish your content.

As he explains in the Buzz Feed interview, there is no TikTok video-monetization scheme for Canada, otherwise, he may have made some money because when TikTok hadn’t been banned in India, I came across lots of people making some good money when their videos went viral.

When you are creating videos, it’s YouTube where you can make money when your videos go viral because the video hosting service embeds advertisements within the videos, and it has some model of sharing revenue with the creators.

Even there, it depends on what sort of video content you are uploading. If the sponsors don’t find your content suitable for their brands, they won’t advertise. Hence, even if lots of people watch your videos, you may not make any money.

I don’t think platforms like Instagram and Twitter have some revenue sharing program for content creators. Hence, no matter how many million views you can generate from these platforms, you cannot make money directly.

But then how do you make money?

Kevin says that he got lots of work because of the video. Many big companies looking for talented videographers like him approached him, so, it was in that sense that he must have made lots of money.

It also happens with my business blog. I publish blog posts as regularly as I can manage. This improves my search engine rankings for my important keywords. This gets me traffic. The traffic draws clients who would hire me as a content writer. I get money from my blog.

Should you publish evergreen content or trendy content?

Evergreen content or trendy content

Evergreen content or trendy content?

For lasting search engine rankings, it is often recommended that you publish evergreen content.

What is evergreen content?

Evergreen content is the content that is relevant for a long time – even multiple years. This type of content doesn’t go out of date. You can call it practically an ageless wisdom.

Take for example, if right now I write a list of tips on how to write SEO content (assuming that the search engine algorithms by now have matured a lot), I’m pretty sure that provided I stick to the fundamental Google SEO guidelines, it will be an evergreen content.

People will find this blog post useful and relevant for at least 2-3 years and consequently, it should enjoy higher search engine rankings accordingly.

Here are some examples of evergreen content titles:

What is trendy content?

Trendy content or non-evergreen content is topical and relevant to something that is going on right now.

Let’s hope we don’t have to write evergreen content on Covid, but right now, if I write something about content writing related to Covid, it is a trendy topic.

Take for example this blog post that I wrote recently: Am I getting more content writing assignments post-Covid?

As you can see, since Covid is a temporary situation (hopefully) this is a trendy topic. It is based on an ongoing trend.

When Covid is over, except for journalists, academicians, scientists and doctors, there will be few people searching for it.

Striking a balance between evergreen content and trendy content

Trendy content gets you instant traffic. Evergreen content gets you ongoing traffic.

Both types of content are important. When you publish trendy topics, for a few days you increase your visibility. More people can find your website or blog.

They may link to you. They may share your content on social media. They may also stumble upon evergreen content.

Since Google may be constantly looking for updated content to present to its users searching on a trending topic, it will quickly crawl and index your trendy content.

A problem with trendy content might be that since thousands of bloggers and web publishers may be writing on the trending topic, the competition might be too high.

In such cases, you should give the trending topic your own twist. Write about something that is about the trending topic, but an aspect that very few people are covering.

What about highly competitive content for evergreen topics? The same advice. Even for evergreen content, the competition might be quite high. Give your own twist. Create a unique title that very few people might be covering.

What should be the balance between evergreen content and trendy content?

My personal experience says that go with the flow. Regularity is more important than strategizing in this regard, as long as you maintain a balance.

Participate in ongoing conversations. At the same time, publish content that people are going to look up for, for a long time.

You get more back links for evergreen content because publishers who are linking to your content know that it is going to be relevant for a long time to come.

Yes, they also link to trending topics but only when they themselves are writing about those trending topics and they want to add value or add another perspective.

 

What differentiates a great content writer from an average content writer?

Difference between a great and an average content writer

Difference between a great and an average content writer.

Someone asked this question on Quora but since I have already answered 2 questions (my daily target nowadays) I thought I’d provide the answer on my own blog.

What are the attributes of a great content writer?

I will use a politically correct pronoun “she”.

When someone talks about “great content writer” I assume what she means is, a content writer who does her job well. She may or may not be experienced, but she delivers.

She delivers on the front of quality and relevance. She expresses well through her writing. She can write forcefully without intimidating the reader.

Below I’m listing some attributes of a great content writer.

Takes initiative

A great content writer takes initiative. What do I mean by initiative?

She goes beyond the brief provided by the client. She uses her own brain to figure what may work and  what may not work for her client.

She does research independently. She finds data from credible sources. She uses her judgement instead of completely depending on her client’s input.

Takes a stand

She should be able to take a stand.

I will give you my example. Sometimes I disagree with my client.

