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What is content marketing?
And what's the big business benefit?
What is content marketing?
Content marketing is based on the idea that todayâs consumers do online research, especially for big ticket items. But they sometimes do so even for lower priced products like anti-dandruff shampoo or plant fertilizer.ďťż
Your customers may not know what their problem is. Image by Axel Mellin on Pixabay
That online research might start very general, before a potential customer even knows what their problem is. (They donât know whether their tomato plants need more water or if they need fertilizer.)
Once theyâve identified the problem, they might start investigating different general solutions. (A 10-10-10 fertilizer or a 10-10-5 fertilizer?)
After that, theyâll likely start considering specific products or services that might help them. (Miracle Gro or Garden Safe brand?)
Finally, they might start comparison shopping. (How does the price at the local garden centre compare to Amazonâs?)
Of course, for low price products, people put in less effort, and might not do any research at all. For expensive items or services, the research period can be very lengthy. For example, it might take a few years for a potential customer to move from the initial wish/idea of renovating their kitchen through to execution. Thatâs because a kitchen reno is a truckload of money and two truckloads of upheaval â and they plan to live with it for a long time â so theyâre willing to put in significant effort to get it right.
Content marketing is where you answer your customersâ questions â in blog posts or videos or podcasts or whatever. (There are other types of content marketing that arenât about answering customersâ questions. But thatâs what weâre going to focus on here.)
What does customersâ online research mean for you?
If you answer your potential customersâ questions when theyâre in the research stage, they can come to see you as a trusted resource.
When potential customers reach the decision stage, youâre more likely to be top of mind because theyâve seen your content before. (Ideally, many times before.) And youâve established trust by showing that youâre an expert in your field. Thatâs huge. That is why content marketing is a big deal.
Build trust with your customers so they know they wonât be ripped off. Image by Gerd Altmann on Pixabay
Think about it. What makes us hesitant to hire a contractor, even if we can afford it and weâre ready for the upheaval?
Often itâs because weâre afraid of being ripped off by someone who is either dishonest, or doesnât have the necessary expertise, or both.
What makes us hesitant to hire a business coach or a graphic designer or, dare I say it, a freelance writer?
Often itâs because weâre afraid of being ripped off by someone who is either dishonest, or doesnât have the necessary expertise, or both.
Content marketing is where you can reduce those customer fears â in blog posts or videos or podcasts, or whatever. (Testimonials and reviews are also powerful for reducing customer fears and building trust.)
Content marketing builds trust based on your expertise and your helpfulness. If you build that trust through content marketing, youâre ahead of your competitors who havenât.
What content marketing is not
So, content marketing is where you answer your potential customersâ questions and reduce their fears. You build a relationship with them, and earn their trust.
Content can be written â such as blog posts, articles in industry magazines, case studies, white papers, or email newsletters.
It can be videos, podcasts, photo tutorials, or infographics. (I plan to talk about repurposing your content in a separate article. Repurposing gets your more mileage out of everything you create.)
Content marketing is NOT sales talk.
This can be hard for some people to get their heads around. I recently signed up to a famous professional copywriterâs email list, expecting to receive helpful copywriting tips. That would have built trust and a relationship with me. Instead, he emailed me repeated sales pitches for his pricey advanced copywriting course. To use a well worn analogy, he was asking me to marry him before even having a cup of tea together. I unsubscribed.
Trying to sell too quickly is not a good look. Image by Alexas_Fotos on Pixabay.
If he had been a bit more patient and given me valuable content, I may have eventually bought his course (or mentioned it to my writer friends). Instead, heâs for sure LOST a customer.
Donât be like that guy.
Your content needs to be genuinely helpful to your customers. Yes, you are giving away value FOR FREE. Crucially, though, your goal is to share that value with as many people as possible. (Content marketing is, after all, marketing.)
This is very different from giving away something for free to an individual customer. Youâre not giving away for free whatever it is that you earn money doing.
So, if you own a plumbing and heating business, you can put video tutorials on your website to help your customers do simple fix-it jobs themselves. Thatâs quite different from you or your team doing plumbing work for free! Youâre sharing your knowledge â not your labour (or your teamâs labour). You need to get paid for that. Generally speaking, hereâs the crucial contrast:
Content marketing is: Giving away knowledge for free to many people.
Content marketing is not: Giving away whatever you get paid for in your business to individual people.
As a freelance writer, Iâm giving away my knowledge in this article to as broad an audience as possible. But Iâm not going to write blog posts for you for free.* If you wanted blog posts for your website, youâd need to pay for them â because thatâs one of the ways my business makes money.
* Writing a free blog post for someone elseâs blog can be worth it, though â if the blog has a decent size and relevant readership. Guest blogging is also a topic for another article though.
What type of content marketing should you do?
Content marketing isnât just blogging. There are other formats for content marketing. How can you decide what type to do? Hereâs a very short list of crucial things to consider when choosing the type of content marketing to do:
What your customers would find helpful.
What you like to do.
To take the plumbing example above, a photo tutorial would be slightly more useful to your audience than a blog post with a bunch of text explaining how to fix a tap. But of course a video would be much better! If youâre comfortable in front of a camera (or doing a voiceover), but you hate writing, then making videos for your plumbing and heating business would be an ideal fit.
The videos donât have to be super-fancy to be helpful. (Youâll get better!) But they do need to clearly show what youâre doing without too much shakiness, and the sound quality needs to be good.
Hereâs Neil Patelâs guide to getting started with video: How to Get Started with Video Marketing
You will need some equipment to make videos. But donât let the idea of perfection stop you from getting started. People can recognize quality information even if the execution isnât glossy. Image by Vanilla Bear Films on Unsplash.
