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A Crash Course in
Content Strategy
     A workshop at the
  School of Visual Concepts
           March 2, 2012




                              Your host: James Callan
                                  @scarequotes
(This workshop stands on the
blog posts and books of giants.)
Introductions!
          Who are you?
        What brings you here?
What’s a website that has good content?
      What do you like about it?
People don’t visit your site
  to see amazing design.
People don’t visit your site
for a great user experience.
They want your content.
“Like a gentleman in a finely crafted suit
who wants to burp you the alphabet,
even if your website looks nice, no one
will stick around to hear what
you have to say if you don’t
craft something compelling.”

                                            Jason Santa Maria
                                            @jasonsantamaria

                               http://jasonsantamaria.com/articles/the-elements-
                                              of-content-strategy/
(Note: user experience, design,
and the other things that make up
 your website are also important.
       This isn’t a contest.)
Content is not a nice-to-have.
 Content is not an add on.
    It’s a business asset.
         It has value.
Because ...
it brings you customers,
      wins you fans,
builds you an audiences,
  and earns you money.
It’s also a lot of work,
if you want to do it well.
U.S. Findings: Web Use +
Perceptions of Content Credibility
“You are all in publishing!”


                      Jeffrey Zeldman,
                      king of the web




                       http://www.zeldman.com/2011/03/15/web-design-is-publishing/
You need to get it right.
Enter content strategy.
What is content strategy?
First word: What is content?
“In the web industry, anything that conveys meaningful
      information to humans is called ‘content.’”



                                              Erin Kissane
                                               @kissane


                                     The Elements of Content Strategy
“Content is contextualized data.”



                                     Rahel Bailie
                                      @rahelab


                          “A Practical Definition of Content”
“Content is anything an organization
  or individual creates and shares
         to tell their story.”


                                Ann Handley
                               @marketingprofs
illustrations                                 images
                             tweets
help articles                         navigation
                 words
                             photos
          audio
                                         slideshows
                interface copy
  podcasts                       Facebook posts

                blog posts     infographics comments

   cartoons                      video
           white papers                     error messages
(It’s not just words.)
Word two: What is strategy?
It’s a plan for getting stuff done
    in order to achieve a goal.
“Wikipedia’s strategy was creating
a set of rules that got people to generate
      more than 18 million articles.”



                                  Erika Hall
                                  @mulegirl
Put ’em together:
What is content strategy?
“Content strategy for the web is about bringing
editorial skill and methods into website planning. In
 order to create good content, you need a plan for
   how you’re going to get it and keep it coming.”



                                              Elizabeth McGuane
                                                  @emcguane

                                  http://mappedblog.com/2010/10/04/fear-loathing-
                                               and-content-strategy/
“Content strategy is to copywriting
as information architecture is to design.”



                                              Rachel Lovinger
                                                @rlovinger

                            http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/content-strategy-the
“I am a firm believer that content strategy
        is communication design.”



                                          Nicole Jones
                                          @nicoleslaw

                          http://swellcontent.tumblr.com/post/4072864686/
                            demystifying-content-strategy-part-i-the-term
“Content is story.
Content strategy is storytelling.”




                                 Prateek Sarkar
                           Director, Creative Services
                          Walt Disney Parks and Resorts
That’s a broad range of answers.
  Content strategy is a broad field.
Practitioners come at it from different
 perspectives, and tend to specialize.
Where do content strategists come from?




                 From “Apes of Wrath,” a Warner Bros. short.
Is content strategy UX?
You can’t create a great user experience
          around bad content.
Without content strategy,
    it breaks down.
There’s overlap.
But they’re not the same thing.
“Content strategy helps organizations use content
        to achieve their business goals.”



                                      Melissa Rach
                                      @melissarach
“(God help a business if UX isn’t one of
  their business goals, but helping the user
isn’t an inherent part of content strategy).”



                                     Melissa Rach
                                     @melissarach
It’s not only user experience.
Is content strategy marketing?
(Marketers have been very excited
    to talk content strategy!)
Content strategy
       vs.
content marketing.
Content strategy:
The plan. The big picture.
Content marketing:
 The execution.
Content marketing:
   Branded content that helps you
differentiate yourself and make sales.
       Content that sold gum:
Content strategy is not only user
          experience.
    It’s not only marketing.
It’s also data modeling.
     And product design.
 And change management.
       And social media.
         And editorial.
 And content management.
And information architecture.
 And content development.
        And other stuff.
Different content strategists
 have different specialties.
Front-end content strategy
What your audience sees and
experiences. It includes:
• User experience content strategy
• Marketing and editorial content strategy
Back-end content strategy 
This is how to make the content work
well. It includes:
• "Intelligent" content 
• Content governance and operations
(That breakdown courtesy of Kathy Hanbury.)