My client knows her subject. For example, if my client is a lawyer, she knows more about law than I do. But I know more about content writing than she does. She has hired me not to write how she wants me to write, she has hired me because I can write the way she cannot, but she needs to.

Therefore, once she has given me the brief, I don’t want her to dictate every sentence I write. A great content writer knows when to take a stand or put her foot down.

She is not simply a stenographer. Above all, before a content writer, she is a writer.

Has a passionate writing voice

If you don’t feel excited, nor will your readers.

Whenever new writers approach me for work, this is the first trait I look for: the sample that they have sent me, have they written like a writer or like a content writer desperate to impress?

A great content writer gets emotionally invested in the project. You are passionate when you are emotionally invested.

I won’t go to the extent of calling myself a great content writer (I leave that conclusion to my clients), but when I’m writing, I’m writing with the good of my client in my heart. This makes me passionate. And this passion quite often resonates through my writing. I am not saying that it happens always, but most of the time, it does.

Knows why the client has hired her

Why does a client hire me?

The macro reason is that she wants to grow her business. This is the ultimate goal of every entrepreneur. By the end of the day, you need more buyers, you need more subscribers, you need more paid users.

The micro reasons might be that she wants to improve her search engine rankings, boost engagement on your social media profile, increase conversion rate on her website and improve user experience.

She may also want to improve the click-through-ratio on the web pages where she wants the visitors to download her e-book or subscribe to her newsletter updates.

My every sentence must contribute towards that. I don’t want to impress. I don’t want to prove what a great a writer I am. She is not paying me for that. She is paying me to write content that helps grow her business in whichever applicable manner.

Does it mean I don’t seek praises? I definitely do; I like it when a client says that I have done a great job. But every client knows that this “great job” doesn’t mean that I have written like Haruki Murakami or Tolstoy. It means I have written in a manner that contributes to her business.

Hence, a great content writer walks the extra mile and makes sure that she is writing content that serves the purpose.

Isn’t obsessed with money

I know money matters, but a great content writer, once she starts the work, isn’t bothered much about whether she is being paid for 200 words or 500 words. She is not insecure in that sense. She is more worried about writing what needs to be written.

This is something I have observed in many writers I have worked with. They are constantly worrying about how much they are writing and how much they are being paid.

I’m not saying that they should leave themselves open to exploitation, but it isn’t going to harm them if instead of 500 words (which they are being paid for) they’re writing 700 words and they are not being paid for the extra 200 words.

Just yesterday a client paid me supposedly for 800 words (I’m still in the process of moving from per word to value deliverability) but I wrote 1200 words because the subject demanded that, without expecting to be paid extra.

If a content writer constantly obsesses about money it becomes a vicious loop. Nobody pays you just for the heck of paying — people want value delivery and you cannot deliver value if your need to get paid for every word dominates your power of expression.

Am I saying that you should allow your clients to fleece you? No. When you focus more on value delivery, your clients can’t afford not to pay you.

Writes a lot, in fact, constantly

A great content writer, being a writer first, has this great desire to write continuously. She doesn’t just write when she is being paid for writing. She writes on different topics. She participates in discussions on social networking websites. She blogs regularly. She works at building her network not just for business purposes but also to expand her understanding.

Writing for her is not a chore, it’s an existential craving.

Learns constantly

Learning never stops for a great content writer. I have been writing professional content for 20 years and still I learn something new every day.

I learn new words. I practise using new expressions that I have never used before or have rarely used, or have forgotten.

I make a note of everything I come across. I do all my reading on Kindle reader and Google Play Books so that I can highlight the portions that I may like to use for my own writing.

Whenever I come across a word I don’t know, I make sure I do, and I don’t proceed without that.

I have a huge Word file where I save words, phrases, and sentence formations that I would like to use when writing. I have been updating this file since 1998. I have saved more than 200 phrases in one of my Google keep notes.

A great content writer is constantly learning and never believes that she has learned enough.

Has confidence

A constant desire to learn doesn’t mean that a content writer is low on confidence. Don’t take confidence with a negative connotation. That’s overconfidence.

In fact, just the fact that she knows that she constantly needs to learn more, shows that she is confident.

The more you learn, the more you practice, more confident you get.

Among average content writers I have observed that they are constantly scared of something. They hold themselves back. For them, writing is just a means to make money and if money is not there, writing is not there for them. It is just another occupation.

The problem with writing is that unless you have a passion for it, it doesn’t pay you much. Your lack of interest shows through every word you use, through every sentence you form. If you don’t want to write without getting paid, you are not going to be paid for writing.

This is true for every field except for manual work. In manual work, even if you’re not interested, somehow you can make a living. But when people pay you for your skill & expertise rather than your manual work, you need to have your soul into it.

