… sin ningún tipo de estrategia: Marcas Zombie

As more companies, marketers and industry professionals flood the web with content, the value of those with a true understanding of content marketing keeps going up. More noise increases the value of signal. If your content marketing defines you as that source of signal, you’ll consistently be found, referenced and chosen ahead of competitors. With 6 in 10 marketers spending more on content marketing in 2010, now, more than ever, is the time to find where content fits within your marketing strategy.
Some statistics from Technorati’s 2009 state of the blogosphere back up the efficacy of content marketing:
And as powerful as blogs are – they are just one potential avenue for content marketing. Content marketing includes all marketing formats that involve the creation or sharing of content to engage potential prospects or current consumers. No matter how you’re engaged, continually sharpening your content creation skills is core to being an effective digital marketing or PR professional.
If you’re brand new to the idea of content marketing, the following points by Mike Masnick succinctly describe why it matters:
The captive audience is dead. There is no captive audience online. Everyone surfing the web has billions of choices on what they can be viewing, and they don’t want to be viewing intrusive and annoying ads. They’ll either ignore them, block them or go elsewhere.
Advertising is content. You can’t think of ads as separate things any more. Without a captive audience, there’s no such thing as “advertising” any more. It’s just content. And it needs to be good/interesting/relevant content if you want to get anyone to pay attention to it.
Content is advertising. Might sound like a repeat of the point above, and in some way it is — but it’s highlighting the flip side. Any content is advertising. It’s advertising something.
Hopefully we’ve got your buy-in to the idea of content marketing. TopRank Online Marketing as an agency embraces this for our clients and ourselves, as content marketing lives at the intersection of social media and SEO.
To help readers here, following are 10 tips to help make your content marketing efforts succeed:
A great quote from Chris Garrett sums this up nicely:
A much overlooked aspect though is “So what?”. What should the reader take away? Where is the benefit? Why should we listen to you?
Just churning out content for the sake of going through the process is setting yourself up for failure. Unless you’ve got a model like Demand Media and would benefit from being fast, cheap and profitable as hell, go the other route and refine all ideas to pass the “So what?” test. Especially if you’re in B2B – the goal of content marketing is usually to inspire trust, grow your reputation and influence your market. Throw-away content accomplishes none of these things.
With some 900,000 blog posts published every 24 hours, and more than 20 hours of video uploaded every minute to YouTube as just two examples, how do you expect to stand out with “vanilla” content? If you’re going to play it safe or regurgitate what is being done by others you’ve got almost no chance to succeed unless you already have a large community built you can tap. And even then, as we add layer upon layer of aggregation, sharing and filtering to the web it’s still possible to be ignored. You need to consistently break the mold, be an unmissable resource or in some way stand out to make your content heard.
If your content marketing efforts are agile enough to touch audiences in a timely manner, you’ll be top-of-mind for prospects vs. slow moving competitors who have complex approval processes. Again and again, the web rewards nimble companies far more than those who are restricted or micromanaged.
We connect deepest with content that has a voice and personality behind it. No one enjoys reading the language on a corporate website. It’s cold and impersonal and in reality does not connect with audiences, it merely conveys information. Personality and emotion are lacking in most corporate and business communications, and this has carried over into the content marketing efforts of many. But, infusing these elements within your content marketing strategy can be a powerful way to not just speak to prospects but connect with them.
Your content marketing can also accomplish another valuable goal: building connections and relationships. This has both social and SEO returns. Connections can help build inbound links, increase shares in social channels and ultimately help your content gain visibility. Incorporation of these connections should be worked into the content artfully and naturally. Readers may not even realize what is happening, but those you are trying to forge connections with will.
Be less concerned with being perfect and more concerned with being earnest, thoughtful and genuine. Perfection is severely overrated and minor flaws are forgivable, while the wrong tone can be as detrimental as causing online reputation management issues.
Make no mistake, your prospects are busy. To treat them as if anything else were true is disrespecting their time. By making your content scan-able, you increase the propensity they will not just scan that content, but if the parts that catch their eye during the scan are worthwhile they will go back to read it. Use headlines, bold text, get creative with your formatting, get designers involved – do whatever it takes to make content attractive and scan-able.
