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Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROIHow to Focus Only on the Things That Matter and Stop Wasting Time
EMEA Edition
11
211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
INTRODUCTION Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
There’s nothing easy about building high-performance marketing content. Unfortunately, hard
work does not always make good, impactful content. Many marketing teams work long hours to
churn out volumes of perfectly mediocre content, and worst of all, they have no real idea how
their content affects the audience or helps the business.
Building high-performance content depends on consistently generating high-value ideas,
planning well and budgeting, managing an efficient and creative workflow, making sure the
content reaches the right audiences at the right times, and measuring its performance. Sounds
like a perfect world, right? Yet many do this consistently, and they do it well.
With the generous support of Aprimo, we decided to dig into the secrets of successful content
marketing. We asked seven experts questions about how they manage each stage of the
content lifecycle: ideate, plan, budget, create, distribute, and analyze. This eBook organizes their
responses into chapters corresponding to these stages of the lifecycle.
It’s clear that at the end of the day, successful content marketers know what their content
is worth and how much it should cost. They also know how to optimize and distribute it to
maximize their return and how to measure its audience and business impact.
I for one found their insights refreshing and a good reminder that the cost of mediocre content
far outweighs the extra investment needed to get the most out of your content lifecycle.
© 2019 Mighty Guides Inc. I 9920 Moorings Drive I Jacksonville, Florida 32257 I 516 840 0244 I www.mightyguides.com
Mighty Guides make you stronger.
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sincere piece of advice in this guide
sits right next to the contributor’s
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you can learn more about their work.
This background information gives
you the proper context for each
expert’s independent perspective.
Credible advice from top experts
helps you make strong decisions.
Strong decisions make you mighty.
Regards,
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Publisher, Mighty Guides, Inc.
311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Managing content has become increasingly complex across an explosion of new
consumer channels. But it’s also become increasingly essential as consumers place more
importance on customer experiences than ever before.
Accenture found that two-thirds of consumers are more likely to make a purchase from
a retailer that sends them relevant and personalized promotions, and remembers their
previous purchases. And conversely, a PwC study found that nearly 1 in 3 consumers will
walk away from a brand they love after just one bad experience.
Delivering content that resonates, however, requires a lot of behind-the-scenes work,
including:
Regards,
Ed Breault
CMO, Aprimo
Aprimo Aprimo provides technology
solutions for content, operations, and
performance that enable enterprises
to optimize their brand experiences
and the resources they use to deliver
them. Our platform gives enterprises
the advantage by streamlining
and governing all the behind-the-
scenes activities – from ideation to
distribution – involved in delivering
exceptional brand experiences.
FOREWORD
• Ideation
• Planning
• Budgeting
• Creation
• Distribution
• Analysis
But without maximizing the time you spend on each of these stages of the content
lifecycle, your enterprise can’t be sure it’s content is going to produce the ROI you
desire.
In this book, 11 content experts weigh in on strategies and solutions for optimizing
each stage of the content lifecycle. They will share insights and takeaways to help
your enterprise overcome challenges to ensure you create the content you need for
impactful customer experiences.
CHAPTER 1
Ideate: How do you create and prioritize the strongest content ideas? 7
CHAPTER 2
Plan: How can you create a better, more agile content plan, and what
would you gain as a result? 20
CHAPTER 3
Budget: What are the best ways to develop a budget that maximizes ROI? 36
CHAPTER 4
Create: How do you manage your team to avoid bottlenecks and
mistakes and eliminate costly delays and duplication? 48
CHAPTER 5
Distribute: What are the best ways to ensure that your content is delivered
to the right places at the right times? 63
CHAPTER 6
Analyze: What’s the best way to use the data from the complete content
lifecycle to measure performance and opportunities and reduce waste? 77
TABLE OF CONTENTS
MEET OUR EXPERTS
ANDREA FRYREAR President and Lead Trainer,
AgileSherpas
ANDREW DAVIS Keynote Speaker and Best-Selling
Author, Monumental Shift
SHANE BARKER Digital Strategist & Influencer
Marketing Consultant, Shane
Barker Consulting
CHRISTOPH TRAPPE Chief Content Officer, Stamats
Communications, Inc.
CARLA JOHNSON Speaker. Author. Storyteller,
Carla Johnson
ROBERT ROSE Chief Troublemaker,
The Content
Advisory
MATT HEINZ President, Heinz Marketing
Inc
LAUREN BOWDENFreelance Marketing
Communications Consultant,
Lauren Bowden Consulting
MEET OUR EXPERTS
NAMITA MEDIRATTAGlobal CMI Director, Content
Excellence, Unilever
BERENICE MANNSenior Marketing Manager,
Arm Ltd
NOZ URBINAFounder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina
Consulting
711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Building high-performance marketing content depends on
consistently generating high-value content ideas. However,
coming up with good ideas is not always so easy, and doing it
consistently over time is even more difficult. Ideation is often
the least understood part of the entire content development
process. We looked at the ideation phase of content
development by asking our experts the following question:
“How do you create and prioritize the strongest content ideas?”
Several key takeaways came out of these discussions:
1) Don’t worry about and get boxed in by format at this stage.
Focus on content first.
2) Let people be free to ideate in their own way. Give it time,
don’t force them to collaborate, and remove distractions.
3) Measure success by testing ideas or testing content after it’s
in the market. Here’s what the experts had to say about
creating and prioritizing content.
IDEATECHAPTER 1
7
IDEATE
ANALYZE PLAN
BUDGET
CREATE
DISTRIBUTE
8
Robert Rose is the author of three best-
selling books on content marketing. As
founder of The Content Advisory, the
consulting and education group of The
Content Marketing Institute, Rose has
worked with more than 500 companies over
the past five years, including global brands
such as Capital One, NASA, McCormick
Spices, Hewlett Packard, Microsoft, and the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
t
11 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“To effectively ideate, sometimes a creative team must give itself time to share ideas with no expectation of output.”
Marketing communications professionals are classically taught to
think about form before content. You need a brochure, a blog, or
an email. Great! Now let’s fill that full of content. But the greatest
success in the ideation stage comes from reversing that process.
There are so many channels and so many formats the content can
take that it’s really important to begin with the content. That means
beginning with the story and its value. When you start structuring
and telling that story, the form becomes clearer. This approach
releases you from being caught in the constraints of the form.
Channel and format come later in the planning stage.
Ideation is not always efficient. To ideate effectively, sometimes
a creative team must give itself time to share ideas with no
expectation of output. Organizations rarely encourage content
teams to think about all the new and cool and interesting content
they could create unimpeded by an output requirement. If you
can develop the practice of giving yourself and the team time to
brainstorm, with no expectation of being efficient, you actually
become more efficient. Allowing ourselves to be creative and invest
in time where there is no expected efficiency enables us to schedule
things that are designed to be executed in an efficient manner.
911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Carla Johnson is a world-renowned
storyteller, an entertaining speaker, and a
prolific author. Consistently named one
of the top influencers in B2B, and digital
and content marketing, she regularly
challenges conventional thinking.
The author of eight books, Johnson
travels the world teaching anyone (and
everyone) how to cultivate idea-driven
teams that breed unstoppable creativity
and game-changing innovation.
Carla Johnson , Author. Speaker.
Storyteller, Carla Johnson
“It’s important to recognize that not all ideation is or should be collaborative.”
Content begins with an idea, and the best place to start
creating ideas is with an objective. If you don’t know
what you are trying to accomplish, you have no basis for
creating ideas or knowing which ideas are most valuable.
Once you know the objective, the challenge is coming
up with creative, inspired ideas. There’s a tendency for
marketers to get in a room and brainstorm, but too often
what’s produced is the same ideas—not much that’s new,
interesting, or innovative. What they miss is true inspiration
in their ideation.
Not all ideation is or should be collaborative; it needs to
be balanced. Often in a group situation, people who are
extroverted or have strong personalities tend to dominate.
What’s missing, then, is input from those who take more
time and think more carefully. People who take longer
to formulate ideas are not thinking less creatively. Great
ideas often need time to set and marinate. Instead of
1011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
brainstorming, it’s more like slow-storming and the ability to really think
things through and look at opportunities that might be tangential to what
comes immediately to mind.
Also, don’t box ideas in with format too early in the process. When you
immediately jump to format, you miss the bigger story, and with that bigger
story comes more creativity. As soon as you start boxing it into a format, you
are judging whether or not something is right or wrong based on form rather
than content. Marketers often do this because they are tactically oriented.
Ultimately, the team members are doing a good job of ideation if they are
delivering a quantity of ideas that are relevant to the objective they need to
accomplish. When the team members are getting it, they’re coming up with
more good ideas more often.
Carla Johnson , Author. Speaker.
Storyteller, Carla Johnson
The best inspiration for great ideas, whether it’s marketing, products, or business
models, comes from everyday life. It comes from outside of a person’s industry
and outside of their normal habits. Good ideas come from being able to look at the
world from a different point of view, connecting that back to the organization, and
applying that inspiration to the work you do.
1111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An early convert to the ways of
Agile marketing, Andrea Fryrear
is now the world’s leading expert
on translating Agile principles and
practices for marketing. She holds
numerous Agile certifications,
including Certified Professional
in Agile Coaching (ICP-ACC) and
Certified Agile Leader (CAL-1). She
is also a sought-after speaker who
shares her findings (and failures)
from stages around the world.
1111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“The effectiveness of your ideation process manifests itself in performance metrics that tell how the content affects the audience and how it moves them.”
Andrea Fryrear, President and
Lead Trainer, AgileSherpas
When it comes to ideation, creative people need space to be creative and to
come up with those great ideas. You can’t have people just living from deadline
to deadline or putting out fires all day long. They need relief from unnecessary
meetings and freedom from repetitive data collection and analysis so they can
get into a room together and explore ideas. They need permission to see this
creative activity as work. Seeing it as work is an important starting point in building
an effective ideation process.
The entire downstream content creation process is streamlined when the right
people get together at the beginning, during this ideation phase, so everyone has
that shared understanding of what the idea is and how it’s going to be realized.
That can minimize unnecessary iterations once the work actually begins.
Early audience feedback can also help with ideation. This involves taking an idea
that may not be fulling fleshed out and testing a version of it to see how the
audience responds. This is helpful because some ideas that sound really good in
the brainstorming meeting turn out to be total duds. Figuring that out early gives
everyone the opportunity to actually iterate and build on the original idea. You
might be putting a lot of stuff out there, and you feel successful because you’re
spinning the wheels, but you may not actually be seeing impact.
1211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An author and award-winning blogger,
Matt Heinz is president of Heinz
Marketing, to which he brings more
than 20 years of marketing, business
development, and sales experience.
He prioritizes measurable results,
greater sales, revenue growth, product
success, and customer loyalty. Heinz is
a dynamic, engaging speaker and repeat
winner of Top 50 Most Influential People
in Sales Lead Management and Top 50
Sales & Marketing Influencers.
Matt Heinz, President,
Heinz Marketing Inc
1211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Successful ideation is not just a productive brainstorming meeting. It is an ongoing process that steadily delivers valuable ideas over time.”
A successful ideation process should deliver a steady stream of good
ideas that are focused on and relate to the target audience. Successful
ideation is not just a productive brainstorming meeting. It is an ongoing
process that steadily delivers valuable ideas over time.
Getting people into a room together can be a good way to stimulate
ideas, but that approach will not result in equal participation from
everyone. Such meetings can be made more productive by asking
people in advance to think about something. Even people unable
to attend the meeting may contribute something worthwhile. Also,
it’s important to recognize that ideation is not just about volume.
Someone may have only one idea, but that one topic might be highly
valuable. Therefore, do not put quotas on the ideation process, but do
try to keep it focused on the right types of ideas along the way.
What are the right types of ideas? That depends on your audience and
what actions you want from them. The best content is rooted in a
strong understanding of who your audience is, what they care about,
and what stage of their journey you are engaging. Good content
creates new insight that helps your audience understand something
they haven’t thought about before.
1311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Shane Barker is a digital-marketing
consultant who specializes in influencer
marketing, product launches, sales
funnels, targeted traffic, and website
conversions. He has consulted with
Fortune 500 companies, influencers
with digital products, and a number of
A-List celebrities.
