So you’re ready to launch some content.
Stop. Right. There.
In case you haven't noticed, our industry has evolved. As SEOs, we're expected to be an amalgam of technicians, analysts, creatives, and marketers. Agility is essential and if you want to acquire and sustain relationships with great clients, you’ve got to prove your worth in every effort you make or you won’t continue to earn your budgets.
Chances are, you’re already pushing out a great deal of content for your clients on a regular basis. Considering SEO, social, conversion, measurement, and analysis, there’s a lot that you have to get into place for success.
So how about some checklists?
These checklists in this post are meant to serve as simple reminders prior to content release, but they’re also intended to encourage you to think beyond on-page SEO elements. Rely on these lists to make sure you’ve considered every possible angle so that your content isn’t just filling up space, but is working toward building community, brand value and awareness, and driving qualified traffic and conversions.
Disclaimer: Like most of my posts, you're gonna have to hunker down and read. You’ll notice the formatting is not true to a traditional checklist. I’ll walk you through each item (that's the guidance part) and then provide you with a true checklist format in Trello (if you make it through).
Pre-planning and pre-outreach
Even though these checklists are meant to verify that you’ve got everything in place after the content has already been generated, there are a couple things that are worth checking off even before you develop your content:
Google Suggest for ideas and keywords
Even with a stellar strategy, you’re going to need one-off ideas for your content so that you are building what people want, and also optimizing your content so that people can find it. Before you even make the effort on your content, go to Google and see if suggest can give you some direction.
What you have in mind may have already been done (but maybe not so well), so you’ve got to figure out how to dominate with a more unique angle. Google suggest is a great way to do this.
Pre-outreach for buy in
Want to get the most out of your outreach efforts? Reach out to your community and target audience before you develop the content. This will help make link building easier and will ensure that you’re developing content that your audience actually wants. Depending on the magnitude of your content, there’s probably two ways to go on pre-outreach:
[1] Hefty stuff
If you’re putting together some hefty content like the SEOmoz Beginner’s Guide to SEO, then you’re going to want to do invest in some pre-outreach that involves something like a Launchrock campaign.
This will help you determine that there’s interest in this content before you actually generate it, and you will have built a list of followers (email addresses) that you can market to once the content is ready to launch. Distilled did this with DistilledU and within 24 hours they had collected more than 1,000 email addresses. It’s a brilliant way to make sure your content will be well received and that your efforts generating the hefty stuff will be well worth it.
[2] Simple stuff
If you’re putting together a basic blog post, infographic, informal video, etc, you’ll still want to do some pre-outreach, but your effort will be less involved (you won’t need a Launchrock campaign around it). Once you’ve figured out the angle you’re going to take and the audience you’re targeting (particularly some influencers), try reaching out and ask them if the content you’re about to produce would be useful. Try providing a basic outline and see what kind of feedback you get. Involving influencers and target audience members will help you get buy in before you even go to the trouble of creating the content, increasing your chances of success.
On-page SEO stuff
Of course, you always want to make sure you’ve accounted for basic SEO stuff:
Keywords in page title
Your page title is probably one of the most important factors for on-page SEO. It used to be that you wanted to try to keep it to 70 characters. But now, Google may take the liberty of revising it so that it is more relevant to the query and could use your URL as the title instead of the actual coded page title. Bottom line: make sure your title is relevant to your content and keyword rich. I prefer to include personality in my titles, but sometimes that makes for some seriously long titles.
With everything in SEO, you’ll probably want to test this out and see what you find to be most effective.
Keywords in headings
Don’t force it, but if you’re able to naturally integrate keywords into your headings, do it. I like AJ Kohn’s practical advice on headings and how they should seamlessly lead the reader through the content. So, when you’re finished with the post, go back and just read the headings all the way through. If there’s a way to smooth out the transitions, do your reader a favor and make some alterations. Paying attention to stuff like this will keep your readers engaged for longer, increasing time on site and the possibility of conversion (or sharing).