Follow basic headline writing tips and work to create headlines that entice potential visitors to your content in the first place. Without strong headlines, your blog post will get skipped over in a cluttered RSS reader or inbox, your white paper or PDF won’t get passed along and you’ll never penetrate social news sites.
As we’ve noted here before, every company is now in essence a media company. The quality of your content is how prospects will imagine your service or product to be, and the consistency you produce that content is a signal to how dedicated you are. Both are required.
It’s tempting to try to put a band-aid on bad content with things like advertising or push promotions. But if you have to advertise your content, in a sense you’ve already failed. Content marketing should be an organic process, and by advertising your content you’re admitting failure of creating something worth sharing. Push promotion on the social web is similar to this – you’re ultimately going to have to face the fact that your content isn’t working on its own to naturally connect with people. Now, that’s not to say you can’t help good content travel (this is one of the 16 rules of social media optimization) but by trying to force bad content to spread you’re wasting resources.
As many readers here are engaged in content marketing on a daily basis, we’d love to hear your thoughts. What content marketing tips have you found most helpful?
© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
10 Tips For Content Marketing Success |
31 comments | http://www.toprankblog.com
Brian Solis is a principal at new media agency FutureWorks, and author of the upcoming book, Engage. You can connect with him on Twitter or Facebook.
The debate over measuring social media investment inspired many brands to cannonball into popular social networks and join the proverbial conversation without a plan or strategic objectives defined. At the same time, the lack of ROI standards unnerved many executives, preventing any form of experimentation until their questions and concerns were addressed.
In 2010, we’re entering a new era of social media marketing — one based on information, rationalization, and resolve.
Business leaders simply need clarity in a time of abundant options and scarcity of experience. As many of us can attest, we report to executives who have no desire to measure intangible credos rooted in transparency and authenticity. In the end, they simply want to calculate the return on investment and associate social media programs with real-world business performance metrics.
Over the years, our exploration and experience has redefined the traditional metrics and created hybrid models that will prove critical to modern business practices and help companies effectively compete for the future.
Where the “I” in ROI represents investment, marketers have also explored ancillary elements to address the socialization of media, marketing, and the resulting dynamics of engagement.
Adaptations included:
Return on Engagement: The duration of time spent either in conversation or interacting with social objects, and in turn, what transpired that’s worthy of measurement.
Return on Participation: The metric tied to measuring and valuing the time spent participating in social media through conversations or the creation of social objects.
Return on Involvement: Similar to participation, marketers explored touchpoints for documenting states of interaction and tied metrics and potential return of each.
Return on Attention: In the attention economy, we assess the means to seize attention, hold it, and measure the response.
Return on Trust: A variant on measuring customer loyalty and the likelihood for referrals, a trust barometer establishes the state of trust earned in social media engagement and the prospect of generating advocacy and how it impacts future business.
But as we progress through the ten stages of social media integration, our views and techniques mature into more sophisticated strategies.
For many businesses, the case for new metrics can’t be made until we have an intrinsic understanding of how social media engagement affects us at every level. It’s not as simple as counting subscribers, followers, fans, conversation volume, reach, or traffic. While the size of the corporate social graph is a reflection of our participation behavior, it is not symbolic of brand stature, resonance, loyalty, advocacy, nor is it an indicator of business performance.
In 2010, social media endeavors are often still thought of as “pilot programs,” launched to steer a brand toward perceived relevance. Budgets, for the most part, are borrowed from other divisions to fund the largely experimental programs. Where that money goes and comes from depends largely on the social media champions who push for this experimentation from the inside.
In many cases however, new programs are introduced without an integrated strategy. Money is allocated from existing programs. If we’re going to take away from something, we should determine whether or not we’re justified to do so.
According to a 2009 study performed by Mzinga and Babson Executive Education, 84% of professionals in a variety of industries reported that they do not measure ROI.

