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By Will Blunt

Are you providing tangible and consistent value to your content marketing clients?

Unfortunately, most agencies aren’t.

They are good at selling the benefits of content and mapping out a strategy, but when it comes to execution their attention waivers. They’re either getting distracted and moving onto the next opportunity, or they simply don’t know how to get results.

Being ready to deliver value and actually delivering value are two very different things.

When it comes to the crunch, if your agency is not providing consistent results to your clients, then they will lose interest.

You need to regularly refine and improve the way you execute. It’s about creating WOW moments for your clients and exceeding their expectations time and time again with exceptional service, unprecedented results, and continuous optimization.

Below are six vital components of execution that will keep your clients humming in excitement just like day one, all year round!

1. Deliver results

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“No sh*t sherlock”

You probably just muttered that to yourself. And for good reason, it’s not rocket science to suggest that delivering results is an important part of client retention.

But what is interesting, and something a LOT of agencies get wrong is understanding how to deliver the kind of results that will prevent your clients from ever questioning their investment with you.

This is where the sales conversation and strategy development phase are so crucial. Both you and your client need to have a succinct definition of what success looks like. There can’t be any grey area.

If you have accurately quantified what the client cares about, then delivering results becomes a lot easier. This allows you to document clear expectations that align with your experience and ability to deliver results, because it’s something you have done before with similar companies.

Your goal should be to create an environment where the only possible outcome is a positive one for your agency. If the client has higher expectations of results than what you KNOW you can achieve, then say goodbye. Don’t work together. Wish them luck with someone else, and focus on backing winning horses.

Don’t assume you know what a client wants and why they are paying you because most of the time your assumptions will be off the mark. Ask the right questions and create a shared meaning for success.

By delivering outcomes directly associated with the things your client is drawing a budget for makes retention a no-brainer.

2. Create a cadence for reporting

Whatever you do… don’t go silent.

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Without a doubt this is the most common reason agencies lose content marketing clients. You settle into an engagement and after a few months, it all becomes a little easier, because your processes are in place and humming along nicely. You’re publishing regular content, building assets, and the train is in motion. Things are looking good from your perspective.

But the client stops hearing from you. Radio silence.

Even though the engine is on in the background, the lights are off and the client is in the dark. They start to question why they are paying you. “What exactly are they doing for us?”

By the time they bring this concern to your attention, it’s too late. You’ve lost their engagement and they have already found an alternative way to approach their content strategy.

This is exactly why you need a regular cadence, at least monthly, of reporting back to the client. They want to know about the results, yes, but they also want reassurance about exactly what they are getting from their investment.

You need to create a repeatable reporting process that shows the client resource allocation, content output, and relevant outcomes. This report should closely relate to the initial contract and agreed definition of success for the engagement.

If you’re looking for a tech solution for this, Klipfolio offers a custom dashboard that connects data and enables regular client reporting.

3. Make informed decisions

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Your clients want insight, not just activity. They want to be confident that the people executing their marketing strategy are in it for the long haul and dedicated to growing their business almost as much as they are. They want thought leaders, not project managers or pencil pushers.

To fulfill this desire you need to be proactive. Don’t wait for them to come to you with ideas or important updates to their strategy, get ahead of the game.

Before you send them that report every month use the data to develop insights of your own. Look for gaps in their strategy, opportunities for improvement, and areas that need your attention.

Come to them armed with industry insight, knowledge of the latest marketing trends, and specific recommendations as it relates to their unique situation.

Let them know that you are doing everything possible to get them to the end of the rainbow. Surprise them with insight, inspire them with success stories, and delight them with action.

Then you will be a strategic partner, not just a service provider.

4. Automate and optimize

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According to the Aberdeen Group, nearly 70% of best-in-class companies are currently using (or implementing) marketing automation.

For your agency to grow, automation and optimization of your client delivery is essential.

Automation helps speed up and improve all sorts of tasks that can enable growth. According to one report by Redeye and TFM&A, the benefits of marketing automation include:

  • Taking repetitive tasks out of marketers hands, allowing them to focus on new/more exciting projects (36%)
  • Better targeting of customers and prospects (30%)
  • Improving the customer experience (10%)
  • Better email marketing (9%)
  • Reduction of human error in campaigns (8%),
  • Lead management (4%) and multichannel marketing (3%)

Embracing marketing automation is an easy way for your agency to scale the marketing efforts of your clients, as well as save on time, energy, resources and skills.