Keywords in body copy
Check that your keywords are integrated into your body text. Also check for natural variations on the keywords that are closely related to the topic. Your goal is to aim for relevance so that the page gets matched with the appropriate query. It’s really important to get the SEO integration right, but it’s just as important to make sure you’re delivering copy that’s easy to read. Ultimately, you want your reader to share what they’re reading, so make sure it’s packed with value and not just stuffed with keywords and their variants.
Descriptive alt text and images
Images can make or break your content, so make them count. Be thoughtful about how they are enhancing (or distracting from) your message. As far as SEO goes, be sure that you’ve covered your bases with images. Integrate the appropriate keywords into the image file name as well as the alt description. Keep in mind that image file names and alt tags are meant to provide the engines with a way to determine what the image is about, so don’t just stuff keywords into these places if they don’t in fact describe the image. This won’t do you any good. You want relevant traffic and to provide a satisfying user experience.
Readability
There’s all kinds of important stuff that needs to be checked to ensure for effective readability (and also SEO). Not just so your post is easy to read, but so that it doesn’t get in the way of the reader doing what you’d like them to do.
Headings and subheadings
You should have some. Make sure they are descriptive and flow from the beginning to the end of the post.
Font and line height
Unfortunately, there’s no straight answer here for making your content 100% easy to read, so you may have to do some testing to ensure that your content is formatted for optimum font size and line height. Just make sure that you’re factoring this into your final check on readability. It’s really important.
Short paragraphs and images
Readers are most likely going to be daunted by too many words on the page (I know, I'm aware I have a problem). You want your content to be inviting even if there is a lot of information to share. So check that you are breaking up your text into shorter paragraphs that are easier to digest, and use meaningful images to supplement your message.
Access and shareability
This is probably more a checklist item for blog integration altogether, but make sure that the post is actually being crawled (once it's gone live). We’ve had so many clients have weird things go on with their robot.txt file that resulted in blocked content. Don’t be that guy. And make sure that there’s social share (and follow) buttons (not just links) on the post so that there’s no roadblocks for readers who actually want to share what they’re reading (and perhaps choose to join your community).
Conversion
Get the most out of your content by making it more targeted and actionable (and make sure it’s worth launching in the first place). Here are some things to consider prior to launch, but certainly you can be thoughtful of them prior to content generation:
Consider value and purpose
To make the most of your content efforts, everything you produce needs to be working toward achieving the goals of your strategy and accomplishing the bigger picture of your client’s overarching business objectives. To that end, each piece of content that you launch should have a very specific purpose and task that you want your user to complete when they interact with it. So, before you launch your content, you may want to ask yourself these questions:
[1] Is this content helping to achieve our goals?
If not, make the necessary adjustments so that it is. Get into the habit of asking this question at the inception of the idea.
[2] Does this content offer value to our readers?
Seems silly to put this on this list, but I’ve had to challenge my team with this before, so it definitely warrants a spot. Everything you do should hold value. If it doesn’t, then hold off on generating something that does. Quantity is important but only if the quality is inherent in the effort.
[3] What would I like the reader to do after they’ve interacted with this content?
Have you integrated a call to action that is either inherent in the message or a visual call out (maybe a graphic, icon, button, etc) to make the targeted action easy for the reader to complete? This should carry all the way through to setting up goals in Google Analytics in Measurement Setup below.
Integrate links to other posts
Don’t forget to integrate links to other relevant posts from your site, as well as from other credible, relevant sources in your content. It adds more value and it lets your audience know what you've been reading.
Note: you can dedicate a column on your blog that provides links to the most powerful posts available on your blog (this is also a great tactic for email marketing - more below). If the reader gets into the post and isn’t interested, some of these posts may attract their attention and keep them there (possibly assisting in conversion). If enough readers ditch the current post to go find the others, it would be ideal to track this all the way back to the goal that you set for this post and make the necessary changes.
Optimize meta description
The meta description is often neglected. Although it doesn’t influence rankings, it can most certainly aid in conversion. Ensure that you have a compelling meta description that helps the reader determine whether they’d want to read this post. Ideally, integrate the keywords you’re using to help the user with association (it helps them make the correlation that what they’ve searched for, and what you’re saying the post is about, is a direct match).