In 2010, executives are demanding scrutiny, evaluation, and interpretation. Even though new media is transforming organizations from the inside out, what is constant is the need to apply performance indicators to our work.
The CFO, CEO, and CMO of any organization would be remiss if they did not account for spending and resource allocation for social media.
MarketingProfs recently published a study by Bazaarvoice and the CMO Club that revealed the true expectation of chief marketing officers. The bottom line: They want measurable results from social media.

However, the study found that the exact implications of social media still evade CMOs.
- 53% are unsure about their return on Twitter
- 50% are unable to assess the value of LinkedIn or industry blogs
Most importantly, about 15% believe there is no ROI associated with Twitter, and just over 10% cannot glean ROI from LinkedIn or Facebook.
I believe this is the direct result of a disconnect between social media activity and a clearly defined end game. We must establish what we want to measure before we engage. By doing so, we can answer the questions, “what is it that we want to change, improve, accomplish, incite, etc?”
Defining a clear strategy can help us reach our social media goals, including:
– Sales
– Registrations
– Referrals
– Links (the currency of the social web)
– Votes
– Reduction in costs and processes
– Decrease in customer issues
– Lead generation
– Conversion
– Reduced sale cycles
– Inbound activity
Customer ratings and reviews rose to the top of useful marketing feedback, as they delivered tangible ROI insight. In 2009, 80% of respondents reported that customer stories and suggestions shape products and services. As a result, brands earn the trust and loyalty of their customers by listening and responding.
According to the MarketingProfs study, CMOs will have more opportunities to engage with user-generated content in 2010, with many reporting:
– A 400% increase in use of Twitter comments to inform decisions about products and services
- A 59% increase in the use of customer ratings and reviews
- A 24% increase in use of social media for pre-sales Q&A

Social media metrics will be increasingly tied to revenue in 2010. To what extent seems to vary according to CMOs. The study indicates:
– 80% predict upwards of 5%
- 15% optimistically hope for 5-10%
In 2009, those companies that aligned social media investments with revenue estimates:
– 5% or less revenue tied to social in 2009 foresee an increase of an additional 5% in 2010
- 6-10% of revenue stemming from social media is expected to increase more than 10%
- Those with greater revenues resulting from social engagement expect an escalation of revenue derived from social at 20%
Companies like Dell are not only tracking the impact of social media on revenue, but expanding lessons learned across the entire organization. According to Dell’s Lionel Menchaca:
“Our @DellOutlet is now close to 1.5 million followers on Twitter, and back in June we indicated that @DellOutlet earned $3 million in revenue from Twitter. Today it’s not just Dell Outlet having success connecting with customers on Twitter. In total, Dell’s global reach on Twitter has resulted in more than $6.5 million in revenue. In fact our Brazilian and Canadian accounts are growing rapidly too –- and it was Canadian tweeters who asked to make sure Dell Canada came online to Twitter. Dell Canada responded because the team heard our customers. In less than a year, @DellnoBrasil has already generated nearly $800,000 in product revenues. Similarly, @DellHomeSalesCA has surpassed $150,000 and is increasing at notable pace.”
Earlier we mentioned generic forms of social media metrics. The survey revealed that indeed, 89% of CMOs tracked the impact of social media by traffic, page views, and the size of their social graph or communities. However, 2010 is the year that social media graduates from experimentation to strategic implementation, with direct ties to specific measurable performance indicators.
In 2010, CMOs will seek to establish a connection between social media and business goals. The study documents the adoption of three metrics:
- 333% surge in tracking revenue
- 174% escalation in monitoring conversion
- 150% increase in measuring average order value
Defining the “R” in ROI is where we need to focus, as it relates to our business goals and performance indicators specifically. Even though much of social media is free, we do know the cost of engagement as it relates to employees, time, equipment, and opportunity cost (what they’re not focusing on or accomplishing while engaging in social media). Tying those costs to the results will reveal a formula for assessing the “I” as investment.
When we truly grasp the ability to define action and measure it, we can expand the impact of new media beyond the profit and loss. We can adapt business processes, inspire ingenuity, and more effectively compete for the future.
