6 Content Marketing Lessons From The Trenches

With the right con­tent, brands can build trust and loy­al­ty through authen­tic­i­ty.

Kelly Wrather By Kelly Wrather from Kenshoo. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Con­tent mar­ket­ing is all about deliv­er­ing the right con­tent, with the right mes­sage, to the right con­sumer, at the right time. A brand’s con­tent can help con­sumers at every stage of the pur­chase fun­nel, which will help build trust and loy­al­ty – with the ulti­mate goal of increas­ing rev­enue. Peo­ple respond to things they can relate to. So if you bring a bit of human­i­ty into your prac­tice, might you just win the con­tent war?


Mar­keters have always been cre­at­ing con­tent, but it was real­ly only the past few years that orga­ni­za­tions start­ed carv­ing out ded­i­cat­ed con­tent mar­ket­ing prac­tices, mak­ing it a strate­gic capa­bil­i­ty in the mar­ket­ing arse­nal. Here are six lessons I’ve learned from the con­tent mar­ket­ing trench­es.

1. Storytelling Not Selling

Before you cre­ate any more con­tent, step back and real­ize that con­tent mar­ket­ing is not about the hard sell. It’s about con­nect­ing with real peo­ple who have real chal­lenges, needs, and desires.

In the words of Jay Baer, “the dif­fer­ence between help­ing and sell­ing is just two let­ters.” Under­stand­ing this con­cept of Youtil­i­ty grounds con­tent cre­ation in real­i­ty and helps con­nects mar­keters with the needs of con­sumers and their poten­tial clients and cus­tomers. This approach will also help you build trust and loy­al­ty through authen­tic­i­ty.

A great B2C exam­ple of this is the city guides that AirBnB has cre­at­ed. By pro­vid­ing basic resources like trans­porta­tion options, neigh­bor­hood descrip­tions, and local tips, AirBnB is help­ing cre­ate an all-encom­pass­ing city expe­ri­ence for its cus­tomers, ele­vat­ing its ser­vice beyond just a place to crash.

On the B2B front, Hub­Spot pro­vides a wealth of free resources – from free tem­plates to stock pho­tos. While these assets cor­re­late direct­ly to its sales mis­sion and val­ue prop, for the mar­keters down­load­ing them, they are just help­ful tools that also hap­pen to posi­tion the brand as a great resource and sub­ject mat­ter expert on inbound mar­ket­ing.

2. Don’t Go In Blind

Only 44 per­cent of mar­keters sur­vey report­ed hav­ing a doc­u­ment­ed con­tent strat­e­gy, accord­ing to this year’s B2B Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Bench­mark report from Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Insti­tute and Mar­ket­ing­Profs.

While it’s tempt­ing to just start crank­ing out con­tent, par­tic­u­lar­ly if your team is small and needs to start pro­duc­ing out­puts, there’s val­ue in map­ping out your plan and writ­ing some guide­lines.

A few tips:

  • Know your objec­tives upfront and make sure they align to organization’s over­ar­ch­ing goals.
  • Cre­ate process­es that will improve work­flow by devel­op­ing check­points along the way and work-back plans to del­e­gate respon­si­bil­i­ties.
  • Map out strate­gies at both a high-lev­el view and a tac­ti­cal line-item list. Con­tent cal­en­dars are help­ful if you actu­al­ly use them, so make sure you’re hap­py with the set up and are com­mit­ted to lever­ag­ing it.
  • Write style guide­lines and iter­ate as you go. This will pay off as you scale your prac­tices and enlist out­side con­trib­u­tors.

3. Align With The Buyer Journey

As your con­tent mar­ket­ing prac­tice matures, under­stand how you can bet­ter tai­lor your con­tent to align with your cus­tomers and prospects and where peo­ple are along the buyer’s jour­ney. This align­ment will pro­vide struc­ture and a frame­work in which to devel­op your pro­grams.

A con­tent audit can seem intim­i­dat­ing but by tak­ing stock of what you have and assign­ing a cat­e­go­riza­tion of where it falls in the fun­nel, you’ll be able to see where there are gaps and oppor­tu­ni­ties. Don’t for­get to talk to the folks in the field, too. Forge alliances with sales and demand gen­er­a­tion teams to get hon­est, action­able feed­back.