Measurement setup
If content launches and isn’t measured, does it make an impact? Make sure you’ve got these items covered so that you can track the effectiveness of your efforts:
Embed tracking code
Don’t laugh. It gets forgotten. A lot. That’s why it’s on the checklist. Make sure that whatever content you’re generating (blog post, infographic, video, microsite, etc.) that you’ve got tracking code on that sucker.
Set up goals
The hardest part about setting up goals is defining them. Every client is going to want to know what their ROI is going to be. Without setting up goals, there’s no way you can answer that. Although you can’t give any guarantees, you can at least help your clients define realistic goals, make efforts towards them, and then report on the metrics that are a result of your hard work. You can use Google Analytics for this, so make sure you’ve got your goals setup in GA so that they are ready for tracking.
Set up other tool stuff
Make sure all of the other tools you are using for measurement are ready to receive data (SEOmoz, Raven, Sprout Social, KISS Metrics, etc). From SEO to social and conversion, make sure all the tools are rearing to go.
Outreach and social
The most critical part of outreach happens before you ask anyone for anything. It’s the time you spend fostering quality relationships so that you have a community of people who actually want to help you. If the only time you’re spending on relationships happens when you’re doing outreach, you’re doing it wrong.
There is no shortcut to outreach. And if you want your outreach to be successful, you have to work at building a community. The only trick to this is being human. Be a genuine person who works hard and cares about people. Then, all you have to do is bust your ass (see, no shortcuts), do good work, and people will want to help you.
To that end, just because you put good content on your blog, doesn’t mean people are going to read it. Even if you’ve established a strong and supportive community, you have to do something to get the word out. Outreach isn’t easy, and when you don’t properly dedicate the time to it, you won’t get the most out of your efforts.
If you’re going to the trouble to write valuable content, seal the deal with effective outreach. Here’s a few items for you to consider:
Connect with the people you’ve mentioned in your content
Clearly there are several ways of doing this (and if you've done pre-outreach, this part should be a breeze). You can do this via email, DM (if they are following you on Twitter), or other social outlets like Google+, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. If you have absolutely no relationship with them, do a little research about them beforehand. And then of course, let them know that their post was solid and was a really great fit, so you included it.
If they happen to link to or share your content, thank them (for the love of Pete)! Monitor your outlets and your analytics following the launch and take the time to thank people (this is called building relationships and it’s good for you).
Connect with key influencers
Hands down, you want to connect with key influencers who you may not have mentioned in your post, but may be interested in sharing with their (ginormous) audience due to quality, relevance, or unique perspective.
A HUGE note here: For me, I want influencers to share my content because it’s good, not just because they like me and are doing me a favor. As a result, I am very thoughtful about which influencers I ask to share my stuff as I do not want to abuse the relationship. Also, don’t over inflate your expectations. It’s their prerogative to say no (as they should if it’s not a match for their community). So, before you reach out to an influencer, I’d recommend being selective about who that is so that they are more inclined to say yes and don’t cringe every time they get a DM or a request for share email from you.
Connect with your community
There’s a ton of ways to do this, but there’s one method that is greatly underused. Brace yourself for this one. Use the phone. That’s right, there’s this thing called the phone and you can use it to talk to people. Seriously. Especially when you’re trying to build awareness and do outreach in your local community or with the media. Give them a call, let them know what you’re up to. If they’re interested, you can email (or social) the content so they can possibly link to it, or send it on to others who would find it useful. I’m betting you’ll stand out, hopefully make a good impression, and work toward a sustainable and rewarding partnership.
Use social
I heart Twitter
Especially in the SEO industry, Twitter is going to be one of the fastest ways to spread the word about your content and hopefully get retweeted.
It’s ok to tweet the same content out a few times throughout the day, but make sure that you’re using a different teaser. If appropriate, call out specific tweeps. Be respectful of time zones, and if you’re going to use the whole “in case you missed it” line, only use that once.