- The 10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration
– HOW TO: Use Social Media to Connect with Other Entrepreneurs
– HOW TO: Implement a Social Media Business Strategy
– 9 Great Document Collaboration Tools for Teams
– 5 New Year’s Resolutions for SMBs
– HOW TO: Choose a News Reader for Keeping Tabs on Your Industry
– 5 Advanced Social Media Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses
Images courtesy of iStockphoto, Petrovich9, Daft_Lion_Studio, pavlen
Tags: business, entrepreneurship, facebook, linkedin, List, Lists, ROI, small business, social media, social networks, strategy, twitter
WooRank is a brand new service designed to let website publishers and marketers evaluate the SEO-friendliness and other aspects of their Web sites on the fly, free of charge. If this reminds you of what HubSpot built with its Website Grader tool, it’s because the concept is extremely similar.
WooRank evaluates Web sites based on 50 criteria in an automated fashion, free of charge, and provides helpful SEO and other tips. A premium version will be offered in about 3 months: for a yet-to-be-determined fee, publishers and marketers will then be able to screen Web sites based on up to 120 pre-defined critera, get served more personalized tips as well as references to online tools that they can use to increase the findability and performance of their Web sites.
Update: site seems to be down or at least terribly slow due to our coverage, so hang in there.
Update 2: seems to be back and more stable now
I gave the tool a spin and generated a report for techcrunch.com – turns out we’re worthy of a WooRank of 82.4. While I have absolutely no idea what that means exactly, according to these statistics we’re well above the average. In the overall ranking, we even made the top 50, ahead of sites like the Apple Store, MySpace, ESPN.com and NYTimes.com (take that, New York Times, we haz bigger WooRankz!).
Apparently, we need to work on our headings, immage attribution tags, meta description and keywords, XML sitemap(s) and other aspects like Web standards compliance. We score pretty well on content (number of indexed pages), off-site SEO (particularly on the social media level) and website usability and load time.
Frankly, that’s a lot of valuable information available free of charge, so I’ll be curious to know in a couple of months how WooRank will try to entice people to pay for more detailed information and improvement tips.
WooRank was built by fellow Belgians, namely digital marketer Jean Derély of BetaGroup and the founders of interactive agency 1MD.be. Since soft-launching the service a couple of days ago, 27,000 reports have already been generated by some 7,500 visitors.
For more online tools, check out Website Grader but also HitTail and LotusJump.

Content marketing is not a new concept, but is gaining new momentum in 2010. PR 20/20 introduced it as a core element of the Inbound Marketing GamePlan released Jan. 20 (click here to download the free PDF eBook) and recognized content marketing authority Joe Pulizzi believes that we’ve entered the Year of Content Marketing.
The concept has emerged in recent years due to a number of factors contributing to an increasingly competitive business environment, including: economic conditions, technological advances, focus on search engine rankings, the expansion of the social Web and the shrinking of traditional media.
Organizations no longer have to wait for the media to tell their story, and more than that, they are starting to see the publishing of relevant, link-worthy content as the great differentiator for their brands.
Today, content marketing services are a core part of integrated inbound marketing campaigns, and center on helping companies grow faster and smarter by outthinking, not outspending, the competition. Organizations that become their own publishers are realizing the power of generating leads, building brand loyalty and gaining new competitive advantages.
In early 2000, while working in the publishing industry, Pulizzi (@JuntaJoe) started using content marketing to describe a variety terms, including: custom publishing, custom media, customer media, customer publishing, member media, private media, branded content, corporate media, corporate publishing, corporate journalism and branded media.
Then in 2007, Pulizzi helped to refine the concept’s identity by recognizing the five main components (or phrases) that make content marketing what it is: editorial-based, marketing-backed, behavior-driven, multi-platform and targeted.
In 2008, marketing industry thought leaders joined the conversation and offered their thoughts:
In 2009, Pulizzi released the book “Get Content Get Customers-Turn Prospects into Buyers with Content Marketing” with co-author Newt Barrett, and the Content Marketing Playbook eBook with with Jonathan Kranz.
