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5 Simple Content Marketing Tweaks for Your Small Business Strategy

Do you have a content marketing strategy? Content marketing is an extremely valuable way to help build your inbound marketing. Content provides value for your prospects and helps position you as an expert in your field. The challenge for small businesses is that content like emails, eBooks, blogs, etc. can be time-consuming and expensive to create.

Here are 5 simple content marketing tweaks for your small business.

  1. Use Guest Bloggers. If you have a blog on your website encourage guest blogs, perhaps from some of your satisfied customers. Share these blogs via your social media channels and other online sources. Ask guest bloggers to create blogs about subjects of interest to them, and they will likely appeal to your prospects as well. You can ultimately build an army of guest bloggers to provide a wealth of content for you.
  2. Make Use of Surveys. Interesting survey’s make for good content marketing, especially when you post their results and associated comments. Surveys can be used to engage prospects and clients and exchange feedback. You’ll want to be careful however, to avoid the two hot buttons of conversation: religion and politics. You don’t want your content to get off the rails. Instead, create business or personal related surveys that may spur discussion. “What percentage of your gross revenues do you spend on marketing?” or “How Many Tattoos Do You Have” are very different questions but both could provide interesting insight into your readers. Use this insight to create relevant content.
  3. Use Video. Sitting in front of a video camera and talking about a subject that relates to your customers is an easy way to create content that can be very shareable. If you are in real estate, create a two minute video about five quick ways to prepare your home for sale. If you own a Fitness Center, it is easy to demonstrate the proper way to do pull-ups, sit-ups or a variety of other exercises. Lawn Care companies can create a variety of self-help videos on lawn care and gardening. Instructional videos showing how to use your product can help “sell” your product.
  4. Use Photos. Photos, especially interesting images, can make for solid content. Have you just acquired a new piece of equipment? Have you remodeled or recently moved? Have you hired a new employee? Photos  can be of interest to viewers, especially if there are accompanied by clever captions. Photos are also a way to interact with viewers either by creating a photo caption contest or asking for submissions on a particular subject.
  5. Make Use of Employees. Your employees can be a source of some terrific content. They each have their own areas of expertise and have experience and tips to share with readers. You can make employees a part of instructional videos or blogging. Include photos to add interest.  Employees may ultimately develop their own personas and online following.

Content is a valuable component of online marketing. These tweaks will expand your small business content marketing strategy and provide you with more materials to work with. You can get more mileage out of your content by piecing them together in new ways for different channels.

 

A Content Strategy Playbook for Your Small Business

Imagine you’re Tom Brady suiting up in the locker room on Super Bowl Sunday. You wouldn’t walk out onto the field without a plan – that would be crazy!  Instead, you’d feel prepared and confident with a solid playbook and defined strategy for defeating the Seahawks.

If Deflate-Gate taught us anything, it’s that the best teams – forthright or not – definitely come to the game with a strategy to win.

You should approach content creation the same way – prepared with a strategy instead of just winging it.

In fact the Content Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs reported on the small business content marketing trends, budgets and benchmarks for 2015.

The report shows that 39% of companies who have a documented strategy are “more effective in nearly all aspects of content marketing than their peers who either have a verbal-only strategy or no strategy at all.”

How To Build Your Content Marketing Playbook

So how do you get your content strategy on paper?  Start by tackling these steps:

1. Identify and Segment Your Audience

You wouldn’t just slap together a bunch of plays and hope they work against your opponent – that would be crazy!  Instead, you’d study game tape like a boss and uncover each specific rival’s weaknesses to prepare for game day.

It’s the same in content marketing.  Know who you are trying to attract, then pin-point their greatest challenges so you can serve up content that engages and appeals to your ideal buyer.

According to CMI’s report, small businesses that have seen success with content marketing segment their audience.  In fact, the average small business content strategy targets four segments.

Don’t know where to begin when it comes to zeroing in on your ideal buyer segments?   Check out:

2. Generate Topic Ideas

The great teams have great leaders who do more than just write up game-winning strategies.  The best coaches are able to inspire their teams to victory with an emotional battle cry.  We all know that “Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose.”

58% of small businesses surveyed say that creating engaging content is the most challenging aspect of content marketing.  It’s one thing to present the facts, but to build trust in your brand, you need to tap into your ideal buyer’s emotions.

Now that you know who you’re targeting, it’s easier to determine the hot-button topics that hit an emotional chord with each segment of your audience.

Brainstorming topics that appeal to your ideal buyer can also help you build your SEO keyword strategy, giving you ideas for new keywords to target throughout your website as well as any ad campaigns you may be running online.

3. Decide How to Deliver

Every team has their own strengths.  A hall-of fame quarterback and wide receiver combo.  A defense that creates turnovers.  An unstoppable running back.  Successful execution means drawing-up plays that involve your core abilities.

The same is true for the content tactics your team chooses to employ. According to the report, the average number of tactics small businesses use to create content is 12, including:

  • Social Media Content (outside of blogs)
  • Blogs
  • eNewsletters
  • Articles on Your Website
  • Case Studies
  • Videos
  • In-person events
  • Illustrations or Photos
  • Online Presentations
  • White Papers
  • Infographics
  • Webinars/Webcasts

You don’t have to tackle each of these content avenues, but pick the ones that align most closely with your talent as well as with your ideal buyer.

4. Create Content

You’ve identified your audience, uncovered engaging topics, and have decided how to deliver your content.  Now it’s time to put your strategy to work on the field.  Create content based on the topics you’ve outlined, tweaking pieces for each of your distribution channels.

5. Evaluate Success

Did your content get the job done?  In football, it’s simple to track points and declare a winner at the end of the game.

You may not have a scoreboard, but determining upfront how you’ll score your content can make it just as easy to track the success of your content strategy.

According to CMI, 87% of small businesses surveyed said that lead generation was a priority for their content strategy.  If that’s the case for your business, you can track the lead source for each of your content channels to measure your success.  Or, if brand awareness is a goal, track social media activity and web traffic.

Set an end goal so you can measure and adjust your content strategy against it.

Like a championship Super Bowl team, you’d never come to the game without a plan. So don’t try to just wing your content strategy. Identify your audience, brainstorm compelling topics, pin-point the right content channels, create your content and measure and repeat your way to content marketing success.