18 Killer Content Marketing Tools That Will Make Your Life Easier

Con­tent mar­ket­ing tools to help with ideation, cre­ation, col­lab­o­ra­tion, and pro­mo­tion.

Bas van den Beld By Bas van den Beld from State of Digital. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Con­tent mar­ket­ing isn’t easy. It’s hard work under­stand­ing where to get ideas, what types of con­tent to cre­ate, how to cre­ate it, and the best ways to pro­mote it. Any help is wel­come for a con­tent mar­keter. That’s why tools are great. They help ensure you’re cre­at­ing the best pos­si­ble con­tent. Here are 18 tools you can use to opti­mize your con­tent mar­ket­ing process.


Getting Ideas

If you’re involved in con­tent mar­ket­ing, you should be one of the biggest con­sumers of con­tent. If you pro­duce con­tent, you need to under­stand it. You need to know what works, what doesn’t, and in what cir­cum­stance you can use cer­tain types of con­tent. Plus, you’ll get a lot of ideas from look­ing at oth­er con­tent.

From read­ing the lat­est news, to find­ing the most impor­tant arti­cles, to under­stand­ing what peo­ple share a lot, many tools can help you start get­ting a bet­ter grip on con­tent. Here are a few tools to help you get ideas.

Feedly

Ever since Google closed Google Read­er, Feed­ly is the best RSS Read­er out there, in my opin­ion. This read­er lets you group web­sites you feel are most impor­tant in your top­ics. You can eas­i­ly go through head­lines and keep up to date with your favorite web­sites.

Hot tip: The paid ver­sion of Feed­ly allows you to eas­i­ly share and con­nect Feed­ly to oth­er tools such as Ever­note or Pock­et.

Getpocket

Get­Pock­et (“Pock­et as an app”) is per­fect for trav­el­ers. It down­loads con­tent to your tablet or smart­phone for you to read lat­er.

The brows­er plu­g­in eas­i­ly allows you to add con­tent you see, but don’t have time for now, to your pock­et. It then strips the site’s designs to have a clear read­ing expe­ri­ence. Get­pock­et also lets you sub­scribe to cer­tain web­sites (e.g., The New York Times).

Hot tip: Use Pock­et in com­bi­na­tion with oth­er tools like IFTTT to quick­ly share, save to for exam­ple Ever­note or sub­scribe to web­sites.

prismatic

Prismatic

If you’d rather get “fed” by top­ic or via your social chan­nels, rather than just read­ing the same old sites over and over again, Pris­mat­ic is a good choice. This tool lets you sub­scribe to top­ics and add in your social so the most impor­tant arti­cles shared by your friends or col­leagues will also show up.

Hot tip: You can also fol­low oth­ers to see what top­ics they share. Fol­low influ­en­tial peo­ple in your niche!

Buzzsumo

Buz­zsumo is a social analy­sis tool that will show you exact­ly what is hot and what is not for the top­ics you are inter­est­ed in. Sim­ply do a search and it will return the most shared arti­cles around the web.

This tool is extreme­ly use­ful to get a bet­ter under­stand­ing of what type of posts peo­ple share and the titles they use. It also allows you to “fol­low” spe­cif­ic web­sites, your own or your com­peti­tors, and see their “hottest” con­tent.

Hot tip: Go one step fur­ther than look­ing at the shared links to see who shared cer­tain links. This will help you find inter­est­ing new influ­en­tials or find peo­ple with sim­i­lar inter­ests.

Buzzsumo

Evernote

Ever­note can actu­al­ly go into every sin­gle cat­e­go­ry of this arti­cle. I use it in every one of them, from think­ing of ideas to shar­ing and mon­i­tor­ing. When I read some­thing I can quick­ly share it to Ever­note. I also make notes when I hear of see things that give me ideas.

Hot tip: Real­ly think about your tag­ging and note­books. Tag­ging will make your life eas­i­er. For exam­ple, the tags “tools,” “post,” and “con­tent mar­ket­ing,” pro­vid­ed a lot of input for this spe­cif­ic arti­cle.

From Ideas To Concept

The next step is to get from ideas to con­cepts. What is real­ly impor­tant, what terms are peo­ple using, and how should you con­nect the dif­fer­ent types of con­tent.

Brainstorming: XMind

Brain­storm­ing can be real­ly use­ful as you’re decid­ing on your con­tent cal­en­dar and writ­ing arti­cles. Brain­storms will help you:

  • Get a quick overview of all the ideas you have.
  • Deter­mine the impor­tance of a top­ic.
  • Dis­cov­er oth­er con­nect­ed ideas.
  • Reveal where you lack con­tent (types).