                                  @kathyhanbury
The benchmark definition:
“Content strategy plans for the creation, publication,
    and governance of useful, usable content.”



                                          Kristina Halvorson,
                                       Content Strategy for the Web
Creation:
Who’s providing your content?
Publication:
How are you getting your content to users?
Governance:
When do you add, update, and archive content?
Useful:
How does this content benefit you?
 How does it benefit your user?
Usable:
Can people find, consume, and act on your content?
What makes good content?
“Good content” is in the eye of the
beholder. Ultimately, your users decide.
What are your goals?
What is your content supposed
     to achieve for you?
“There’s really only one central principle of good
content: it should be appropriate for your
business, for your users, and for its context.
Appropriate in its method of delivery, in its style
and structure, and above all in its substance.”



                                              Erin Kissane
                                               @kissane

                                     The Elements of Content Strategy
Good content is:

• Appropriate
• Useful
• User-centered
• Clear
• Consistent
• Concise
• Supported



                   Erin Kissane again. Seriously, read her book.
How do you know
if your content is good?

 Inventory and audit.
Inventory: What content do we have?
Audit: What content do we need?
The content inventory:
  The cornerstone of any
successful content strategy!
The content inventory
Yes.
It really is a massive spreadsheet
  documenting your entire site.
How do you do a content inventory?
   Click each link on your site.
    Document what you find.
Things often tracked in a content inventory:
  • Page ID/number
  • URL
  • Page Title
  • Parent
  • Page Description
  • Components
  • SEO Information (metadata, keywords)
  • Who inside the organization owns that content.
The inventory is quantitative.
    What’s on the site?
Followup: the content audit.
That’s qualitative: How good is what you’ve got?
Basic audit: ROT analysis.
Look for content that’s:
       Redundant
      Outdated or
         Trivial
More thorough audits can track all kinds of qualities.
                 Is content on brand?
                        Is it clear?
          Is it meeting customer needs?
               Is it in a usable format?
       (There are many possible measures.)
EXERCISE #1:
Let’s evaluate some website content.
Step one: Let’s do user analysis on ourselves.
(Note: in the real world, this is a bad idea.)
“We cannot advocate for those whom we do not know—
  or, even worse, those whom we assume we know.”



                                     Corey Vilhauer
                                     @mrvilhauer
You’re scoping out a food truck’s website.
What content would be useful and usable?
Business goals:
Ideally, we’d talk to the business owner.

     If you owned a food truck,
  what would you want your website
            to do for you?
SPLIT INTO TEAMS OF TWO

I’ll give each team a food truck’s website.
Your job: Perform a quick inventory.
How much content is on the site?
And a quick analysis: Is it useful and usable,
based on our goals? Check for ROT:
redundant, outdated, or trivial content.
WORTH CONSIDERING:
Does the content work on mobile?
Are they linking to Facebook or Twitter or
Yelp, and if so, are those up to date?
Spend a half hour on your analysis.
Then prepare a quick overview: How’s the
site’s content? What needs fixing?
Present:
• Three words that capture the food truck’s
voice. What makes it distinct?
• Three recommendations for how content
(new, deleted, changed) could improve the site.
And we’re back.
So we’ve identified problems.

Now what?
Remember the nutshell:
1. What content do we have?
2. What content do we need?
3. Fill the gap: edit, create & curate.
Erin Kissane’s even shorter breakdown:
1. Evaluate.
2. Design.
3. Execute.
One thing to keep in mind:

Content strategy is a process. It’s a cycle.
It never really ends.
Content strategy is a web design discipline.
   Content experts should be involved
from the beginning of a web design project.
   (Some would argue “content first.”)
It’s not a perfect world, of course,
   so that doesn’t always happen.
“The end goal is not great content.
        It’s a great thing.”




