Content marketers, does the following scenario sound familiar?
You’re tasked with creating content that attracts publicity, links, and social shares. You come up with great ideas for content that you’re confident could accomplish these goals. However, any ideas that push the envelope or might offend anyone in the slightest get shot down by your boss or client. Even if a provocative idea gets approved, after feedback from higher-ups and several rounds of editing, you end up with a boring, watered-down version of what you originally envisioned.
Given the above, you're not surprised when you achieve lackluster results. Repeat this cycle enough times, and it may lead to the false assumption that content marketing doesn’t work for the brand.
In this post, I’ll answer two questions:
- How can I get my boss or clients to sign off on envelope-pushing content that will attract the attention needed to achieve great results?
- How can we minimize the risk of backlash?
Why controversy is so powerful for content marketing
To get big results, content needs to get people talking. Often times, the best way to do this is by creating an emotional reaction in the audience. Content that deals with a controversial or polarizing topic can be a surefire way to accomplish this.
On the other hand, when you play it too safe with your content, it becomes extremely difficult to ignite the emotional response needed to drive social sharing. Ultimately, you don't attract the attention needed to earn high-quality links.
Below is a peek at the promotions report from a recent controversial campaign that resulted in a lot of high-quality links, among other benefits.
Overcoming a client’s aversion to controversy
We understand and respect a client’s fierce dedication to protecting their brand. The thought of attaching their company to anything controversial can set off worst-case-scenario visions of an angry Internet mob and bad press (which isn’t always a terrible thing).
One such example of balancing a sensitive topic while minimizing the potential risk is a recent campaign we created for apartment listing site Abodo. Our idea was to use Twitter data to pinpoint which states and cities had the highest concentration of prejudiced and tolerant tweets. Bigotry in America is an extremely sensitive topic, yet our client was open to the idea.
Want to get a contentious idea approved by your boss or client? Here’s how we did it.
1. Your idea needs to be relevant to the brand, either directly or tangentially.
Controversy for the sake of controversy is not going to provide value to the brand or the target audience.
I asked Michael Taus, VP of Growth and Business Development at Abodo, why our campaign idea got the green light. He said Abodo’s mission is to help people find a home, not to influence political discourse. But they also believe that when you're moving to a new community, there's more to the decision than what your house or apartment looks like, including understanding the social and cultural tone of the location.
So while the campaign dealt with a hot topic, ultimately this information would be valuable to Abodo’s users.
2. Prove that playing it safe isn’t working.
If your “safe” content is struggling to get attention, make the case for taking a risk. Previous campaign topics for our client had been too conservative. We knew by creating something worth talking about, we’d see greater results.
3. Put safeguards in place for minimizing risk to the brand.
While we couldn’t guarantee there wouldn’t be a negative response once the campaign launched, we could guarantee that we’d do everything in our power to minimize any potential backlash. We were confident in our ability to protect our client because we’d done it so many times with other campaigns. I’ll walk you through how to do this throughout the rest of the post.
On the client’s end, they can get approval from other internal departments; for example, having the legal and PR teams review and give final approval can help mitigate the uncertainty around running a controversial campaign.
Did taking a risk pay off?
The campaign was a big success, with results including:
- More than 620 placements (240 dofollow links and 280 co-citation links)
- Features on high-authority sites including CNET, Slate, Business Insider, AOL, Yahoo, Mic, The Daily Beast, and Adweek
- More than 67,000 social shares
- A whole lot of discussion
Beyond these metrics, Abodo has seen additional benefits such as partnership opportunities. Since this campaign launched, they were approached by a nonprofit organization to collaborate on a similar type of piece. They hope to repeat their success by leveraging the nonprofit’s substantial audience and PR capabilities.
Essential tips for minimizing risk around contentious content
We find that good journalism practices can greatly reduce the risk of a negative response. Keep the following five things in mind when creating attention-grabbing content.
1. Presenting data vs. taking a stance: Let the data speak
Rather than presenting an opinion, just present the facts. Our clients are usually fine with controversial topics as long as we don't take a stance on them and instead allow the data we’ve collected to tell the story for us. Facts are facts, and that's all your content needs to offer.
If publishers want to put their own spin on the facts you present or audiences see the story the data are telling and want to respond, the conversation can be opened up and generate a lot of engagement.
For the Abodo campaign, the data we presented weren’t a direct reflection of our client but rather came from an outside source (Twitter). We packaged the campaign on a landing page on the client’s site, which includes the design assets and an objective summary of the data.