To sum up, here’s how you can become a great content writer:

  • See beyond the client’s brief.
  • Be passionate about your client’s interests.
  • Learn to research.
  • Always know why you’re writing a particular piece.
  • Polish search engine friendly writing.
  • Learn constantly. On your own. From other writers.
  • Set your insecurities aside.
  • Don’t just write for money.
  • Deliver value more than the number of words.
  • Be passionate about what you are writing.

My personal favorites are, have a strong desire to write, and take pride in the fact that you are constantly improving yourself.

What is buyer intent and how to write content for it?

Content writing for buyer intent

Content writing for buyer intent.

Just as there is search intent there is also buyer intent.

The concept of search intent is broad: it has many intents such as informational intent, navigational intent, transactional intent and commercial intent.

You may like to read How effective content writing and searcher intent are interrelated.

Buyer intent (also known as buying intent) or purchase intent tells you how eager a customer or client is to buy a product or subscribe to a service. This is data or information that manifests before a buying action takes place.

Why is it important? Why is it important to know buyer intent and then write content accordingly?

This Gartner report says that prospective buyers spend 50% of their time seeking information about a product or a service from third-party sources such as social media websites, review websites, blogs, talking with peers, and online directories.

This information can sway them. Even when they are ready to buy, if there is something that puts them off or gives them enough reason to get reluctant, your sale is gone.

One thing is clear about buyer intent – your prospect is ready to buy. He or she needs the last nudge. Or, you need to prevent him or her from getting distracted or misled or getting confused.

Buyer intent can be gauged from the type of web pages visitors accessing on your website. In my example, people who want to hire me as a content writer often checkup my content writing rates page. They also go through my samples.

What type of content writing can help you target specific buyer intent?

To be able to write content targeting buyer intent, you need to know what would turn your prospective buyer away. It must be some information or lack of some information that sends your prospective buyer away.

Hence, you need to fill that gap.

When a prospective customer or client comes to your website you must provide all the answers he or she may need to make up his or her mind.

What questions or apprehensions a typical client may have before hiring my content writing services? Let’s go through a few points:

  • Will I be able to write quality content specifically for his or her business?
  • Do I have enough knowledge and experience to write content that can generate business?
  • Can I help him or her improve his or her search engine rankings?
  • Can I write the amount of content that is required?
  • Can I stick to a schedule?
  • Will I write completely original content?
  • How expensive or affordable am I?

There can be many more questions. But what you need to pay attention to is the fact that these are all questions that a prospective client would ask.

What sort of content do I write to address to this buyer intent, or rather, these questions?

I’m constantly sharing my knowledge and experience on my blog and therefore, a prospective client should be able to get enough information about that.

I also blog a lot about how to improve one’s search engine rankings through SEO-friendly content. You may like to read How do I write search engine friendly content for my clients?

I have an FAQs section that describes my content writing process.

I have testimonials from other clients. I have also obtained testimonials on LinkedIn and Google Business.

I have explained why I charge what I charge on various pages and blog posts.

Hence, from my side, I have tried to provide as much information as possible to my visitors with buyer intent.

Similarly for your business, you need to figure out what questions or apprehensions your prospective customer or client may have and then write content addressing those questions and apprehensions.

 

Am I getting more content writing assignments post-Covid?

By “post-Covid” I’m not saying that Covid is over. In fact, here in India, we are expecting the third wave to hit somewhere in August-September, 2021.

But, during the past year, we have learned a lot. The situation is not as scary as it was a few months ago. Hence, the expression “post-Covid”.

Many have gotten vaccinated.

So, has my business increased?

My business HAS increased, but I’m not sure whether it is due to Covid or due to my own effort.

When the Covid started in the US – my major amount of money was coming from there – two of my main clients drastically cut down their operations.

They didn’t let go of me, but the amount of money they paid me was now less than one-third of what they were paying me before the pandemic.

Previously when I could manage without promoting my work, now, no longer was the case. I needed to make up by generating more work.

I don’t want to sound opportunistic, but I took it as a blessing in disguise. This gave me some time to concentrate on growing my business rather than continuously working for them.

I started updating my blog almost every day. This improved my search engine rankings.

I became active on LinkedIn – queries began to come from there.

So, my business increased because my promotion increased. In the past year, I’ve more than doubled my search engine traffic.

Has the Covid outbreak had no effect on my business?

I wouldn’t say that. I’m getting more work from India, which is a big change.

Clients from India are, even if reluctantly, agreeing to pay more.

Many sound more knowledgeable about the need to publish quality content.

In that sense, yes, business has improved.