                                   Erika Hall
                                   @mulegirl


                           From her Confab presentation.
More evaluation tools:
Stakeholder interviews
Talk to everyone involved with the
content, preferably one-on-one, about
 what they need and want from the
            site’s content.
The goal is to get an idea of how
content works within the organization.
ASK QUESTIONS.
(Go with the classics: who, what, when,
       where, why, and how.)
Who’s supplying the content?
 Who is the target audience?
Who’s maintaining the content?
What content do we need?
When will we publish?
Where will we publish?
(Our site, email, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)
How will all of this get done?
And a big one, especially in discovery:
               WHY?
      Why do we need a blog?
  Why do we need a Twitter feed?
   Why aren’t we using a CMS?
                 Etc.
Once you’re done evaluating, it’s time
             to design.

Some tools you might use to do so:
Message Architecture

 What are your key messages?
 How are you delivering them?
Does your audience believe you?
Your message architecture is
      independent of form.
It’s not a tagline, or a mission
      statement, or a video.
   It’s communication goals.
      Specific terminology.
illustrations                                 images
                             tweets
help articles                         navigation
                 words
                             photos
          audio
                                         slideshows
                interface copy
  podcasts                       Facebook posts

                blog posts     infographics comments

   cartoons                      video
           white papers                     error messages
Editorial Style Guide

      What’s our tone?
Which dictionary do we consult?
 Do we use the serial comma?
Editorial process

   Who’s creating our content?
How do we decide it’s good enough?
How do we evaluate its effectiveness?
Content Template
            (a.k.a. Page Table)

  What needs to go on each kind of
page? Includes both visible and invisible
  content. Accompanies site map and
  wireframes. Communication bridge
 between subject matter experts and
                writers.
Content Template
  (example #1)




            http://intentionaldesign.ca/2011/02/22/writing-templates/
Content Template
  (example #2)




                 The Elements of Content Strategy
Content Template
(example #2, continued)




                  The Elements of Content Strategy
Editorial Calendar

  How do we decide when to publish?
(Tweet twice a day? Update home page
 when new products launch? Respond
 to holidays? Respond to news events?
           How quickly? Etc.)
There are more tools.
  content matrices
  content modeling
accessibility guidelines
    SEO analysis
      taxonomy
       personas
 competitive analysis
     wireframes
Not every project requires every tool.
And content strategy is not, ultimately,
 about learning a particular tool. The
tools help the process, but they’re not
       the point of the process.
Also, not every project is a site-wide
redesign. Content strategy works on a
        project-by-project basis.
ONE MORE THING ...

     Governance!
How content strategy
 plays out over time.
“If IA is the spatial side of information,
I see content strategy as the temporal side
               of the same coin.”



                                   Louis Rosenfeld
                                   @louisrosenfeld
“When I look at where most websites fail, it’s in
    managing their content over time.”



                                    Karen McGrane
                                    @karenmcgrane
Consultants and agencies:
  People want to hear from you!
Yay, buy-in! But you don’t get to be
       there for the long haul.
In-house:
   Buy in can be a major challenge!
But you know the brand and business
 goals, and you are there for the long
                 haul.
Content strategy is not a quick fix.
   It’s a long process. One reason
  content is valuable is because it’s
messy, and difficult, and requires a lot
              of resources.
To keep your content working:
Track when content will need to be
       archived or updated.
    Use the editorial calendar.
        Use a rolling audit.
   Budget time to get that done.
Whatever your approach and your
background, learn about the other
    areas of content strategy.
“It’s about seeing structures through the lens of
meaning and storytelling, and building relationships
across disciplines so that our databases reflect this
             richness and complexity.”



                                    Sara Wachter-Boettcher
                                       @sara_ann_marie
“People’s capacity for bullshit is rapidly diminishing.
 We need to respect people’s time and give them
  relevant, purposeful content without the extra
                       cruft.”


                                        Brad Frost
                                        @brad_frost
“We should eliminate distractions for
 people. If they came to read, turn the light
on and let them read. If they want to learn,
 give them a quiet place to study. Whatever
they’re after, help them do it in peace. Make
 it readable, watchable, and hearable—and
        keep the ads out of the way.”




                                Nicole Jones
                                @nicoleslaw
Content strategy helps make the
     web a better place.
I’m tired of yammering.
I know you’ve got questions. Shoot!
Resources:
 I’ll post a bibliography and links and stuff on my blog:
                      http://scarequot.es
   Come to a meetup with Content Strategy Seattle!
   http://www.meetup.com/Content-Strategy-Seattle/
Join the Google Group, or LinkedIn discussion groups.
             Follow smart people on Twitter.
Content strategists are a friendly, helpful group. (I think
                   it’s a job requirement.)
THANK YOU
Remember to fill out your evaluation.




