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Jen Barrell

By 168极速赛车平台: Jen Barrell

Aug 25, 2022

Topics:

168极速赛车平台:Content Marketing 168极速赛车平台:Marketing Strategy
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168极速赛车平台:Content Marketing  |   168极速赛车平台:Marketing Strategy

What is a Contentꦅ Strategy? (Definition + Templates)

Jen Barrell
What is a Content Strategy? (Definition + Templates)

Successful content marketing is more than just publishing a blog post here and there, crossing your fingers, and waiting for the website traffic to come rushing in.ꦜ 

You need a strategy to organize your efforts and achievꦯe your business goals — but 🌄that’s easier said than done.

Too many businesses set off and try to “do content marketing” without a really clear idea of what they’re trying to achieve and how they’re trying to achieve it. As a result, they get frustrated, claiming content marketing doesn’t work for us.

This is what happens when you don’t have a plan. 

Without a sound content strategy in place, the content creation process can get messy. Con꧒tent ideas get lost in the shuffle, or𝓰ganic traffic fluctuates, and business goals get missed. 

So, if you𒈔’re lacking a clear content marketing strategy, th🍸is one’s for you.

I’ve seen successful strategies from both sides. First, as a conten🌸t director, and now as a content trainer, where I coach dozಌens of businesses on how to grow their revenue by producing valuable content.

Below, I’ll walk you through:

  • What exactly is a content strategy?
  • What needs to be included in your strategy
  • How to put that strategy into action at your company

If you’re ༒looking to develop a content strategy, this one’s for you. 

What is a content strategy? How is it different from a content marketing strategy?

A content strategy is a full company document that illuꦗstrates ൲how the content your organization creates will impact every facet of the business.

Your strategꦰy should provide a holistic view of where you as an organization want to go and how your content will help you get there. But it took me a long time to realize this. Let me back up and share my story.

There are times as a marketer when everything ju෴st falls into place. You update your editorial cale﷽ndar, check out your traffic metrics, post a few company updates on social media, and get caught up on your Slack messages. 

Everything🌠's clicking. Heck, you might even be humming “Walking on Sunshine” as 🐽you close your laptop and start your evening.

That was me a few years ago. I was a content director at a mid-sized B2B business, years before I made the move🎉 to .

This was back when people commuted to downtown offices, when the𒐪re was an evenܫing rush to get home from work, and when I felt that the marketing world was moving in sync with my personal good vibes soundtrack.

Then my desk phone rang.

Leadership had been in a meeting all day long. I knew there were a few questions that 🌠might come up but, hey, I knew my stuff. I wasn't worried.

“Jen, can you send over your content strategy?”

Easy peasy. I had just updated the editor♛ial calendar. It had the title of every blog post we would be publishing this quarter. I said I'd send it over right away.

“Nope, not the editorial cﷺalendar, the content strategy. Can yo🙈u send that to us by tomorrow?”

Oh, crap. You could practically hear the record scratch.

Umm… Sure…

And just like that, my confidence was gone. Here I was, directing the conte💫nt of a growing business, and I wasn't sure what exactly they wante✱d. 

I had what felt like all the questions:

  • “What is a content strategy?”
  • “What does a content strategy actually look like?”
  • “How is it really different from the editorial calendar I'm already using?”
  • “What does the content strategy do?”
  • “Is anyone really going to use this or is it just something leadership thinks they need?”

What I was sure of, though, was that everyone I passed during my commute home knew I was a fraud — and it was only a matter of time until 🙈my bosses ♑and coworkers knew this too.

Quite frankly, I thought the editorial calendar was my strategy. What was I missing? And why were they asking for the strategy anyway? Here I was, hitting my goals to publish content con😼sistently. Wasn't that enough?

No, Jen, was what popped in my head as I slumped away from the office toward home, trying to hide from everyone in my path. No, it's not.

Lack of a content strategy exposes much deeper problems

To put it mildly, it wasn't a fun position to be in. And let's be honest, even writing this now is causing me more anxiety than I'm comfortable༺ with.

The real pressure weighing me down at that moment was the knowledge that I truly believed creating content would work. I had fought for the position I had and for leadership to suppor🍸t this effort.

𓂃But ifও I didn't provide a strategy that turned on the leads, this was all going to go up in smoke. 