The publishers then chose how to cover the data we provided, and the discussion took off from there. For example, Slate called out Louisiana’s unfortunate achievement of having the most derogatory tweets.
2. Present more than one side of the story
How do you feel when you watch a news report or documentary that only shares one side of the story? It takes away credibility from the reporting, doesn’t it?
To keep the campaign topic from being too negative and one-sided, we looked at the most prejudiced and least prejudiced tweets. Including states and cities with the least derogatory tweets added a positive angle to the story. This made the data more objective, which improved the campaign’s credibility.
Regional publishers showed off that their state had the nicest tweets.
And residents of these places were proud to share the news.
Pleased WI was one of the top-10 least nasty places for pejorative tweets! Stay away from Louisiana. https://t.co/ijoAMsmKao
— Sam Million-Weaver (@millionweaver) March 9, 2016
If your campaign topic is negative, try to show the positive side of it too. This keeps the content from being a total downer, which is important for social sharing since people usually want to pass along content that will make others feel good. Our recent study on the emotions behind viral content found that even when viral content evokes negative emotions, it’s usually not purely negative; the content also makes the audience feel a positive emotion or surprise.
Aside from objective reporting, a huge benefit to telling more than one side of the story is that you’re able to pitch the story for multiple angles, thus maximizing your potential coverage. Because of this, we ended up creating 18 visual assets for this campaign, which is far more than we typically do.
3. Don’t go in with an agenda
Be careful of twisting the data to fit your agenda. It's okay to have a thesis when you start, but if your aim is to tell a certain story you’re apt to stick with that storyline regardless of what the data show. If your information is clearly slanted to show the story you want to tell, the audience will catch on, and you'll get called out.
Instead of gathering research with an intent of "I'm setting out to prove XYZ," adopt a mindset of "I wonder what the reality is."
4. Be transparent about your methodology
You don’t want the validity of your data to become a point of contention among publishers and readers. This goes for any data-heavy campaign but especially for controversial data.
To combat any doubts around where the information came from or how the data were collected and analyzed, we publish a detailed methodology alongside all of our campaigns. For the Abodo campaign, we created a PDF document of the research methodology which we could easily share with publishers.
Include the following in your campaign’s methodology:
- Where and when you received your data.
- What kind and how much data you collected. (Our methodology went on to list exactly which terms we searched for on Twitter.)
- Any exceptions within your collection and analysis, such as omitted information.
- A list of additional sources. (We only use reputable, new sources ideally published within the last year.)
For even more transparency, make your raw data available. This gives publishers a chance to comb through the data to find additional story angles.
5. Don’t feed the trolls
This is true for any content campaign, but it’s especially important to have an error-free campaign when dealing with a sensitive topic since it may be under more scrutiny. Don’t let mistakes in the content become the real controversy.
Build multiple phases of editing into your production process to ensure you’re not releasing inaccurate or low-quality content. Keep these processes consistent by creating a set of editorial guidelines that everyone involved can follow.
We put our campaigns through fact checking and several rounds of quality assurance.
Fact checking should play a complementary role to research and involves verifying accuracy by making sure all data and assertions are true. Every point in the content should have a source that can be verified. Writers should be familiar with best practices for making their work easy to fact-check; this fact-checking guide from Poynter is a good resource.
Quality assurance looks at both the textual and design elements of a campaign to ensure a good user experience. Our QA team reviews things like grammar, clarity (Is this text clearly making a point? Is a design element confusing or hard to read?), and layout/organization.
Include other share-worthy elements
Although the controversial subject matter helped this campaign gain attention, we also incorporated other proven elements of highly shareable content:
- Geographic angle. People wanted to see how their state or city ranked. Many took to social media to express their disappointment or pride in the results.
- Timeliness. Bigotry is a hot-button issue in the U.S. right now amidst racial tension and a heated political situation.
- Comparison. Rankings and comparisons stimulate discussion, especially when people have strong opinions about the rankings.
- Surprising. The results were somewhat shocking since some cities and states which ranked “most PC” or “most prejudiced” were unexpected.
The more share-worthy elements you can tack onto your content, the greater your chances for success.
Have you seen success with controversial or polarizing content? Did you overcome a client’s objection to controversy? Be sure to share your experience in the comments.