       Don’t forget to write.
               james@scarequot.es
                http://scarequot.es
              Twitter: @scarequotes

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SVC Content Strategy Workshop - Winter 2012

  • 1. A Crash Course in Content Strategy A workshop at the School of Visual Concepts March 2, 2012 Your host: James Callan @scarequotes
  • 2. (This workshop stands on the blog posts and books of giants.)
  • 3. Introductions! Who are you? What brings you here? What’s a website that has good content? What do you like about it?
  • 4. People don’t visit your site to see amazing design.
  • 5. People don’t visit your site for a great user experience.
  • 6. They want your content.
  • 7. “Like a gentleman in a finely crafted suit who wants to burp you the alphabet, even if your website looks nice, no one will stick around to hear what you have to say if you don’t craft something compelling.” Jason Santa Maria @jasonsantamaria http://jasonsantamaria.com/articles/the-elements- of-content-strategy/
  • 8. (Note: user experience, design, and the other things that make up your website are also important. This isn’t a contest.)
  • 9. Content is not a nice-to-have. Content is not an add on. It’s a business asset. It has value.
  • 10. Because ... it brings you customers, wins you fans, builds you an audiences, and earns you money.
  • 11. It’s also a lot of work, if you want to do it well.
  • 12. U.S. Findings: Web Use + Perceptions of Content Credibility
  • 13. “You are all in publishing!” Jeffrey Zeldman, king of the web http://www.zeldman.com/2011/03/15/web-design-is-publishing/
  • 14. You need to get it right. Enter content strategy.
  • 15. What is content strategy?
  • 16. First word: What is content?
  • 17. “In the web industry, anything that conveys meaningful information to humans is called ‘content.’” Erin Kissane @kissane The Elements of Content Strategy
  • 18. “Content is contextualized data.” Rahel Bailie @rahelab “A Practical Definition of Content”
  • 19. “Content is anything an organization or individual creates and shares to tell their story.” Ann Handley @marketingprofs
  • 20. illustrations images tweets help articles navigation words photos audio slideshows interface copy podcasts Facebook posts blog posts infographics comments cartoons video white papers error messages
  • 21. (It’s not just words.)
  • 22. Word two: What is strategy?
  • 23. It’s a plan for getting stuff done in order to achieve a goal.
  • 24. “Wikipedia’s strategy was creating a set of rules that got people to generate more than 18 million articles.” Erika Hall @mulegirl
  • 25. Put ’em together: What is content strategy?
  • 26. “Content strategy for the web is about bringing editorial skill and methods into website planning. In order to create good content, you need a plan for how you’re going to get it and keep it coming.” Elizabeth McGuane @emcguane http://mappedblog.com/2010/10/04/fear-loathing- and-content-strategy/
  • 27. “Content strategy is to copywriting as information architecture is to design.” Rachel Lovinger @rlovinger http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/content-strategy-the
  • 28. “I am a firm believer that content strategy is communication design.” Nicole Jones @nicoleslaw http://swellcontent.tumblr.com/post/4072864686/ demystifying-content-strategy-part-i-the-term
  • 29. “Content is story. Content strategy is storytelling.” Prateek Sarkar Director, Creative Services Walt Disney Parks and Resorts
  • 30. That’s a broad range of answers. Content strategy is a broad field. Practitioners come at it from different perspectives, and tend to specialize.
  • 31. Where do content strategists come from? From “Apes of Wrath,” a Warner Bros. short.
  • 32.
  • 34. You can’t create a great user experience around bad content.
  • 35. Without content strategy, it breaks down.
  • 36. There’s overlap. But they’re not the same thing.
  • 37. “Content strategy helps organizations use content to achieve their business goals.” Melissa Rach @melissarach
  • 38. “(God help a business if UX isn’t one of their business goals, but helping the user isn’t an inherent part of content strategy).” Melissa Rach @melissarach
  • 39. It’s not only user experience.
  • 40. Is content strategy marketing? (Marketers have been very excited to talk content strategy!)
  • 41. Content strategy vs. content marketing.
  • 42. Content strategy: The plan. The big picture.
  • 44. Content marketing: Branded content that helps you differentiate yourself and make sales. Content that sold gum:
  • 45. Content strategy is not only user experience. It’s not only marketing.
  • 46. It’s also data modeling. And product design. And change management. And social media. And editorial. And content management. And information architecture. And content development. And other stuff.