Looking back, I can easily spot the issues:

  1. My organization was relatively new to . We had been publishing usable content consistently, but there wasn't much of a plan beyond that. 
  2. I had been building an editorial calendar full of common sales questions, but I still wasn't certain that the sales team was using the content we were producing. While they were happy to give us a list of questions they fielded, it was clear that the sales team still saw their jobs as completely separate from marketing.
  3. Leadership claimed to be fully bought in on content, but they were only behind the concept as long as it produced immediate results and as long as marketing produced the entirety of the content. (So, like, not really bought in at all.) And now for the big one…
  4. Our content was driving organic traffic, but it wasn't converting to actual sales.

And, yeah, it's easy to look back a half-dozen years and poke holes at a situation that clearly wasn't perfect. The funny thing is, it wasn꧃'t until I came to IMPACT that I fully realized what a true content strateg💖y actually was. 

But that wasn’t it. 

I also started to see the conditions needed for a real content strategy to exist.

Now that I'm at the other enಌd of the Zoom line, talking with people who are sitting where I used to sit and who are feeling the pain that used to keep me up at night, I can spot when a content strat🎃egy isn't working (or doesn't exist at all).

Get set, 2016 Jen, I'm about to answer your questions.

What is a content strategy really?

Let's get one very important detail clear from the start — a content strategy is not a marketing document. 🐠While your marketing experts might craft a content strategy, theirs isn't the only departme𝓰nt that owns it.

A content strategy is a compa♛ny-wide document that illustrates how the content the organization creates will impact every facet of 🔥the business. Your strategy will provide a holistic view of where you as an organization want to go and how your content will help you get there.

This is why it's crucial t🌸o have the entire company fully bought in to the content strategy. Everyone has to agree on the outcome for your strategy to be successful.

In essence, your content strategy serves as a service-level agreement (SLA) for all departments to understand the i𓄧mportance of content to the business's success and to document their role in how the plan is executed.

What does a content strategy look like?

As much as I'd like to tell you that the best content strategy should be six pages set in 12 pt Proxima No🥀va font, it's not up to me. This is your document, and you know better than me how to communicate with the rest of your coworkers.

For many, the content strategy is a document, divided into clear sections that walk readers through the plan element by element.🐟 For others, it's a more complicated spreadsheet with tabs for days.

And then there are those more visually-minded:

content strategy images

Note: There are 1.4 B results in Google for what a content strategy looks like, some with an outstanding array of colors and shapes. You do you.

content strategy SERP

Your strategy is unique and should be created and presented in the format that will most r💃esonate with both you💖r leadership team and your coworkers.

What's included in a content strategy?

Though 🍰I can't show you one single content strategy template to rule them all, I can tell you precisely what should be included in your content strate🐈gy document. Basically, I can now better define the rules for you.

A content strategy is a wide view of how content is managed, produced, and used throughout the organization, so think of the bigger picture in yo💯ur strategy document.

The mಞore granular itemsꦇ, though important to you, don't necessarily have to live in your strategy (we'll get to that later).

Here are theꦫ items that are best to include in a content strategy document. Each point provides a foundation for the next, so it's best to tackle these in order.

1. Establish the goal and purpose of your organization 

Like I said earlier, start broad. What is your company's purpose or mission? As a group of employees,ꦬ what are you setting out to do?

Your content should align with the company's overall why and shou🍌ld drive results that directly relate to the bottomܫ line. But if you don't know what that is, then how do you know in which direction to aim your content?

It’s easꦡy to think that content marketing is all about search engines and organic traffic. It’s not. It’s about advancing the mission of your organization. 

2. Determine what you hope to achieve with your content 

Now we zoom in a bit. 

As you set goals for your content, remember to keep e🐷very factor in mind. Think about the resources🗹 at your disposal: people, tools, time. 

You need t🔥o have a purpose behind your content before you even begi🧔n to define your strategy.

How will yo🍸ur content contribute to the overall goals of the company? What you establish in the section above will have an immediate bearing on this part of the 🎃document.

3. Figure out who your audience is

Don't feel bad if the answer to this question doesn't come as easily as you think it should. Defining a target audience for your content can be a tricky exercise for even ꩲthe most seasoned t♍eams.

Depending on what you 🌳establish as the purpose of your content, you may be targeting prospects for a defined line of business or an audience for a variety of products or services you provide.