You get better results and keep your clients happy with less effort. Perfect!

5. Add additional value

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By automating and optimizing a portion of your clients’ marketing activity, you create space to add additional value.

Now you have time to be proactive and brainstorm ways you can strengthen the bond you have with your clients. This is the icing on the cake.

Here are some ideas for adding value to your clients that don’t take too much effort but create a lot of social currency:

  • Call them up at least once a month to check in, see how they are, and ask if there is anything else you can do for them.
  • Seek out helpful articles about their industry and send them 3 to 4 takeaways that relate to their business.
  • Provide out-of-scope advice and guidance about their other marketing activity.
  • Introduce them to people in your network that could provide mutual benefit or opportunity.
  • Recommend their product or service to relevant friends, families, and colleagues.
  • Take them and their team out for lunch or send them a gift certificate to strengthen your relationship.

Each of these things is fairly small but they all contribute to a well-rounded relationship with your clients. It’s no longer a transaction, but a partnership. Partnerships are hard to break.

6. Extend your services

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Once you have onboarded a client and are exceeding their expectations, it’s time to start thinking about extending your services.

By extending your services, you not only increase the revenue you receive from a client, but you also become further entrenched in their organization. The more value you create for your clients, the less likely they are to churn.

An extension of your services may be providing additional content marketing solutions. For example, if you are simply managing their social media accounts, there may be an opportunity to start writing blog content, producing videos, or building links. Alternatively, you could diversify your services by offering AdWords management, SEO, or web design.

Of course, how you go about extending your services will depend on the makeup of your agency. For some agencies, you will already have the resources, processes, and infrastructure to provide additional services immediately. For others, you will need a way to satisfy additional demand. This may be through hiring more team members, outsourcing to freelancers or contractors, or finding a white label service solution.

Once you lock down a process for resourcing the extension of your services, it will be much easier to replicate with other clients.

That’s how you retain clients, increase revenue, and grow your agency.

 

By Will Blunt

Will Blunt is the Founder of FlypChart.

Sourced from Flypchart

By Brown Hill

These Strategies Can Be Utilised To Increase Leads, Return On Investment And, Most Importantly, Sales

The world of B2B marketing is ever evolving, and today’s marketing team needs to be able to adopt new strategies and leverage a mix of technologies that educate, engage and increase conversions. Having a well-defined strategy is the key to improving the effectiveness of your B2B marketing efforts. There is no scope for any mistakes in B2B marketing. Because if you fail to impress one company about your services, then your potential target audience shrinks immediately.

Today we are going to cover the top five B2B marketing strategies that you can use to increase leads, return on investment (ROI) and, most importantly, sales.

Content Marketing

Most companies do a great job of explaining what they do but fail when it comes to using more dynamic content (blogs, videos, infographics) to show how they can help. You may have heard this repeatedly, but content marketing continues to rule strong for B2B marketers. In the past, a sales representative, dealer, or channel partner was the key point of contact for gathering information.

Content continues to cover the web and for performance-oriented marketing professionals, finding new and creative ways to show content can be a real challenge. According to a recent study by Regalix, 80% of senior marketers said creating marketing collateral is a top priority. In another study by TopRank, the most effective content marketing tactics according to B2B marketers are:

  • In-person events (70%)
  • Case studies (65%)
  • Videos (63%)
  • Webinars (63%)
  • Blogs (62%)
  • Newsletters (60%)
  • White papers and research reports (59%)

Interactive B2B content possibilities are only as limited as your imagination, and budget. Your writers should prepare a content-based experience for the target audience so that they fall in love with your services quickly.

Build Relationships

All marketing activities should be directed to establishing, developing and maintaining successful relationships with customers. Customer satisfaction is imperative to the success of any B2B company. Without happy customers, a business will struggle to achieve the rest of its goals. Your customer support team can help maintain positive relationships and improve customer retention rates.

Here are 5 ways to improve your B2B relationships:

  • Know yourself.
  • Re-imagine your B2B relationships.
  • Consider “scalability” in all that you do.
  • Find B2B partners with complementary technology.
  • Improve trust to enhance further partnering.

Large or small, improving your relationship with each and every prospect will undoubtedly have a positive effect on your ability to generate more, high quality leads now and in the future.

Make a Relevant Call To Action

Do you want to boost email engagement and conversion rates for your brand? No matter your business, CTAs can help you engage subscribers and encourage them to take action. Good CTAs build brand awareness, increase web traffic, and ultimately result in more conversions and sales.

