Content Marketing for Small Business (Tips for Growing Your Business Online)
Managing a small business these days is far from easy.
According to the latest reports on small businesses by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, about 50% will fail within the first five years, and 70% within 10.
But what is the biggest culprit contributing to small business failure? Not surprisingly, it’s a lack of revenue.
Without a steady stream of leads, strong visibility, and a healthy budget, lifting a small business off the ground can be extremely difficult, but the same old fixes don’t apply any longer.
Buyer behaviors have changed. When people wanted to make a big purchase about 15-20 years ago, they’d walk into a store looking for a way to talk to the sales department or see a demo. Today, buyers are much more into self-service and are a lot more hesitant to reach out to someone in sales.
Business conversations used to be dominated by building face-to-face human connections. Now, implementing a strong digital marketing strategy and creating quality content is one of the only ways to get in front of your ideal buyers fast.
In this article, we’re going to share with you the basics of content marketing that have worked for hundreds of small business owners we’ve worked with.
Why use content marketing for small businesses?
One of the biggest challenges small businesses face is effectively reaching potential customers. Creating healthy brand awareness is difficult to support without large budgets to fund massive marketing campaigns. This is why building an ever-growing library of valuable content that speaks to both your customers — and search engines — is key.
By putting pen to paper, you can turn the odds in your favor.
When you publish content online that helps educate your ideal customers and find you, the content continues working for you long after you wind down for the day. And, as you add to this content, your online presence grows steadily stronger.
Think of content marketing like a garden: After a few long, laborious days at the beginning of the growing season — planting seeds, adding nutrients, providing enough water and sunlight — your beds reward you with lots of blooms and beauty that last the entire growing season. You’ll have to weed and water regularly, but once a garden bed is fully established, it grows well for some time.
For small businesses, the fact that content never sleeps and continues working, gathering prospects and leads, even while you sleep, is only one of the many perks.
Content marketing also helps small businesses:
Now that you understand why you should be implementing a content marketing program for your small business, let’s take a closer look at how small businesses do it.
How to use content marketing to grow your small business online
Using content marketing for small businesses does not have to be complicated. Still, it’s way more than just blogging (although blogging is one of the biggest contributors to a healthy content marketing campaign).
IMPACT partner and author of They Ask, You Answer Marcus Sheridan learned this when he nearly lost his swimming pool company, River Pools and Spas, to the 2008 recession.
As a last-ditch effort to save his small business, he stayed up all night, publishing blog post after blog post, posting as much educational material around fiberglass pools as he could to his website.
Shortly thereafter, his company’s web traffic, leads, and sales went through the roof. (Learn more about Sheridan’s success story and how you can apply this effective approach to inbound and content marketing here.)
Even though blogging is an integral part of content marketing, content creation should also include:
In this section, we’ll run through what each of these formats is and how to use them for growing your online presence and revenue.
But first, let’s go over one of the most important choices your small business can make when going all in with content marketing: Hiring a content manager.
Hire a content manager
Your content marketing undertaking won’t work the way you need it to if it’s reduced to a once-in-a-while effort. You need to publish content regularly — as in three pieces of content per week — to really see results.
Because of the time and effort it takes to effectively implement a successful content marketing initiative, one of the most important things you can do for your business is to appoint someone to be in charge of the entire process.
We typically call this a content manager. Here’s a video about why you should hire a content manager:
We’ve seen firsthand how hiring a content manager can influence results. Our IMPACT clients who’ve seen the biggest business growth from their content marketing initiatives have someone on staff who owns the content creation and management process from start to finish.
As Liz Moorehead writes in “Why you need a content manager on your digital marketing team:” “We’ve seen time and again with our clients that there’s a direct correlation between the companies that see significant gains and improvements in digital marketing and sales, and those that don't when they have hired an in-house content manager.”
IMPACT client West Roofing Systems is a perfect example, as can be seen in their success story. The team hired an in-house content manager and saw a 1,200% increase in website traffic and an 828% jump in lead conversions (among other amazing results) from their efforts.
Stories like this are the reason we tell each of our digital sales and marketing coaching clients that one of the first steps to success is hiring a content manager. And it continues to be one of the key factors in driving results for IMPACT's most successful clients.
