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Content Marketing by Rob Fitzpatrick

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Content Marketing by Rob Fitzpatrick

  1. 1. CONTENT Founder & GROWTH rob@foundercentric.com @robfitz
  2. 2. @FOUNDERCENTRIC WWW.FOUNDERCENTRIC.COM devin hunt JORDAN SCHLIPF salim virani rob fitzpatrick PRODUCT & UX SALES & INVESTMENT BUSINESS MODEL DESIGN & MENTORING CUSTOMER DEVELOPMENT & LEAN STARTUP ! ! ! !
  3. 3. Gabe is competing with Google on search
  4. 4. Are you... Building an empire, lighting a power-keg, or starting a movement? Gabriel Weinberg
  5. 5. Reality check! Every founder dreams of creating an empire and prays they’re sitting on a powder keg. ! But most of us are actually growing movements. We gain customers and fans one step at a time. There’s no magic bullet.
  6. 6. Mistake #1 They don’t pursue traction in parallel with product development
  7. 7. Why is it useful to explore early? 1. Initial customer development informs your product roadmap
 
 
 
 

  8. 8. Why is it useful to explore early? 1. Initial customer development informs your product roadmap 2. Launch with a nice base of initial users
 
 

  9. 9. Why is it useful to explore early? 1. Initial customer development informs your product roadmap 2. Launch with a nice base of initial users 3. Test messaging and distribution channels
  10. 10. Mistake #2 They didn’t spend enough time pursuing traction
  11. 11. How much time is it really worth? 1. Distribution is equally important as product
 
 
 
 

  12. 12. How much time is it really worth? 1. Distribution is equally important as product 2. You should be spending 50% of your time on it
 
 

  13. 13. How much time is it really worth? 1. Distribution is equally important as product 2. You should be spending 50% of your time on it 3. For tech people, you should probably bias it to 75%
  14. 14. Part I. Content
  15. 15. Beware! There’s more bad advice about marketing than any other part of starting up
  16. 16. “Always be blogging! Always be tweeting! Be active on Facebok!” Etc etc
  17. 17. Sanity check “Do more of everything” is not a strategy
  18. 18. (it is wild flailing from well-intentioned folks who don’t know what you should actually do)
  19. 19. Startups don’t starve; they drown. Shawn Carolan Menlo Ventures
  20. 20. What we need 1. Clear goal & targets !
  21. 21. What we need 1. Clear goal & targets 2. Simple daily process
  22. 22. What we need 1. Clear goal & targets 2. Simple daily process 3. Measurable results
  23. 23. Content marketing is powerful Two startups with the same product; one of them used blogging strategically
  24. 24. Absolutely true, it’s a completely unfair advantage, and it’s why so many people harp on folks to start things like blogs and mailing lists. ! When you want to do things like sell a book or a new startup you have a running start! Jason Cohen (on starting another company when he already has an audience of 50,000)
  25. 25. The goal Develop your sticky community funnel
  26. 26. The community funnel process 1. Traffic shows up
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

  27. 27. The community funnel process 1. Traffic shows up 2. You give away free gift & create value
 
 
 
 
 
 

  28. 28. The community funnel process 1. Traffic shows up 2. You give away free gift & create value 3. Exchange larger gift for permission to contact
 
 
 
 

  29. 29. The community funnel process 1. Traffic shows up 2. You give away free gift & create value 3. Exchange larger gift for permission to contact 4. Stay in touch, over-deliver value
 
 
 

  30. 30. The community funnel process 1. Traffic shows up 2. You give away free gift & create value 3. Exchange larger gift for permission to contact 4. Stay in touch, over-deliver value 5. Convert subscribers to paid customers of core product
 