I’m a big fan of XMind as a brain­storm­ing tool. XMind has sev­er­al tem­plates ready for you, is easy to set up, and eas­i­ly lets you share in dif­fer­ent for­mats (e.g., export­ing to Word or as images).

Hot tip: If you brain­storm a top­ic in the right way it will auto­mat­i­cal­ly turn into your out­line of an arti­cle. Dif­fer­ent branch­es will become top­ics and subtopics. XMind allows you to export (paid) this to Word or Excel, giv­ing you your out­line. All you have to do now is fill in the para­graphs!

Mock Up: Balsamiq

Some­times cre­at­ing con­tent means you have to tell your devel­op­ers to build cer­tain pages. Not every­body is equal­ly skilled at this. A tool like Bal­samiq can help you out here. With pre-set exam­ples and draw­ings, you can eas­i­ly cre­ate an exam­ple of the page(s) you want devel­oped.

Hot tip: You can also use Bal­samiq as a tool to cre­ate imagery for your con­tent. Do you do a lot of explain­ing about your tool for exam­ple? Sim­ply cre­ate draw­ings!

Creating Content

Now you have your ideas and your out­line set up, it’s time to start cre­at­ing the con­tent. Con­tent mar­ket­ing comes in many dif­fer­ent forms, not just text, so we’ll look at tools that will help you opti­mize con­tent in its many dif­fer­ent forms.

Your headlines: Portent

Let’s start with the head­lines of your arti­cles. We all know, a good head­line makes a big dif­fer­ence. After all, it deter­mines whether some­one will click on the link, and some­times whether some­one will share the con­tent.

But how to cre­ate that killer head­line? We’ve learned above that Buz­zSumo can give you some great insights into what head­lines work, but actu­al­ly cre­at­ing one isn’t that easy.

Say hel­lo to Por­tent. Por­ten­t’s title mak­er is sim­ple: type in your impor­tant terms and Por­tent will return you with sug­ges­tions of titles.

Portent

Here are some of the titles it sug­gest­ed for this post, based on the term “Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools’:

  • How Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools is Like a School Bul­ly
  • Doing Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools the right way
  • Why Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools are Hot­ter than Jen­nifer Lawrence
  • 17 ways Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools Could leave You Need­ing a lawyer
  • The Dum­mies Guide to Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools
  • Why every­body talks about Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools
  • How Con­tent Mar­ket­ing Tools can keep you from…

Hot Tip: As you can see, not every title is per­fect. Make sure you don’t just pick the first one, but cre­ate a group of poten­tial titles and choose and adapt from there.

Keywordtools: Keywordtool.io

Smart dig­i­tal mar­keters know that when writ­ing con­tent you should think about the terms peo­ple use in search engines and on social media. This improves your chances of being found.

You’re like­ly already famil­iar with Google AdWords Key­word Plan­ner, so I’ll high­light a dif­fer­ent one: http://keywordtool.io/. This sim­ple tool shows you a list of 750 key­words for free. Again it will help you cre­ate head­lines, but it will also show you what words to use in your text.

Hot tip: Don’t just look at Google here. The “YouTube” tab has inter­est­ing data on what peo­ple are search­ing for on YouTube.

Video: Screeny or Camtasia

Want to show off an appli­ca­tion or maybe a web­site? If so, you may want to show what is good and make a lit­tle video (e.g., a how-to or an overview).

Tools like Cam­ta­sia and Scree­ny (Mac only) are extreme­ly use­ful for this. It only takes a few min­utes to cap­ture a cer­tain area of your screen and start show­ing off. Quick tips on how to do some­thing can real­ly make your con­tent look a lot bet­ter, so get on it!

Hot Tip: Try using the in screen video. It will show both the screen as well as your face (using the web­cam), mak­ing the video much more per­son­al.

Design: Canva

I recent­ly wrote a big post on a vari­ety of visu­al mar­ket­ing tools, so I won’t go too much in depth with that one, but I’d like to high­light one:

Can­va. Canva.com is an easy visu­al mar­ket­ing tool that lets you quick­ly cre­ate visu­als for any social plat­form. It has the sizes pre-set for you and you can use images from Can­va or upload your own.

Hot tip: Check out the Can­va Design School for help cre­at­ing bet­ter visu­als.