Shane Barker, Digital Strategist &
Influencer Marketing Consultant,
Shane Barker Consulting
“An important part of successful ideation is looking at your own successes.”
A strong content idea is not strong just because you think it is. Good,
strong ideas need to prove themselves. That is why an ideation process
needs to generate ideas but also consider factors like the performance
of similar ideas. This involves looking at similar stories and performance
analytics around those to see what can be learned, how that relates to
what you are trying to do, and how you can improve on it.
You can also develop ideas around keywords that you know perform
well with your target audience. These might be 10 or 20 keywords
provided by a client, or solid performing keywords based on research and
performance metrics. You can also combine the keyword strategy with
research on related content pieces to determine what ideas have the
best chance of performing well.
Of course, not every idea will take off and become viral. If you are getting
good traffic on some pieces, that’s fine, but you want to watch for those
few pieces that really outperform the others. Then you can look at those
to see why they took off and where the traffic came from. An important
part of successful ideation is looking at your own successes, going back
to the team to evaluate what performed well, understanding why it was
successful, and developing additional ideas around that. It’s also good to
have all hands on deck for that part of the ideation process.
Noz Urbina is a globally recognised content
strategist and modeller. He’s well known
as a pioneer in content strategy, content
marketing, customer journey mapping,
and adaptive content modelling to support
personalised, contextually relevant content
for omnichannel experiences. He is also
co-author of the book “Content Strategy:
Connecting the dots between business,
brand, and benefits” and founder of the
event and community www.OmnichannelX.
digital.
t
1411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
“It is within this framework of a customer journey—its flesh and blood reality—that the best and most productive ideation occurs.”
Effective ideation requires standing in the shoes of the customer
and understanding the emotional arc that is central to the
customer’s journey. The customer’s journey in life is not a journey
to buy your product. The customer’s journey is not the same thing
as a sales funnel or a customer lifecycle. The customer may go on
multiple journeys to solve a problem or achieve an end result.
To understand your customers’ key journeys, you must know what
the customers need to do in their lives, what tasks and jobs they
need to accomplish, and what their priorities are. It’s an extension
of persona building, but rather than building only a fixed picture of a
buying archetype, you are building one or more movies of what the
customers are doing in the market. Understanding the emotional
content of their journeys is critically important to later prioritizing
improvements, actions, and process updates to support the journey.
Where in each journey are those emotional hotspots?
It is within this framework of a customer journey—its flesh and blood
reality—that the best and most productive ideation occurs. There are
tools that help in mapping journeys and capturing ideas that align
1511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
your business value to value for your customers along their emotional arc,
which includes where in a journey they are most receptive or most upset.
Customer journey ideation is a creative process built around understanding
and serving customer needs. The days of going into a room all suited up
and thinking up what you imagine are good content ideas are over. That’s
not how modern marketers should work. The modern marketer is driven
by analysis and research. People who come to a customer journey ideation
session need to be informed by data as well as their own experience. They
need to go through search logs, analytics, campaign reports, and third-party
research, and they need to come to the customer journey ideation session
fresh with the latest market understanding.
Another important piece of the ideation phase is that you are not thinking
about resources, constraints, or plans at this point. You are completely
focused on the best thing for the customer, answering their questions, and
addressing their needs about what the customer needs at each step, on any
channel or in any format.
Berenice is a physicist and programme
manager turned marketer, with a career
spanning R&D, production, product
development, technology transfer
and marketing. She has spent over 15
years leading marketing strategy and
implementation in the high-tech sector,
specialising in B2B and technology. She
currently leads outbound marketing in
the Architecture and Technology Group
at Arm. She blogs on tech and enjoys
reviewing theatre and restaurants.
1611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“At this stage, it’s about key messages: what do you want people to think, feel, say, and do when they see your messaging.”
Berenice Mann, Senior Marketing
Manager, Arm LtdCreating good ideas begins with understanding who the audience is and
what your purpose is for writing to them. Those are the keys. If you don’t
know why you’re writing, how can you know what to write? Many people
don’t seem to think about those two key factors right from the beginning.
In B2B technology marketing, figuring that out can become more
complicated. You might have several audiences who have very different
needs, or different types of people with different roles. It also involves
thinking about which part of the funnel you are trying to influence and
what you want to do there. Are you trying to inspire or entertain or
convince someone? Are you in the awareness part of the funnel, the
consideration part of the funnel, or the decision-making part of the
funnel? As you break down the audience this way, you will need to create
ideas that service them in these areas. All those things come into play,
and then you can start thinking about what will appeal to this audience
and what you want to say to them.
1711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Berenice Mann, Senior Marketing
Manager, Arm Ltd
At this stage, it’s about key messages and what you want people to think,
feel, say, and do when they see your messaging. Format is not important at
this point. It’s about integrated campaigns and the ideas that address those
audience objectives across the entire campaign.
Ideas come from people, and it’s important to take the time to really think
through the ideas in the context of your campaign and big objectives. As
marketers, we often don’t spend enough time doing this. Someone comes
up with an idea, and the group agrees it’s good and they decide to go
forward. But they haven’t thought about the wider audience, how it’s going to
fit into the user journey, what they want people to do, or what the audience
needs at that point in their journey. Too often marketing teams come up
with really great ideas, but they haven’t thought enough about how that fits
into a marketing plan. The ultimate measure of success in the ideation stage
is whether those ideas actually deliver the audience results you are looking
for, whether that’s lead generation, awareness, discussion, or some other
marketing goal.
1811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
KEY POINTS
Don’t worry about and get boxed in by format at this stage. Focus on content first.
l Status Quo: Content marketers are classically taught to think about form before content. This is a mistake.
l Cost of Status Quo: If you box ideas in with format too early in the process, you miss the bigger story. You can produce lots of content and spin the wheels, but you’re not seeing impact.
l New Approach: A creative team needs time to share ideas with no expectation of efficiency or output. The best inspiration for great ideas comes from everyday life.
Let people be free to ideate in their own way. Give it time, don’t force them to collaborate, and remove distractions.
l Status Quo: A semi-random group of people show up at an ad-hoc brainstorming meeting without specific business objectives or goals.
l Cost of Status Quo: Quicker thinking, more gregarious personalities dominate the process, leaving out those who process more slowly or think more deeply. This shortchanges the ideation process.
l New Approach: Not all ideation is collaborative or done in a group setting. Set out business objectives, and give it time. Doing this actually makes the team more efficient. It enables the team to ideate things that can then be created and executed efficiently.
Measure success by testing ideas or testing content after it is in the market.
l Status Quo: Too often ideas are chosen in brainstorming sessions without external validation.
l Cost of Status Quo: You feel successful building lots of “great” content that fails to perform, forcing you to churn out even more ideas more quickly.
l New Approach: Good ideation is about outcome, not output. Look at business goals and previous performance successes, and test incomplete ideas to get early audience feedback.
1911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
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2011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 20
Ideation produces ideas and stories, but the planning
stage is really the first step to turning those ideas
into content assets. Planning is a critical stage in
the content lifecycle because poor planning can
undermine all subsequent phases of the cycle. To
find out what needs to be in a good content plan,
we asked the following question:
How can you create a better, more agile content
plan, and what would you gain as a result?
In answering this question, several key themes
became apparent: 1) have a schedule, but don’t rush
the process and default to format too early in the
process; 2) agree on what to measure for success as
part of your planning; 3) build flexibility into the plan.
Here’s what the experts had to say.
PLANCHAPTER 2
IDEATE
ANALYZE PLAN
BUDGET
CREATE
DISTRIBUTE
2111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Carla Johnson is a world-renowned
storyteller, an entertaining speaker, and a
prolific author. Consistently named one
of the top influencers in B2B, and digital
and content marketing, she regularly
challenges conventional thinking.
The author of eight books, Johnson
travels the world teaching anyone (and
everyone) how to cultivate idea-driven
teams that breed unstoppable creativity
and game-changing innovation.
Carla Johnson , Author. Speaker.
Storyteller, Carla Johnson
“Planning involves thinking about what you want to accomplish before you make decisions about forma. You first have tos really understand what audience you are targeting and what you want them to do.”
A plan enables you to select the best ideas that serve
the objective and provide focus on those best ideas.
Without the focus that a plan provides, people’s attention
becomes scattered, which causes work to progress more
slowly. By choosing one, two, or at most three of the best
ideas and focusing on those for a short period of time to
execute them really well, you can be more agile in making
necessary adjustments as you go through the process. In
an agile process, you create and adjust, create and adjust,
create and adjust. That process often results in something
very different from where it started, but it’s a much better
final product.
Planning also involves thinking more about format, which
requires really understanding what audience you are
targeting and what you want them to do. Again, this goes
back to your original objectives. There’s a linear decision
process about getting to format, but many marketers jump
to the format before they understand what they’re trying
to accomplish. Once they understand audiences and
2211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Carla Johnson , Author. Speaker.
Storyteller, Carla Johnson
audience priorities, that dictates format. Defaulting to format too early in the
process results in teams doing what they’ve always done because that’s what
they know.
Another important part of planning is deciding what to measure to determine
if the content is working. There are many things you can measure. The
metrics you select depend on what part of the funnel and customer journey
that content is targeting. As you think about what you are measuring, you
also need to maintain that agile mindset of creating and adjusting.
Unfortunately, 70% of all content that’s created for sales is never even
used. A big part of that is because marketers default to the formats they’ve
always used. Developing inspired content that serves the objectives requires
spending more time up front getting the ideas and planning right. Doing that
ensures the content you do create is better quality and someone will actually
use it.
If you expect everything to always be perfect, you’ll never take creative risks. You
can try little, really creative things, and if they fail right out of the box, you can
adjust. You can’t know if something is done well unless you test things. If you only
execute what you know is done properly, you create mediocre work.
23
Robert Rose is the author of three best-
selling books on content marketing. As
founder of The Content Advisory, the
consulting and education group of The
Content Marketing Institute, Rose has
worked with more than 500 companies over
the past five years, including global brands
such as Capital One, NASA, McCormick
Spices, Hewlett Packard, Microsoft, and the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
t
11 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“When you come out of the planning process, you should have a bill of materials for assets that are going to be produced and budgeted.”
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
Planning should be a content needs alignment process. For many
companies to do that well, they need to de-silo their content
planning. The content lifecycle in most organizations is siloed in
groups such as corporate communications, demand generation,
brand marketing, email marketing, and website, and there may
be different groups covering these functions in different regions.
These operations are typically siloed, which means they do planning
in their own silos. It isn’t until the creation stage that they realize
they’ve re-created the same content four times.
De-siloing needs to be part of the planning stage. It requires
introducing information sharing, transparency, and insight into
what everybody’s doing in a rolled-up fashion so that the planning
process also becomes an alignment process. That is how you avoid
creating multiple iterations of content items.
Some organizations are concerned this will slow down the process
because you’re actually suggesting more meetings to get everyone
aligned. Yes, this does slow down the planning process, but every
2411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
step that follows is exponentially faster. It’s the classic measure twice and cut
once. Planning is where you figure out channels, outputs, and formats. You’re
going to do an interview with a customer? Fantastic! Let’s get a camera
crew and audio crew there and schedule 10 minutes with a photographer.
Let’s make sure the writer is there and ask about the case study. Let’s make
sure everybody’s objectives around that idea are met so that we reduce the
duplicated effort later on.
By the time you reach the planning stage, you know the story you want to
tell. The de-siloed planning process specifies how you are going to tell the
story, and when you come out of that planning process, you should have a
bill of materials for assets that are going to be produced and budgeted. When
you go into the budgeting process, you’re not budgeting for random acts of
content. You’re budgeting for larger tent pole projects that are going to live in
multiple places.
“De-siloing… does slow down the planning process, but every step that follows is exponentially faster. It’s the classic measure twice and cut once.
2511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An early convert to the ways of
Agile marketing, Andrea Fryrear
is now the world’s leading expert
on translating Agile principles and
practices for marketing. She holds
numerous Agile certifications,
including Certified Professional
in Agile Coaching (ICP-ACC) and
Certified Agile Leader (CAL-1). She
is also a sought-after speaker who
shares her findings (and failures)
from stages around the world.