  31. 31. The community funnel process 1. Traffic shows up 2. You give away free gift & create value 3. Exchange larger gift for permission to contact 4. Stay in touch, over-deliver value 5. Convert subscribers to paid customers of core product 6. Retain, up-sell, get referrals
  32. 32. The community funnel process 1. Traffic shows up 2. You give away free gift & create value 3.Exchange larger gift for permission to contact 4.Stay in touch, over-deliver value 5. Convert subscribers to paid customers of core product 6. Retain, up-sell, get referrals
  33. 33. If you only have the core product and not the full model, you don’t have enough flow and are tempted to incorrectly drop the price Daniel Priestly
  34. 34. We’ll need to design these 5 pieces 1. Free gift 2. Product for prospects 3. Stay-in-touch content 4. Core product (£) 5. Follow-on product (£££)
  35. 35. Discussion What are some gifts that are cheap for us to give away, and which create real value for visitors?
  36. 36. Gifts Educate Inform Amuse Inspire
  37. 37. Gifts Educate Inform = Content Amuse Inspire
  38. 38. Content is the keystone of inbound marketing. Without content, there’s no SEO, no social media, no community, and no revenue. Rand Fishkin
  39. 39. To create value, the content needs to be exceptional ! (which is different from perfect)
  40. 40. Content is great 1. Fast & cheap to produce 2. Free & instant to distribute 3. Measurable 4. Lets you begin building audience before product is finalized 5. Repeatable
  41. 41. Your startup has a mission, right? Startups are designed to either create joy or remove pain
  42. 42. Your content has a mission too. What do they get for their time? This is all about helping ____________ learn/be/do __________.
  43. 43. Tip Your content shouldn’t do exactly the same thing as your product. Rather, it should be interesting for the sort of person who might also want your product. ! For example, if your product is healthy snack food, your content could be about helping busy parents create a healthy home and happy kid.
  44. 44. 120 seconds. Make as many as you can. This is all about helping ____________ learn/be/do __________.
  45. 45. That’s the value proposition of your gifts and content marketing
  46. 46. Design your funnel products 1. Free gift 2. Product for prospects 3. Stay-in-touch content 4. Core product (£) 5. (optional follow-on products)
  47. 47. Part II. Simple daily process
  48. 48. The process 1. Make things
  49. 49. The process 1. Make things 2. Tell people
  50. 50. The process 1. Make things 2. Tell people 3. Repeat
  51. 51. The content creator’s spiral of death 1. Decide you’ll write every time you have a “good idea”. 2. Wait months. 3. At last, inspiration has struck! 4. Treat it like your baby. Protect & perfect it. 5. Takes time. Finally finish. 6. Traffic doesn’t change 7. Not worth it. Give up.
  52. 52. Most common content failure “What should I say today?”
  53. 53. Marketing is work (not inspiration) Community growth: 2 years of writing when inspiration struck vs. 3 months of writing daily (from roughly 0 to 250,000 monthly visitors)
  54. 54. Best practice Put your marketing on autopilot by deciding: ! 1. What you’ll create and how often 2. Where you’ll announce it
  55. 55. Example: tools for writers This is all about helping new authors get their first book finished ! !
  56. 56. Example: tools for writers This is all about helping new authors get their first book finished ! 1. Daily inspirational mini-posts
 

  57. 57. Example: tools for writers This is all about helping new authors get their first book finished ! 1. Daily inspirational mini-posts 2. Helpful weekly newsletter

  58. 58. Example: tools for writers 1. Daily inspirational mini-posts 2. Helpful weekly newsletter
 
 
 

  59. 59. Example: tools for writers 1. Daily inspirational mini-posts on pinterest 2. Helpful weekly newsletter 
 
 
 

  60. 60. Example: tools for writers 1. Daily inspirational mini-posts on pinterest 2. Helpful weekly newsletter of an author interview talking about writer’s block
  61. 61. Remember Don’t make a decision every day if you can just make it once! ! (but of course, be ready to make a new decision if this one isn’t working)
  62. 62. It’s broader than consumer apps 1. B2E? Build credibility 2. Growing? Find key hires 3. Other situations?
  63. 63. What’s your content cycle? 1. How often? 2. What is it, exactly? 3. Where does it go?
  64. 64. Best practice Reduce the cost by: ! 1. Front-loading the creative burden 2. Removing friction from creation through batching, outsourcing, and setting up a content creation flow
  65. 65. Example: tools for writers 1. Spend 2 hours today finding several dozen quotes, then outsource the design and daily posting to a student
 
 
 
 
 

  66. 66. Example: tools for writers 1. Spend 2 hours today finding several dozen quotes, then outsource the design and daily posting to a student 2. Email all your favorite writers today to ask for interviews. Record the skype calls as soon as possible and send the audio to your student helper for transcription and editing
  67. 67. More examples • 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Twitter important to you? Use bufferapp.com and ifttt.com to automate

  68. 68. More examples • • Twitter important to you? Use bufferapp.com and ifttt.com to automate Making lots of video content? Set up a permanent studio for lighting & recording in your flat
 
 
 
 
 
 

  69. 69. More examples • • Twitter important to you? Use bufferapp.com and ifttt.com to automate Making lots of video content? Set up a permanent studio for lighting & recording in your flat Spending forever perfecting your blog posts? Write outlines and then pay a grad student £10 to edit
 • 
 
 