And one from HubSpot: The Ultimate Guide to Video Marketing
You can also use software to make animated explainer videos. Here are a couple of reviews of some of the available software to get you started:
12 Best Explainer Video Software in 2019 (Paid and Free)
3 of the Best Explainer Video Software Tools
As well as recorded videos, there are also live streams (e.g. on Facebook, Instagram, or LinkedIn), webinars, podcasts, infographics, before and after photos, and photo tutorials. (And probably more I havenât thought of!)
I donât know anything about creating podcasts, but this looks like a good place to start looking into it:
Podcasting Resources & Tools for Every Level
If you donât have a design background, Canva is a great place to make infographics. I use it all the time for social media graphics.
So, if writing a blog post gives you nightmares about school exams, donât write blog posts! You have other options.
So long as itâs valuable to your potential customers, any kind of content marketing can also be valuable for your business.
Create content consistently and plan your content calendar
You donât need to do everything (blog posts and videos and podcasts andâŚ) and you canât do everything. At least not yet. Maybe one day youâll hire someone to make videos, while you focus on blog posts, say.
When youâre just starting with content marketing, itâs more realistic to pick one type of content marketing to do exceptionally well. Thatâs much better than doing a half-arsed job of more than one.
And once youâve decided what type of content youâre going to focus on, itâs important to plan and be consistent. (And publish fairly frequently.) Donât do what Jay Baer refers to as ârandom acts of contentâ â a blog post here and there, or an occasional video when you feel like it, or a podcast every few months when you get around to it.
If you wing it, youâll probably end up scratching your head every week wondering what you should talk/write/video about. The risk is youâll eventually end up doing nothing. (Have you seen how many abandoned blogs are out there?) In addition, youâre not building that trust with your audience if you create content only sporadically.
So, when youâre ready to start content marketing, itâs important to create a content calendar. Come up with topics in advance and plan when youâre going to produce and publish the content. For advice on coming up with a content calendar and how to get that content done, I recommend Amy Porterfieldâs podcast, episode #250.
Finally, keep in mind that whatever content marketing you do, youâll learn more and get better as you go along.
Remember the big benefit of content marketing for your business
If you search online about content marketing, youâll soon come across pressure to bust your butt to get your content to come up on the first page of Google. But is that really possible? And if itâs not possible, is there any point doing content marketing?
I mean, if your content comes up on the fourth page of Google in response to a potential customerâs search query, pretty much nobody will see it. In which case, you may as well not bother, right?
Nope. Not right.
Sure, it would be lovely to come up towards the top of relevant search results. And once you get more skilled at targeting keywords, and you begin to understand other aspects of SEO (search engine optimization), you may be able to do that.
In the meantime, though, even if your content doesnât rank on the first page, content marketing is still worth bothering with â because you can create your own audience. And you can develop relationships with those people.
You have current customers. You have followers, friends, and connections on social media, and some of them are potential customers. Even if thatâs only a handful of people, start there and ask them if theyâd like to subscribe to your new blog or podcast. (Keep asking them every now and then.) They donât need to find you on Google. Because theyâve already found you.
You can provide value to those people with your content marketing and gradually grow your audience. Here are some suggestions for how to do that:
Encourage current subscribers to share your content with others who might be interested.
Add a link to your blog (or YouTube channel or whatever) in your email signature.
Add your blog (or whatever) address to your business cards, invoices etc.
If you have a brick and mortar site, promote your content there.
Encourage everyone on your team to promote it too.
Partner with a business thatâs complementary to yours and promote one anotherâs content.
Find influencers (or micro influencers) in your area of expertise and ask them for an interview or a quote you can use. Donât be shy â theyâre only human and the worst they can do is ignore you. Ask them to share your content that mentions them.
Publish guest posts on relevant sites with decent size audiences.
Be a guest on someone elseâs podcast.
Ask to be interviewed for someone elseâs video.
So long as your audience overlaps with the audience youâre guesting for, that will help you gain more subscribers. Of course, you may need to start with small fry. You may have little chance of being interviewed by Gary Vee right off the bat. But you never know. It doesnât hurt to ask. Iâm dead chuffed that author and content marketing expert, Ann Handley, responded to my email asking for a quote for this article. :)
I asked her if business owners and entrepreneurs who have no chance of ranking well on Google should bother with content marketing. She replied:
âOne goal of content marketing is search results. But it's not the only goal. (And it's not even the first goal. But that's a comment for another article.)
Another goal is to build trust with your audience. So the question becomes: Does your content tell your story in a way that's compelling and builds trust with your audience? Once your customers find you... do they like you? Do they want to do business with you?â
I agree with this view. Gradually building relationships is the big business benefit of content marketing. You will build trust with your audience over time. Itâll be slow, but if youâre providing value, your audience will grow. And some of your audience will eventually become customers.
(Later, once youâve learned more about SEO, youâll be in a better position to start ranking, because youâve been creating content for a while. Having plenty of helpful content on your website â which you can create internal links to â increases its authority in Googleâs eyes.)
Itâs not essential to be on the front page of Google to grow your business. Just like itâs not essential to have a Super Bowl ad to grow your business.
We donât think, âSuper Bowl or donât bother with advertisingâ. And we shouldnât think, âFront page of Google or donât bother with content marketingâ either.
Youâll be able to speak to your people in your content marketing and give them what they value. And over time, there will be more people who are your people.
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If youâd like to market your construction or robotics company with content like blog posts, white papers, and case studies, I can write those for you.
Letâs talk: zena@zenafreelancewriter.com