Why Are Calls-to-Action So Important?

For those of you new to Inbound, strong CTAs are an essential part of a conversion path and the lead generation process. Check out the Act-On Center of Excellence to find resources that help you create more effective emails and landing pages in order to optimize the results of your next campaign.

The use of effective calls to action by email can help you generate conversions, but they are not all you need to consider for an effective email strategy. All of your website’s power comes to a fine point in the CTA. The user’s action is what it’s all about. Once you understand the basic of what a CTA is, its function, purpose, and appropriate content and use, you can create CTAs that improve conversion.

Digital Marketing Channels

What are the top digital marketing channels for your company? Is it Email Marketing, PPC, SEO, partnership program? Before starting to plan an effective digital marketing strategy, you must understand the different channels of digital marketing. The digital marketing has introduced several digital marketing channels that help advertisers target the right audience and attract them to the product or service that is marketed.

Popular Digital Marketing Channels

  • Social Media Marketing
  • Search Engine Optimization
  • Pay-Per-Click Advertising (PPC)
  • Email Marketing
  • Content Marketing
  • Affiliate Marketing
  • Display Advertising
  • Online PR

By setting up a digital marketing campaign for your company, you cannot rely on just one resource to generate all the results you want. The right digital marketing channel for your brand or business also depends on your brand’s business goals. Each marketing channel has to be evaluated for its relevance in your overall marketing strategy and needs to be aligned in keeping with your business objectives. With so many companies turning towards digital marketing, it’s important that you pull your socks up and make optimal use of what you can.

Marketing Automation

However, for B2B marketing specialists, evolving technology is not always a bad thing. The evolution of marketing automation is creating new opportunities for marketers to deliver better quality leads to their sales teams, bridge the gap between marketing and sales, and measure their direct impact on their business.

As companies that provide B2B services look to implement more effective marketing strategies, marketing automation has become one of the most useful tactics being implemented. In fact, the use of marketing automation by B2B companies increased by 1100% between 2011 and 2015.

Faced with these challenging market dynamics and increasing ROI pressure, B2B marketers at companies of all sizes can gain these benefits from a marketing automation:

  • Perfecting the Client Experience
  • Lead Nurturing
  • Increase in Revenue
  • Decreases Lead Conversion Time.
  • Reduce Marketing Costs
  • Customer Retention
  • Receive Multi-Channel Efficiency

As it stands today, business competition has reached cutthroat levels, and the marketing landscape is no exception. Now is the time to re-examine your essentials, take an inventory of current capabilities and talk with your marketing automation section and other marketing and sales technology providers.

Note: The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the author and does not necessarily reflect the views held by Inc42, its creators or employees. Inc42 is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by guest bloggers.

By Brown Hill

Sourced from Inc42

By 

Sometimes it bums me out that we’ve become a culture of contrarians.

Whether it’s Black Panther, 3D printing, or strawberry ice cream, there’s nothing so excellent that someone on the internet won’t tell you why you’re wrong for liking it.

So sometimes it’s easy to miss the signals when a genuine problem does develop. And among the usual noise of “the thing you like sucks,” there’s been a fresh spate of articles on content marketing, talking about the “content marketing playbook” not working the way it used to.

Unlike that guy who hated Black Panther (let’s face it, he was just wrong), there’s some substance to this.

But it’s not something to panic over. In fact, it’s something to embrace.

Does content marketing work like it used to?

No. And this should come as a surprise to no one.

If you aren’t familiar with Gartner’s Hype Cycle of Technology, you should be. I won’t walk you through the whole cycle, but content marketing is currently emerging from the “Peak of Inflated Expectations” phase.

Content marketing is simply the principle that your marketing communication should be able to stand on its own. It should be relevant. It should be interesting. It might even be funny, or pull at heartstrings.

Distilled even further, content marketing is the principle that you now need to earn attention, instead of just paying for it.

So why did anyone expect that would be easy?

The Trough of Disillusionment

In Gartner’s model, the Peak of Inflated Expectations is followed by the entertainingly named Trough of Disillusionment.

There’s been a lot of frustrated can-kicking about expensive processes and tactics not working the way they used to. And it’s hard not to notice the sheer and overwhelming volume of mediocre content that floods the web every day. The pile of CRaP gets higher and higher.

Well, now that volume of mediocre content isn’t working as well as it was.