2511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Agile teams plan more frequently than traditional teams. They’re just creating shorter, more lightweight and flexible plans.”
Andrea Fryrear, President and
Lead Trainer, AgileSherpas
There’s often a misconception that agility and planning are antithetical.
But in fact, agile teams plan more frequently than traditional teams.
They’re just creating shorter, more lightweight and flexible plans that are
designed to respond to an iterative inspect and adapt process. When
planning for agility, you’re really looking for a minimum viable campaign.
What’s the smallest slice that you can put out that still provides you the
outcomes you’re looking for as a marketing team but also delivers value
to your audience? You need to put out the minimum that hits those
targets and then see what happens. See what the audience response data
tells you. Then you can build on the things that are successful. This way
you learn faster with less risk, and there are opportunities to double down
on the things that are really working well.
This not only enables building on success but gives you the flexibility
to adapt to changing marketing needs. For example, some product
feature you didn’t expect may turn out to be everyone’s favorite, and
that’s the big selling point. You need to be able to pivot and change your
messaging around that.
2611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrea Fryrear, President and
Lead Trainer, AgileSherpas
The worst case scenario is a massive, big-bang campaign that is ridiculed
on social media or on the late-night talk shows. The teams kept it all to
themselves. After spending 6 or 12 months making this massive campaign, they
put it out with a big fanfare, and it turned out to be a massive miscalculation.
It becomes a huge cost to the brand, plus the actual financial costs that went
into a campaign that was an utter disaster. It’s painfully quantifiable.
Agile planning reduces that risk. However, it must also include what you are
going to measure. How are you going to know that this is something worth
investing more time and resources in? How do you know what to abandon
because it’s a failed experiment? When you’re setting up a new project, include
key metrics in the project plan. What are you measuring, and what are you
expecting? What are the pivot or persevere triggers that you need to watch?
“Agile planning reduces that risk. However, it must also include what you are going to measure.”
2711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Shane Barker is a digital-marketing
consultant who specializes in influencer
marketing, product launches, sales
funnels, targeted traffic, and website
conversions. He has consulted with
Fortune 500 companies, influencers
with digital products, and a number of
A-List celebrities.
“Making sure everyone agrees on project objectives and the KPIs you will use to measure them is essential in the planning phase.”
Shane Barker, Digital Strategist &
Influencer Marketing Consultant,
Shane Barker Consulting
One key function of a plan is to make sure everyone on your team
and the client’s team has the same understanding of what’s being
delivered and what they expect to get from it.
The planning phase needs to settle essential questions: What are you
looking for? What are the overall goals? You need to look at those
objectives and make sure they’re reasonable, that everyone has
proper expectation around them.
You don’t want to be in a situation when you are in downstream
phases of executing the plan that you are not meeting expectations
because the client’s goals were unrealistic.
Related to that is another critical part of the plan: defining the KPIs
you are using to measure its performance. And these KPIs must align
with the client expectations.
2811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Shane Barker, Digital Strategist &
Influencer Marketing Consultant,
Shane Barker Consulting
For example, if you as the content company say you’re working toward
getting more brand mentions and more people talking about the client
online, and the client expects are expecting the campaign will deliver
more sales, there’s a possible disconnect.
These kinds of disconnects are not uncommon in influencer marketing.
When the campaign wraps up, the content group looks at one thing and
thinks it was a success only to find the client was looking at something
else completely and decides the whole project was a failure and a waste
of money.
Making sure everyone agrees on project objectives and the KPIs you will
use to measure them is essential in the planning phase. Then you have
all the pieces of the puzzle you need to develop the initial content pieces
and make assessments and adjustments as you go.
“Making sure everyone agrees on project objectives and the KPIs you will use to measure them is essential in the planning phase.”
2911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 2911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Christoph Trappe leads content and
digital transformation in B2B publishing
and content marketing for an established
communications firm. He is a career
storyteller who has worked as a journalist,
change agent, and content marketing
executive. He has spoken at conferences
globally, blogs, and has written two
books. His teams’ digital initiatives have
been recognized globally.
“The plan should allow for making sure you get the most out of your content development efforts.”
Christoph Trappe, Chief Content
Officer, Stamats Communications, Inc.There are three really important parts of the planning phase:
1. Building a realistic schedule: It’s important to have a calendar
and move it forward. Otherwise, you risk never getting to the
publishing stage. The operational schedule specifies the time
required to develop and deliver content items. An important
influence on schedule is the approval process. Every additional
person slows down the process, so you must account for this
when planning schedules. Some approval processes are more
complex than others, depending on the industry and its regulatory
environment. The goal is to minimize the approval process.
2.Defining performance metrics: The plan must include
performance metrics for published content. Many people want to
see content campaigns turn into dollars as soon as the content
hits, but that’s not how content marketing works. Initially you
want to know if the content is being viewed, and page views
are a good indicator of that. That metric is less important in a
3011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Christoph Trappe, Chief Content
Officer, Stamats Communications, Inc.
deeper assessment of campaign performance, but it tells you quickly
if content is reaching people. Time spent with content is also useful,
especially in a lead generation campaign. The important thing to
remember about performance metrics is that content requires time
to gain traction. You need to give it time to ramp up. There are ways
to accelerate this ramp-up time, such as through syndication, but that
means additional expense.
3.Planning to maximize your return on effort: The plan should allow
for making sure you get the most out of your content development
efforts. For example, if a filmed interview can be turned into a YouTube
video and related articles, blog posts, and other pieces, this enables
you to gain more content performance from the original interview
effort. A content plan should consider maximizing return on effort.
“Every additional person slows down the process, so you must account for this when planning schedules... The goal is to minimize the approval process.”
Freelance marketing and
communications professional with
15+ years of B2B in-house and
agency experience in the financial
services and technology industries.
Previously Senior Solution and Content
Marketing Manager and Corporate
Communications Manager at Wolters
Kluwer - Financial Services Solutions,
and PR account manager at Weber
Shandwick and Metia.
3111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Lauren Bowden, Freelance Marketing
Communications Consultant/Chief
FinTech Content Creator at The
Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden
Consulting
“The planning discussion is not just about the sales objectives, although that’s a huge part of it; it’s about what’s realistic in terms of what can actually be delivered by the company.”
Selling enterprise software into the financial sector requires long
sales cycles—typically 18 months—and it involves lots of decision
makers. Although the sales process around regulatory drivers can
be is somewhat formulaic, deadline changes by the regulator can
disrupt marketing plans. A lot of marketing content is thought
leadership related to regulatory initiatives. Regulations can have
a big impact on the industry, and they do not always adhere to a
product marketing schedule. Even when regulators set deadlines
for certain rules to take effect, those deadlines often pass before
banks work out implementation details.
In this business environment, ideation becomes a crucial part
of the planning process. Also, making a plan requires internal
buy-in from all the key stakeholders. They have to be involved in
the conversation to define the biggest potential wins and focus
points. This involves input from sales teams, product leads, market
experts, and both internal and field marketing teams.
3211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Lauren Bowden, Freelance Marketing
Communications Consultant/Chief
FinTech Content Creator at The
Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden
Consulting
The planning discussion is not just about the sales objectives, although that’s
a huge part of it; it’s about what’s realistic in terms of what can be delivered
by the company. It involves looking at what has worked well in the past,
and it begins with knowing what outcomes you expect from the content
marketing tactics you will be using through the year. You may have multiple
campaigns, and each of those campaign plans needs to cover the market
drivers, solution description, key messages, target market, key competitors,
challenges, localization plans, and schedule. In financial services, you also
have to factor in regulatory drivers so that you can prepare customers for
changes and technology solutions that support them. And if the schedule for
a regulatory driver changes, you need to have the agility to fill in with more
market-driven content.
Part of the plan will also include how you will measure the effectiveness of
your tactics, which can be difficult in a complex sales cycle involving many
decision makers. These measurements need to be based on the outcome
you’re expecting from each tactical campaign and how that leads back to the
wider strategy.
Noz Urbina is a globally recognised content
strategist and modeller. He’s well known
as a pioneer in content strategy, content
marketing, customer journey mapping,
and adaptive content modelling to support
personalised, contextually relevant content
for omnichannel experiences. He is also
co-author of the book “Content Strategy:
Connecting the dots between business,
brand, and benefits” and founder of the
event and community www.OmnichannelX.
digital.
t
3311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“You have to approach planning holistically, and it has to begin with the questions the customer wants answered.”
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
In the ideation phase, you focus on a key customer journey and the
questions customers need to have answered at each step along the
way. In the planning phase, you are mapping out the vessels you
will use to answer those questions. Just as in ideation, the identified
customer needs guide the planning. In the ideation phase, you are
analysing specifically what the customer needs to know at particular
points in the journey. In the planning phase, you are asking how to
best provide that information to the customer.
For many marketers, there is a misalignment between ideation and
planning. In the planning phase, they might decide they need to
publish a newsletter every month. If that’s their mentality, their goal
becomes to publish a newsletter every month. But that’s not really
their goal. Their actual reason for being is to facilitate and accelerate
the relationship-building process with prospects and the brand.
When customers have a question during the journey, they want
an answer, not a newsletter. The customers don’t care about your
vessel. They care about having the knowledge in their heads.
3411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
That is why you have to approach planning holistically, and it has to begin
with the questions the customer wants answered. Now what should the
vessels be? How should you package answers to those questions? What
formats and channels should you choose? Consider this example: You know
from your customer journey ideation that customers get really scared right
before signing a mortgage or a letter of intent to buy your server. That’s
where the delays and objections appear. So you are going to target your
content to that point in the journey. The question then becomes how.
Video? Newsletters? Emailers? SMS? Chatbot? Print? Interactive kiosk? Trade
show booth? A combination of the above? And how do you make sure it
gets surfaced at the right moment? And how much depth will address the
concern without being overwhelming? Now you’re building a plan.
The planning process also needs to consider how you will measure
performance. Again, it comes back to the customer journey. When you
map out the customer journey, break the journey down into key stages. The
transition point between stages should be triggered by a measurable call to
action. These calls to action might be transition from one content piece to
another, a registration, a channel switch, or even a human contact. Those
measurable actions become your performance metrics.
3511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
KEY POINTS
Have a schedule, but don’t rush the process and default to format too early in the process.
l Status Quo: Planning is too time consuming, so content teams rush to the creation phase. They default to format too early in the process.
l Cost of Status Quo: Content creators create what they’ve always done because that’s what they know. Content is misaligned with performance expectations and fails to deliver on KPIs.
l New Approach: Slow down the planning process and make sure there is cross-team and cross-silo involvement. This takes longer, but every step that follows is exponentially faster. It’s the classic measure twice and cut once.
Planning includes agreeing on what to measure for success.
l Status Quo: Planning fails to define metrics and KPIs that align to content and business goals.
l Cost of Status Quo: Later in the content cycle, there is a lack of insight into how content is performing and why, which limits one’s ability to make smart decisions about plan adjustments.
l New Approach: During the planning phase, make sure everyone agrees on project objectives and specific KPIs you will use to measure them.
Build flexibility into the plan.
l Status Quo: Organizations invest in huge monolithic campaigns that take a long time to build and are slow in delivering measurable results.
l Cost of Status Quo: Failure of large, inflexible plans hurts business and damages the brand.
l New Approach: Take an agile approach to content planning. Agile teams plan more frequently. They create shorter, more lightweight, and flexible plans that are designed to respond to an iterative inspect-and-adapt process. Plan for a minimum viable campaign.
3611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 36
A good content plan is the foundation for a content
budgeting process, but there are many things to
consider when building and allocating budgets.
These include what the plan is going to do for you
and how you can adjust spending to meet changing
needs. We explored the budgeting process in greater
detail by asking our experts the following question:
What are the best ways to develop a budget that
maximizes ROI?
In discussions of the budgeting process, several
key ideas became clear: 1) It’s important to know
the worth of your content; 2) you need to clearly
understand your content objectives and what you
expect to get from them; 3) you need to be willing
and able to pull funding from things that aren’t
working and move it to things that are. Here’s what
the experts had to say.