Brilliant piece. I was at a Buzzfeed editorial talk once where they said that every client says they want to be risky until you show them content related to vagina's and then they panic and reign it in :-)
This is some real next level marketing in terms of not sticking with the same old tactic. I have to say that when presented with a task to develop content in general you can run into a dead end once the inital aspects are taken care of. I think that what you did best is show that by making a controversial peice of content you will be in front of a lot of eyes, but the biggest is the strategy of delivery. Each point was excellent present data, both sides of the story, not to feed the trolls, and for me was not to have an agenda.
By doing this you can really create a useful and entertaining piece of content that help drive users. In this case I mean if you are looking to rent an apartment or purchase a home negative viewpoints of society does play a key so you created a tool for the companies clients but also shed light on areas that can improve their mindsets.
Thanks for this awesome piece.
Thank you, Tim :) Great point that you can create something that is both entertaining/useful but will also drive interest in the brand. Tying the idea back to our client was key, and I hope that point isn't lost on others -- otherwise you're creating controversy just for the sake of it.
I just want to say this is great and I'm stealing all of these tips!
Too many case studies only focus on results; not enough go into the elbow grease, convincing and objectivity it takes to get there.
Thanks, Tylor! Steal away :) Making the case to take a risk like this is definitely half the battle, especially when it's new territory for you.
Very Cool! Makes sense that this type of thing goes viral - I immediately had to know where my home state ranked, so I can totally get behind the geographical angle. Finding controversial ways to present information that's relevant to the brand (while also touching on share worthy elements) is the real challenge. I've already shared this with our team, thanks Kelsey!
Thank you, Paul. The geographic angle really piques curiosity in viewers! Great to hear you passed this along to your team. :)
Thanks Kelsey
this is of great help. As a business owner myself I can confirm 100% that in most cases the thought of damaging the brand or creating negative feelings with current loyal customers has a higher weight than reaching out more people... but the advises you provide to minimise the risks are really useful.
My main concern is though on time and budget. Being a small company the main problem may not be coming up with an idea, but on execution to ensure everything is well planned and prepared, trolls are not fed, etc. In house vs hiring an agency is part of the dilema I suppose.
Are there in your view any red lines which should not be touched in terms of topics?
Are there in your view any red lines which should not be touched in terms of topics?
Well you could take the same advice many people take when dating -- religion and politics should be avoided. ;) But this really depends on the brand. For example, we have done some pretty "out there" campaigns about sex and drugs but those topics are relevant to some of our clients' brands and who they were trying to target.
Thanks, good examples!. We thought once of using politics and despite we tried hard to come up with the correct angle to avoid trouble we decided not to go ahead at the end.
As for religion we used it once (wine related company) ... Guess which country in the world has the highest consumption of wine in the world?... Vatican and then provided with different data,etc.We got good response but not huge (probably not controversial really)
I just want to say, this post is a great piece of Information and I'm stealing all of these tips! Too many case studies only focus on results; not enough go into the elbow grease, convincing and objectivity it takes to get there.
Thanks Kesley!
The father of controversy, Bernard Shaw, would certainly had this great post bookmarked)
Seriously, creating content of art has to be unexpected and ALWAYS extract emotions from people.
Pretty old school reference there, Ivan :)
Controversy is great, but I guess there is a fine line between a good controversial post and of course libel or defamatory comments.
Great post Kelsey. I've noticed this effect in content before when I've just gone on a rant, but never gave it a second thought about using it as a tactic in itself.
Hi Kelsey,
I´ve read your article and It gives a very helpful tips. I´m going to try to adapt some ideas for some of my blogs in Spain, Thanks!. Please, can you tell me how did you collect the information from the tweets, especially the cities? I agree that the additional reputable sources should appear in the article. Best regards
It's good to know other agencies struggle to convince clients that controversial content can be used to an advantage! I agree with their note that any content strategy that could be deemed as "pushing the envelope" should be air tight in terms of data relevance and transparency - you're bound to get push back when you're putting an industry / social trend under the microscope.
Writing controversial content may not easy but this post give me an idea on how to write it without worrying.
Thanks Kelsey!
Hi Kelsey, this was an excellent analytical article. With some of my clients, I explain this concept to them and they are mostly on board. It's not until they see the results that they realize the power of great controversial content. I look forward to your next article.
Dear Kelsey,
That was a very well explained post! I think controversy is essential in our daily tasks as content creators since, sadly, it's one of the onliest thigs that can really attract the general public.
I loved how you exposed that you may want to add something positive to your article like the other side of the story, but I've a question: what if, for example, the company that makes the controversial post looses all the clients from the side you're "attacking"? What should you do in that case?