So commit to hiring a content manager to ensure your content marketing undertaking can hit the ground running.
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Know who your buyers are and what they’re interested in
Creating great content for your ideal customer is a waste of time if you don’t fully understand their needs. You might as well be throwing words into thin air.
Do your research, see what your competitors are doing, and use search engine optimization (SEO) and keyword research tools such as Semrush and Google Trends to keep on top of what your buyers are searching for.
Another helpful tip: Perform a Google search for the broad keywords and terms around your products and services to gain insight as to what your buyers are likely searching for. In your SERP (search engine results page), there is typically a section under the ads and the first few results that offer other search terms “people also ask” for.
Use these terms and related searches to create more content by answering these questions too. It’s a simple way to see where Google will be directing your prospects, and if you rank well for these search terms, your content will be showing up there too.
Once you know what your business’s buyers are, you can zero in on meeting their needs and focus on showing prospects how your products and services solve their problems.
Great content can drive traffic you didn’t even know existed, especially with longer-tail keywords that have higher intent.
You will be answering their questions — again, as thoroughly and honestly as possible — in the formats previously listed.
Here’s how to use each of these formats for your small business’s content marketing efforts.
Blog articles
Blog articles are the meat and potatoes of any content marketing strategy. This is where you can address all potential questions your customers are asking and help educate your prospects about how your products and services solve their problems.
From a search engine perspective, blog content helps your website show up when people search online for products and services like yours. As a bonus, every time you create a blog article, it creates a new page on your website, and Google and other search engines value websites that are fresh and growing.
What questions should you be answering?
When Marcus Sheridan saved his pool company from bankruptcy with content, he realized five specific topics consistently drove these results.
These topics, which we call The Big 5, should be addressed first:
Start with these specific questions, and then teach your prospects everything you can think of about your products, services, industry, and process, focusing on your potential customers and how you can help with their needs.
Sheffield Metals, a B2B business that sells metal products to manufacturers and contractors, used this method when writing articles for their learning center. Their comparison article Metal Roofing vs. Shingle Roofing demonstrates the perfect way to structure your own posts.
After working with IMPACT to tackle The Big 5 and other They Ask, You Answer how-tos, Sheffield Metals increased their revenue by about $20 million! (Learn more about how by reading their case study.)
To learn more about how to write these articles, take our free course How to Write “The Big 5.”
Ebooks
Ebooks function like blog articles do, providing educational content and driving search engine results, but they should be longer and more in-depth and offer more value to a potential customer.
Consider “gating” this content by requiring an email address or similar piece of contact information for your prospects to access them. If you’re using marketing software such as HubSpot or Marketo, the contact information you obtain will be entered into your lead database, giving you the opportunity to reach out to them later.
As you get better at creating content, you’ll notice that much of what you create can be repurposed. If you take a group of relevant blog articles, you can combine them into an ebook, which is a great way to get even more out of the work you’ve already done.
Videos
According to Wyzowl, 84% of people surveyed revealed they bought a product or service after watching a company’s video. In addition, 76% of companies that use video see increased sales volume and revenue, and it’s estimated that this year, 80% of the content consumed by buyers on the internet will be video.
It’s no secret that video is an effective means of communicating, and as the dominance of platforms like YouTube and TikTok continue, it will only become a more vital marketing tool. The bottom line: Your content should be there, too.
But where should you start?
We recommend producing videos that will move the sales needle most, including videos we call “The Selling 7.”
These include:
Yale Appliance worked closely with the IMPACT team to roll out video content, among other inbound marketing initiatives, and saw incredible results. They now average up to 800,000 visits and 8,000 new leads each month. They are opening a third location and accruing about $117 million in revenue.
Many small businesses, though, can be intimidated by creating videos. But honestly, if you have a smartphone and a tripod, you can get started.
Can you go a bit further and look way more professional if you invest in equipment such as proper lighting, backdrops, and digital cameras? Of course you can. But if that iPhone is all you have to set up an awesome video-recording space on a budget, so be it. As we like to say here at IMPACT, done is way better than perfect.