BUDGETCHAPTER 3
IDEATE
ANALYZE PLAN
BUDGET
CREATE
DISTRIBUTE
3711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An author and award-winning blogger,
Matt Heinz is president of Heinz
Marketing, to which he brings more
than 20 years of marketing, business
development, and sales experience.
He prioritizes measurable results,
greater sales, revenue growth, product
success, and customer loyalty. Heinz is
a dynamic, engaging speaker and repeat
winner of Top 50 Most Influential People
in Sales Lead Management and Top 50
Sales & Marketing Influencers.
3711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Working back from impact enables you to think not only about how much something costs, but also what it is worth.”
Matt Heinz, President,
Heinz Marketing Inc
A proper budget will be built relative to expected outcome. When
you are thinking about your content marketing strategy overall,
you have to map what you’re doing in content to the revenue
impact that content is going to have. Working back from impact
enables you to think not only about how much something
costs, but also what it is worth. Determining what it is worth also
relates to an appropriate budget allocation. You’re not necessarily
determining what channels you will be using at this point, but you
are deciding what you’re willing to spend to achieve an outcome.
Working back from expected outcomes in this way is a good
approach to creating a content budget, not only for deciding what
you need in the way of budget, but also because it helps justify the
spend to a manager or CFO.
Then as the plan moves forward, you have metrics that can help
you see if you are achieving the outcomes you are looking for. It
can be difficult to measure content effectiveness because most
content is not a direct response in which you see immediate
3811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Matt Heinz, President,
Heinz Marketing Inc
action. Identifying influence and attribution to specific content is also difficult.
However, if you understand what that next step should be to move an
audience toward the outcome you are looking for, you can measure that.
Measurement is an important part of budget allocation adjustments as you
execute your plan. If you see that something is working, you need to have
the flexibility to double down on it. You should be asking yourself how much
more you can do to sustain those results.
On the other side of the equation, you also have to be willing to look at
things that aren’t working and pull the plug. Any good manager or CFO will
want to see responsibility on both sides of the spending equation. There’s an
opportunity cost to not cutting budget on things that are failing. There’s also
an opportunity cost to not increasing funding on things that are working and
can scale.
3911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Carla Johnson is a world-renowned
storyteller, an entertaining speaker, and a
prolific author. Consistently named one
of the top influencers in B2B, and digital
and content marketing, she regularly
challenges conventional thinking.
The author of eight books, Johnson
travels the world teaching anyone (and
everyone) how to cultivate idea-driven
teams that breed unstoppable creativity
and game-changing innovation.
Carla Johnson , Author. Speaker.
Storyteller, Carla Johnson
“Your budget depends on what you already have and your priorities for what you want to accomplish.”
When developing a budget and working to maximize your
return, you first have to understand your objectives. Are
you looking to generate brand or product awareness? Do
you want people to subscribe to your content? Are you
seeking conversions, or working to improve retention?
You must understand your objectives and then allocate
budget that way. Look at what kind of content you have,
and determine if it serves those objectives. Look at where
you need to fill holes to make sure you’re creating an
experience across the entire customer journey. Your
budget depends on what you already have and your
priorities for what you want to accomplish.
Then as the program moves forward, focus your spend
on things that are working. Sometimes that is a difficult
decision for marketers. Sometimes programs just need
more time to gain traction. You can’t start a content
marketing program and expect to see something in the
first few months. There are areas where you need to invest
4011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Carla Johnson , Author. Speaker.
Storyteller, Carla Johnson
and understand that up front. If you’ve invested or if things consistently fail to
deliver, you do need to adjust your spend.
Determining if something is working goes back to your objectives, where
you are in the customer journey, and what you want to have happen. Initial
engagement indicators are not always a sign of overall performance. Still,
they can be early indicators that build up to important results like conversions
and pointers to quality lead generation. If you wait until you get six months
down the road for the important metrics to kick in, you may end up wasting
a lot of time and money. You want to optimize your spend. Keep in mind that
part of the return goes beyond performance metrics. It’s also the learning
you gain that can help you build successful subsequent content.
“Determining if something is working goes all the way back to your objectives.”
4111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrew Davis is a best-selling author and
keynote speaker. He has built and sold a
digital marketing agency, produced for
NBC, and worked for The Muppets. Today,
he teaches business leaders how to grow
their businesses, transform their cities, and
leave their legacy.
Andrew Davis, Keynote Speaker and
Best-Selling Author, Monumental Shift
“One problem most marketers face when it comes to budgeting is the willingness to stop the things that aren’t working and reallocate that budget in a timely way to things that might work better.”
A large part of budgeting involves deciding how to divide up the
marketing budget pie. For many organizations, the marketing pie
isn’t getting much bigger. It’s just being sliced more and more
ways. Content marketers can’t always expect to get more money
from somewhere else. They have to be willing to look at the
content, formats and channels, media, and bought advertising, and
they need to reallocate budgets toward things that will be more
effective.
This also applies to budgeting time. If you’re sending out an email
newsletter every week that takes you 10 hours to produce but
you’re not generating revenue from it, maybe you should stop
doing a newsletter and reallocate that time toward content that
might be more effective.
One problem most marketers face when it comes to budgeting is
the willingness to stop the things that aren’t working and reallocate
that budget in a timely way to things that might work better. You
need to be flexible enough to evaluate those things and be willing
to reallocate budgets in a way that makes more sense.
42
t
11 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Robert Rose is the author of three best-
selling books on content marketing. As
founder of The Content Advisory, the
consulting and education group of The
Content Marketing Institute, Rose has
worked with more than 500 companies
over the past five years, including global
brands such as Capital One, NASA,
McCormick Spices, Hewlett Packard,
Microsoft, and the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation.
“More and more companies are building greater flexibility into the budgeting systems where content teams become ‘owned media’ teams.”
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
Good planning makes it possible to budget content as a portfolio of assets.
You can also build separate creation and production budgets, which gives you
flexibility in creating different form factors from the same core content assets.
This is where that de-siloed planning process really pays off. It gives you
transparency and insight into content consistency and cost optimization. You can
move away from the practice of every group hiring its own agency to create its
own materials (some of which may be redundant). De-siloed planning allows you
to reduce the number of agencies or outside and internal resources involved in
the creation process. It also gives you greater consistency and insight into costing.
You will be able to better see which agencies excel in different parts of the content
lifecycle, including creative and production, transforming content to different
formats, putting it into different languages, distributing it, and managing it.
Every company budgets in its own way. For instance, traditionally promotional
budgets have been owned by the brand team or media team, and if a content
group wanted to promote a piece, they had to beg funds from one of these other
teams. More and more, though, companies are building greater flexibility into the
budgeting systems where content teams become “owned media” teams. This gives
content teams that are running owned media properties more agility in the way
they respond quickly to market needs and timely event.
Freelance marketing and
communications professional with
15+ years of B2B in-house and
agency experience in the financial
services and technology industries.
Previously Senior Solution and Content
Marketing Manager and Corporate
Communications Manager at Wolters
Kluwer - Financial Services Solutions,
and PR account manager at Weber
Shandwick and Metia.
4311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Having a detailed plan with touch points mapped out for different points in the buyer’s journey makes budgeting a much more efficient process.”
Lauren Bowden, Freelance Marketing
Communications Consultant/Chief
FinTech Content Creator at The
Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden
Consulting
Effective budgeting requires adhering to the original strategy of
each campaign and always keeping overall objectives in mind.
Having a detailed plan with touch points mapped out for different
points in the buyer’s journey makes budgeting a much more
efficient process. Budgeting needs to consider many factors that
relate to specific buyers and their journeys, and it needs to take
into account a global strategy that repurposes content for multiple
regions and campaigns to maximize ROI.
Budgeting also requires having a clear idea of the goals you need
to achieve in each campaign—goals that have been communicated
to and accepted by stakeholders. This does not mean planning out
and budgeting for every last detail of every content piece with no
room for flexibility over the year. Even the most robust plan and
organized team will have unexpected opportunities that are too
good to pass up over the year. That’s why it’s always important to
have at least a 10 percent contingency fund built into the budget.
4411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Lauren Bowden, Freelance Marketing
Communications Consultant/Chief
FinTech Content Creator at The
Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden
Consulting
Another value of a strong plan is that it helps you manage supplier costs. With
a well-thought-out plan, many items can be budgeted for upfront, suppliers
notified in advance about what work you have planned over the year, and
packages negotiated accordingly. Good relationships with external suppliers
are extremely important in managing these costs. Every industry has third
parties trying to persuade you to spend your marketing dollars with them.
Every purchase has to be rigorously justified. Spending money on a tactic
that may seem like the right fit in theory but fails to meet the mark in practice
can undermine a whole campaign. Teamwork and communication with
internal stakeholders and external networks of peers who have worked with
suppliers is essential to making wise vendor choices. Ongoing relationships
with trusted suppliers is key, but it is also crucial to explore the marketplace
for suppliers who can help you execute new tactics. This should be done
on an ongoing basis over the year to ensure the supplier has a solid grasp of
the marketplace well ahead of key fulfilment deadlines. This kind of market
scanning is particularly important for in-house marketing teams so they can
keep abreast of new techniques and methods.
Finally, you need to continuously monitor campaign performance through
metrics like cost per lead and funnel analysis, as well as qualitative analysis, to
develop the ROI insight you need to validate your budget.
Noz Urbina is a globally recognised content
strategist and modeller. He’s well known
as a pioneer in content strategy, content
marketing, customer journey mapping,
and adaptive content modelling to support
personalised, contextually relevant content
for omnichannel experiences. He is also
co-author of the book “Content Strategy:
Connecting the dots between business,
brand, and benefits” and founder of the
event and community www.OmnichannelX.
digital.
t
4511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Budgeting against personas or market segments…enables you to budget based on revenue-related outcomes.”
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
One great way to develop a budget that maximizes return on your
content marketing investment is to budget against personas or
market segments rather than budgeting for channels or formats.
To do this, you divide up the audience and correlate behaviors
against content interactions. For example, does your audience
convert or register for more trials than un-engaged contacts in your
contact base? And what do those increases in engagement mean
in revenues? This enables you to budget based on revenue-related
outcomes.
Another important budgeting strategy is to budget in phases. First
budget for content that is developed in a cross-deliverable format
way. Then budget for content assembly and formatting for channels.
This means that before it hits layout and delivery, the content is
optimized, validated, and considered for effectiveness holistically
across the customer experience. This approach results in less
rework, less reviewing the same words needlessly across teams
and formats, and less mess when corrections need to cascade
4611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
across multiple deliverables. Some worry that this front-loading approach
feels “slower,” but it saves significant waste and risk downstream, making the
content cycle more profitable as a whole.
One advantage to budgeting in this way is that if you can calculate the
impact of content on revenues by analyzing the behaviors of the segment
of your customer base that engages with your content—that is, your content
audience versus all customers—then you’re able to easily calculate what
the impact would be if you were able to a) increase the overall audience
size or b) reach more of your total customer base with engaging content.
The numbers can point to many things. Maybe your audience engages with
content but your platforms aren’t sticky. Maybe only proactive customers
become part of your content audience and you need to invest in social
amplification or influencer marketing. In each case, you can calculate the
potential new activity versus the uptick that you can expect considering
how your engaged content audience behaves versus customers who don’t
engage with much content.
Budgeting is where you assign value to the content you are going to create.
Content is a marketing tool, and you measure its effectiveness depending on
what job you are trying to accomplish in the first place.
4711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
KEY POINTS
It’s important to know the worth of your content. l Status Quo: Most marketers do not know what a piece of content is worth in terms of its actual outcome value to the business. l Cost of Status Quo: Not knowing what content is worth makes content budgeting pure guesswork. l New Approach: Working back from impact enables you to think not only about how much something costs, but also what it is worth. You are able to decide what to spend to achieve an outcome.