Of course, don’t ignore oth­er ways to tai­lor your con­tent too. Lay­er on themes that coin­cide with sea­son­al­i­ty, world events, geo­gra­phies, and your inter­nal prod­ucts and ser­vices to real­ly make your con­tent sing.

4. Focus On Quality And Pace Yourself

Dur­ing a recent webi­nar, Ann Hadley of Mar­ket­ing­Profs com­ment­ed: “We don’t need more con­tent. We need bet­ter con­tent.”

Yes. A thou­sand times yes! View Momentology's Content Marketing Guide

Con­tent mar­ket­ing should not be a series of sprints to just push out bursts of con­tent. Devel­op cam­paigns around key themes and fig­ure out how you piv­ot that con­tent into dif­fer­ent out­puts. This way, you can build upon your sol­id con­tent foun­da­tion and avoid com­plete­ly rein­vent­ing the wheel – a white paper becomes an email nur­ture and a webi­nar; an info­graph­ic becomes a video idea and blog series.

We spend so much time cre­at­ing these pieces so we should spend just as much, if not more time, get­ting the word out about them. At the end of the day, about 20 per­cent of your time should be spent on cre­at­ing con­tent while the oth­er 80 per­cent is spent on dis­tri­b­u­tion and pro­mo­tion.

Don’t burn your­self (and your audi­ence) out by hold­ing on to this notion that you con­stant­ly have to be pub­lish­ing some­thing “new” in order to be fresh.

5. Invest In Resources

As you build out your prac­tice, be sure to invest in the tools that will help you grow and get you where you need to be – this includes both soft­ware and human cap­i­tal.

On the soft­ware side, take advan­tage of free tem­plates and tools to help you stay orga­nized but real­ize that, as you scale, you may need to up your invest­ment in this area.

When it comes to your team, iden­ti­fy your biggest needs and find peo­ple with the skills that mat­ter most to you. Above all, look to hire not just writ­ers, but sto­ry­tellers – brand jour­nal­ists.

If head­count is lim­it­ed, focus on peo­ple who can be flex­i­ble and can com­ple­ment the skills you have. For me, that meant find­ing some­one who had more ana­lyt­i­cal focus.

Don’t for­get that you can (and should) lever­age clients and part­ners to help con­tribute to efforts. Give peo­ple the oppor­tu­ni­ty to guest post on your blog, for exam­ple; this gen­er­ates more con­tent for you with­out adding more man­pow­er and allows each indi­vid­ual to flex his or her thought lead­er­ship mus­cles.

6. Don’t Be Afraid To Take Risks And Have Fun

Last, but not least, remem­ber to try new things and have fun while you’re doing it. Even if you’re in a seem­ing­ly mun­dane indus­try, you can still make real­ly cool con­tent. Use your brand posi­tion­ing as your guide to make sure you’re not too far out­side the bounds of what feels nat­ur­al for your brand.

Some good exam­ples of this include:

GE’s Pin­ter­est Account  Who said Pin­ter­est was only for clothes and recipes?

Zen Desk’s use of videos. Cus­tomer sup­port soft­ware doesn’t seem that excit­ing, but the sto­ry cre­at­ed in the video below begs to dif­fer. Their bit on “Sh*t Sup­port Agents Say” shouldn’t be missed either.

At Ken­shoo, we work hard, but we try not to take our­selves too seri­ous­ly, proven by this “Clueless”-inspired info­graph­ic.


What lessons have you learned about con­tent mar­ket­ing?  become a bet­ter sto­ry­teller? Share your insights in the com­ments!

Kelly Wrather

Written by Kelly Wrather

Sr. Manager, Content Marketing, Kenshoo

Kelly Wrather is the Senior Manager of Content Marketing at Kenshoo, the global leader in predictive marketing software. Prior to joining Kenshoo, she helped launch the Accuen brand, the trading desk of Omnicom Media Group. A graduate of Boston University's College of Communication, Wrather's previous experience also spans social media and online community management.

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