According to MarketingProfs' 2012 Content Marketing Benchmarks report, the top two challenges for today's content marketers are:
With the increasing move to content marketing, especially in B2B, the need to get both quality and quantity has never been greater. Whacking together a couple of self-serving case studies and an inaccessible white paper won't cut it (and let's face it, they never really did). So what can the time-poor, budget-limited marketer do?
Too many companies still assume that customers are really very interested in their businesses. That, somehow, if they can just get their story about their products and their 'solutions' in front of customers, those same customers will devour it and pass it on to everyone on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. Back in the real world of course, it doesn't work that way.
Customers have 1,001 things to worry about every day. Chances are that your product is not one of them. Sorry.
What they really worry about is themselves of course. They worry how they're going to compete more effectively, become more agile, market their products better, keep their costs down – you know, all the stuff you worry about too.
The trick to producing engaging content is to discover what these worries actually are, tease out the ones that your business has some expertise in (and that your products ultimately solve) and then produce content that makes those customers' days just a bit better.
Yes, I hear you say, but how? Good question – three things to start:
From this foundation, you should begin to have the basis for a content plan.
As long as you always keep repeating "this is about them not about me," you should be fine.
But what about quantity? How can you create enough stuff?
The first thing to look at is where you can get content. This falls into 4 key areas:
The next thing is to atomise your content.
Virtually every piece of content can spawn a number of others. Let's say you create a 12-page ebook on a key topic. From this you could then create:
And that's just the start. Because you have the core content as a starting place, creating added-value derivatives becomes easier and less time-consuming.
So there you have it, content marketers' top two challenges solved.
Tomorrow? World peace.