Think about different and creative approaches for alerting your audience throughout the day. Make sure that you have a tweet button conveniently located for people to tweet the post. You can even provide a “tweet this” link after each tweetable thought to get more retweets or engagement from your post. For any social outlet, but especially when you’re using Twitter for outreach, always keep your goals in mind and remember what you’re trying to help the audience achieve.
Google+
Google+ is not Twitter or Facebook or LinkedIn. When you post the content here (same goes for any social outlet), you need to have a different approach. Use yet another unique teaser that is different than what you’ve used for all of the other outlets.
Be sure to optimize your posts for maximum SEO benefit.
When I’m pushing content out on G+, I usually feature more than just one line of text. You could also try curating a few posts (vs. just sharing the one piece of content). In other words, select another relevant post or two that compliments the theme of the content you’re trying to get traction on. Provide key takeaways and links just it’s a mini-blog post. Just make sure if you do this that you break up the text into short paragraphs and use formatting so that it’s easy to read.
You can also link directly to your G+ posts from Twitter and draw some of your audience over that way. Test different ways of spreading the word about your content on social media and see what works best.
LinkedIn for good measure
Sure you want to make sure you’ve featured your content on LinkedIn, but do more than just post it as your status. Stop by your user groups and provide the content there.
And the others, too
There are so many other social outlets that you can use for outreach.
You know which ones are going to perform the best for the content at hand. Make sure they're all on your checklist.
Schedule email marketing
Email marketing is another powerful outreach method. And, if you’ve done some pre-outreach, you already have a qualified list of people who want to be in your target audience.
Note: Feature just the one piece of content that you’re marketing. That’s right, just that one. If you have other great content that people might want to read (or that you want to draw their attention to), you can include it in a dedicated column in the email template (just like on your blog). You’ll find that you’ll get some additional click throughs to other valuable stuff on your site.
Call to action from other places on your website
Double check that you’ve included outreach from relevant place on your website. Clearly your home page is a great one. If you have a rotating image feature in your header, design a slide just for this content and integrate some messaging about the specific task you’d like the reader to accomplish (all stuff to aid in conversion). If you are doing paid advertising, be sure that your add and all associated assets reflect the goal of your content as well.
Analysis, reporting, and testing
There's always more to do than just get your content launched. Now you've got to analyze it, report your winnings to your client, and of course invest in some testing.
Validate your efforts
Now for the fun part. The content has launched and the data is pouring in. Time to select the significant metrics to provide to your client. The most important thing to remember here is that the metrics you report send an important message to your client. If you’re focusing too much on keywords, or too much on (the wrong) social data, you're probably not doing yourself (or them) a favor.
Validate your efforts by reporting on the goals that you have set out for this content in the first place. Once the campaign (or month) is over and you’re being asked to show the client what you’ve been working on and how it’s gone, come all the way back to these goals. If you did your measurement setup properly, you'll have all kinds of data to stand behind what you've done.
We are all going to have different ways of reporting to our clients because every client is different, has different goals, and we all have diverse approaches and things to accomplish. The biggest thing to note here is that if you don’t provide accurate reports that actually measure what you’re doing for the client, you won’t earn their budget.
Prepare report for client
What we’ve been working on presenting in our reports lately is re-introducing the goals that have been defined (remember way back in Measurement Setup?), illustrate the efforts that have been taken in the campaign (or over the last month) to work toward those goals, and then show the metrics that reflect those efforts (screen shots that illustrate everything from GA to social and email marketing metrics).
Ideally, this will open up an educated discussion about expectations and results. There may be some adjustments that need to be made to efforts in general moving forward. Maybe some testing can be done. Maybe you need a new approach (or even some more concrete goals).
This isn’t meant to be all encompassing of our reporting process. Just some thoughts to be aware of and have on your checklist.
Do some testing
You can set up some content experiments so that you can test different variants and determine what can be improved in your content. If you're testing your content, you can stop guessing and figure out exactly what your audience wants. Testing will improve conversion rate, and it will help you deliver more value (which will help you earn your budget every year).
