Wednesday, March 23, 2016

[New Post] 5 Simple Considerations for Packaging and Presenting Content

 

Blogs

5 Simple Considerations for Packaging and Presenting Content

Victoria Harres

blog_DigitalHome

Digesting a page in print is nothing like experiencing content digitally. The digital world allows for a much more interactive experience.

The expectations viewers have when consuming your digital content are much higher and the job of the publisher is more complex.

Yet, we can get so focused on what the words in our message will be that we give little consideration to the broader experience someone will have with our blog post, article, press release or white paper.

If you want audiences to return and engage with you again and again (who doesn’t?), your entire content package – or content experience – must be considered. And it needs to be considered long before you upload, publish, and distribute your content.

A major reason for this is that search engine algorithms are continually giving more weight to human behavior. As shown by the best practices in PR & SEO: Still Driving Discovery, you will be rewarded with better search visibility when you publish content that people spend time on, interact with, and share across their networks.

When starting down the content creation path, keep these five simple things in mind to ensure your viewers encounter the best experience possible and you achieve the results you desire.

Words convey: Whether it’s an article covering new product features, an ebook about your industry’s latest trends, or a cute cat video, the first requirement of a great content experience is providing quality information that delivers on your headline’s promise.

Even if a non-speaking feline is the only featured character in your story, you need to think carefully about what you want to say. For instance, a video can’t reach its full potential without a captivating title and appropriate tagging. Fluffy walking a tightrope is not certain to go viral unless you make sure people can find it. The same applies to your blog post or product announcement.

Words are essential to any online content experience. They help introduce the content, categorize it, and tell your story. So choose your words wisely.

Visuals engage:  A captivating title and great story are a must, but to hook your audience you need to consider visual elements.

Content that includes an image or video delivers more views and inspires more sharing. Jamie Heckler details this in her blog post and infographic about The State of Multimedia in Press Releases.

Visuals help readers connect with your message or story, and social media users are much more likely to share something with an engaging photo or video than something which is text only.

If you’re writing a white paper, think about adding call-out graphics that highlight a quote or statistic used in the text. If you’re publishing a blog post, add a header image and other multimedia to break up the text and help illustrate the topic. A press release will ultimately perform better if you include a video, and it’s hard to find a story on any media site that doesn’t include a photograph or other graphic element.

Remember that your photos and videos don’t always have to involve professionals behind the camera, but they do need to help your story.

SE-CO-4.3.1_PR-and-SEO-Still-Driving-Discovery-Content-GuideDirections convert: Whether you’re on a road trip through Texas or trying to find something online, everyone appreciates direction.

Clear road signs can save so much time.

Digitally speaking, you need to make sure your audience can find their way without getting lost or confused.

A clear call-to-action can be worth its weight in gold — or leads.

Point your audience in the right direction by offering more than one road sign or opportunity to take action. The second call-to-action serves as a reminder about the desired destination, in case your audience missed the first opportunity to follow your path.

Sharing expands reach: If your readers share your content, you have the potential of reaching a much broader audience than your own. But, first, you have to set your content up so that it’s easy to share.

Write headlines that are short enough to be tweeted, and include one or two lines in your content that stand alone and would make the perfect tweet (right length + interesting fact).

Additionally, make sure the page where your content is published has buttons for easy posting to Twitter, Facebook and other key social media channels. These also serve as a reminder or call to action for your readers.

No place like home: Your content and the website or page it is housed on must work together. They have to complement each other to ensure your message is easy to digest and as accessible as possible.

The appearance of your content is the first impression you’ll make and visual appeal does matter. It draws the reader in, helps your content achieve authority faster and keeps your audience on the page longer.

It must also be search optimized to add to your content’s discoverability.

Ultimately, you want your reader to have an exceptional experience with your content that leads them to the next step.

A rich content experience was top of mind during our recent redesign of PRNewswire.com. We wanted to offer a content experience that satisfies all of our audiences’ individual needs and flows well.

Check out the press release to see how we made it even easier to find the news, resources, and solutions you need, then let us know what you think!

Author Victoria Harres is vice president, strategic communications and content at PR Newswire. Her team leads social media, PR, creative and blogging for the brand. Vicky was the original twitterer on @PRNewswire and continues to be part of that crew. If she's not at her desk, you'll likely find her in the garden.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, click on the following link: Unsubscribe

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

[New Post] 7 Ways to Mix It Up and Make Your Marketing New Again

 

Blogs

7 Ways to Mix It Up and Make Your Marketing New Again

Eva Rohrmann

ideas to inspire your marketing and pr

Any professional can get into a groove and follow the same routine of how they do things. This makes sense: It's part standardizing processes for efficiency, and part "if it ain’t broke, don't fix it."