  • 47. Different content strategists have different specialties.
  • 48. Front-end content strategy What your audience sees and experiences. It includes: • User experience content strategy • Marketing and editorial content strategy
  • 49. Back-end content strategy  This is how to make the content work well. It includes: • "Intelligent" content  • Content governance and operations
  • 50. (That breakdown courtesy of Kathy Hanbury.) @kathyhanbury
  • 52. “Content strategy plans for the creation, publication, and governance of useful, usable content.” Kristina Halvorson, Content Strategy for the Web
  • 54. Publication: How are you getting your content to users?
  • 55. Governance: When do you add, update, and archive content?
  • 56. Useful: How does this content benefit you? How does it benefit your user?
  • 57. Usable: Can people find, consume, and act on your content?
  • 58. What makes good content?
  • 59. “Good content” is in the eye of the beholder. Ultimately, your users decide.
  • 60. What are your goals? What is your content supposed to achieve for you?
  • 61. “There’s really only one central principle of good content: it should be appropriate for your business, for your users, and for its context. Appropriate in its method of delivery, in its style and structure, and above all in its substance.” Erin Kissane @kissane The Elements of Content Strategy
  • 62. Good content is: • Appropriate • Useful • User-centered • Clear • Consistent • Concise • Supported Erin Kissane again. Seriously, read her book.
  • 63. How do you know if your content is good? Inventory and audit.
  • 64. Inventory: What content do we have?
  • 65. Audit: What content do we need?
  • 66. The content inventory: The cornerstone of any successful content strategy!
  • 68. Yes. It really is a massive spreadsheet documenting your entire site.
  • 69. How do you do a content inventory? Click each link on your site. Document what you find.
  • 70. Things often tracked in a content inventory: • Page ID/number • URL • Page Title • Parent • Page Description • Components • SEO Information (metadata, keywords) • Who inside the organization owns that content.
  • 71. The inventory is quantitative. What’s on the site?
  • 72. Followup: the content audit. That’s qualitative: How good is what you’ve got?
  • 73. Basic audit: ROT analysis. Look for content that’s: Redundant Outdated or Trivial
  • 74. More thorough audits can track all kinds of qualities. Is content on brand? Is it clear? Is it meeting customer needs? Is it in a usable format? (There are many possible measures.)
  • 75. EXERCISE #1: Let’s evaluate some website content.
  • 76. Step one: Let’s do user analysis on ourselves.
  • 77. (Note: in the real world, this is a bad idea.)
  • 78. “We cannot advocate for those whom we do not know— or, even worse, those whom we assume we know.” Corey Vilhauer @mrvilhauer
  • 79. You’re scoping out a food truck’s website. What content would be useful and usable?
  • 80. Business goals: Ideally, we’d talk to the business owner. If you owned a food truck, what would you want your website to do for you?
  • 81. SPLIT INTO TEAMS OF TWO I’ll give each team a food truck’s website. Your job: Perform a quick inventory. How much content is on the site?
  • 82. And a quick analysis: Is it useful and usable, based on our goals? Check for ROT: redundant, outdated, or trivial content.
  • 83. WORTH CONSIDERING: Does the content work on mobile? Are they linking to Facebook or Twitter or Yelp, and if so, are those up to date?
  • 84. Spend a half hour on your analysis. Then prepare a quick overview: How’s the site’s content? What needs fixing?
  • 85. Present: • Three words that capture the food truck’s voice. What makes it distinct? • Three recommendations for how content (new, deleted, changed) could improve the site.
  • 87. So we’ve identified problems. Now what?
  • 88. Remember the nutshell: 1. What content do we have? 2. What content do we need? 3. Fill the gap: edit, create & curate.
  • 89. Erin Kissane’s even shorter breakdown: 1. Evaluate. 2. Design. 3. Execute.
  • 90. One thing to keep in mind: Content strategy is a process. It’s a cycle. It never really ends.
  • 91.
  • 92. Content strategy is a web design discipline. Content experts should be involved from the beginning of a web design project. (Some would argue “content first.”)
  • 93. It’s not a perfect world, of course, so that doesn’t always happen.
  • 94. “The end goal is not great content. It’s a great thing.” Erika Hall @mulegirl From her Confab presentation.
  • 97. Talk to everyone involved with the content, preferably one-on-one, about what they need and want from the site’s content.
  • 98. The goal is to get an idea of how content works within the organization.
  • 99. ASK QUESTIONS. (Go with the classics: who, what, when, where, why, and how.)