TL;DR Bonus
If you made it all the way to the end (I’m sure you read every word), then congratulations. You may have these checklists in Trello. Add your own items, move stuff around. Make them your own. Hopefully this is an effective springboard that will help you formulate your own checklists to match your process.
Always a work in progress
So it’s quite possible that I’ve left some things out (which I’m happy to hear about below). These checklists reflect some of the things that we’ve been working on not forgetting. We try to keep our process pretty agile, so it's continually evolving, just like our company, so I anticipate some revision will be necessary in the next couple months. At the very least, I hope these lists will help you to think beyond basic SEO stuff and just getting a bunch of content out. Good luck, and let me know how it goes.
Printed to use it with my clients.
I think no better compliment can be done, Mack :)
Thanks Gianluca! I'm so glad. That's awesome.
did something similar to Gianluca Fiorelli :) a perfect list!
Nice! Most awesome and wide checklist with descriptions and great suggestions) Bravo!
Thanks so much. Really glad you've found it useful.
Another great post from you Mackenzie! So many great actionable points that anyone who is pushing content should be focused on. Obviously with the huge shift into content marketing, there is probably a lot of people trying to get content out there that may not know exactly how to go about it. Your strategy seems to be working very well because I have definitely been reading your stuff and you have been getting some good push. Keep up the good work!
Thanks Philip. I appreciate your continued support :)
What an amazing post Mackenzie. Hats off to you!!!
This will be very useful for future projects.
What are your thoughts regarding a local (non-English) community with not too many influencers or contacts to choose from? Any good approach you could share?
Thank you!
Thanks so much. As for your question, I assume you're asking about outreach. if you're dealing with a local community, I would definitely look to make some face-to-face contact. Pre-outreach would work well as you could survey and get some feedback on what you are about to develop for this group. I'd also do some research online and figure out who else could benefit from this content. Right now it probably seems like your vertical is local and small, but I'm sure the content can be leveraged into another niche online. Hope that helps.
Great read for today.
Best content strategy to get the fruitful results.
What an awesome guide!! Thanks Mackenzie for providing us step by step process to reach a new level of content which can be used for building community, relationships, increasing traffic & converting into sales. I'm out of words :) Sending this to my content team right away.
Thanks.Hyderali
Great! Glad you will get some use out of it Hyderali. Let me know how it goes.
Mackenzie - I applaud your great interaction with commenters. Its amazing what some simple interaction with people reading your article can do to increase its value. Love the checklist - you covered the entire gamut here.
Well thanks Hansen. The best part is hanging out and chatting with the Moz community. Glad you enjoyed the post and hope it works well for you.
Awesome read Mackenzie. That is a lot of tabs opened in my Chrome :) (I use mouse middle click for opening other post links)
Thank you. Yeah, sorry about the new windows. It's my preference to have posts that take me away from a website open in a new window, even though it's probably not the best user practice :) Glad you enjoyed the post.
Sorry I didn't mean that, external posts opening in new tab is always a good practice
Full of GREAT suggestions! Thank you for sharing Mack!
My pleasure! And you're welcome.
In the meta description section you note: Ensure that you have a compelling meta description that helps the reader determine whether they’d want to read this post. Related to that point, that's the time to also add your open graph parameters so that an optimized image and blurb appear when a visitor shares your content.
Yes, great point Mark. Thank you and I'll add that to the Trello board when I update.
That's in there now Mark. Sorry for the delay.
Great post! I really appreciate the 'hands-on' approach and the checklist is awesome!
Awesome. Glad you will get some mileage out of it :)
What a great but very simplified list! I know I almost always leave out some silly basic thing when releasing a new site and end up having to go through everything again... think I might use this as a basis for my own checklist, thanks
My pleasure Stewart.
Great beast of a post! It helps to be reminded about some of this stuff now and again, especially the post-launch stuff... Many (including myself, sometimes) often have a "post and forget" attitude to this stuff.
Very much so. Glad it will be useful.
