Plenty of so-called journalistic tasks and methods have already infiltrated marketing departments and agencies in recent years. The majority of content marketers are maintaining editorial calendars, adhering to style guides and turning their teams into newsrooms for their brands.
Yes, this has enabled marketers to pump out content more efficiently. But hasn’t necessarily helped them do it effectively. Uberflip's latest visual examines the essential principles that drive journalists to produce amazing content and what marketers should learn from them.
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Sources:
1) http://www.journalism.org/resources/principles-of-journalism/
2) http://moz.com/blog/content-marketers-and-journalists
7. While brands are pumping out
content more efficiently, they’re
not necessarily doing it
more effectively.
8. As described by the world’s top
universities, here’s how
marketers can apply the
principles of journalism to their
own work – lessons
from content experts.
10. “Journalists must pursue the truth in a
practical sense. This ‘journalistic truth’ is a
process that begins with the professional
discipline of assembling and verifying facts…
Journalists should be as transparent as
possible about sources and methods so
audiences can make their own assessment
of the information.”
Principle #1:
Source: Pew Research
11. This is a golden rule for
journalists, and should be
for content marketers, as
well. Your credibility and
your company’s reputation
are at stake.
13. “While news organizations answer to many
constituencies, including advertisers and
shareholders, the journalists in those
organizations must maintain allegiance to
citizens and the larger public interest. This
commitment to citizens first is the basis of a
news organization’s credibility.”
Principle #2:
Source: Pew Research
14. Every piece of content you
create as a marketer exists to
serve a business goal, but
it's guaranteed to fail if it
doesn't ultimately serve your
audience’s needs in the process.
16. “This discipline of verification is what
separates journalism from other modes of
communication, such as propaganda, fiction
or entertainment.”
Principle #3:
Source: Pew Research
21. “Independence is an underlying requirement
of journalism, a cornerstone of its reliability…
While editorialists and commentators are not
neutral, the source of their credibility is still
their accuracy, intellectual fairness and ability
to inform–not their devotion to a certain
group or outcome.”
Principle #4:
Source: Pew Research
22. The value of a whitepaper,
eBook or other content asset
naturally diminishes
if it is perceived as nothing
more than glorified
marketing collateral.
23. Third-party gated content
assets tend to generate more
downloads, and also produce
better leads, on average,
than company-branded
content assets.
25. “Communicators have an obligation to
protect freedom by not demeaning it in
frivolous use or exploiting
it for commercial gain.”
Principle #5:
Source: Pew Research
26. Yes, your ultimate goal is to
sell. But content marketing is
a marathon, not a short
sprint. Your real goal is to
create better customers over
the long term.
28. “Accuracy and truthfulness require that as
framers of the public discussion we not
neglect the points of common ground where
problem solving occurs.”
Principle #6:
Source: Pew Research
29. Sometimes marketers forget
about their audience and
talk to the CEO or to
themselves. They end up
slipping into the corporate
voice. Do that, and watch
your audience slip away.
31. “For its own survival, it must balance what
readers know they want with what they
cannot anticipate but need. In short, it must
strive to make the significant interesting and
relevant. The effectiveness of a piece of
journalism is measured both by how much a
work engages its audience and enlightens it.”
Principle #7:
Source: Pew Research
32. Journalists can find a good
story in a sea of information
and distill it into something
that the reader wants to stay
with. Your content should be
every bit as riveting.
34. “Journalism is a form of cartography:
it creates a map for citizens to navigate
society. Inflating events for sensation,
neglecting others, stereotyping or being
disproportionately negative all make a less
reliable map. The map is only an analogy;
proportion and comprehensiveness are
subjective, yet their elusiveness does not
lessen their significance.”
Principle #8:
Source: Pew Research
35. Your content should always
be comprehensive at every
level. From individual pieces
to your overall strategy, you
must effectively describe the
reality of your industry.
37. “Each of us must be willing, if fairness and
accuracy require, to voice differences with our
colleagues, whether in the newsroom or the
executive suite… This stimulates the
intellectual diversity necessary to understand
and accurately cover an increasingly diverse
society. It is this diversity of minds and voices,
not just numbers, that matters.”
Principle #9:
Source: Pew Research
38. It might seem difficult to
always produce content that
is accurate, balanced,
interesting, and focused on
your audience.
39.
40. But content marketers must
remain close to these values.
In the end, this is the only
way to make your audience
trust your content, share it,
and ultimately become
loyal customers.
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