Share Marketing To Win
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By Michael Roberts
The podcast currently has 63 episodes available.
You need a framework.
To source content. To create content. To distribute content.
So here's a the framework for building frameworks π
#marketing
You may have noticed I missed some days on the podcast, and moving forward there may continue to be some days I miss. Some of it has been unintentional, but moving forward much of it will be intentional. I walk through my thinking on this episode, how it's built around a new content strategy I'm testing, and what I'm trying to accomplish with it.
You get more experience on a small team. Especially a start up.
No, come on, I did not say BETTER. But yes, I did said MORE.
And that's still important. π
Gaining experience comes from, well, doing things.
And in start up/small team land, there is LOADS to do, across lots of different areas.
Plus, in start up world done is often much more important than perfect, which means you incentivized to move quickly.
So you get MORE done.
Trust me, I worked within a larger org before. And I've worked now in a start up for two years.
The difference is pretty crazy (in my experience).
The 3 tiers of content and the type of engagement they drive:
What do you think?
A subject matter expert will always create better content than a writer.
Someone in the space. That actually knows what they are talking about.
EVERYONE hires out writers and marketers to create the content they need for their site.
But only a few companies mix in generated content from the people that actually live in the industry they are selling to.
And if you aren't including that kind of content in your mix, you're probably missing out on the greatest value you can give to your audience.
#marketing
Think about email as a content distribution platform as opposed to a sales channel, and good things happen.
It's the whole reason there are entire businesses built on an email newsletter.
And it can be a critical way to get momentum on your new content.
The best marketing orgs are creating lots of content, and there should be plenty of value.
But SEO takes time.
And social is dominated by personal brands.
Email though? Still the world where business content rules.
Which is why email isn't dead.
Create really good stuff, and send it to your audience. Often.
They look. They like. They learn. They share.
They trust.
So rather than always asking for something in email, give.
And give and give and give and give. Then ask.
#trust
What you think you need:
A massive contact list for your email distribution so you can get quick sales.
What you really need:
A ton of content that people trust and want to receive more of so they sign up for your newsletter.
Audience first. Business will take care of itself.
#marketing
3 things the few great emails newsletters have in common:
Simple reasons I've seen that separate the elite Β from the rest of us.
#marketing
Should you really gate your content?
3 principles to guide your decision π:
In most cases, gating content will not help you distribute it, will not help your users consume it, and is a transactional way of thinking.
So use gates appropriately.
#marketing
I'm surprised.
I thought people would all agree with me.
That long form email content gives the most value for folks.
But several people in the comments of my post said they liked shorter form newsletters, with a bunch of summaries with links to blog posts.
It acted as a filter for them to see whether or not content was worth their time to read or not.
And this makes sense.
We consume content in different ways.
Just another lesson that one size does not fit all :)
The podcast currently has 63 episodes available.