The stupidly easy wins are evaporating. Stupidly easy wins always do.

That means the middle-ground players — not the worst, and not the best — are struggling.

The worst have revenue models that just monetize eyeballs. (How’s that for a creepy phrase?) Cheap clicks on nasty headlines to meaningless content that’s going to be written by robots any day now.

That model won’t work for you unless you are a robot, so let’s put it aside. That leaves mediocre and great.

Before I make the case for great, I want to rant speak to a few straw man arguments I’ve seen around.

Beware the planet of the straw men

Here are some arguments I’ve seen in recent “content marketing is dead oh no” articles:

“Stop thinking that content marketing is only about blogging.”

Sure, because, um, it’s not 2008? Podcasts, video, visual content, live digital events (like webinars and Facebook Live), SlideShare … that’s all content. (I love Ann Handley’s phrase, “everything the light touches is content.”)

Not just content, but popular content. The kind that millions of people are talking about.

So definitely, if for some reason you thought content marketing was only about blogging, you should stop thinking that.

“Stop insisting on owning your own content.”

This argument holds that we’re being silly for insisting on maintaining a hub of high-quality original content.

Because losing 85 percent of your revenue when Facebook flips its algorithm is so much fun.

Yes, of course we need to publish content on the platforms where people like to hang out. Yes, we’re going to rely, to some extent, on platforms we don’t control. Yes, sometimes it’s hard to get people back to our sites.

Of course you shouldn’t refuse to publish content on Facebook or LinkedIn or Medium. That would be super dumb.

You also shouldn’t fail to adapt your content so it’s relevant to the platform you publish on.

But construct and publish your original content on your own site first. Make it amazing. Then thoughtfully adapt that amazing content to various platforms, to increase your reach and connect with people where they are.

The specific expression of a piece of content — the Facebook Live video, the Instagram-optimized image, the LinkedIn Pulse article — might live or die on those platforms.

But the core creative idea, executed in your own voice with all the craft you can bring, lives on your site. From there, you can repurpose that content as many ways as your imagination will allow, depending on what platforms rise and fall.

That means we don’t use Medium as our primary blog — we write a blog post and export it to Medium.

We don’t use Instagram as our only venue for marketing our art — we have a gorgeous website, and we republish selected compelling images on Insta.

There is no tension with this. Anyone trying to tell you that you have to choose between a third party and your own site is giving you bad advice.

“Content creators have to get more strategic and less creative.”

I think this qualifies as the worst advice I’ve seen this year.

The most brilliant strategy applied to crap will simply get the word out faster about how crappy your content is.

I’m not anti-strategy. I love strategy! Strategy helps you get amazing work in front of tons of people, then moves them toward your business goals.

Strategy is an amazing servant. But it’s a horrible master.

Asking your content strategy tool what kind of content to create is like asking your hammer what kind of house to build.

Life beyond the Trough

Gartner’s hype cycle gives us a pretty good idea of what happens once we get over our disappointment hangover. Gartner calls it the Slope of Enlightenment, and it’s the moment when we start to live in reality again.

There is one way, and only one way, out of our particular Trough of Disillusionment.

Content has to get better.

Which shouldn’t scare anyone. It’s more fun to do great work. It’s more fun to come up with original, fresh, exciting ideas, and execute them really well.

But it scares a lot of large organizations. And I think I know why.

Certain kinds of organizations jump to strategy and technical solutions first, partly because they have to. In a huge organization, every type of work has to be turned into a repeatable process.

And, unless your organization has an extraordinary culture, that comes at the expense of creativity.

Managing creatives is difficult. They’re often shitty at office politics. Ask me how I know.

They make strange jokes and they can never follow the dress code. The other employees think they’re weird. Because … well, they are kind of weird.

Creative people have a hard time in organizations that resemble high school.

So instead, the highly “process-driven” content organization hires people who are just-okay writers, but who look the part of the “team player.”

They create work that’s unoriginal and boring. The true creatives get depressed and leave, or they get really depressed and they stick around even though their good work gets dumbed down until it’s unoriginal and boring.

When content marketing was shiny and new, you could create just-okay content and then use strategy to make up for its weaknesses. But now there’s a giant stifling mass of just-okay content.

When you put creativity first, when you honor the writer, you get the good stuff. You get fresh, brave, original work that excites audiences.

And the analytics, strategy, and tech? They’re used to get the word out about content that actually deserves the attention it’s asking for.