You might eveꦏn be expanding your conte💞nt audience far beyond your prospect audience.

It all depends on your goals and purpose. 

For exam🧔ple, here at IMPACT, our content team adheres to a publisher model to guide the content strategy. So we create content positioned to several audiences:&n𒉰bsp;

  • Customers 
  • Businesses actively engaged with our sales teams
  • Those who may convert to prospects at some point in the future
  • People who have a general interest in marketing but may never engage with our services

Each of these target audience units is targeted because of how we've defined our company and con♛tent purpose and goals. 

Based on your goals, who will be best served by the ♐content you create? What content formats will resonate with this target audience? What platforms?

4. Define the user path through the organization

Now that you know your target audience, it's time to create a plan for how your audience will engage with your content as they move through the buyer’s journey. This is the part of the content strategy wherဣe we marketers get to flex our tactical muscles. 

Here, you'll have the chance to set the roadmap for how you'll attract your audience and guide them through their buyer’s journey with you. You'll want to include major themes and campaigns that will be covered, as well as how each piece of your content arsenal will𒀰 work together.

This se🔯ction could include a range of stuff, from actual assets to market research tools, and more. 

Tactical eleme🃏nts to include in this section include꧙ (but certainly aren't limited to):

  • Written content, including articles, , CTAs, and historic optimization
  • Podcasts
  • Learning centers
  • Key events
  • Content promotion and amplification

If you're reading this list and thinking that you're right. Thou♐gh your calendar isn't an appropriate stand-in for a content strategy, it does makeup one 🧸part of it. 

Just make sure you provide context to the calendar you establish. Some editorial calendars only include written content. While others might actually be split into multiple spreadsheets𓂃 or doc📖uments.

Instead of merely pasting the calendar link into your strategy document, explain how each piece works with t🐲he others and how you plan on using th𒀰ese to interact with your audience.

5. Understand how you will define success

How you define is the final step in your audience's journey with you. It's not enough for them to engage with you and what you've created. After all, we want the people reading, watching, and scrolling to actually do something.

Determine just wha🌠t it is you want them to do, explain how you'lဣl measure it, and finally decide how often this will be done. So much of what you include here depends on the goals you established earlier, so refer to those as you create your definition of success.

That said, ther💎e are some you might want to include, suꦏch as:

  • Blogs published
  • Keyword growth
  • Traffic totals and sources
  • Impressions
  • Clicks
  • YouTube channel subscribers
  • Average click-through rate
  • Average position
  • Contacts created
  • Contacts by sources

Monitoring your content metrics will allow you to measure your success and be able to spot opportunities for 🌳improvement.

💝The benefit of having this documented in your content strategy allows you to clearly celebrate a win or defend your pos🍸ition to make a change, depending on what the numbers tell you.

6. Know who owns the content strategy and who contributes to it on an ongoing basis

Finally, you'll want to include whoꦕ owns the content strategy y🍃ou've created and who the stakeholders are.

Yes, this is a company document and everyone has skin in the game, but the strategy itself needs someone to nurture it along and make sure it'✱s being followed. This often lands in the lap of the co𝕴ntent or editorial director. But for small companies, this could be a marketing manager or whoever is overseeing marketing activities.

Of course, though, the owner of the strategy won't be doing all the work — not on my watch, at least.

You’ll need to document how other departments and key players will take 🧜part in content creation and distribution.

Here's where you'll include the sales team's role in sourcing topics and using content as part of the sales process. This is where you'll identify theಞ need for subject matter expers throughout the organizatio꧃n to sit for interviews, write articles, record podcasts, or produce vi🤪deos.

Leave no stone unturned when it comes to h🧜ighlighting the importance of each employee’s role in fulfilling the strategy. This should, hopefully, prevent surprises down the road.

Successful content marketing is always 🔜a concerted effort, so be sure to weave that into the very fabric of your strategy.

What doesn't belong in a content strategy?

I'm too Type A to say not to sweat the details, but there's no need to weigh down⭕ your strategy doc with extra marketing materials that have little connection to the big picture.

I love 168极速赛车平台:a solid content style guide as much as the next girl (OK, probably more so, given that I once admitted to wanting to use the IMPACT style guide as a pillow), but it's saf🥃e to leave these kinds of docu༒ments out of this — no matter how comforting they may be.

