The five great questions of content marketing
Mark Schaefer
Top Voice in Personal Branding, Marketing strategist, keynote speaker, university educator, futurist, and bestselling author of "Marketing Rebellion," "KNOWN," and "Belonging to the Brand."
I recently attended a conference where marketers wrote about their single biggest challenges. These issues were posted on a board and it was fascinating to observe! These five content-related posts stood out as the great questions representing the minds of the conference attendees:
1. Breaking through the noise
“We can create ‘great’ content, but how do we guarantee it is seen? How do we guarantee that the message/takeaway of the video was viewed? It is our job to put guardrails in place to make sure that our message is seen. The cost of guaranteeing that messages are seen is increasing greatly, and the industry needs to brace themselves for the increased cost. Consider the Media Rating Council guidelines: 50 percent view for two seconds. Ha, is that how the creative team packaged the message?”
2. Specific measurement
“We still have clients who want to know how many conversions can be attributed to specific platforms or even pieces of content — and often the brands who want to know this are the ones without digital conversion paths that can be tracked and analyzed. We’re combating this by fine-tuning a purchase intent model that assigns weights to different interactions a user may have with the content, and using this to back into a minimum dollar amount that we feel confident taking credit for — but it’s obviously not a perfect science.”
3. Seamless content creation
“The challenge I face is how to educate my company-wide content writers to produce engaging, cost-effective content for our target audience. We have many different teams producing content for several mediums and platforms and who feel very connected to their area — meaning they don’t like outside perspective. I want to make sure we all seamlessly collaborate on content creation.”
4. Competing funding levels
“How do we compete for marketing funding to support content marketing programs when senior leaders compare it to mature marketing vehicles that have a more linear, positive ROI? If we can’t measure the results of the content, the funding will disappear.”
5. Human versus bots
“We all hear about the importance of having a human presence with our content but we are moving toward a world of algorithms and automated writing. How do we navigate those waters when content bots become as good or better than humans?”
… pretty good questions, right? What would you add?
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This post originally appeared on the site of Schaefer Marketing Solutions
Illustration courtesy Flickr CC and Bilal Kamoon
Director of Marketing at Collaborative Haus
7 年I think many marketers today can relate to the challenges outlined above. Unfortunately, I think even as we work towards solutions to these challenges, new hurdles constantly appear in the ever-evolving industry of marketing. The ultimate solution is likely just adaptability in both the marketer and their strategies.
Conseil en Protection Sociale & Gestion de Patrimoine
7 年I would say that these are very relevant questions and are the same as last year, meaning unfortunately no one has found the answers yet!
Entrepreneur/Consultant/Writer
7 年#3, the seamless content creation is very hard to do because it relies so heavily on the culture of each company. Some companies, especially startups, have a much easier time doing this than larger, more established (both in the industry and in their culture) companies. Unfreezing a company's culture and reshaping it to be more collaborative with shared goals that include things like branding, lead generation and customer satisfaction (all things content is great at boosting) is a very large task. Mark, have you faced challenges like this with clients? What's been your take in helping change the culture?
VP - Marketing | The Thrifty Marketer | Certified Happiness Coach | Marketing Advisor
7 年5 solid questions and a good article