We’re in a jungle, not a blue ocean

It’s exciting to think of a “blue ocean” market (to use Renée Mauborgne and W. Chan Kim’s phrase), where we have no competition. An endless blue expanse where whatever we put out is successful, because no one else is doing it.

But on the planet we actually live on, the only places that lack competition are the places that lack potential customers.

The rest of us live in the jungle. A place teeming with life — with competition, with customers, with rivals, with allies, with potential for risk and potential for glory.

Content marketing, for a little while, gave the illusion of the blue ocean. You could put out work that was, let me just say it, pretty mediocre. And it worked.

“Oh, it’s an infographic!” “Oh, it’s a podcast!” “Oh, it’s a reasonably interesting article with a call to action at the end!”

These are phrases that no one utters anymore.

Content marketing strategy needs to offer something other than “new.”

The opportunity …

So okay, I do think content marketing is getting somewhat harder.

To be more specific, I think it’s getting a lot harder to get anywhere with content that just squeaks by.

To quote the one article I did like on this, by Doug Kessler of Velocity Partners:

“Five years on and we’re looking at a LOT of mediocre content. Because — and this is the part that hurts — the teams that created it weren’t even aiming for great. They were aiming for the mean. For credible.”

Effective content marketing strategy today has to start from one place: radical empathy for the specific audience you are serving.

Then, we create work for them that’s genuinely interesting and useful.

Bring on the brave, original writers. Alternately, start listening to the brave, original writers you already have.

Go ahead and obsess over headline structure or image format or what color the button is … because you want to know what would best serve that audience. What will engage and delight them. What will solve their problems.

Beware the seductive “soul-sucking force of reasonableness” (that’s Chip Heath and Dan Heath’s great phrase from The Power of Moments) and let yourself be unreasonably excellent.

Don’t tell me that your customers would prefer to go back to irrelevant ads that shout at them.

Don’t tell me that there’s some kind of alternative to creating exceptional work that you give a shit about.

Don’t tell me that content marketing is broken or dead if you’re still doing it wrong.

 

By 

Sourced from copyblogger

Online reputation management is very necessary all of a sudden.

By MediaStreet Staff Writers

Businesses say they plan to allocate more resources to their online reputations in response to the growing popularity of social media and online reviews.

According to a new survey from Clutch, 40% of businesses will increase their investment in online reputation management (ORM) this year.

All this is due to the growing power of social media and third-party reviews sites, which impact businesses’ control over their online reputation.

Clutch surveyed 224 digital marketers and found that more than half of businesses (54%) consider ORM “very necessary” for success. As a result, 34% said they allocated more resources to ORM in 2018, and an additional 43% said they plan to hire a professional public relations or ORM agency in 2018.

Businesses already invest a significant amount of time observing their online reputation, Clutch found. More than 40% of digital marketers (42%) monitor their companies’ brand online daily, while 21% monitor their online reputation hourly.

According to public relations experts, businesses frequently monitor how their brand is portrayed online because they know even one negative media mention can quickly damage the public’s perception of their company.

“When people search for brands online, they tend to search for stamps of credibility,” explained Simon Wadsworth, managing partner at Igniyte, an online reputation management agency in the UK. “If potential customers find anything negative, that could end up being a significant amount of leads the business won’t get from people who are put off from using the service.”

Social media also has shifted the ORM landscape because it gives consumers free-reign to share their opinions and experiences quickly and frequently: 46% of businesses look to social media most often to monitor their online reputation.

By using professional agencies that have expertise in online reputation management, businesses can minimise losing new customers who may be dissuaded from purchasing their product or service.

To read the complete report, click here.

 

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Here’s why you need to get your advertising to zoom in.

By MediaStreet Staff Writers

The relationship between desire and attention was long thought to only work in one direction: When a person desires something, they focus their attention on it.

Now, new research reveals this relationship works the other way, too. Increasing a person’s focus on a desirable object makes them want the object even more – a finding with important implications for marketers seeking to influence behaviour.

The study, published in the journal Motivation and Emotion, is the first to demonstrate a two-way relationship.

“People will block out distraction and narrow their attention on something they want,” said Anne Kotynski, author of the study. “Now we know this works in the opposite direction, too.”

In marketing, advertisements with a hyper focus on a product’s desirable aspect – say zooming in on the texture of icing and frosting – might help sell a certain brand of cake.

Findings suggest the ad could be targeted to people who have shown an interest in a similar product, such as running the cake commercial during a baking show.