You need to clearly understand your content objectives and what you expect to get from them.
l Status Quo: Many market plans fail to set clear, measurable objects for content.
l Cost of Status Quo: Without measurable objectives, it is not possible to attach value to those objectives. This results in budgets that provide little guidance on what is an appropriate spend for a specific content piece or project.
l New Approach: Budget to outcomes. Mapping content to the revenue impact that content will have enables accurate budgeting.
You need to be willing and able to pull funding from things that aren’t working and move it to things that are.
lStatus Quo: Most marketers develop inflexible budgets that make it difficult to stop things that aren’t working and reallocate budget in a timely time way to things that will work better.
l Cost of Status Quo: Inflexible budgets result in increased opportunity cost. There’s an opportunity cost to not cutting off budget on things that aren’t working. There’s also an opportunity cost to not increasing funding on things that are working and can scale.
l New Approach: Build budgets based on outcome value. This gives marketing the flexibility to make informed decisions to adjust spend in ways that improve content performance.
4811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 48
With ideas, a content plan, and a budget, you are
ready to create. But the creative process is often
plagued by bottlenecks, uneven delivery, and the
production of content that delivers disappointing
results. What’s the problem? To find out, we asked
our experts the following question:
How do you manage your team to avoid
bottlenecks and mistakes and eliminate costly
delays and duplication?
Several themes emerged in discussions about the
creation process: 1) Too often teams jump from idea
to create without adequate planning, which can
result in churn in the creation process; 2) Leveraging
technology can help use content assets more
efficiently and reduce duplicate efforts; 3) If you
understand success metrics, you can use them to
inform the creation process.
CREATECHAPTER 4
IDEATE
ANALYZE PLAN
BUDGET
CREATE
DISTRIBUTE
4911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Robert Rose is the author of three best-
selling books on content marketing. As
founder of The Content Advisory, the
consulting and education group of The
Content Marketing Institute, Rose has
worked with more than 500 companies over
the past five years, including global brands
such as Capital One, NASA, McCormick
Spices, Hewlett Packard, Microsoft, and the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
t
“A good indicator that your process is working well is the amount of content produced based on plan versus ad hoc requests.”
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
The ideal approach to content development is to begin with
ideation and then plan, budget, and create. But what often happens
is a process something like this: create, plan, ideate, budget, and
analyze. One can easily see how this happens. It typically begins
with a content group being asked to create something, and in many
organizations, the content team is viewed as an on-demand vending
machine for content. When they get a request, they find a plan to
fit that request, and then they ideate ways to put content into that
plan. Then it’s all the content they can fit into the plan that makes
the budget. It is like a backward assembly line that often churns out
mediocre content.
The ideal process of ideation before planning, budgeting, and
creation makes for a much better creative process. It becomes a
process in which you are creating something that has been ideated
well, planned out properly, budgeted appropriately, and is ready for
you to put the creative effort you need to deliver a quality product.
A good indicator that your process is working well is the amount of
content produced based on plan versus ad hoc requests. If only 20%
5011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
of your output is based on plan and the rest is coming from ad hoc requests,
you are not working efficiently. On the other hand, if 80% of your output is
plan output, you’re doing pretty well.
There is often a lot of collaboration and review that has to happen during the
create phase. Any technology that communicates the hard lines in the sand
of ideation, planning, and budgeting to others involved in the creation phase
keep the creative phase focused and enables more flexibility around creative
options within those hard guidelines.
Part of having an effective process is having someone responsible for the
overall effort. Someone steering this process correctly is an important
success factor.
Technology alone does not guarantee success through this kind of communication
and collaboration. People have to comply and work together to make the process
work properly. That doesn’t happen because of technology; the technology is
effective because of the people.
5111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An early convert to the ways of
Agile marketing, Andrea Fryrear
is now the world’s leading expert
on translating Agile principles and
practices for marketing. She holds
numerous Agile certifications,
including Certified Professional
in Agile Coaching (ICP-ACC) and
Certified Agile Leader (CAL-1). She
is also a sought-after speaker who
shares her findings (and failures)
from stages around the world.
5111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“You can’t effectively deal with a bottleneck if you don’t have the workflow visualized so that you know where it really is.”
Andrea Fryrear, President and
Lead Trainer, AgileSherpas
When you reach the create phase, it’s impossible to eliminate bottlenecks
completely. The theory of constraints tells us that every system is going
to have at least one bottleneck, and there’s nothing you can do about
it. That’s why visibility is so crucial at this point in the cycle. You need
to be able to see where the bottleneck is and then optimize the rest of
the system around it. Too often organizations see a process that seems
to be getting stuck in one general area, so they throw more people
or more money at it. But that’s actually not going to give them the
process optimization they’re looking for. You can’t effectively deal with
a bottleneck if you don’t have the workflow visualized so that you know
where it really is.
Visibility into the creative workflow and output also helps avoid duplicate
efforts. An agile process can help with this through sprint review meetings
where everyone shows and tells what they did over the past few weeks.
You can attend those meetings with other teams to see what they are
doing. If you see something that is 80% of what you’ve been trying to
do, you can build on that. A formalized process can avoid duplication of
work and save time. It also helps to have a central repository like a digital
5211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrea Fryrear, President and
Lead Trainer, AgileSherpas
asset management system. Review meetings in which everyone sees all the
great work other teams are doing fall flat if it’s hard to get your hands on
those materials. If you become frustrated spending a lot of time looking for
something, you might easily decide just to make it yourself, even if it takes
longer. A centralized repository improves efficiency and avoids duplication.
The ultimate goal of an efficient, smoothly running creative process is that
you can maintain a predictable, sustainable pace of quality output. You don’t
want people working all the time and getting burned out to the point of
being unproductive or quitting. This damages your process in the long run. It
goes back to process visualization and being able to see a smooth workflow
from ideation out to publication and analysis. You should not have most of
the workflow stuck in one phase at any point in time. You must watch the
process and continuously optimize it.
5311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrew Davis is a best-selling author and
keynote speaker. He has built and sold a
digital marketing agency, produced for
NBC, and worked for The Muppets. Today,
he teaches business leaders how to grow
their businesses, transform their cities, and
leave their legacy.
Andrew Davis, Keynote Speaker and
Best-Selling Author, Monumental Shift
“A successful creative process releases content that is timely and that delivers on audience objectives.”
A successful creative process releases content that is timely
and that delivers on audience objectives, whether that’s
driving traffic, generating leads, or meeting other marketing
objectives. If deadlines are being missed or the content
contains mistakes, it’s time to regroup and figure out what
the real issues are. The content you’re creating must actually
add value to the business. The cost of bad content can
sometimes be difficult to pin down. The content might be
driving traffic, but it may turn out to be the wrong kind of
traffic, or low-quality traffic that never converts. These kinds
of performance metrics provide valuable feedback that
strengthens the creative process.
5411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 5411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Christoph Trappe leads content and
digital transformation in B2B publishing
and content marketing for an established
communications firm. He is a career
storyteller who has worked as a journalist,
change agent, and content marketing
executive. He has spoken at conferences
globally, blogs, and has written two
books. His teams’ digital initiatives have
been recognized globally.
“The creative team needs to review both its failures and its successes and learn from them.”
Christoph Trappe, Chief Content
Officer, Stamats Communications, Inc.To be successful, the creative process must deliver good content on
schedule. Numerous technologies can minimize the bottlenecks that
are part of the creative workflow. It’s important not to get bogged
down with technology to the point at which using it slows you down.
Consider cost versus the value technology delivers to your process. The
right technology can set individual deadlines and enforce them through
automated reminders, which can make the entire creative cycle flow
more smoothly.
Another way to streamline the creative workflow is to use strategies that
optimize time utilization. For example, companies that want to leverage
their internal experts in a content marketing strategy should never
allow those experts to write their own content. It will take them a long
time to produce one piece, and that piece most likely will not be well
written. A better use of everyone’s time is to have a content marketing
specialist interview the expert and write up the piece. This uses less of the
expert’s time and generates better written content, and it’s likely you can
repurpose the interview material into multiple content items.
5511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Christoph Trappe, Chief Content Officer,
Stamats Communications, Inc.
The creative process also needs to reliably deliver good content. Deciding
what is “good” ultimately comes back to measuring the effectiveness of the
content, and that depends on metrics related to the content objectives. You
may find that only a small percentage of your content would be considered
outstanding in the way it is picked up and read or viewed. This may be
because of something unique about how that content was created and just
the luck of being in the right place at the right time. The creative team needs
to review both its failures and its successes and learn from them.
5611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Carla Johnson is a world-renowned
storyteller, an entertaining speaker, and a
prolific author. Consistently named one
of the top influencers in B2B, and digital
and content marketing, she regularly
challenges conventional thinking.
The author of eight books, Johnson
travels the world teaching anyone (and
everyone) how to cultivate idea-driven
teams that breed unstoppable creativity
and game-changing innovation.
Carla Johnson , Author. Speaker.
Storyteller, Carla Johnson
“Sometimes bottlenecks arise because people focus on their own siloed goals at the expense of larger campaign or business goals.”
A key part of streamlining the creation process is cross-
team collaboration. The reality is that different groups
such as digital, social, and content work in their own
silos. Sometimes bottlenecks arise because people
focus on their own siloed goals at the expense of larger
campaign or business goals. Representatives from these
different groups need to develop a shared understanding
of the overall plan you’re trying to accomplish across the
marketing organization. That ability to have cross-silo,
cross-functional team collaboration and conversations
is important. If everybody understands what the bigger
priority is, they understand how they need to manage their
own requests and bring the bigger goal into their group.
Much of technology can give people line of sight into
progress and show where things are getting stuck, and
with whom. That visibility can help you make adjustments
to the team or process. For instance, if there’s a subject
5711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
“Visibility can help you make adjustments to the team or process.”
matter expert approver who’s committed to another project, even though the
person understands the importance of your project, there are only so many
hours in the day. How do we adjust to ensure that everything continues to
move forward?
This technology can also indicate that a team or process is not working well.
For instance, if it takes longer than it should to create content, or if there are
more revision cycles than should be the case, something in the process is
not working. It could be that the goal was not clearly understood or that early
groundwork around ideation and planning were not well executed. Sometimes
people rush through these stages so they can get started on creating the
content. If you front-load your time so that everyone understands audience
objectives and the plan for achieving them, everything else that happens after
that is clearer, more efficient, and more cost-effective.
Namita is the Global CMI Director,
Content, Unilever. She has lived and
worked across various countries and
categories, and has received recognition
for her work on brand turnaround. She is
the recipient of several prestigious awards
including the Esomar Global Methodology
Award, the Global Brand Congress Award
for Outstanding Contribution to Market
Research, as well as the MRS Award for
Social Listening using Big Data. She is
the chair of the Warc Awards 2019 on
Content Strategy. She leads a global team
of professionals in the area of Content
Excellence at Unilever.
5811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“You have to build testing and analysis into the content creation process.”
Namita Mediratta, Global CMI Director,
Content Excellence, Unilever
In consumer products marketing, consumer feedback data is
important at every stage of the content development cycle. Having
active feedback during the create phase is essential. To do this, you
need to start looking at unfinished work and getting feedback at that
stage. That’s when it’s easiest to make changes and avoid errors.
To do this, you have to build testing and analysis into the content
creation process. This involves testing with consumers, and it involves
looking at past work and building your internal knowledge base about
what is working and about the craftsmanship of creating content
from a consumer perspective. Having that knowledge base available
across the organization enables content development teams to move
forward without having to reinvent the wheel.
Managing the creative phase is really about feeding into the early
stages of the process with consumer feedback and using those meta-
learnings and knowledge bases that you have so that people are
getting it right the first time. It enables them to build content that is
5911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Namita Mediratta, Global CMI Director,
Content Excellence, Unilever
based on proven craftsmanship, and at the same time experiment with what
is genuinely new so that they can get as much as possible out of those fresh
pieces of creative.
Consumer and marketing insights technology is important to the create
phase. It enables you to integrate machine learning and artificial intelligence
directly into your creative discipline so that you have a fully integrated
process that brings together meta-learning and market insight. That guides
marketers in the right direction during the create phase. It allows marketers
to view their output through many lenses so that if something is missing the
mark, they will see it quickly.