But communications professionals know that if their campaigns are going to rise above every other message coming at buyers and influencers across channels, "don't fix it" is not the path to continued success or better results.

The new standard in communications playbooks is to require PR pros and marketers to get out of their groove and mix things up.

Experimentation and trying new tactics must be integrated into your communications planning process.

However, just adding a field titled “What's New” to your marketing and PR campaign brief may not supply the spark needed.

In an environment of tight budgets, constrained execution windows and limited staff time, it may be hard to get into the mindset of exploring new channels and tactics. This article is here to help, outlining a few ways to inspire your colleagues – and yourself – to mix it up.

1. Extend into adjacencies.

A relatively easy way to take your program further is to add an activity or target an audience that's similar to those activities and audiences already successfully deployed and reached.

For instance, perhaps your social media promotions have performed particularly well. An adjacent tactic could be to add paid social, targeting specific job titles and driving them to the same landing page for download.

While the cost in time and money is not zero, doing something new but close to actions you've already taken is not as complicated as powering up an entirely new activity.

2. Do less.

One danger of following a standard playbook is what I think of as "bringing a sledgehammer when a tack hammer will do."

Expending the same amount of precious marketing and communications resources on every project is not always optimal, and may divert energy from projects that really need extra juice.

Does every new enhancement really require an identical level of promotion?

Sure, you may need to take a deep breath before saying "this time we'll be doing less of X to accomplish Y and Z" and your colleagues may think the latest new product feature deserves all the attention in the world.

However, rather than supporting the latest feature with every paid and owned channel in the playbook, perhaps updating your client onboarding program will better target the users who will most benefit from and be most satisfied with the enhancement.

Keep in mind that the most important thing about doing less is that it may help supply the resources to do more on your next campaign.

N-CO-1.1.1_Reach-Your-Communications-Objectives-with-Mix-of-Tactics

3. Do more.

This can be a straightforward way of mixing it up, and if “do less” is underway elsewhere, you may be on your way to lining up the budget and staff resources necessary.

As an example, if a press release was an effective way to promote your last white paper, this may be the opportunity to invest in a series of releases announcing subsets of new research findings by different industries.

4. Add new.

Filling in your brief’s”What's New” field with a genuinely new promotion method or channel is likely very satisfying. After all, marketers and communicators like new things! And again, if you are do(ing) less in other parts of your program, the required resources may be available.

But where to start on what to add? Here's where you should go back to your playbook. Review the goals and target audiences you outlined; from there, you can identify additional ways to reach and nurture prospects.

Let's say your programs do really well in bringing contacts into your funnel, but the close rate has plateaued. Perhaps your “Add New” program item is to build out a new content set designed for late-stage conversion opportunities.

5. Stretch time.

Another way to break out of your groove is to mix up the timing of your efforts. Let's say your playbook calls for a big splash for "launch day," but then communications quickly fade out.  Has your audience really had enough time to discover and absorb your message and content?

For major projects and themes, compressing your efforts into a short timeframe may not be optimal. Instead of everything happening at once for a big launch, spread out efforts to give your current clients time to absorb the new information and your prospects time to find and engage with your campaign’s content.

This could include scheduling exclusive previews for the media and key customer advocates ahead of Day 1, delivering a new demo with the official announcement, and then creating a promotion calendar that rolls out new content in your owned channels over the next several months.

6. Compress time.

On the flip side, there may be programs that work better when the promotional elements are run on a tightly knit timeframe. Successfully recruiting webinar attendees may benefit from a shorter promotion timeline as prospects feel the urgency to Register Now when the date is fast approaching.

7. Reorient strategy to your audience mindset.

Do you still know your audience as well as you once did? Or have they moved on while you're still working out of a playbook developed a few cycles ago?

When Topic X was top of mind, your programs made your organization the go-to resource, but now your audience has moved on.

Repositioning the expertise of your organization to where community mindshare is heading is another way to mix it up.

The final idea to mix up your programs is to make “What's Being Tested” a part of the playbook, too. Experimentation and A/B testing are the best ways to inform how you can "mix it up" in your future programs – from sharing visual content in an adjacent social channel to modifying email subject lines according to your audience's current concerns.

Methodically evaluating how you mix it up will be the foundation for campaigns that break through and connect with your target audiences. Download Reach Your Communications Objectives with an Intelligent Mix of Tactics for more inspiration.

Author Eva Rohrmann is the director of solutions and customer lifecycle marketing for PR Newswire, designing integrated programs for communicators across the PR, marketing, and IR spheres.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, click on the following link: Unsubscribe