Here are ⛄some items you ca🐎n omit from your strategy:

  • Topic brainstorms
  • Results of a content audit
  • Branding guidelines
  • Content style guide
  • Article examples
  • Organizational structures
  • Monetary contracts

After re🍎ading that list, I know what some of you are thinking♎:

“Jen, why shouldn't those be included? Those are all related to how we execute our content strategy… right?”

You are absolutely correct. They are related to how you execute your strategy, but here's the critical thing to keep🐲 in mind — these different pieces are not the strategy itself. 

Topic brainstorms can be outcomes of the strategy, but they are not the ﷽strategy. Your content style guide covers the editorial rules of the content you will create, but🍸 (again) it's not the strategy. 

See what I mean?

Now, if your conten🌳t strategy is housed online (in a Google Doc, an online Wiki, etc.), you can include a list of links to these items in an appendix of related documentation. But remember, you should not consider them as centerpieces of your strategy.

How often should you update a content strategy?

Where we once might have creat🌳ed a content strategy to last for a year or more, life just doesn🐽't seem to work on a long-term basis like it used to.

That doesn't mean you'll have to start from scratch every time🐬 you update your strategy, but it does mean you'll want to schedule regular maiဣntenance. I suggest creating a strategy for a year and planning to revisit it every quarter.

The flexibility of working on a 90-day schedule provides an extra layer of freedom to respond to changing influences, especially when planning the mo༒re tactical elements. This also allows you to dig into the metrics and make adjustments as needed.

You've created a content strategy, now what?

The goal of creating a strategy document isn't just to be able to check a box, attach it to an email to the CEO, and th�♛�en hope to stay under the radar until the next request.

Creating a strategy that the entire organization aligns with and rallies around can and should be a company-changing event, prompting everyone to get excited about pitching in a🉐nd being part of making it a success.

In short, your cont✨ent strategy must becomeౠ a part of your company culture for it to really increase organic traffic, generate leads, and fill the sales funnel. 

The key here, though, is to get everyone on board. And tha﷽t's totally easy, so we won't dwell on that.

Oh, wait…

There are three parts to having your stra✱tegy adopted by the ent💯ire company: 

  1. First, you need buy-in from the top. Your leadership needs to understand the and why . 
  2. Client-centered content also relies heavily on , and that means that sales will need to be intimately involved in the content production and distribution process. 
  3. is key to a successful content strategy (not to mention a pleasant work environment). 

OK, but how do you do that?

IMPACT hasn't been exempt from the tale-as-old-as-time sales and marketing mismatch. But we've recently made major steps toward solving this by , where the sales team and key members of the marketing group come together once a week to sing Kumbaya talk about revenue-generating content. 

The last part of the alignment puzzle is, well, everyone else: your coworkers, your work spouse, your nemesis, the new gu🅠y, the person whose home office background has you daydreaming of renovating your entire apartment every time you get on a Zoom call with him.

These are the people you'll ask to do some ♈pretty heavy lifting when it comes to content production. So, how can you entice them to happily take part𒆙?

.

Bring your people together over content

When content becomes a business initiative, the people who participate in that cornersꦬtone ✅strategy become the company rock stars. You can celebrate their work by calling them out in team meetings, by featuring their articles in company newsletters, or by sharing their work in a Slack celebration channel.

Every time a dea♊l closes, look for the♓ content that played a role. Share a few examples with the team.

It's up to you how you'll reward the top performers, but it's important that you make them feel appreciated (because, after all, you really will appreciate them).

While you're handing oജut praise, also discuss the progress of the content strategy and make 💧sure everyone has a clear understanding as to what the goals are and how you’re progressing. 

Nothing motivates like success.

Having a completed strategy can prompt a euphoric sense of accomplishment, ꦍbut creating a content strategy itself isn't the success metric.

To those who are nurturing the strategy, success is achieved w🦂hen you can draw a direct line from the content created to a sale, knowing that line passed through multiple people and departments, each of whom had a stake in the ultimate win.

That's something that shou🌳ld have everyone — from sales to l𒀰eadership to marketing — walking on sunshine (for real this time).

If you’re looking for help creating your content strategy, 168极速赛车平台:talk to one of our advisors. We help busine𒁏sses ♔simplify their content marketing every day, so they can reach their potential customers and drive more sales. 

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