Thanks for the great post and the Trello checklist, Mackenzie! It's great to see a thorough, practical guide to content strategy. Without a good procedure like this in place, it's too easy to crank out content without thinking about what it's for and who it's targeted at. Thanks again!
My pleasure Alice!
It’s really an incredible write up from beginning to end which transparent each and every point of blogging or online business success. I personally loved the point of pre-planning of content which is really an incredible point to be success full blogger with right content on the web.
Thanks Mackenzie Fogelson for sharing with US a in-depth knowledge!
I love that ME/WE pic! (must admit I'm a bit hazy this morning and it took me a few seconds). We're trying to teach our in-house copywriters the merits of proper formatting for SEO this week. This guide is very timely, thanks!
Oh great! Perfect timing :) Good luck!
I've been using Trello for team to-do lists for some time now, however, I only just discovered that you could add actual check boxes to Trello cards via your example. Awesome, thank you!
Great! It's always the little things :)
Outreach - 'use the phone' - radical, awesome thinking, actually talking to real people - whatever next!
But what if I want to hide behind my desk and even only talk to my colleagues in the same office over instant messenger? ;)
Great post, it's all too easy to get into churning out content without really focusing on what it is for so an approach like this that helps keep focused on the end goal and integrates the oh' so necessary outreach to make things work is always a great read.
Good stuff. :)
Thanks Marcus. And yes, it's easy to forget that it's real people we're dealing with and not just machines. A little personal outreach goes a long ways these days :)
Thanks for the write up Mackenzie. And much thanks for the Trello link. I love using Trello for our web development and SEO tasks :)
The interesting portion that we've been working through is the pre-launch for small/local businesses. There is a good post here https://www.seomoz.org/blog/seo-pricing-costs-of-services - that shows a lot of agencies service hyper-local and small businesses. The content generated for these campaigns isn't ground breaking a lot of the time, but can be influential locally with local papers, blogs, and circulars. If you can get in those, you can usually get a great local link too. You can get pretty good results locally without the full-on push a larger campaign requires if you get a little creative and find the local publishers that are thirsty for content.
You're welcome. Glad you can get some use out of it!
Awesome post, Mackenzie! I've just passed it over to my colleagues who are involved with planning content strategy.
I like your thoughts on how to go about using G+ for outreach. My take on it: if you have a description - use it. I heart Twitter too (like you) but the character limit can be so restricting sometimes, especially when tweeting content with long titles. That's one of the advantages that G+, FB and LinkedIn have that Twitter doesn't have. Make use of that space! And if you can tag people/companies (applicable to G+ and FB) then do so!
Definitely agree and thanks for your kind words. My favorite feature on Google+ is how you can link to your posts. I usually start there and do a bit of a lengthy (mini-blog) post. Then grab the link to it and post it on Twitter. It's a great way to get more content out without actually drafting an entire post on your blog (even though there are benefits there as well). :)
Now this is right up my street - love it! :)
The pre-outreach part that you mention is great... giving people ownership of a piece of content before you've even launched it works like a dream. I'd flown out to the US (I'm based in the UK) to meet some of our key bloggers at a conference last year and got some input, after a few beers, on a graphic we were working on. It's been, by far, the most shared piece of content we've ever done.
Also, one thing to add is competitor outreach. We've had a lot of success lately by finding pages that have similar pieces of content, or are intrinsically linked, and doing a bit of good old fashioned link begging. As we're doing stuff that's different to everyone else we've picked up links from competitor sites (e-commerce) and pages that are trying to rank for the same keywords that we are.
Finally, once you have that list of competing pages, check who they're getting links from (Either manually through OSE or by some API magic) and outreach to them too... filtering, of course, by DA / MR / PR / whatever else floats your boat.
Thanks again for the great post,
Matt
I do agree that DA, MR and PR are crucial factors. They are primarily how i judge each and every site
All these are important but MOZtrust is also big factors, when we analyse any site and Mack your every article is amazing.