Noz Urbina is a globally recognised content
strategist and modeller. He’s well known
as a pioneer in content strategy, content
marketing, customer journey mapping,
and adaptive content modelling to support
personalised, contextually relevant content
for omnichannel experiences. He is also
co-author of the book “Content Strategy:
Connecting the dots between business,
brand, and benefits” and founder of the
event and community www.OmnichannelX.
digital.
t
6011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“First, creation teams need to be able to mine their own content. Second, they should be creating small reusable blocks to be able to leverage them easily once they’ve found them.”
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
The challenge in creating content for an omnichannel strategy is
making sure that the many different ways you answer questions
customers ask through their journey is done efficiently across all
channels, and it consistently aligns with business goals.
First, creation teams need to be able to mine their own content.
It’s a step that many businesses fail to take. Content teams rotate
in and out of projects. Companies work with different agencies,
or someone with an agency suddenly no longer works there.
Many companies have no idea what content they actually have,
and indexing all that can be a time-consuming maintenance task.
Corpus analysis tools can be a tremendous help in content mining.
For example, in practice you may have many digital assets. Some
may be in your knowledge base, some in your externet, some on
your web CMS, some on your internet, and some in your digital
asset management system. A corpus analysis system can reach
into all those repositories, do text mining, and apply AI-based
natural language processing, and it can find things and tag them
automatically for future reference. However it’s done, it’s essential
6111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Noz Urbina, Founder & Omnichannel
Content Strategist, Urbina Consulting
to have that ability to find existing content so you are not wasting resources
re-creating them.
Second, it’s important for a content marketing strategy needs to create
Lego®-like content that has the answers to all the customer questions.
This means managing component or modular content rather than have all
your content locked in large, monolithic finished pieces. This means, for
example, managing “tips” or “best practices” as discrete blocks vs managing
only a complete “7 tips for holiday makers” article. Reusable blocks give you
the flexibility to assemble your content into different content deliverables
depending on what journey you’re trying to facilitate for the user and what
marketing needs you must address at a particular point in time. Ideally,
you will manage and create content at the Lego component stage so that
you can mine it later and pull out what you need to quickly assemble the
packages and deliverables you require.
You can tell how efficient your content creation process is by measuring how
much leverage you are getting out of your existing asset base. In other words,
how many times to do you reuse existing content blocks across deliverables,
formats, and channels? If your leverage is very low, content creators may be
spending a lot of time re-creating materials unnecessarily, or they may be
going rogue with inconsistent messages delivered through different channels.
If that happens, you are not properly managing your content or messaging.
6211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
KEY POINTS
Too often teams jump from idea to create without adequate planning. This can result in churn in
the creation process.
l Status Quo: Content teams get a request, find a plan that fits, and ideate ways to put content into that plan; their budget is driven by all the content they can fit into the plan. This process is backward.
l Cost of Status Quo: Content teams work all the time, getting burned out to the point of being unproductive, all to churn out as much mediocre content as possible.
l New Approach: Begin with ideas, build a detailed plan, and build an outcome value budget before starting creation. This makes the create process more efficient and the content more successful..
Leveraging technology can use content assets more efficiently and reduce duplicate efforts.
l Status Quo: Many content teams are unaware of or unable to find existing content assets, so they re-create them.
l Cost of Status Quo: This results in expensive duplication of creative effort and message drift.
l New Approach: Creative processes need to leverage technology that provides access to existing content assets wherever they exist in the organization, and that provides visibility into cross-team and cross-silo creative efforts.
Understand success metrics, and use them to inform the creation process.
l Status Quo: Planning fails to define content KPIs, or creative teams don’t understand them.
l Cost of Status Quo: Content teams don’t receive audience feedback, which causes them to continue to produce mediocre content.
l New Approach: Performance KPIs need to be defined in the planning phase, creative teams need to understand what they are and design content with those performance objectives in mind, and actual performance data needs to come back to the creative team so they can make informed adjustments to content assets.
6311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 63
CHAPTER 5
Creating great content can be a wasted effort if
it is poorly distributed. The content fails to find its
intended audience, it lands at the wrong time, and it
fails to fulfill its business goals, which can be a costly
failure. We explored how organizations can ensure
their content is distributed better by asking our
experts the following question:
What are the best ways to ensure that your content
is delivered to the right places at the right times?
In discussing content distribution, several themes
emerged: 1) the importance of using keywords to
manage search optimization; 2) the importance
of determining the right channels for reaching the
target audience with your content; 3) being able
to evaluate if those who are engaging with your
content are the people you want to reach. Here’s
what the experts had to say.
DISTRIBUTE
IDEATE
ANALYZE PLAN
BUDGET
CREATE
DISTRIBUTE
6411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An author and award-winning blogger,
Matt Heinz is president of Heinz
Marketing, to which he brings more
than 20 years of marketing, business
development, and sales experience.
He prioritizes measurable results,
greater sales, revenue growth, product
success, and customer loyalty. Heinz is
a dynamic, engaging speaker and repeat
winner of Top 50 Most Influential People
in Sales Lead Management and Top 50
Sales & Marketing Influencers.
6411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Search optimization is important, but there is a difference between enabling people to find your content and aggressively putting it in front of their eyes.”
Matt Heinz, President,
Heinz Marketing Inc
Effective distribution comes down to understanding your target
audience. Who are they? Where, how, and when do they access
content? What kinds of content are they consuming? A C-level
executive is probably not going to read a 20-page white paper. If
you take a white paper, eliminate all the copy, and just leave in the
graphics, the visuals, and the captions, you have something that
a C-level might actually flip through. Content distribution isn’t just
how many impressions you get or how many emails you send out
to promote. Distribution relates back to the audience, what they
care about, and what they’re willing to do.
Search optimization is important, but there is a difference between
enabling people to find your content and aggressively putting it
in front of their eyes. There are ways you can use keywords and
tag content to have it be more discoverable and to increase its
ranking. But content marketing today has a higher bar: if you
feel bad interrupting your prospects to put the content in front
of them, the content isn’t good enough. You should be creating
content that your prospects might be willing to pay for. It’s not just
the content that is valuable enough to use to interrupt your target
6511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Matt Heinz, President,
Heinz Marketing Inc
audience. You need to go from being interruptive to being irresistible with your content. When people see your content in their inbox, they should be excited to open it.
Digital asset management technology plays an important role in optimizing your distribution strategy. Part of it is getting the right message in front of the right prospect at the right time. A digital asset management solution ensures that content goes out at the right times to support all the different points of evidence and triggered events and buying signals that need to happen. Lots of if-then statements can happen on the back end to make that possible.
.
Not getting distribution right is an opportunity cost. If you know the economics of your funnel, you can reverse-engineer the opportunity costs of missing someone. So for every one of our target prospects that doesn’t engage with this content, we just lost $40, so you could do the backward math on that. And maybe that opportunity cost translates into a potential $4,000 sale down the line. Now you can decide if it’s worth spending a small percentage of that $4,000 to more aggressively try to get your audience to engage with the content. It helps you see the cost of missed opportunity, but it also helps you decide whether to throw more money at the problem or cut your losses.
If you think about the currency of marketing today, it’s not about having bigger lists
or having more people fill out forms. It’s about sustained attention. If you can get and
keep the attention of your prospects, you’ve found gold. Not every prospect is going
to be ready to buy right away. But when they are ready to buy and ready to engage,
you want to have that warm conversation already underway
6611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Shane Barker is a digital-marketing
consultant who specializes in influencer
marketing, product launches, sales
funnels, targeted traffic, and website
conversions. He has consulted with
Fortune 500 companies, influencers
with digital products, and a number of
A-List celebrities.
Shane Barker, Digital Strategist &
Influencer Marketing Consultant,
Shane Barker Consulting
“Some channels and communities perform better than others for the same content, and you want to go for the most exposure to the right kind of audience.”
Distribution of content is a big piece of the puzzle that many people
miss. They just created this great product they’re going to put it out
there, and they think the whole world’s going to love it. But if nobody
sees it, who cares?
There are many strategies for getting your content in front of the right
audience. One involves keywords and indexing. Content today needs
a keyword strategy to strengthen search performance and sharing.
This includes researching keywords, monitoring performance,
and sticking with keywords that generate more traffic. These can
be specific to the topic or channel. You also need to check your
competitors to see how their pages are performing and make
adjustments to improve your standing relative to them. It really comes
down to competition.
Another area that is important to distribution includes channels and
communities. Some channels and communities perform better
than others for the same content, and you want to go for the most
exposure to the right kind of audience.
6711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Shane Barker, Digital Strategist &
Influencer Marketing Consultant,
Shane Barker Consulting
You can also develop your own communities. There is great value in
having communities that you own. You can pitch your content to other
communities or Facebook and LinkedIn, but rules limit what you can do.
When you can have your own communities in LinkedIn, Facebook, Quora,
Slack, and others, you own those communities, which gives you more
control over the content you offer. It also enables you to build a more
valuable target audience that delivers the right kind of traffic.
Having 10,000 of the right people is better than having half a million people
coming to your site but only 1% being of interest to you.
The effectiveness of these strategies depends on testing. Once you see
something that really works, that’s where you want to spend more time.
6811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An early convert to the ways of
Agile marketing, Andrea Fryrear
is now the world’s leading expert
on translating Agile principles and
practices for marketing. She holds
numerous Agile certifications,
including Certified Professional
in Agile Coaching (ICP-ACC) and
Certified Agile Leader (CAL-1). She
is also a sought-after speaker who
shares her findings (and failures)
from stages around the world.
6811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Successful distribution comes back to the planning phase and knowing who the content is for and how they want to consume it.”
Andrea Fryrear, President and
Lead Trainer, AgileSherpas
Failure to effectively get content in front of the right audiences at the
right times is like screaming into the void. You’re making a lot of stuff,
but it’s not helping anybody, and it’s not doing what you need it to do.
You may be seeing a lot of leads, but none of them convert. You may be
reaching a lot of people, but they’re not the right people.
Successful distribution comes back to the planning phase and knowing
who the content is for and how they want to consume it. Audiences now
have high expectations about receiving information that is personally
relevant to where they are in the buying journey and optimized for the
channels where they prefer consuming it. The old fire hose approach of
putting everything out on every channel just doesn’t work anymore.
For example, effective content marketing often employs user stories.
Doing that well requires content creators to think about who they’re
targeting and what that person’s going to be able to do after they
consume a particular piece of content. The key idea is who you are
serving with this piece of content and what benefit they are actually going
to derive from it.
6911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrea Fryrear, President and
Lead Trainer, AgileSherpas
Then the content needs to be optimized, tagged, and indexed so that it
reaches the target audience. This is where a centralized content repository,
such as a digital asset management system, becomes incredibly valuable.
When it comes time to access persona A at stage four of the buying journey,
you can quickly access content already targeted to those people. You have
content collected that’s been designed for particular channels and media.
Effective distribution also requires looking at data to determine if it is being
consumed and if it is having an effect. For example, if the content is about
how to bake a cake, you might expect the target audience to go out and buy
ingredients needed to bake a cake. You need to know what your content is
empowering people to do, and ideally there’s a capability for tracking that
behavior.
7011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrew Davis is a best-selling author and
keynote speaker. He has built and sold a
digital marketing agency, produced for
NBC, and worked for The Muppets. Today,
he teaches business leaders how to grow
their businesses, transform their cities, and
leave their legacy.
Andrew Davis, Keynote Speaker and
Best-Selling Author, Monumental Shift
“Most people who are successful with content distribution and promotion focus more on where they are delivering it and less on when.”
When distributing content, keep in mind that every channel
has its own half-life. For example, if you post something on
LinkedIn, it takes all week for that content to be consumed by
most of the people who will ever see it. On Twitter that might
happen in 15 seconds.
One big mistake marketers make when distributing content is
the everywhere approach: they get it out there on every social
platform and buy ads for a day or a week, and its useful life is
brief. Most people who are successful with content distribution
and promotion focus more on where they are delivering it
and less on when. They might start by emailing the content
to customers and clients. Then they wait and watch how it’s
consumed, and they make sure it’s valuable and that it works
for the people they know. Then they do one social channel at
a time. They might buy ads only when they see momentum on
social media. And then finally they do PR.
