Over the last year or so, a consensus has been developing around the relationship between social media and SEO. Namely, that the more content is shared via social, the more likely it is to gain links – and thus gain more visibility in search as a result. Recent extensive research suggests however that the picture is much more complex. And sobering.
The majority of content published on the Internet is simply ignored when it comes to shares and links. Most people are wasting their time either producing poor content or failing to amplify it.
These are just two of the rather brutal conclusions from a recently published joint survey from SEO tool vendor Moz and content marketing SaaS specialist BuzzSumo.
The research looked at more than 1 million pieces of content in order to “understand the correlation of shares and links, to understand the content that gets both shares and links, and to identify the formats that get relatively more shares or links.”
Content Marketing Links & Shares: 8 Key Findings
The full report is well worth reading, but here are some of the standout findings – not least because many of them contradict conventional wisdom around social media, SEO, and content marketing.
- The majority of posts receive few shares and even fewer links. In a randomly selected sample of 100,000 posts, more than 50 percent had 2 or less Facebook interactions (shares, likes or comments) and more than 75 percent had zero external links.
- It’s easier to acquire shares than links: Looking at a bigger sample of 750,000 well-shared posts, the research found that more than 50 percent of these posts still had zero external links. This suggests while many posts acquire shares, and in some cases large numbers of shares, acquiring links is far harder.
- Shares and links are not normally distributed around an average. There are high performing outlier posts that get a lot of shares and links, but most content is grouped at the low end, with close to zero shares and links. For example, more than 75 percent of articles from the random sample of 100,000 posts had zero external links and just 1 or less referring domain link.
- People share and link for different reasons. Across the total sample of 1 million posts there was no overall correlation of shares and links.
- Specific content types do have a strong positive correlation of shares and links. These include research backed content and opinion forming journalism. These content formats achieve both higher shares and significantly more links.
- Long form content (more than 1,000 words) consistently receives more shares and links than shorter form content. Eighty-five percent of content published (excluding videos and quizzes) is less than 1,000 words long. However,. According to Moz/BuzzSumo, this means “either people ignore the data or it is simply too hard for them to write quality long form content.”
- Content formats matter. Formats such as entertainment videos and quizzes are far more likely to be shared than linked to. Some quizzes and videos get hundreds of thousands of shares but no links.
- List posts and videos achieve much higher shares on average than other content formats. However, in terms of achieving links, list posts and why posts achieve a higher number of referring domain links than other content formats on average. List posts remain a powerful content format.
The Future Of Content Marketing?
At first blush, it might be tempting to conclude that content marketing is a waste of time given that the vast majority of content seems to languish unloved. On the other hand, it highlights some critical factors that would be foolish to ignore.
Sharing and linking are clearly done for different reasons and almost certainly by different people with differing incentives and motivations.
Research-backed content and opinion-led journalism are the two types of content that have a better chance of hitting the sweet spot of sharing and links (and in the latter case, an indication that PR still has a key role to play).
If nothing else, the research clearly shows that content quality, content length, and content format are all vital factors in getting any kind of viable return on investment.
It also means being explicitly clear about the goals and objectives for the content, what kind of audience you’re targeting, and where consumers are in their decision journey.
Getting content shared may help with reach but won’t necessarily lead to links, and as a result, higher search visibility. In crude terms, is the audience in the awareness phase or consideration phase?
Conversely, earning links is much harder than gaining social shares. Creating fewer but lengthier more detailed content assets may be a better long term strategy than lots of shorter form content.
Ultimately, smart consumer marketers will invest in audience research and decision journey mapping first before running off and creating content. Without this kind of approach, the likelihood of content marketing failure is only increased.
What do you see as critical for future content marketing success?