Before you can determine new content types, choose social media channels, and decide on an editorial style, take a step back. Marketers must first create a clear picture of what you need to communicate—and the hierarchy of those communication goals. We’ll look at how that works with a message architecture, looking at examples from a range of companies that all care about communicating consistently across channels and platforms.
Presented at Congres Content Marketing & Webredactie, #congresCM on November 20, 2014 in Utrecht, the Netherlands
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Know thyself.
We invest in knowing our users,
but how well do we know our
own brands?
6. If you don’t know what
you need to communicate,
how will you know if you succeed?
How do you know where to put
resources, time, and talent?
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First things first.
Why blog, conduct a content audit, add
video testimonials, Tweet, Instagram,
consolidate site architecture, switch to a
new CMS, Pin, or go “mobile first”…
if you don’t know what you need to
communicate?
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What is content strategy?
Planning for the creation, delivery, and governance
of useful, usable, and brand-appropriate content.
12. If you don’t know what
you need to communicate,
how will you know if you succeed?
How will you know where to invest
your time, budget, and creativity?
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Steps along the way…
Message architecture
Content audit/inventory
Content model
Editorial style guidelines
Metadata guidelines
Governance guidelines
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What’s a message architecture?
A hierarchy of communication goals
that reflects a common vocabulary.
16. How could we prove this is a car not
like anything else out there? It’s a small
car, but it’s premium. You get a Porsche
911 ride for a fifth of the cost. It’s got
history… but in Europe.
You need to give people content to give
them history.”
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Message architecture
Premium technology
• Assertive; ready to perform as a driver’s car
• Proactive and supportive of spontaneity
Classic design
• Experienced and savvy
Cheekiness
• Smart, “punny,” hip
• Fun, gleeful
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What did the content need to do?
• Offer fast, easy access
• Encourage personalization
• Convey local relevance
• Facilitate sharing
• Communicate quirkiness
• Allow for easy, infrequent updates
• Support a few structured content types
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If these emails are boring you
and you don’t mind missing out
on all the lip-smackin’ stuff
we’ll be sending in the future,
simply send a message to owner-
unsubscribe@insiders.miniusa.com
and include “Unsubscribe” and
your favorite fruit in the
subject field.
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Nomenclature and labels
Content types and media
Content elements
Calls to action and instructional copy
Sentence structure, diction, and tone
…and content
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Not all channels are right for all goals.
Academic and serious?
• Annual reports
• Articles on your site
• Articles on other sites
• Blogs
• Books
• Branded tools
• Case studies
• Digital magazines
• eBooks
• Email newsletters
• Facebook posts
• Games
• In-person events
• Infographics
• Licensed/syndicated
content
• LinkedIn posts
• Microsites
• Mobile apps
• Online presentations
• Podcasts
• Print magazines
• Print newsletters
• Research reports
• Twitter
• Videos
• Virtual conferences
• Webinars/webcasts
• Whitepapers
Per Content Marketing Institute & MarketingProfs 2013 Content Marketing Survey
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Not all channels are right for all goals.
Fun and engaging?
• Annual reports
• Articles on your site
• Articles on other sites
• Blogs
• Books
• Branded tools
• Case studies
• Digital magazines
• eBooks
• Email newsletters
• Facebook posts
• Games
• In-person events
• Infographics
• Licensed/syndicated
content
• LinkedIn posts
• Microsites
• Mobile apps
• Online presentations
• Podcasts
• Print magazines
• Print newsletters
• Research reports
• Twitter
• Videos
• Virtual conferences
• Webinars/webcasts
• Whitepapers
Per Content Marketing Institute & MarketingProfs 2013 Content Marketing Survey
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Premium
• Lindt embodies quality, in product, marketing, & company interactions
• Approachable: Quality indulgences are more accessible
• Trusted in brand and quality
Empowering
• Entrepreneurial: Innovating, championing individuals and successes
• Market driving: strategic and proactive
• Professional and consistent through experience and being responsive
Community-minded
• Engaged with the Lindt family
• Customer-oriented
• Socially conscious
Message architecture
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Message architecture drives a
consistent user experience, visually
and verbally.
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Imagery of individual impact
• People engaged with product and offsite
community service—not just product or just results
of service
• Team breadth and diversity of role, gender,
ethnicity, and age
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Message
architecture
Content
audit
Content types
Content model &
matrix
Editorial style
guidelines and
calendar
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Editorial calendar:
Schedule topics to manifest
the message architecture
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What are our goals in getting there?
• Engage in a tangible, hands-on way
• Encourage debate and conversation
• Identify points of disagreement
• Prevent seagulling
• Force prioritization
• Encourage ownership & investment
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Why do this?
• Gain standards by which to conduct a qualitative
audit. What is “good” anyway?
• Determine keywords for SEO
• Plan content types to meet communication goals
• Prioritize CMS modifications to support them
• Reallocate budget and resources across channels
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But first things first:
What are you trying to communicate?
What content do you have and what do
you need to do that?