1. 3 Content Marketing Opportunities You Are Missing
Most marketers laser focus on building their own audience. This makes sense since "know your
audience" is the second step of any content marketing strategy.
What's wrong with this approach?
It's hard work to build a sizable base of people interested in reading your content by just talking to
the people who happen to find your content by chance via social media or search. This is especially
true when you first get started and no one knows who you are.
I often get letters from readers asking me how they can build their following because writing great
content on a topic people are interested in isn't enough. There's a lot of content everywhere, so
there's a chance that yours isn't unique.
While you might have the best content on your topic in the world, you still need people to find it,
read it, talk about it and share it.
Most marketers are so concentrated on improving their audience building tactics that they overlook
the power of other people's audiences (beyond longingly wishing their audience was as large or as
vibrant).
Instead, borrow other people's audiences. Direct marketers have been doing this for years. Before
the Internet, they rented lists of buyers and subscribers with similar attributes and interests. (When
I was at the Economist, we rented our list of subscriber email addresses for $300 per thousand.)
Subscribers now don't appreciate promotional offers cluttering their email inboxes. You have to use
2. different methods to leverage the power of other people's audiences.
3 Content marketing opportunities you are missing
Here are the 3 key ways that you can take advantage of other people's audiences to build your
audience. Incorporate these into your content marketing plans.
1. Write for other media entities
3. Give your best content away.
The catch: This content is far from free. It takes hard work to meet the top blogs and media entities'
standards. Add to your post's credibility by adding data and examples. Where appropriate use
screenshots and charts.
Further, you may need to build your track record over time. Start with smaller lesser known
publications to gain experience and create a bigger audience one post at a time.
Orbit Media's Andy Crestodina aims to write one post a week for another site. He's methodical about
his approach. He focuses each article on a specific keyword phrase.
4. Create content for a variety of blogs and media entities. Buffer co-founder Leo Widrich is the poster
child of guest posting. He used it to build Buffer's initial user base.
Write a regular column for a blog or media entity. This is a traditional media approach. Depending
on the publication, there may be a lot of competition. I started my online writing as a columnist for
ClickZ. Hat tip to my editors Rebecca Lieb and Anna Maria Virzi. (BTW--I'd love to write another
column.)
Be a source. Often this requires a good PR team to get you high visibility mentions. If you've got a
small budget, sign up for HARO to connect with people seeking your expertise.
2. Publish content on social media platforms
Content marketers only focus on social media as a distribution channel to extend their reach. While
an important first step, this is a shortsighted approach.
Many social media entities provide the opportunity for you to publish content beyond just a 140
character text message or an image. Take advantage of it.
3. Create content at and for live events
Live events are forms of content. Add them to your content marketing mix in a variety of ways.
Content Marketing World extends its live content with a series of pre-event ebooks. This year's
theme is Hollywood. (Here's help for curating this type of influencer content.)
5. Speak at conferences. This can be difficult to accomplish, especially if you're relatively unknown in
your field. Where appropriate, submit ideas for presentations. Be willing to pay to play--in other
words, pay for your own travel and related expenses. Then pack your presentation with your best
stuff. You get extra points for a case study.
Live blog conferences. Overit's Lisa Barone is the queen of this genre. Attend a conference and take
down the key content. You pull back the curtain on the event. You get bonus points if you add your
own analysis and share it on social media.
Get interviews at a tradeshow. Razor Social's Ian Cleary did this when he first started attending
conferences. It's a great way to create content and share it using the show's hashtag.
Each of these 3 content marketing opportunities requires work. You must create the same quality
6. content your customers seek from your blog or website.
What other content marketing opportunities would you add to this list and why?
Happy Marketing,
Heidi Cohen
Content Marketing World 2015 I'll be there. Come and join me!
Get $100 off the registration fee - use our promo code: Cohen
Free eBook -- The Video Marketing Handbook
Everything you need to build a video marketing strategy.
7. The Video Marketing Handbook covers everything from video production through to optimizing and
tracking your video's performance. Vidyard has partnered with experts to bring you an incredible
resource packed with inspiring examples and proven best practices.
How to introduce a storytelling culture at your company
Types of videos you'll want to produce throughout the funnel (and their strategic purpose)
What a typical video marketing budget looks like (for in-house or outsourced assets)
Defining your video marketing goals and strategy
Using analytics to determine your success with video
Generating new leads with embedded CTAs
Using video viewing data to score and qualify leads
And much, much more!
Download This Free eBook Today!
Photo Credit: http://www.morguefile.com/archive/display/943765
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HeidiCohen/~3/oUiNByHoFV0/