In the “release everywhere” model, you’re maximizing exposure
for a brief period of time. Somebody might see a tweet in the
7111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrew Davis, Keynote Speaker and
Best-Selling Author, Monumental Shift
morning, a post on Facebook in the afternoon, and a LinkedIn post later the same day and
not click any of those. But if they get that email from a known source, they’ll click on it.
They’ll see the Twitter post three days later, they’ll click on it and consume the content. And
four days later, they’ll see it on LinkedIn, and now it has 7,000 views on LinkedIn because
of the momentum you’ve built. People are much more likely to consume the content
because it has social validation.
How you manage this distribution strategy varies by brand, channel, and even content
type. Rather than putting something out one day on every channel, it might take you six
weeks to go through the entire cycle for one piece of content. What you get out of that is
a much richer and deeper content consumption experience on the audience side. You also
increase the lifespan of the content, which reduces the pressure on you to be constantly
creating content because yesterday you had a spike and now something new is needed.
Marketers often measure the wrong things. Search and discovery are important to
ensuring that your content is discoverable, which is a necessity. But today that’s just table
stakes. Your content needs to be discoverable, but it’s far more important to ensure that
you’re actually adding value for the content consumer and that it’s actually moving them
toward the sale. At the end of the day, if your content’s not generating revenue, there’s
a problem. It’s easy to think your content is successful if you’re using vanity metrics. You
must be able to actually qualify the people who are consuming the content as valuable to
the organization. If they are not, you need to reposition, rewrite, re-create, or rethink the
content, probably from the strategic level down.
Freelance marketing and
communications professional with
15+ years of B2B in-house and
agency experience in the financial
services and technology industries.
Previously Senior Solution and Content
Marketing Manager and Corporate
Communications Manager at Wolters
Kluwer - Financial Services Solutions,
and PR account manager at Weber
Shandwick and Metia.
7211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Lauren Bowden Freelance Marketing Communications Consultant/Chief FinTech Content Creator at The Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden Consulting
“Martech, whether it’s CRM, marketing automation or content management systems, becomes useful in making sure content is getting into the hands of key audiences.”
Content distribution—and making sure you’re hitting the right
audiences—can be a challenge, especially in a long sales cycle that
involves multiple stakeholders participating in a group decision
process. When you look back on the wins in this kind of sales
cycle, it’s difficult to pinpoint the influence specific content pieces
had on that sale. You’re not going to turn around to a salesperson
after an 18-month-long sales process and tell her the real reason
she got that deal was because of a particular video or white paper.
That’s not going to happen.
Marketing Technology (aka MarTech), whether it’s CRM, marketing
automation or content management systems, become useful in
making sure content is getting into the hands of key audiences.
In the case of CRM, you can see what’s been opened, and you
have click-through rates, open rates, and other data that is crucial
to measuring content engagement to validate your distribution
strategy. That data becomes useful in building up a picture of what
is happening during a sales cycle. We’ve done a retrospective
7311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Lauren Bowden Freelance Marketing Communications Consultant/Chief FinTech Content Creator at The Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden Consulting
analysis of a sale to look back at how many people in an organization actually
did look at our content. When you see 12 different people from the same
firm all clicking on multiple pieces of content during that cycle, or if the
same person clicks on multiple pieces of content, you know you’re on the
right track. In our business, every sale is different. Every sale involves different
job titles, different teams working together, different ways of approaching
challenges. This retrospective analysis provides decent insight, but it doesn’t
translate into a formulaic approach to content distribution.
Another important input is qualitative feedback from sales people who are in
touch with customers. Did the customer see the content, and was it helpful?
This kind of anecdotal evidence from the sales team is crucial for evaluating
your content strategy and how you are reaching stakeholders in the decision
process.
Another important part of distribution is being able to make adjustments if
the messages are either not reaching their targets or simply not working.
With long sales cycles and long campaigns that are well thought out at the
planning stage, there are many opportunities to steer a campaign back on
track if something is not working. Sometimes you have to make adjustments,
try different things, and then stay in constant communication with campaign
stakeholders to be sure you are on the best path.
Berenice is a physicist and programme
manager turned marketer, with a career
spanning R&D, production, product
development, technology transfer
and marketing. She has spent over 15
years leading marketing strategy and
implementation in the high-tech sector,
specialising in B2B and technology. She
currently leads outbound marketing in
the Architecture and Technology Group
at Arm. She blogs on tech and enjoys
reviewing theatre and restaurants.
7411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“You need to know which channels suit your audience and your business and how to reach your audience through those channels. Base your decisions on evidence, not assumptions.”
Berenice Mann, Senior Marketing
Manager, Arm LtdWhen it comes to content distribution, there is no one-size-fits-all
solution. It varies with the business. You need to know which channels
suit your audience and your business and how to reach your audience
through those channels to get the results you are looking for. It’s all
about understanding which channels are best for you.
In some ways, B2C marketing is easier than B2B marketing because you
are able to speak directly to the consumer, who is often the buyer. B2B
marketing is often more difficult because there may be many people you
have to influence before you ever get a decision and the sales cycles are
usually longer. A further issue is you’re trying to reach people within an
organization who don’t want to make a wrong decision, because their
job depends on getting it right. Finding those channels to reach the right
people is often quite a challenge for businesses. It involves knowing
where the audiences you need to reach go and what channels they use.
It also involves testing and experimenting, but if your audience doesn’t
tweet, you may not want to put things on Twitter.
7511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Berenice Mann, Senior Marketing
Manager, Arm Ltd
In B2B marketing, it’s a long sales cycle that involves raising awareness,
educating target audiences about why it’s good for them, and getting them
to start thinking about the decisions they need to make until they reach that
decision point.
You can use a number of strategies to ensure that your content is reaching
the key audiences at the right time. Digital channels offer great opportunities
and keyword research and search optimization are essential. Valuable
content can be gated and you can build in measurements that allow you to
statistically break down the types of people using your content. There are
both paid and unpaid exposure and you can experiment to find out which
works best for your campaign. They often involve higher cost, so it comes
down to maximizing the return on your investment and how much you are
willing to spend and working within your budget. The better the results, the
more you can prove that it works and evidence brings the confidence in
knowing which channels to pursue and which to drop. Making evidence-
based decisions wherever possible is critical to success.
7611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
KEY POINTS
You need to use keywords to manage search optimization..
l Status Quo: Marketing teams focus on targeted channels while neglecting search optimization.
l Cost of Status Quo: Content underperforms in generic searches and does not propagate as widely as it could.
l New Approach: A keyword strategy strengthens search performance and sharing. This needs to include researching keywords, monitoring performance, and sticking with keywords that generate more traffic.
You need to determine the right channels for reaching the target audience with your content.
l Status Quo: Marketers often use an everywhere approach when distributing content, getting it out there on every social platform and buying ads for a day or a week, but soon after that content’s life ends.
l Cost of Status Quo: The cost of not getting distribution right is a lost opportunity. If you know the economics of your funnel, you can see the opportunity costs of missing a person or an audience.
l New Approach: Use channels to aggressively put content in front of your target audience. If you feel bad interrupting your prospects to put the content in front of them, the content isn’t good enough. Digital asset management solutions help make sure content goes out at the right times in the right channels to support all the different points of evidence and triggered events and buying signals that need to happen.
You need to be able to evaluate if those who are engaging with your content are the people you want to reach.
l Status Quo: Marketers often measure things that do not tell them who is engaging or what the impact is.
l Cost of Status Quo: Failure to know if you are reaching the people you need to reach can give you a false sense of success (high level of engagement with the wrong audience) and an inaccurate indication of content performance.
l New Approach: Adopt processes that qualify the people you are engaging and use metrics that measure their behavior after each engagement. This enables you to accurately assess and adjust content for better performance.
7711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 77
At the end of the day, do you know how well your
content marketing program and campaigns are
doing, whether they are performing as expected,
or even if they are paying for themselves? This has
always been one of the most challenging questions
for content marketers to answer. We took a closer
look at what the experts have to say about analyzing
content performance by asking the following
question:
What’s the best way to use the data from
the complete content lifecycle to measure
performance and opportunities and reduce waste?
The analysis discussions revealed several key ideas,
including: 1) It’s important to measure why the
audience is engaging with your content and not just
if they are engaging; 2) it’s worthwhile to measure
what people do after they engage with your
content; 3) it’s valuable to measure the relationship
between the content lifecycle and sales. Here’s what
the experts had to say.
ANALYZECHAPTER 6
IDEATE
ANALYZE PLAN
BUDGET
CREATE
DISTRIBUTE
7811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
tRobert Rose is the author of three best-
selling books on content marketing. As
founder of The Content Advisory, the
consulting and education group of The
Content Marketing Institute, Rose has
worked with more than 500 companies over
the past five years, including global brands
such as Capital One, NASA, McCormick
Spices, Hewlett Packard, Microsoft, and the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
“Most content marketers measure exactly the wrong things.”
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
Measurement is critical, and the cost of not measuring the right
things is ignorance. For example, you can create an amazing piece
of content that suffers because it was poorly promoted. You can
also have a horrible piece of content do okay because it was part
of an amazing promotional campaign. Your insight, then, is that
the horrible content is something you should do again, and this
really great piece that suffered from a bad marketing campaign is
something you shouldn’t do. That’s measuring how well the content
was promoted and syndicated and distributed rather than how it
moved the audience, and when you measure the wrong thing like
that, you build a negative feedback loop.
Most content marketers measure exactly the wrong things. They
mostly try to measure the quality and quantity of content they’re
producing and how efficient or effective the higher quality content
is. Content marketers should be measuring the content’s impact on
the behavior change of the audience that is consuming the content.
7911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Robert Rose, Chief Troublemaker,
The Content Advisory
The challenge with content is that it’s not a widget. It’s not like an ad, a
brochure, or a piece of collateral where you can safely predict the cost on each
subsequent widget. Content is different because there is a quality level we have
to apply that is an unknowable number until we actually start creating it.
How much does a feature film cost? It depends on the story, what it is saying,
and the value of the content. Media companies answer that by measuring how
many tickets they sell. Content marketers need to do the same thing. They
need to measure what the audience does. So, in creating a measurement
program for content, the first thing to ask is what the goal is. What is the impact
on the audience you are trying to achieve?
That could be many things. Let’s say, for example, you have a digital blog meant
to build your first-party data that you will then expose to your personalized
catalog or targeted ads. Let’s say you look at the conversion rates of
anonymous people exposed to your catalog versus the conversion rate for your
own first-party audience members. The gap between the two is the value of the
audience impact. Any content that increases that gap in a positive way—making
the first-party audience members more valuable—is a direct measure of the
value and effectiveness of that content.
8011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
An author and award-winning blogger,
Matt Heinz is president of Heinz
Marketing, to which he brings more
than 20 years of marketing, business
development, and sales experience.
He prioritizes measurable results,
greater sales, revenue growth, product
success, and customer loyalty. Heinz is
a dynamic, engaging speaker and repeat
winner of Top 50 Most Influential People
in Sales Lead Management and Top 50
Sales & Marketing Influencers.
8011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“Being able to identify and measure the correlation between content engagement and revenue is not easy, but it is essential.”
Matt Heinz, President,
Heinz Marketing IncThe most important measurements for the content cycle are
those that show the impact that content is having on revenue.
You can’t buy a beer with a click or an impression. Although
content engagement is important, what happens after that content
engagement is most important. Being able to identify and measure
the correlation between content engagement and revenue events
is not easy, but it is essential.
The further up the funnel you go, the more difficult this becomes
because the more steps there are between where that prospect
is and them closing. But you can reverse-engineer your funnel
to figure this out. You can calculate that every time you get a
prospect to a particular stage, that prospect is worth X dollars. For
example, if you’re selling something that costs $10,000 and your
conversion rate on the opportunities to close deals is 25%, it’s
worth $2,500 to get someone into an opportunity. Then you can
do that backward math and try to understand what it costs to get
8111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Matt Heinz, President,
Heinz Marketing Inc
someone to that point through your various channels and paths. Now you’re
able to decide which paths are most efficient, which ones seem to be working
the best, and which of those paths may not be generating the most prospects,
but the best prospects.
