Archive for the ‘content marketing’ Category

What to expect in 2012…

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

Content Marketing Institute has released predictions for the 2012 world of content marketing. You’ll find some great reading here–from more than 75 marketers. See if you can find a few juicy ideas for where to take marketing efforts in the new year.

Full disclosure: my prediction is on slide 50!

Content marketing tips…

Friday, December 16th, 2011

As you create or perfect your 2012 marketing plan, here are a few tips from Content Marketing Institute contributors.

Some good ones:

  • Don’ t wait: write down your ideas when you think of them, with pen and paper or the notepad feature on your smartphone
  • Conduct a content audit–by printing it out and reviewing it
  • Dragon Dictation for transcribing interviews
  • Create an editorial calendar (my contribution–I can’t live without mine!)
  • Ask yourself why the audience should care about what you produce

Make your content fail…

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

Failure hurts, it’s embarrassing, and in these days of real-time sharing via social media, it can be very public. It’s easy to be afraid of it.

The result of that fear is that it’s easy to play it safe. In content marketing, that means that the closer what you say is to the middle (of your niche) the better your content will be received.

However, sometimes you need to walk to the edge of the cliff, jump into the deep end, or slip and fall flat on your ass in the middle of a room full of people. Maybe you learn a lesson and grow. Maybe you simply fail and learn what not to do the next time.

Do you want to make an impact? Do you want to have some value? Maybe you’ve got to take a few risks. To wit:

  • Try writing in a different voice–maybe the funny or sarcastic one you hide in favor of your business voice, or develop a persona and give it a specific point of view that is different from yours.
  • Try new kinds of content you’ve never produced before–perhaps a podcast if you usually blog, or something long form like a white paper if you usually tweet.
  • Try a new venue–consider guest posting on blogs that are complimentary to yours or to your industry, or planning an event if you don’t usually do in-person networking to your audience.

These are just a very few ideas on the tamer end of the scale.

Could you fail? Yup. But you could also succeed wildly.

What derring-do do you dare do?

Top 10 of 2011…

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

Herewith my vote for the top 10 content marketing resources, events, and trends of 2011

10.  The fact that the term “content marketing” is now mainstream.
9.  Measurement.  More companies are relying on web traffic and the quality of sales leads to measure effectiveness.
8.  Rise of the infographic. One of which might make this post much easier to read, wouldn’t it?
7.  The report of the death of print was an exaggeration. Online is important. But content that people can hold in their hands or use when they are offline (or if they don’t have a computer–there are still many of those folks out there) won’t go away anytime soon.
6.  Focus on community. Online and off, making connections and being part of a community is part of the human condition. As content marketing and social media have evolved, we are getting closer to finding the sweet spot.
5.  Curation. At last, content marketers understand they don’t have to go it alone.
4.  Get Content. Get Customers. by Joe Pulizzi and Newt Barrett. If you don’t know how to start or how to maintain a content marketing program, you need this book.
3.  Content Rules, by Ann Handley and C.C. Chapman. Ditto.
2.  LinkedIn IPO and it’s continued growth. It is the place to be for B2B businesses to build communities and reach customers and prospects.
1.  Content Marketing World. The inaugural event this past September was amazing! Mark your calendars for September 4-6, 2012 and get yourself to Columbus, Ohio!

Analyzing content…

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2011

One of the best ways to understand content marketing is to examine what others have done. Recently, I’ve had the chance to do that for the Content Marketing Institute.

Here are some thoughts on success and room for improvement in content for healthcare, financial services, B2C and B2B.

See anything you like? Anything you hate? Something to emulate?

One niche, two niche…

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Content marketing, Dr. Suess style…

Red niche, blue niche.
Old niche, new niche.
Some have one need, some have four.
Some have six needs, some have more.
Some are thin, some are fat.
Some wear a funny yellow hat.
Where they come from I can’t say.
But many have come a long long way.
Hello there, customer, how are you?
Tell me, tell me what is new?
How are things in your world there?
What is new? Oh please share.