Why create content? Revisiting the basics

The first step in developing a content marketing program for any brand is to set clear objectives. What are your reasons for creating content? What’s your vision for success? And what are your timeframes and deadlines for achieving your projected outcomes? Here are some content marketing objectives you might consider.
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Content strategyMarketingSEOThought leadership

The first step in developing a content marketing program for any brand is to set clear objectives.

What are your reasons for creating and distributing content? What’s your vision for success? What are your timeframes and deadlines for achieving your projected outcomes?

Here are some content marketing objectives you might consider:

  • Generating brand awareness
  • Increasing audience engagement
  • Driving traffic to your website
  • Positioning yourself (or your company/organisation) as a market or industry thought leader
  • Generating and nurturing sales leads
  • Converting sales leads
  • Nurturing customer relationships and increasing brand loyalty.

Generate brand awareness

A core objective, in developing and distributing content, will be to generate audience awareness of your brand, your product, your service, your ideas or your cause.

Of course, the greater the number of people who read, view, listen to or otherwise engage with your content, the more widely your brand will be recognised. You’ll extend brand awareness even further if a high percentage of these people like and share your content with others across different channels.

Your aim here is to grow your audience in terms of both size and quality. Once you have the ongoing attention of an audience that includes prospective buyers, your chances of generating, qualifying and converting quality leads increases exponentially.

Increase audience engagement

It’s one thing for an audience to be aware of your content and your brand. It’s another for its members to be actively engaged.

Of course, the quality and relevance of your content needs to align with target audience needs and interests, to the extent that individual audience members actively seek it out, read it, view it, like it, comment on it and share it across a range of channels.

You can track audience engagement with your content through metrics, such as the amount of time audience members spend with specific content items, the number of content pages viewed in each session, and the number of on-page clicks and shares achieved.

Drive traffic to your website

As you develop an ongoing program for creating and/or curating quality content, publishing it on your website and promoting it across a range of channels (such as social media and email), you’re likely to see a marked increase in the volume of traffic visiting your website.

Your content marketing activities should also support the search engine optimisation (SEO) strategies and tactics you have in place. In fact, content marketing can be seen as an essential component of your SEO strategy.

Effective SEO requires quality content. Quite simply, the more relevant, high-quality content you have on your website, the higher your website pages will rank in the results of searches on Google.

Position your organisation as a thought leader

What is the perception of your brand in your target market or industry? Your business will thrive if it’s perceived as a market leader.

Your content marketing activities are a key factor in determining how prospective buyers view your brand, your organisation, its products, its services and its expertise.

Your objective, in this sense, is for prospective buyers to choose your content first when seeking information that relates to your industry, market or profession. They should trust your brand as a reliable source of clear, interesting, relevant content that answers their key questions.

This helps you to differentiate your brand from competitor brands. When your website is accepted as a key repository of innovative, objective insights that relate to your area of product or service development and delivery, you have an invaluable competitive edge.

In this way, thought leadership can quickly evolve into market leadership.

You can gauge your success in becoming a thought leader by assessing the number of times your content is shared across different channels, especially by industry or market influencers.

Generate and nurture sales leads

There are fewer better vehicles for lead generation than content marketing.

When you continuously create and disseminate relevant, high-quality content, audience members are likely to trust your brand and will be increasingly willing to exchange their personal details for further premium content. They are also more likely to subscribe to newsletters, participate in polls and request product demonstrations.

Once your content has engaged an audience that comprises a significant percentage of prospective buyers, you have will have generated a large number of sales leads – people who are amenable to your organisation’ follow-up in terms of targeted sales activities.

Also, when you link your content with lead generation forms, your overall volume of leads will increase. Depending on the quality of your content, these leads will be highly qualified in terms of their openness to your sales approaches. As you continue to provide targeted content to qualified leads, they will be increasingly amenable to learning more about your product or service offerings.

Convert sales leads

Effective content marketing helps your brand to create new customers by giving you access to consumers at the time they are ready to buy. It can also shorten the time it takes for qualified prospective buyers to make a purchase decision.

Once your content marketing activities have built a level of trust for your brand in the minds of qualified leads, it’s significantly easier to convince them that your product or service is the best fit for their needs.

First-time buyers who have consistently consumed your content are also more likely to purchase larger orders, premium offerings and add-on services.

Nurture customer relationships and increase brand loyalty

Content marketing can even help to convince one-time buyers to become repeat purchasers.

When you have a clear idea of a customer’s purchasing history, you can create more relevant content for that customer (perhaps, for example, in the form of a segmented customer newsletter or podcast). This ongoing, targeted content engagement can enhance the customer’s level of trust in, and loyalty to, your brand.

In fact, a customer who happily engages with both your content and your products or services is likely to become an active advocate for your brand, providing invaluable word-of-mouth recommendations to friends, family members and business associates.

Nurturing existing customer relationships through content marketing, therefore, can not only increase customer retention, but it also contributes to referrals and ongoing new customer acquisition.

Bottom-line objectives

At the end of the day, your content marketing objectives need to align, seamlessly, with your organisation’s long-term business objectives.

If, for example, your primary business objectives are to achieve a 20% increase in revenue per year over the next three years, with a similar increase in net profit, and to increase market share by 10% per year across specific demographic and regional criteria, this should inform everything you do in your content marketing program.

If you’d like to talk to Editor Group about writing or editing content for your business, you can contact us here.

By Peter-John Lewis

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