Canva

Podcasts: Audacity

Peo­ple do not just con­sume con­tent from text. Audio is a big one as well. It is easy because peo­ple can lis­ten to it while com­mut­ing for exam­ple. This is one of the rea­sons pod­cast­ing is still a good and pop­u­lar ele­ment of con­tent mar­ket­ing.

It’s quite easy to cre­ate pod­casts with apps on your phone or tablet. If you work on a PC, Audac­i­ty is a nice tool to have. It allows you to record voice, mix in music, and will eas­i­ly export the audio in any for­mat you want.

Hot tip: Import a record­ed video (like an inter­view) in Audac­i­ty and you will instant­ly have an audio file of that video. Repur­posed con­tent!

Infographics: Easelly

The best and most beau­ti­ful info­graph­ics are cre­at­ed by peo­ple who can actu­al­ly design. But some­times you want or need to get some­thing done “quick and dirty.” Easel­ly can be use­ful in such cas­es.

Easel­ly has tem­plates for dif­fer­ent types of info­graph­ics ready for you. You can eas­i­ly add visu­als – Easel­ly offers some, or you can upload your own.

Hot tip: It’s easy to add charts – you can even enter your own data in data­base for­mat and it will show a nice graph.

easelly

Promoting Content

Pro­mot­ing the con­tent is an extreme­ly impor­tant part of con­tent mar­ket­ing. Sev­er­al dif­fer­ent tools can help, but we’ll high­light three dif­fer­ent types.

Email: Mailchimp

Email still is one of the most used ways peo­ple con­sume con­tent and is con­sid­ered to still be more suc­cess­ful than social media. Send­ing out newslet­ters should be done with con­sid­er­a­tion, but you can still get a lot done, even if you aren’t an email expert.

A tool like Mailchimp can be use­ful here. Mailchimp lets you cre­ate many dif­fer­ent lists and newslet­ters. It also easy inte­grates with oth­er tools and CMS plat­forms like Word­Press.

Hot tip: Use Groups and Seg­ments to per­son­al­ize your e‑mails. Keep that in mind when cre­at­ing lists and sign up forms.

Social Media: Buffer

Social media shar­ing can be done in many dif­fer­ent ways. You can go direct­ly to the social net­work or use tools like CoSched­ule or Buffer.

I per­son­al­ly real­ly like Buffer because it allows you not just to share dif­fer­ent types of con­tent to dif­fer­ent plat­forms, it also makes it very easy to share oth­er people’s con­tent and it has insights on your stats.

Hot tip: Make sure to add a sched­ule and share updates on the time that your audi­ence is online. Use Buffer­’s “Opti­mal Sched­ul­ing” func­tion­al­i­ty to find out what times are best for your audi­ence.

Automation: IFTTT

Yes, Buffer is also part­ly automa­tion. And, yes, automa­tion is a bad thing when not done prop­er­ly. But when well thought out, automa­tion can be use­ful. IFTTT prob­a­bly is the most use­ful automa­tion tool.

It allows you to cre­ate “recipes” that vary from shar­ing a feed to your social accounts to cre­at­ing an overview of rel­e­vant con­tent based on a set of rules.

Hot tip: Browse through oth­er shared recipes to find out what oth­ers do to see if there is a recipe that could just fit your needs.

IFTTT

Working Together On Content Creation

Con­tent mar­ket­ing usu­al­ly isn’t a one per­son effort. It takes a group of peo­ple to think of, cre­ate, and share great con­tent. To have these peo­ple do the best job you need the right tools. Here are two help­ful col­lab­o­ra­tive tools.

Google Drive

Work­ing on the same doc­u­ment, look­ing at sched­ules togeth­er, mak­ing notes – it’s all pos­si­ble in Google Dri­ve. At this point of time it is the most com­plete and use­ful col­lab­o­ra­tion tool for con­tent mar­keters.

Trello

Last, but not least, there is Trel­lo. If you’re look­ing for a use­ful way to com­mu­ni­cate, keep track of what is hap­pen­ing, and see where you need to speed up, Trel­lo is per­fect.


These are just a few tools I use, but they def­i­nite­ly help in con­tent mar­ket­ing. So what tools do you use? Any of these? Or do you have the gold­en tip for us? Let us and the oth­er read­ers know!

Bas van den Beld

Written by Bas van den Beld

Digital Marketing Strategist, State of Digital

Bas van den Beld is an award winning Digital Marketing consultant, trainer and speaker. He is the founder of State of Digital and helps companies develop solid marketing strategies.

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