CCW #008: How to Write a Winning Content Strategy in 7 Stupidly Simple Steps
Brian Smart
MrContent | Transforming professionals into attention-generating machines and building brands that speak for themselves.
"More (and better) content starts with a strategy."
In this issue, we're going to tackle why you need a content strategy and how to build and execute a successful content marketing strategy from scratch in 7 no-stress steps.
Your content strategy is the most important piece of your content marketing plan. A content strategy helps you define your goals, plan your content and measure your results. And a well documented content strategy ensures every piece of content generates tangible results.
Let's get started!
Step 1. Define your goals.
Know your goals before you start planning your strategy.
Answer these three questions to get started:
Step 2. Conduct persona research.
Create a character to embody your perfect buyer.
It will help make your persona easy to reference and remember.
Demographics help you identify people based on their age, gender, income, kids, habits, hobbies, job status, location, religion, race, or anything relevant to your business.
Psychographics will help you understand what your buyer(s) enjoys, values, and believes. Psychographics is where you learn your buyer.
Then, make a list of goals that are relevant to what you offer.
Tip: A relevant conversation on LinkedIn will give you tons of valuable information.
Write down the problems you/r business can solve.?
Step 3. Run a content audit.
SEO metrics like organic traffic or keyword rankings
User metrics like page views or bounce rates
Engagement metrics like comments or click-through rates
Sales metrics like number of leads or conversion rates
Type of content, like educational, lead generating, etc.
Title of content (H1 headers)
Subtitles (H2 or H3 headers)
Internal and external links
SEO factors, including metadata and keywords
How timely the content is, including if any of it is outdated
Analytic data, including page views, average time on page, bounce rate, and search queries
Other factors, like page load speeds (should be less than two seconds) and how mobile-friendly it is
领英推荐
Consider these key questions as you review:
What content is performing particularly well?
This might mean it has a high page view rate or a high conversion rate. What can you glean from this content to try to duplicate these results in the future?
What content is performing poorly?
For example, high bounce rates, long load speeds, or poor SEO rankings.
What content is outdated?
Does it need to be deleted, updated, or entirely reworked?
Step 4. Choose a content management system.
The content management system (CMS) is where you create, manage, and optimize your content.
The complexity and functionality of your CMS depends on your needs and size; i.e. enterprise, small business,?solopreneur, etc.
Here are a few examples:
Step 5. Determine which type of content you want to create.
Focus on formats that add value (entertain, educate, inspire) and deeply connect with your audience.
The perfect content format is the one that best fits your audience. Content creation is all about reaching out to specific persona types - the persona types most likely to buy your solutions.
Your perfect buyer profile will tell you what types of content your audience consumes and favors most.
The perfect type of content puts your products and brand at the top of your audience’s mind.
If you’re building trust with your audience, pick content types that give you room to explore and deliver content that educates. But, if your goal is spreading awareness, memes and short videos perform better.
Every social platform behaves differently and attracts different audiences; what performs well on one channel may not perform well on another channel.
If you're branding content solutions via video explainers, YouTube works great. But shorter videos perform better with Facebook and Twitter. And, if you're targeting B2B markets, eBooks are perfect for LinkedIn.
Everything depends on the attention level of your audience. If you’re competing in a low attention/high-turnover setting, simple content works best (i.e., Instagram and memes). If you’re competing in a high engagement/low-turnover setting, complex content forms will be more effective (i.e., LinkedIn and long-posts).
Step 6. Brainstorm content ideas.
Running out of content ideas will crush your momentum. Brainstorming provides quick and easy idea generation of fresh content ideas in a relaxed manner.
Try one of these four powerful group brainstorming techniques:
7. Create, publish, analyze, iterate your content.
Your marketing strategy is about more than the types of content you create – your marketing strategy also details how you'll organize, distribute and analyze your content.
Use my?editorial calendar to publish a well-balanced and diverse content library.
Featured Tool:?Free 2023 Coaches Editorial Calendar with Posting Prompts
See you next week.
When you're ready, use these three tools to help you build:
1.The Dynamo Content Engine: When you're ready to start creating more, organizing better and distributing your content more effectively.
2.The 10X Creator Toolbox: Templates you can use now whether you know your audience yet or not.
3.The Essential Content Creation Resource: Join a community of like minded creators for Weekly podcasts, Content training and ask-me-anything sessions.
Thanks for posting! I'd like to learn more!
CEO Acuity Risk Management | Strategic Technology Leader | Cross-Functional Expertise | Scaling High-Growth Businesses
2 年“Stupidly simple steps” is right, Brian! Sometimes it’s all about the consistency, not the complications
Vice President of Marketing at Yuvo Health
2 年"Your marketing strategy is about more than the types of content you create – your marketing strategy also details how you'll organize, distribute and analyze your content." SO TRUE!! Content can't be successful if you don't think about how to market it accordingly.