Thanks for your feedback, Matt. That's a great idea. Especially because we view many of our competitors as partners, it would be great to consider them for outreach. I'll be sure to update our internal list (and the Trello board).
Basic yet powerful post. Pre Planning and Outreach is a must in this hardcore competition.
I've added that in there now Matt.
After spending the time reading your article had the same first thought asgfiorelli1 to use it with clients, Loved it Good Work.
Thanks so much and I'm glad you're going to put it to use!
I think a lot of site owners fail to include links to other relevant posts, which is such a wasted opportunity. You don't want to drown your content in links, but one or two to really great sources of content (even if they aren't your own) can add a lot of value to your own words.
Definitely agree. And it provides a very easy opening for outreach.
Thanks for sharing Mackenzie. Just sent the link to a client. Good stuff and thumbs up. :-)
Great! And thanks!
Great post. It's coincidental that today we just launched one of our most viral potential pieces of content to date. I forgot about reaching out to influencers directly and asking them if they have use for it. Good thing it's not too late.
I like the idea about dedicating a column on your blog that provides links to the most powerful posts. Do you have any plugin recommendations?
Thanks and congrats on your content launch. If you're on Wordpress, there are several different plugins that you can use to feature your posts. I'd do a search for [wordpress featured post plugin] and pick one that you think will work well.
Thanks! I got one up and running already!
I believe adding Authorship Markup is an important step in the process.....
Yes, I completely agree that you need to check and make sure that you've got Authorship properly integrated. That would go nicely in the Measurement Setup section. I'll be sure to update the Trello board.
That's updated now Lin. Thanks!
Fantastic post Mackenzie. Refreshing to have a step-by-step guide in plain English. :)
Thank you. And you're welcome :)
Very nice checklist. Very complete. It will definitely be of great use. Thanks!
You're very welcome Roberto. Thanks for reading!
This is very comprehensive - great checklist / post!!
Great! Thanks Julien. Enjoy!
Thanks, checklist saved.
We are working on outreach by being active on social media and building relationships. Hopefully they will share our content, but I like your idea of getting influencers involved, so hopefully they will share.
This checklist is great...It always takes me so long to create content because I feel like I'm missing something. As a result, I end up not putting enough content. I think it's relevant to not only newbies in the SEO game, but to veterans as well. I know I often forget the basics and this goes over that and so much more. Trello bonus is definitely a bonus. I am probably going to be integrating some of the info here in one of my local business seminars to help educate my clients. ;) Thanks!!
Great. Glad to hear you'll get some use out of it and make it your own.
This post was, without a doubt the most useful and singularly comprehensive overview, I have ever read online. Thanks for taking the time to remind us of these things. No matter how many checklists and schedules we have, we always forget something. Overviews like this always help keep me on track. Cheers.
You're very welcome Phil. Yes, it has been very helpful for us as well so we wanted to share :)
I have a habit of just writing and posting my content on my blog. Is it really important to always read what I wrote before hitting Publish button? How can I turn a simple post into an interesting stuff to read?
Doing your own research before posting is a good way to get the message out.
Google keywords suggestion and keyword research is one good tool i always use.
Extraordinarily helpful and well-plotted post. Thanks for sharing!
The Trello link doesn't seem to work - is there a new link available?
Sorry about that.
Try this: https://trello.com/board/a-basic-yet-essential-pre-post-content-launch-checklist/509ec301b906c4b134020ce0
Perfect, thanks!
Great checklist :)
Thanks for sharing
A good collection and different point of view from the general pre and post checklist I have seen in the past.
Thanks for the checklist.
As a former project manager, I'm a big fan of using checklists to ensure maximum impact for your (finite) efforts. Even the most experienced people can benefit from consistent workflows.
Checklists are also useful for identifying ways to improve your overall processes, and save yourself from having to redo work.
I think that two aspects of creating content that are often overlooked are:the planning phase: knowing where you are headed before you start working on anything (e.g. goals, overall strategy, etc.)value for readers: I don't think you can over-emphasize this aspect. Sometimes we get so wrapped up in what we enjoy or the keywords/SEO that we forget that the bottom line is: will anyone read and share this?