  • 100. Who’s supplying the content? Who is the target audience? Who’s maintaining the content?
  • 101. What content do we need?
  • 102. When will we publish?
  • 103. Where will we publish? (Our site, email, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)
  • 104. How will all of this get done?
  • 105. And a big one, especially in discovery: WHY? Why do we need a blog? Why do we need a Twitter feed? Why aren’t we using a CMS? Etc.
  • 106. Once you’re done evaluating, it’s time to design. Some tools you might use to do so:
  • 107. Message Architecture What are your key messages? How are you delivering them? Does your audience believe you?
  • 108. Your message architecture is independent of form. It’s not a tagline, or a mission statement, or a video. It’s communication goals. Specific terminology.
  • 109. illustrations images tweets help articles navigation words photos audio slideshows interface copy podcasts Facebook posts blog posts infographics comments cartoons video white papers error messages
  • 110. Editorial Style Guide What’s our tone? Which dictionary do we consult? Do we use the serial comma?
  • 111. Editorial process Who’s creating our content? How do we decide it’s good enough? How do we evaluate its effectiveness?
  • 112. Content Template (a.k.a. Page Table) What needs to go on each kind of page? Includes both visible and invisible content. Accompanies site map and wireframes. Communication bridge between subject matter experts and writers.
  • 113. Content Template (example #1) http://intentionaldesign.ca/2011/02/22/writing-templates/
  • 114. Content Template (example #2) The Elements of Content Strategy
  • 115. Content Template (example #2, continued) The Elements of Content Strategy
  • 116. Editorial Calendar How do we decide when to publish? (Tweet twice a day? Update home page when new products launch? Respond to holidays? Respond to news events? How quickly? Etc.)
  • 117. There are more tools. content matrices content modeling accessibility guidelines SEO analysis taxonomy personas competitive analysis wireframes
  • 118. Not every project requires every tool.
  • 119. And content strategy is not, ultimately, about learning a particular tool. The tools help the process, but they’re not the point of the process.
  • 120. Also, not every project is a site-wide redesign. Content strategy works on a project-by-project basis.
  • 121. ONE MORE THING ... Governance! How content strategy plays out over time.
  • 122. “If IA is the spatial side of information, I see content strategy as the temporal side of the same coin.” Louis Rosenfeld @louisrosenfeld
  • 123. “When I look at where most websites fail, it’s in managing their content over time.” Karen McGrane @karenmcgrane
  • 124. Consultants and agencies: People want to hear from you! Yay, buy-in! But you don’t get to be there for the long haul.
  • 125. In-house: Buy in can be a major challenge! But you know the brand and business goals, and you are there for the long haul.
  • 126. Content strategy is not a quick fix. It’s a long process. One reason content is valuable is because it’s messy, and difficult, and requires a lot of resources.
  • 127. To keep your content working: Track when content will need to be archived or updated. Use the editorial calendar. Use a rolling audit. Budget time to get that done.
  • 128. Whatever your approach and your background, learn about the other areas of content strategy.
  • 129.
  • 130. “It’s about seeing structures through the lens of meaning and storytelling, and building relationships across disciplines so that our databases reflect this richness and complexity.” Sara Wachter-Boettcher @sara_ann_marie
  • 131. “People’s capacity for bullshit is rapidly diminishing. We need to respect people’s time and give them relevant, purposeful content without the extra cruft.” Brad Frost @brad_frost
  • 132. “We should eliminate distractions for people. If they came to read, turn the light on and let them read. If they want to learn, give them a quiet place to study. Whatever they’re after, help them do it in peace. Make it readable, watchable, and hearable—and keep the ads out of the way.” Nicole Jones @nicoleslaw
  • 133. Content strategy helps make the web a better place.
  • 134. I’m tired of yammering. I know you’ve got questions. Shoot!
  • 135. Resources: I’ll post a bibliography and links and stuff on my blog: http://scarequot.es Come to a meetup with Content Strategy Seattle! http://www.meetup.com/Content-Strategy-Seattle/ Join the Google Group, or LinkedIn discussion groups. Follow smart people on Twitter. Content strategists are a friendly, helpful group. (I think it’s a job requirement.)
  • 136. THANK YOU Remember to fill out your evaluation. Don’t forget to write. james@scarequot.es http://scarequot.es Twitter: @scarequotes

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