You can see if a content marketing team is measuring the wrong things by
simply looking at what it is measuring. If it’s clicks and likes and retweets
and content engagement, that’s a good first step, but what’s most important
is what happens after that. You should be able to see some velocity and
the prospects taking action. If they engage with something and don’t do
something new, if they engage with content and that doesn’t change
their behavior or mindset, you have to question whether that content was
worthwhile. At that point it doesn’t matter how many retweets the content had
or how viral it went. Did it add value to the customers? If you’re not measuring
that, you don’t really know how it’s performing or how to improve it.
8211 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Shane Barker is a digital-marketing
consultant who specializes in influencer
marketing, product launches, sales
funnels, targeted traffic, and website
conversions. He has consulted with
Fortune 500 companies, influencers
with digital products, and a number of
A-List celebrities.
Shane Barker, Digital Strategist &
Influencer Marketing Consultant,
Shane Barker Consulting
“If you are going to improve the content, it’s important to understand what problem to address.”
When measuring content, the number-one thing to look at is
conversions. If you have a million people on the site and a 0.2%
conversion rate, who cares about all those site visits?
Conversion rates are key, and it comes down to A: how many people
are you bringing in? and B: how many of those people are downloading
something, getting on the newsletter, filling something out for you, or
doing something to take that next step? And out of those, how many
leads are you getting, how many appointments are you setting up, and
how many of those are turning into sales? You have to develop your
basic set of KPIs.
Keep in mind several things as you measure content performance:
lBe sure you are measuring the content and not a broken
process tied to the content. For example, if you have a sales
team that has a terrible time closing deals and a content strategy
generating tons of leads, it could be the content strategy is
flawed and is not generating the right kind of leads. Or it could
be the sales team is poorly trained. If you are going to improve
the content, you need to understand what problem to address.
8311 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Shane Barker, Digital Strategist &
Influencer Marketing Consultant,
Shane Barker Consulting
lLook beyond single pieces of content. When analyzing content,
consider that some content influences the consumption of other
content, and some content items are just repackaged versions of
other content items, optimized for a different channel. Analyzing
these things gives insight into how you can build on what you have
out there, how you can add to it, and how you can shift emphasis
to something that is working better than something else. There may
be other ways you can reach people, and there are different ways
that people take in content. Once you feel like you’ve exhausted the
possibilities and you see through the numbers that there is some good
traction, you may decide to push it a little further.
lNot all content takes off right away. You have to A/B test things. You
might have one campaign that starts strong and other campaigns you
have to iterate five times to find the right target audience and the right
message. You have to give the content time to work and not pull the
plug too early.
8411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI 8411 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“In content today, everything is about measurement. This data becomes a guide for how to develop additional content.”
Christoph Trappe, Chief Content
Officer, Stamats Communications, Inc.
Using data to measure content performance is challenging because life is
nonlinear. You can be going about your day and a friend calls you out of the blue
to tell you about a meeting she just had in which a person’s name came up. After
the call, you search that person’s name, and an article the person wrote comes up.
The article has nothing do with what your friend was talking about, but it’s interesting,
and you spend a few minutes reading it. Maybe you recommend it to someone else
you know was looking for that information. It’s difficult to track these things.
But in content today, everything is about measurement. Are people reading it? Do
those consuming the content prefer certain topics, and do they prefer articles of a
certain tone? And really, the most important thing, does the content convert readers,
causing them to take an action? How many people click on the Call Now button? How
many people email? This data becomes a guide for how to develop additional content.
Anecdotal evidence is important too, when the right person shares it. If an
executive asks if the content campaign is working and a business manager says
we have a lot of new customers who mention the content, that counts. It might
not carry as much weight coming from a marketing consultant, though. Then if on
top of that you can show a 50% increase in site traffic, those things taken together
become very powerful.
Christoph Trappe leads content and
digital transformation in B2B publishing
and content marketing for an established
communications firm. He is a career
storyteller who has worked as a journalist,
change agent, and content marketing
executive. He has spoken at conferences
globally, blogs, and has written two
books. His teams’ digital initiatives have
been recognized globally.
8511 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrew Davis is a best-selling author and
keynote speaker. He has built and sold a
digital marketing agency, produced for
NBC, and worked for The Muppets. Today,
he teaches business leaders how to grow
their businesses, transform their cities, and
leave their legacy.
“Only one metric counts: the amount of revenue your content creates.”
Andrew Davis, Keynote Speaker and
Best-Selling Author, Monumental Shift
Measurement is the biggest content marketing challenge. The
essential problem is that content marketers do not actually tie
their content marketing efforts to revenue. It doesn’t have to
be complicated. For each part of the content lifecycle, you
should be able to ascertain a dollar value for the consumer
who consumes it. And if you’re not able to do that, you’re
probably reporting on the wrong metric. It’s great to measure
a lot of things, but content marketers should only report
on one metric: how much revenue this piece of content or
this content campaign or this part of the content lifecycle
contributed to the bottom line.
Not until then are you able to determine the return on a
content investment. Deciding if the content was worth it is a
great question to ask, but most content marketers fail to get to
the first step: making that revenue connection.
It does not need to be a complex calculation. For example,
if you can say that someone who subscribes to your email
newsletter is worth $53 on average to your bottom line, the
8611 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Andrew Davis, Keynote Speaker and
Best-Selling Author, Monumental Shift
cost of creating the newsletter and building subscribers becomes a pretty
simple equation to determine if you should keep doing it. This can be a
recursive calculation, meaning that as you go through the content lifecycle,
if you can determine that a prospect who consumes these four pieces of
content is now worth X dollars, all of a sudden you have a really good case
for that lifecycle.
Too often CMOs in board meetings tout how many followers they have on
Facebook and how many likes they get for their posts, only to hear a CEO or
a board member say, but how many of those people buy our product? And
they don’t have the answer. Only one metric counts: the amount of revenue
your content creates. Whatever things you need to measure to get to that
number are the right things to measure. The cost of not making that content-
revenue connection is marketing churn, the loss of staff because you can’t
justify the efforts for the cost, and ultimately damage to the business.
Freelance marketing and communications professional with 15+ years of B2B in-house and agency experience in the financial services and technology industries. Previously Senior Solution and Content Marketing Manager and Corporate Communications Manager at Wolters Kluwer - Financial Services Solutions, and PR account manager at Weber Shandwick and Metia.
“Measuring the effectiveness of a marketing campaign can only happen if you have defined expectations during the planning stage.”
Lauren Bowden Freelance Marketing Communications Consultant/Chief FinTech Content Creator at The Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden Consulting
Measuring the effectiveness of a marketing campaign can only
happen if you have defined expectations during the planning stage.
It goes back to those conversations with all the stakeholders and
getting their buy-in because when you come back to them and
share campaign results, they will look at whether those outcomes
are in line with their expectations, and analysis becomes the
main way to see if it’s working or not. All of this becomes easier
when the planning is done well. Marketing objectives you define
in the planning process become your baseline. If results are in
line with what you expected when you wrote the campaign plan,
that’s great. If not, you can use that to make adjustments in the
ideation and planning phase for the next iteration. How it performs
becomes the basis of making adjustments and moving when the
market moves.
To do this well, it’s important to have high-quality querying and
data visualization technology, especially when there are many
target audiences and decision makers involved in the sales cycle.
8711 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
8811 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Lauren Bowden, Freelance Marketing
Communications Consultant/Chief
FinTech Content Creator at The
Comms Crowd, Lauren Bowden
Consulting
You may have multiple campaigns running at any given time. You want to
have that intuitive data insight that allows you to drill into the data and test
hypotheses, for instance seeing how the campaign has performed with one
audience compared to another, or seeing if a campaign is working better in
one country than another. You can then compare that with past campaigns
and maybe make regional campaign adjustments, such as refining messages
or distribution strategies, or retarget different audience groups in certain
areas.
When collecting and analyzing performance data, it’s important to include
qualitative inputs along with the digital metrics in your analysis. Numbers are
critically important, but you need to talk to people, too.
Namita is the Global CMI Director,
Content, Unilever. She has lived and
worked across various countries and
categories, and has received recognition
for her work on brand turnaround. She is
the recipient of several prestigious awards
including the Esomar Global Methodology
Award, the Global Brand Congress Award
for Outstanding Contribution to Market
Research, as well as the MRS Award for
Social Listening using Big Data. She is
the chair of the Warc Awards 2019 on
Content Strategy. She leads a global team
of professionals in the area of Content
Excellence at Unilever.
8911 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
“The real power of this data is bringing it all together so you can start looking at campaign assessment in totality.”
Namita Mediratta, Global CMI Director,
Content Excellence, Unilever
In multichannel consumer product marketing, you need to
be able to look at all the data inputs in an integrated way.
What you’re trying to do is to get to the core of what makes
something work, or what is not working. It’s beyond just
whether something is meeting expectations. You need to
know why it is or is not. To understand this, you get clues
from a variety of data sources. You can look at how people
respond to one piece, or how one thing changes behavior,
but you have to see this across channels, and it has to
include less direct data inputs like social listening. This kind
of analysis requires integrating a lot of data from different
sources, and it is an iterative process. It is a discovery
process.
During the planning phase, you are defining key metrics.
Then during the create phase, you are using consumer
feedback metrics and your knowledge base to guide
creative. After a piece airs, you are tracking to see if it
9011 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
Namita Mediratta, Global CMI Director,
Content Excellence, Unilever
has the expected impact. You are using metrics to close the loop on the
content cycle, and this is where you can piece together the elements of a
multichannel campaign. If you are not tying these things together, you end
up with isolated behavioral data, or claim data, or survey responses, or in-
market metrics. The real power of this data is bringing it all together so you
can start looking at campaign assessment in totality. You need to look at
campaign assessment across an integration of variables.
The goal is to have this integrated perspective and analysis for action.
You need to look at how creative was received, what happened to sales,
and what happened to brand metrics. You need to look at hard and soft
metrics together. It’s a big data challenge that requires examining various
data sources and applying advanced technologies that include artificial
intelligence and machine learning. In the end, though, it is an analysis for
what you’re going to do differently, or similarly, the next time. There’s no
point in having a metric if you’re not going to do anything with it.
9111 Experts on Using the Content Lifecycle to Maximize Content ROI
KEY POINTS
Measure why the audience is engaging with your content, not just if they are engaging.
l Status Quo: Most content marketers have some measure of audience engagement, such as pages views or clicks, but they do not know why people engage.
l Cost of Status Quo: Failure to understand why people engage limits your ability to improve engagement.
l New Approach: Content marketers need to measure what causes the target audience to engage with their content. This involves an ongoing test-measure-adapt process that continuously feeds the content lifecycle.
Measure what people do after they engage with your content.
l Status Quo: Content marketers often measure clicks, likes, retweets, and content engagement, but what’s most important is what happens after that.
l Cost of Status Quo: If your content does not change audience behavior or mindset, you have to question whether that content was worthwhile.
l New Approach: Plan and create content so that it includes measurable calls to action so that you can track what the audience does and develop behavioral metrics.
Measure the relationship between the content lifecycle and sales.
l Status Quo: Most content marketers try to measure the quality and quantity of content they’re producing and how efficient or effective the higher quality content is. These are exactly the wrong things.
l Cost of Status Quo: The cost of not measuring the right things is ignorance, no visibility into how content is performing or how to improve it, marketing churn, loss of staff because you can’t justify content efforts for the cost, and ultimately damage to the business.
l New Approach: Content marketers need to measure the content’s impact on the behavior change of the audience that is consuming the content, and they need to show the impact that content is having on revenue. Only one metric ultimately counts: the amount of revenue your content creates.incomplete ideas to get early audience feedback.
By activating Aprimo’s Digital Asset Management solution, Philips achieved its digital transformation to adapt to ever-changing customer touch points and personally engage with its customer base.
Philips is a globally recognized brand that serves the healthcare, lighting, and consumer lifestyle markets. With approximately 122,000 employees, Philips is active in the sales and service outlets of more than 100 countries.
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