This finding also works in other areas outside advertising too. For example, doctors could potentially help their patients develop a stronger focus on healthy activities that they may desire but otherwise resist, such as exercising or eating a balanced diet.

The study’s findings also add a wrinkle to knowledge of focus and emotion. According to a spate of previous research, positive emotions, such as happiness and joy, widen a person’s attention span, while negative emotions such as disgust and fear, do the opposite: narrowing a person’s focus.

“We conceptualise fear as drastically different from desire,” Kotynski said. “But our findings contribute to growing evidence that these different emotions have something key in common: They both narrow our focus in similar ways.”

The findings also fit the notion that both of these emotions – fear (negative) and desire (positive) – are associated with evolutionarily pursuits that narrowed our ancestors’ attentions.

For example, fear of predators motivated attention focused on an escape route, while an urge to mate motivated focus on a sexual partner.

“If a person has a strong desire, research says this positive emotion would make them have a wide attention span,” Kotynski said. “Our research shows we developed a more beneficial behaviour around desire: focusing our mental energy on the important object, much like fear would.”

The study

Study participants were shown images of desserts mixed in with mundane items. They were instructed to pull a joystick toward them if the image was tilted one direction and push the stick away if it was tilted the opposite direction. Researchers recorded the reaction time of each.

Participants who responded fastest to pull the images of desserts were those whose attention had been narrowed. Responses were much slower to the mundane, and for participants whose attention was broad, suggesting narrowed attention increases desire for desserts but not for everyday objects.

The study used dessert pictures to measure reaction time because such images have been shown to increase desire across individuals, most likely due to a motivation to seek high fat, high calorie foods that is rooted in evolution.

There you go people. If people love cars and you can get them to focus on the car you are hawking, you’ll have a better chance of converting that to a sale. May the ROI forever be in your favour.

 

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By Shama Hyder

The concepts behind intelligent content are an important glimpse into the future of content marketing.

As you can tell from the number of chatbots that are popping up across the web, brands of all types have begun investing in artificial intelligence, mainly for their customer service departments.

But ask these same forward-thinking brands whether they’re using intelligent content, and their answer will probably be either “No,” or “What’s intelligent content?”

Here’s a quick explanation of this content development, and how to determine whether it’s right for your brand.

What is intelligent content?

Intelligent content is content that can be adapted, changed, and/or released on different channels, to different audiences, without needing a human to touch it. Intelligent content is to content what adaptive design is to design – it adapts to the device, context, and situation in which it’s being consumed.

(Intelligent content is a complex topic, so for a full, in-depth explanation, you may want to pick up Ann Rockley’s book Managing Enterprise Content: a Unified Content Strategy. Rockley is a top expert on intelligent content, having pioneered the idea more than 10 years ago.)

In order for this to be possible, your content needs to be structured in such a way that it can be mixed and matched, as it were. It has to be broken into fragments, easily customizable, and – perhaps most importantly – properly tagged, so that both your marketing team and your customers can find the pieces they need easily.

In other words, intelligent content is content that takes a lot of the guesswork, rewriting, and repetition out of content creation. It replaces it with content that can be easily automated, recombined, personalized, and distributed.

How can I tell if it’s right for my brand?

Intelligent content isn’t something every brand needs.

For example, if you’re a small business that sells one product to one audience, there’s really no need for you to put in the effort to take your content from standard to intelligent. You likely have a bank of content that already works for you, and that needs little adaptation.

However, if you’re a business that sells lots of products, to lots of different audiences, then intelligent content can allow you to drastically cut down on the amount of time you spend creating new content and adapting what you already have.

Consider this example. Your company creates 5 different software packages, each of which is used in 3 different industries. Within each of those industries, you’ve got 7 different buyer personas for whom you’re creating content.

While you’re likely reusing and adapting content already, to some degree, the process of creating new content for every persona, in each industry, for every product, is extremely time-intensive.

Switching to an intelligent content approach could work extremely well for this company. That would mean that instead of spending time writing new content from scratch, the marketing team would begin breaking down their existing content into fragments, and tagging it with metadata to make it easily findable.

For example, they would have one sentence about the company itself – they could tag that “about company.” They might have an intro paragraph that they use consistently – that would be removed and tagged “intro.”

Then they could begin getting into their more detailed, individual content needs. For each software package, three features could be selected and summarized, with each feature tagged “feature 1,” “feature 2,” etc. One testimonial per industry, per software package could be chosen and tagged.

