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Content Marketing

Embrace the magic unicorn of your marketing strategy.

Hug me!

Content marketing is definitely the most lovable form of business promotion.  Most advertising and marketing is pretty easy to hate, primarily because it’s usually interrupting something you’re actually interested in.  It barges into the middle of your television program or online article; it makes you wait five seconds to watch your YouTube video (assuming you are as quick as we are on the “skip ad” trigger); it plops itself down at every single event you want to attend, and demands to be thanked repeatedly for being there.  We’ve become accustomed to its presence, and we understand why it’s there, but we’d rather it wasn’t.  It’s the drunken uncle of branding. 

He's actually adorable when he isn't drinking.

The drunken uncle has had the run of the place for decades. Unfortunately for him, the rest of the family eventually decided enough was enough, and moved away without telling him.  He keeps banging on doors and yelling at passing cars, but he’s been ghosted.  Nearly 90 percent of people now skip TV ads.  Almost half ignore direct mail (and we have serious concerns about the other half).  Online advertising doesn’t fare much better.  Over 90 percent of email users unsubscribe from company emails, indicating they didn’t want it in the first place.  Clogging up a potential customer’s inbox against their wishes is not a particularly endearing strategy.  Ad blocker usage is increasing every year.  And every internet user has been effectively immunized against advertising, the result of relentless, long-term exposure.  Research shows they don’t even see ads any more

Long Live the King

con·tent mar·ket·ing

content marketing

noun
  1. a type of marketing that involves the creation and sharing of online material (such as videos, blogs, and social media posts) that does not explicitly promote a brand but is intended to stimulate interest in its products or services.

We’re not sure who first coined the term “Content is King”, but Bill Gates started waving that royal flag around back in 1996.  We don’t know how you could argue with him.  Without a broader supply of information and entertainment, the internet would be nothing more than low-res semi-nude photos of Teri Hatcher, and chat rooms devoted to the discussion of semi-nude photos of Teri Hatcher, which is what it basically was in 1996.  Gates imagined that online advertising would play a major role in financing an explosion of content, and he was right.  Soon, there was an endless supply of content and an equally infinite supply of advertising.  So much advertising.  And scams, and spam, and clickbait.  Almost instantly, probably as a defense mechanism, users developed “banner blindness”, effectively filtering out anything that looked like an ad, acted like an ad, or hung around too close to an ad (including, incidentally, sponsored search engine results).  Internet users, it turns out, are very goal-oriented, so they will head straight for the information they need or the entertainment they want.  Putting an ad in their way is like waving a dishcloth in front of a charging elephant.

 

Your puny ad will not stop me.

Marketing agencies eventually stumbled on the idea that providing the content users were looking for might be better than interrupting it.   And the term “content marketing” was born.  Supplying useful information proved, unsurprisingly, to be something to which customers responded positively.  Sixty percent of people will be more likely to seek out a product after reading about it.  Seventy percent would rather learn about a company through articles than advertisements.  And they have unprecedented control over how they learn.  They are “informavores”, foraging for information, and if one hunting ground is unproductive, they will move on to the next.  Smart companies are making sure their online properties are richly stocked with desirable prey.

The strategy is paying off.  These companies are saving money with content marketing — its costs are roughly 60 percent lower than traditional marketing.  And they are attracting more customers — approximately three leads for every one generated by traditional marketing, per dollar spent.  Seventy-eight percent of consumers feel like they have “a relationship” with a company after viewing its custom content.  On top of that, search engines absolutely adore content marketing.  They’re in the business of tracking down and serving up the most relevant, useful, engaging content.  Provide that content, and search engines will happily send potential customers your way.  Often when they are most in need of your services or products. 

For the smaller business, without the budget or time or resources to pursue this strategy, it may seem out of reach.  However, there are many affordable ways to enter the arena.  If you use social media, toss in some expert advice or insights of interest to your customers.  You probably have a website; you can add blog content that answers your customers’ questions, establishes your expertise, and builds trust.   All it costs you is time.

And if time is in short supply, you can hire a content creator to craft articles and posts for you.  There are, conservatively, several million to choose from.  The best content creators will often have a background in marketing, and can produce content that is consistent with the personality of your business, contributing to your brand identity.  Prices vary wildly, as does the quality and style of the content, but providers are usually willing to engage in a dialogue with you, and share their ideas, before you spend anything, so finding a good match isn’t necessarily as difficult or expensive as it sounds.  They are content marketers, after all, so they understand the concept of proving their value before asking you for money.  And are surprisingly eager to do so. 

We will wag our tongues at the slightest provocation.

Get Bloggy With It

If you don’t know where to start, we suggest blogging.  Most marketers recognize it as the most effective channel to woo customers and increase traffic.  On average, companies with blogs generate over 67 percent more leads than those without.  And you can do it yourself.  If you need some help, find a content creator you’re compatible with, and take the leap.  We would love to hear from you, and give you our thoughts on your blogging strategy.  To be honest, though, it’s not so much a strategy as a simple common sense approach to business and relationships that you’ve always instinctively believed in, right down to your bones: 

Give a little bit of yourself  to anyone — your experience, your knowledge, your genuine interest in their well-being — and you will get so much more in return. 

We can act like we just discovered it, but it’s as ancient and obvious as Mount Everest.   We can even quantify its impact, as we have here, on specific business goals you wish to reach.  Ultimately, though, it is its own reward, and it should make you feel as good as it does your customers.  Or your family.  Or your friends.  Being useful and helpful is an investment in your own personal prosperity — your influence, your relationships, your satisfaction and happiness.  It’s just a very nice kicker that it’s also a great way to build your business.

The most effective way to stop a charging elephant?  Put a unicorn in its way. 

Oh, God. No. Please don't.

Works every time. 

 
 
 

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