  70. 70. More examples • • Twitter important to you? Use bufferapp.com and ifttt.com to automate Making lots of video content? Set up a permanent studio for lighting & recording in your flat Spending forever perfecting your blog posts? Write outlines and then pay a grad student £10 to edit Wasting time on fancy graphs? Use tools like infogr.am to trivialize the process
 • • 
 

  71. 71. More examples • • • • • Twitter important to you? Use bufferapp.com and ifttt.com to automate Making lots of video content? Set up a permanent studio for lighting & recording in your flat Spending forever perfecting your blog posts? Write outlines and then pay a grad student £10 to edit Wasting time on fancy graphs? Use tools like infogr.am to trivialize the process Video editing taking forever? Adjust your style & content to work with socialcam.com in one take
  72. 72. Mistake #3 They didn’t take advantage of microopportunities
  73. 73. Micro-opportunities Micro-opportunities are little chances to grow which appear unexpectedly and temporarily. ! E.g. responding to a story in the press or trying a newly created advertising platform.
  74. 74. Each of the letters was a successful micro-opportunity for growth
  75. 75. This week, for example, Instagram is launching their new ad platform
  76. 76. You have to be watching, flexible and creative. ! So you need to be spending enough time on it. Gabriel Weinberg
  77. 77. Mistake #4 They were biased toward or away from certain traction verticals
  78. 78. Traction comfort zones Every startup relies on blogging, twitter, and Adwords. They can’t be the solution for everyone. What about billboards? PR? Publicity stunts? Direct sales? Lead generation? Snail mail? Sometimes the weird stuff works.
  79. 79. Mistake #5 They didn’t take a systematic approach to getting traction
  80. 80. The usual approach is to build the product, then frantically try to figure out how to promote things, then haphazardly attempt the obvious stuff Gabriel Weinberg
  81. 81. Discussion We know about product MVPs. ! What would a traction MVP look like? What are some examples?
  82. 82. The traction process 1. Have an educated guess at a few traction verticals
 
 
 
 
 
 

  83. 83. The traction process 1. Have an educated guess at a few traction verticals 2. List them all out in order of potential usefulness
 
 
 
 

  84. 84. The traction process 1. Have an educated guess at a few traction verticals 2. List them all out in order of potential usefulness 3. Approach the most promising verticals (say five) with small but effective tests
 

  85. 85. The traction process 1. Have an educated guess at a few traction verticals 2. List them all out in order of potential usefulness 3. Approach the most promising verticals (say five) with small but effective tests 4.If one or two out of the initial five seem promising, focus hard on them
  86. 86. Build the funnel to “catch” traffic 1. Free gift 2. Product for prospects 3. Stay-in-touch content 4. Core product (£) 5. (Optional follow-on product)
  87. 87. Founder Centric HERE TO HELP! rob@foundercentric.com @robfitz Learn more! bit.ly/fc-list
  88. 88. Workshop! We’re going to front-load the creative burden of “what to write” by coming up with your manifesto ! 1. You’ll soon have a pile of raw ideas 2. Later, turn them into content marketing
  89. 89. Rules 90 seconds per trigger question ! Come up with as many ideas as you can, one idea per card. Don’t self-censor. ! Remember who you are trying to help!
  90. 90. 90 seconds “It is absurd that…” ! What’s wrong with your industry? With the world? Pick a fight! You
  91. 91. 90 seconds “Always/never do X” ! Nothing like a good ultimatum. Take a stand. What are the non-negotiables? You
  92. 92. 90 seconds What are the must-read books and authors for your visitors? ! Making recommendations for other good content is easy and valuable. Why do you like these sources? You
  93. 93. 90 seconds Mistakes were made! ! What are the most common blunders people fall for when trying to accomplish this? Bonus points if you can share personal failure tales. You
  94. 94. 90 seconds What’s the most common bad advice? ! Who gave that moron a microphone!? What’s the most popular advice in this area that you totally disagree with? You
  95. 95. 90 seconds What are the recent questions you’ve been asked? ! Get into the habit of writing down the questions customers ask you about the industry - every answer is a bit of content marketing in disguise! You
  96. 96. 3 minutes Working in pairs, help each other turn as many ideas as possible into strong titles that make a bold claim. ! Once you have the title, creating the rest of the content is easy.
  97. 97. My process 1. Capture loads of ideas 2. Ideas -> Titles -> Drafts -> Scheduled backlog 3. Don’t obsess; publish 2nd drafts 4. Automate promotion 5. Ignore analytics 6. Write a little every day
  98. 98. Founder Centric HERE TO HELP! rob@foundercentric.com @robfitz Learn more! bit.ly/fc-list

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