This process would continue until they had the building blocks to create the content they needed quickly and efficiently.

That’s just the beginning, though. Depending on your resources, you can invest in artificial intelligence programs that can automate your content and even, in some cases, produce some for you.

One program, Wordsmith, can create written reports from reading your Google Analytics and AdWords data. Wordsmith pulls your data and then analyzes it for insights, creating a robust report that reads as though it were written by a human. Programs like this can save your team huge amounts of time, and even, in some cases, produce better data analysis.

While intelligent content may not be for every brand, the concepts behind it are an important glimpse into the future of content marketing. For more, read my post “3 Crucial Truths You Don’t Know About the Connected Consumer.”

The opinions expressed here by Inc.com columnists are their own, not those of Inc.com.
Feature Image Credit: Getty Images

By Shama Hyder

Founder and CEO, Marketing Zen Group

Sourced from Inc.

Women-owned businesses are most likely to use social media. Men! What y’all doing?

By MediaStreet Staff Writers

A woman-owned small business is more likely to use social media, according to a new survey from Clutch, a leading B2B research and reviews firm.

Among women-owned businesses, 74% use social media, compared to 66% of men-owned businesses.

The findings came as no surprise to experts, who said women overall are more likely to use social media. Given that trend, female small business owners more easily can bring their business onto social media.

“Women are generally better conversationalists than men,” said Jeff Gibbard, chief social strategist at digital agency I’m From the Future. “They tend to be more expressive and more emotive. It’s no surprise to me why more women business owners use social media.”

Women often communicate better than men, which translates to the online world where they are more likely to use social media effectively.

Millennial-Owned Small Businesses Lead Social Media Use

There is also a generational divide among small businesses’ social media use. The survey finds that 79% of millennial-owned small businesses use social media compared to 65% of small businesses owned by older generations.

Millennials, like women in general, frequently use social media for their personal lives. Their social media skills easily carry over into their businesses – unlike older generations, experts say.

“The older people didn’t grow up with social media, so many don’t understand how to use it for their business,” said Shawn Alain, president of social media agency Viral in Nature. “They went through a significant part of their life without even the internet, and they remember what it was like not to have a smartphone or email.”

Millennials are also more likely to use Instagram and Snapchat than older generations, but Generation Xers and Baby Boomers are more likely to use LinkedIn.

Most Small Businesses Use Facebook

Facebook remains the most popular social media channel for small businesses, no matter the gender or generation of the owner – 86% say they use it, which is nearly twice the number of small businesses that use the second-place channel, Instagram (48%).

Among small business users of social media, 12% say they use Facebook exclusively for their social media efforts.

Overall, 71% of small businesses use social media, and more than half (52%) share content at least once per day. Images and infographics (54%) are the most popular content types that businesses post to social media.

Read the full report here. 

 

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Google unveiled Auto ads, a new ad unit for AdSense, its ad placement service for publishers, to help publishers streamline ad placement on their pages.

Auto ads use machine learning to determine potential ad locations, types, and number of ads, while preserving the user experience, according to Google. Auto ads include formats like in-feed, display, and full-screen mobile ads, and can be integrated into publisher pages with a single line of code.

Auto ads are attractive to publishers for two key reasons:

  • They minimize the resources publishers spend on ad placement. Publishers don’t need to devote as much staff to optimizing ad placement on their pages, as Auto ads will use machine learning and analytics to “teach” the system where to best place ads in the future, according to TechCrunch.
  • And they can help publishers better monetize their content. Auto ads may cause publishers to test ad placements in areas on their pages they might not have tested otherwise, and this can result in higher monetization. For example, some publishers participating in the beta testing of Auto ads saw average revenue increases of 5-15%, per MediaPost.

Auto ads can positively impact publishers’ bottom lines, given AdSense is already used by tens of millions of publishers. Publishers are likely looking for additional ways to monetize their content amid Facebook’s recent News Feed tweak that de-prioritizes their posts, which could hurt publishers’ ability to generate ad revenue on Facebook.

Meanwhile, the release of Auto ads helps increase Google’s influence over the digital ad environment. Although publishers can always opt out of using the tool, Google gains control over the types and number of ads publishers implement when they do use auto ads. This can help in Google’s efforts to minimize the number of annoying ad experiences publishers serve, which can ultimately encourage users to keep browsing for content on the open web and not in the walled gardens of other platforms like Facebook or Twitter.