Thank you very much.
What if, for example, the company that makes the controversial post looses all the clients from the side you're "attacking"? What should you do in that case?
This is why we make sure to objectively present the data. That way you aren't attacking anything or taking a potentially polarizing stance. Think in terms of how a newspaper should cover a story objectively.
Thanks Kelsey
I am currently managing the SEO and online presence of a UK payday loans company. The challenge that i have found is that most people are against payday loans and lenders so why would anyone want to link with a website of this sort? I think this is one of the most difficult and volatile markets online to implement a good link building strategy, simply because of the nature of the business and bad reputation that the payday loans industry as a whole has received.
I have found that by creating content that is more valuable to people such as money saving advice, this has proved a lot more popular with people sharing through social media, their own various blogs and even commenting and interacting with my blog posts.
Thanks for your post!
Kirsty
[link removed by editor]
The challenge that i have found is that most people are against payday loans and lenders so why would anyone want to link with a website of this sort?
Think of a creative, outrageous publicity stunt that will get you covered in the major news (my tutorial here on Moz might have some inspiration). Masses of people will start to talk about the company online and on social media, and many of those mentions will happen to contain links and social shares.
Most "content marketing" and "link earning" is really just "publicity" by another name: Simply get the media, bloggers, and people to talk about you online, and that will result in mentions and links as natural by-products.
This advice will work for almost anyone.
Quite so. Publicity via journalism seem to have been the main drivers with SEO and link building being a corrollary benefit, at least that's how I interpreted Kelseys case study. But that seems to be the way to effective marketing. (Excellent article, BTW, Kelsey!).
I can concur with what Kirsty says. I run a payday loans company similar to the one Kirsty is currently working with. We've been active in SEO for a number of years have tried many different approaches to garnering links, however there is a certain stigma that comes with 'payday', which makes it challenging to get links on better quality sites.
Kelsey, great article BTW.
Thanks
John
Thanks. Good point about presenting the data vs taking a stance. It does require playing with title though, messing it a up will force people to ignore your "data presenting", they will just refer to the title.
Wonderful post Kelsey as usual. Simple & effective idea for content promotion & earning links. It is nothing but a link assets. I like the way you mention some great tips here!
I would love to know that do you have test the data for small & large businesses OR it is applicable for all?
Hi Kelsey!! Yes, I'm agree with your post, specially with this: "If your “safe” content is struggling to get attention." In the following words I'm becoming OBJECTIVE, so I'm not making any political propaganda, but for example, Donald Trump has applied this tech you said. He's not a classical politician, he makes people talk about him and he's not precisely talking about "safe" things about everyone. This tech has boosted his campaign in United States and in the world, like it or not.. In internet the graphs tell everything, so that is way I believe in you Kelsey.
In the beginning of the article you posted something about DoFollow and No-Follow links based in some campaigns...
What are these campaigns of? I read something about "antigay places." By the way, like Philipp Kotler said: "it tooks some hours to learn marketing, but a truly life to put it in action."
We have to take in consideration all the points you have listed here... but it won't always be something that our bosses or pals like 100%... we have to risk sometimes... and yes, like you said, don't feeding the troll!
Thanks Kelsey, I see that making this kind of material can make controversial, but we have also to care about the brading of our enterprises by doing this risky step :)
Hi Rodrigo, thanks for your comment! As far as the dofollow/nofollow links, that was a screenshot from our report with all of the placements this campaign received. So in the URLs you see are part of the titles from the published articles -- as you can see publishers covered a range of the data we provided. It wasn't just racial discrimination that we looked at, but also homophobic tweets, anti-female tweets, etc.
Hi Kelsey
As you well say, if just to talk about something I create controversy, as controveria is created ...
We are so used to being politically correct that when we see something that is out of the nomal 1) We striking and 2) offends us or like us. So perhaps the use of this technique, if properly focused not bad.
But as I say, we are so used to hearing what we want to hear that this controversy can be a double-edged weapon
Thanks Kelsey,
There's nothing more frustrating than having your work diluted or under underappreciated.
Thanks very good information, I find it very useful and I'm starting with seo
a good controversial content is not bias and supports facts, data to prove a certain area or side that makes it CONTROVERSIAL. others are doing it wrong and it's obvious that they are bias on how they explain and present the information. Making the readers misguided and lead to uninterested readers because others can sniff and recognize low quality content and again resulting to low engagement.
Thanks Kelsey