All good points Branain. I would caution that checklists aren't meant to drive process, just a means for making sure that no balls get dropped. We try to be agile and make sure that what we need to do for our clients is at the heart of every "checklist." This makes it a lot harder to systematize your process, but it ensures that you don't forget what's important (delivering value to the client).
A bit late, but still, bunch of thanks for the Trello board idea and the ready to use board you've made! And of course for the comprehensive article:)
Our website would love to add this checklist to our platform, check out www.hydralist.com for a platform to exchange browse and create checklists relevant to your life :)
Brief, crisp and informative lists, few days back i was trying to make such lists you simplied my work Mackenzie!! thank you
Thanks for sharing Mackenzie. I had just made a simple version of this checklist based and keep it on my white board.
Lovely stuff Mackenzie. Thanks. Many great items in your list that we haven't been doing :)
Here's another thing we like to do during the pre-outreach phase:
Rather than only focusing on the influencers themselves, we like to do some "related entity research" on each of the influencers -- to see if there are more accessible, influential or current opportunities worth exploring.
Let's say we were to mention Mick Jagger in an article, we won't only focus on Jagger as an influencer (honestly, what are the chances of him responding....) but we will spend a little time (5-10 minutes max) creating a list of related entities / people / places / products / organisations that either have a long-standing (or if we're lucky a very current) relationships with our central figure.
So in this example... our list of related entities might include "Rolling Stones", Keith Richards, the band's latest album and as I just discovered while researching this fictitious scenario, the band's recently released documentary called "Cocksucker Blues".
So after a cursory 5-10 minutes of research, we now have many more options for reaching out. E.g. the movie director, movie and music journos and perhaps even Jagger himself who's probably more willing to comment on something to do with his latest movie release rather than some old news.
Bottom line: do a little "related entity research" and you may uncover a few highly accessible, influential or current outreach prospects.
Sounds like a great tip. Thanks for adding it to the conversation.
Wow, great post Mackenzie! I know the checklists are out on Trello for us to use, but quick question (suggestion) for SEOmoz: have you considered adding a convert to PDF option for blog posts?
I like the connect to your community suggestion. I'm not the greatest speaker, but I've presented at two local Code Camps already and once in front of a classroom. There is not a lot of content available locally for SEO so I've been sharing what I know. This connection has provided me with numerous clients and also with more speaking engagements. I think this part is important and not very difficult to do.
Thanks for sharing :).
You're welcome George. And certainly having posts as PDFs that you can quickly access offline would be nice. I usually put most everything I want to read (or have read) in my Pocket so that I can access it later. You can view it offline if you are sure to download before you're without an internet connection. Hope that's helpful.
Awesomeness. Great post Mackenzie. Thanks for making it so detailed.
Just thought of sharing this amazing content distribution template as well.
Actually the best way to get content is to go to google keyword tool and see what people are searching for, when doing keyword research, you can do blog post research as well
Great list of suggestions for your blog. If you follow all of these tips your SEO will be on the right track. And you will rank high on Google search engines. I just built a new site 2 months ago and follow these exact steps and rank in Google #1 already. Being in PR 1 is not the best but at least I am listed on Search Engines. Which only means with a bit of dedicated and time I can rank 4 in 6 months.
This checklist list must be in favorite ;)
SeoMoz tools help to check it really easily.
Great read am making this required for my team to read. Also thank you for creating the trello board! We love us some trello
We do too! Good luck! I'll be updating the board in the next week or so with some of the great feedback I've received here.
Awesome post. I recently started to do more with content marketing. I will create a checklist based on this post for all the content I publish.
Great! Hope the Trello board will be useful to you!
Nice Mack,
Nice To Do's for some "new to SEO" guys out there.I agree in all your mentioned tips. I guess this must be a little reviewer and guide before launching the created plan. I like the ideas that are very well-presented. Hope to read more from you.
Thanks so much.
I'm going to use your checklist right now with my team. Thanks a lot!!