Pulizzi’s defintion can be found on the Junta42 resources page.
As mentioned earlier, content marketing has become the great differentiator — a sustainable competitive advantage that enables businesses to separate themselves, while driving acquisition (leads) and retention (loyalty).
At its core, content marketing activities include the production and publishing of creative, compelling and relevant content, including, but not limited to:
Content marketing alone will not generate leads and loyalty, but it can help an organization enhance its positioning as a thought leader and innovator, connect with audiences in a more authentic and personal way, and directly impact its Website’s search engine rankings and traffic.
While many understand the benefits of investing in the production of captivating content pieces, without community building activities, established distribution channels, and the internal commitment to a long-term strategy, the content will not travel far beyond the place it is published on the Web.
By seeing content marketing as the lifeblood of an inbound marketing strategy, feeding off the strength of the brand, Website, social media and search marketing strategies, and pumping new life into traditional PR, advertising and marketing campaigns, marketers can monitor and track measurable results of their investments, and use this data to continually adjust strategies to meet the changing demands of their audiences.
While content marketing may not be a new idea, the way that marketers have begun to embrace it as a fundamental part of their 2010 plans is of great interest to our agency. Look for more on content marketing throughout the year, and please share your thoughts and resources, and what areas you’d like to learn more about.
Capadona-Schmitz is assistant vice president and consultant at PR 20/20, a Cleveland-based inbound marketing agency and PR firm. She can be found on Twitter @ChristinaCS.
Ariel Alejandro Tettamanti y por fin he encontrado el camino que ha de guiar mis pasos, y esta noche me espera el amor en tus labios
Melisa Laura Tessorey yo a vos, con toda mi vida!Ayer a las 21:22
En algún sitio guardo una carpeta con carteles que cogía de los tablones de anuncios de la Ciudad Universitaria de Madrid, era entorno al año 2.000 y pensaba que ese modelo se podía llevar a la red. Nunca lo hice, craso error. Muchos años después (en tiempo de internet) cuando hay cientos de sitios de anuncios clasificados, algunos de ellos muy importantes, se siguen montando proyectos de este tipo y alguno de los que ahora nace llegará a ser el líder por encima de los ya asentados, sin ir más lejos, OLX nació en el 2006 y en muchos países ya es el líder.
Ahora cuando pienso en nuevos proyectos sigo viendo la competencia como un problema cuando en realidad debería verlo como una oportunidad. Si hay empresas que están ganando dinero, es porque hay mercado, porque la gente tiene una necesidad y desde la red se les puede aportar una solución. Allá donde hay un lider se puede emprender y con el tiempo llegar a hacerlo mejor. Idealista, Atrapalo, Toprural, Softonic, Edreams, Infojobs, Minijuegos, Privalia, … son grandes proyectos, lideres en sectores donde no es necesario ser el primero para tener éxito, solo es necesario ser el mejor.
Me resulta curioso como aún hay gente que “presume” de ser el primero, a mi la verdad es que cuando me llega un correo con este argumento me da que pensar. Cómo se puede estar absolutamente seguro de que eres el primero que ha hecho algo? no sería mejor trabajar por ser el mejor que intentar rentabilizar un concepto que para muchos no tiene ningún valor? Si miramos fuera de internet tenemos miles de ejemplos de empresas que trabajan en sectores tradicionales que no solo han conseguido hacerse con una parte del negocio sino que se han convertido en los líderes, en grandes marcas reconocidas en su sector que han superado con creces a marcas más antiguas.
En la red, sobre todo a nivel internacional empezamos a tener buenos ejemplos sobre esto. Facebook ha arrasado en el sector de las redes sociales cuando había proyectos muy importantes que ofrecían lo mismo, Friendster, Myspace, Orkut, … han sido superados por las nuevas ideas de comunidad que ha traído Facebook. En el negocio de los buscadores lo vimos con Google, en los CMS para blogs con WordPress y así podríamos dar otros muchos ejemplos. No es necesario inventar Twitter para tener éxito en internet, detecta una oportunidad de negocio y pares hasta conseguir ser el mejor.
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