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Sourced from Business Insider UK

 

Less than 1 in 3 people call Facebook a responsible company, according to a new survey.

By MediaStreet Staff Writers

Barraged by accusations of spreading divisive fake news and amid new allegations that it handed over personal information on up to 50 million users without their consent, Facebook is losing the faith of the people, according to a new survey.

Almost 4 out of 10 people surveyed said: “Facebook is not a responsible company because it puts making profits most of the time ahead of trying to do the right thing.” Less than 1 in 3 said that Facebook is a “responsible company because it tries to do the right thing most of the time even if that gets in the way of it making profits.” The rest were unsure.

By a 7-1 ratio people surveyed said that Facebook has had a negative influence on political discourse. Sixty-one percent said that “Facebook has damaged American politics and made it more negative by enabling manipulation and falsehoods that polarize people.”

The survey was conducted as new revelations surfaced that the company connected to the 2016 Trump campaign, Cambridge Analytica, inappropriately harvested personal information on millions of Facebook users.

The sharp rise in negative feelings is a significant departure from Facebook’s standing prior to the 2016 election, when the rise of so-called Fake News and polarizing content led to calls for the company to take greater responsibility for the content on the popular social media site – or face government regulation.

By a 2-1 margin, people surveyed said it’s Facebook’s responsibility to remove or warn about posts that contain false or misleading information. And 59 percent reported that the company is not doing enough to address the issues of false and inflammatory information that appear on its site.

“Facebook is at a crossroads because of its inability – nearly a year-and-a-half after the election – to get a handle on its divisive effects on society,” said Tom Galvin, Executive Director of Digital Citizens, who commissioned the survey. “From spreading fake and manipulative information to becoming a ‘Dark Web-like’ place for illicit commerce, Facebook seems to losing the trust of the American public. Regulation will not be far behind for social media companies if things don’t change.”

This declining trust reflects a growing concern about the impact Facebook and other social media sites have on young teens.  In the survey, more than two in five people surveyed said that the minimum age to have a Facebook account should be at least 18 years old.

“Digital platforms have to rise to the occasion and assure internet users that their personal information will be safe, that the content will be legal, safe and not contrived to manipulate. In short, they have to demonstrate they will be the positive influence on our society that they espouse to be,” said Galvin.

 

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A travel company has managed to stir up a lot of viral traffic with their hashtag. Watch and learn, people.

By MediaStreet Staff Writers

What do a dream wedding in New York, an adventure through the mountains of Sri Lanka and a family’s search for their roots in Scotland all have in common? All saw a hospitality professional going out of their way to make or save someone’s trip. And a holiday booking company use this mushy sequence of events with a hashtag to fire up social media views and get a great repsonse from them.

Booking.com call themselves the global leader in connecting travellers with the widest choice of incredible places to stay. Established in 1996 in Amsterdam, Booking.com B.V. has grown from a small Dutch start-up to one of the largest travel e-commerce companies in the world. Part of The Priceline Group (NASDAQ: BKNG), Booking.com now employs more than 17,000 employees in 198 offices in 70 countries worldwide.

So, what are they doing with their social media marketing? They are riding hastags like a showjumper would a prize horse.

They have had some great success with their recent hashtag #BookingHero. They asked people to share their travel stories using the hashtag. The best story won travel prizes and big kudos online.

Following thousands of submissions via social media, Booking.com selected the three most touching and inspiring accounts of hospitality professionals going above and beyond to create unique and unforgettable travel experiences for their guests.

The customers were then flown back to say thank you to the person who saved their trips. Here are the stories.

 

 

The point isn’t the stories though. The point is that real people’s journeys made the hashtag come alive and generate traffic for booking.com. In fact, the call out for submissions via social media has been so successsful that Booking.com is now using the hashtag to extend the social media campaign with long-form video content that extends the #BookingHero message, with TV to follow.

According to recent research conducted by Booking.com across 25 markets in 2017, a personal connection is essential for many travellers with 29% saying that an accommodation feeling like home is key and 24% sharing that a welcoming host is a make or break factor during the first 24 hours of their trip.

Said Pepijn Rijvers, Chief Marketing Officer, Booking.com. “These stories beautifully demonstrate that an amazing trip is about more than simply finding the right destination or the perfect accommodation– it’s also about the people you meet along the way which truly make for an unforgettable journey. And that’s what travel is all about.”

And for the company, it is about finding the right hashtag and getting it to go viral.

 

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