There’s a reason people balk at content marketing – it’s hard. Not only do we have to be marketers, but now we’re supposed to be subject-matter experts, writers, and designers? Sure, we can hire it out, and sometimes we should, but there’s something to be said for crafting a piece of content entirely on your own. It’s not just ego – it’s your vision and only you really understand what you want in the finished product.
For me, the gap is often in the design and illustration. I’m assuming you’re a subject-matter expert in something and can write about it competently (it’s ok if you’re not a poet). If you’re like me, and your expectations are bigger than your talents, I’d like to offer a few shortcuts I’ve learned for designing your own content.
1. Liven Up Text
It’s amazing what you can do with a few words and a splash of color. For example, I started a recent post by writing out how much money Google made last year:
With just one font and strategic use of color, I was able to not only emphasize that $29B is a lot of money, but I tied it to Google’s identity. Best of all, it only took a few minutes.
I have to come clean and admit that I learned this trick (a couple of these tricks, actually) from Rand. Here’s another example, from his recent post on the responsibilities of a modern SEO:
The image looks great, and it really livened up Rand’s post, but what is it, really? It’s just well-placed text with a splash of color. I’m not picking on Rand – my point is that these small touches can make a huge difference.
2. Keep It Simple
Even if you go beyond text, you don’t have to be an artist to create a simple illustration that effectively communicates an idea. Justin Briggs had a great post here recently on how Google might detect spam, and it included images like this one:
Practically speaking, it’s just some circles and arrows, but these images really helped illustrate the complex ideas in Justin’s post. It wasn’t the complexity of the design that mattered, but the depth of the ideas behind the design.
Let’s pick on Rand again. Here’s an image he did for a recent post on inbound marketing:
I’ll let you in on a little secret – boxes and arrows are one of Rand’s favorite tricks. It’s hard to argue, because this image is a lot more compelling than a bulleted list. I hope you’re also seeing a pattern here – it’s the quality of the thought behind the image that really matters.
I admit that I’m trying to keep this post to mostly SEOmoz examples – not to pat ourselves on the back, but to show that we practice what I’m preaching. Here’s an outside example I really like, though, a Minimalist Muppet poster created by Eric Slager:
Obviously, this one is a bit more complex than my previous examples, but the actual design elements are pretty simple. The concept is genius, but the graphic itself really is minimalist. The minimalist meme has been going around – here’s another example with superhero posters (via ScreenRant.com):
My minimalist Roger Mozbot illustration should make a bit more sense now. The moral of this story: you can do a lot with some basic skills, if the core concept is strong enough. Clearly, this is the work of talented designers, but you don’t have to be an Adobe Illustrator guru to create something similar. You just have to start with great ideas.
3. Plagiarize Yourself
It’s not stealing if you take your own stuff – good content creators learn when and how to re-use their own content. That doesn’t necessarily mean using the same image over and over (although there are times when even that can be very effective). It means learning how to re-use elements of your own illustrations, sometimes even within the same post. Recently, I did a post on marketing ethics, and I illustrated the post with whiteboard-style drawings like this one:
It won’t hang in a museum anytime soon, but I think the series of illustrations helped simplify a difficult topic. If you look at the 5 illustrations, you’ll see each of them have some variation on the same 5 elements:
You don’t have to be a connoisseur of the fine arts to realize that element #2 is just the same guy with a bowtie and element #5 is the blue car “painted” red. Take away the brick wall in the 1st image and the gray box, and I essentially created 5 illustrations with 3 main elements.
Last year, Rand did a great piece illustrating indexation issues. Some of the illustrations were pretty complex, like this one:
Before the days of Roger Mozbot (or, as we call it, the Time of Despair), Rand used to frequently create illustrations that were essentially Googlebot + Page icons + Arrows + Text. Again, I’m not picking on him – the finished products were great. Break them down, though (and pay attention over years of content), and you’ll see that Rand was re-using a lot of work he’d already done. That’s one of the reasons he can pound out an amazing blog post between 2-4am on a trans-Atlantic flight.
Re-use starts with being a curator of your own content. Eventually, you may even build some custom illustration libraries. Here’s an example – back in 2008, I wrote an e-book on CRO that started with an illustrated guide to conversion metrics. It included images like this one:
If you read my recent post on duplicate content and Panda, this may seem oddly familiar. That post used a number of similar web-page images, including:
In that post, I easily converted this basic template into 8 different illustrations. Condensed, those illustrations look something like this:
I don’t want to beat you to death with this point, but I think it’s often easy to miss how elements can build on each other. This kind of approach not only saves time, but it gives your content a consistent look and feel and can make your work look more professional.
You can also see how easy it would be to split these web-page templates into a basic library of layers (I actually have multiple Photoshop files, but the core concept is the same):
As you develop these design libraries over time, especially with an image as flexible as a basic web-page, you find more and more creative ways to use them. Best of all, the quality of your illustrations improves even as they take less time to create. You may even find yourself earning a reputation for your distinctive talent-impaired style.
So, Get to Work
Stop saying you’re “not a designer” and design something. It doesn’t have to be perfect, it just has to be based on a good idea. Over time, you’ll get better, even if you can only put in 10-15 minutes a day. If you find yourself staring at the computer screen for an hour, pick a new medium. A few months ago, I got up, walked to Office Depot, and bought a box of Crayola markers. It was one of the best creative decisions I’ve made in a long time. Whatever it takes, get started.
I read the headline as 'content creation' talent impaired. Not 'design' talent impaired.
Most of these examples, albeit, aesthetically 'meh', are examples of great content speaking for themselves.
Lucky me as I played a lot with Photoshop and fireworks so these images for presentation and blog posts sounds a bit more easier for me :) but I do have clear idea how pain full it is to get money out of the pocket for some very simple images/graphics…
Content marketing is not only text you write but its lot more than just text and it’s any kind of graphics one can think of like images, videos and other stuff…
These tips for displaying your complex ideas with simple design yourself images is a great idea… and I believe anyone without much skills in designing can make these and display his idea… because at the end of the day it’s not design quality but it’s the idea that matters…
Nice post. For the more complex information, it's great to have the design there. But when using basic graphs, chunks of text, boxes and arrows etc., I'm leaning much more towards using HTML and CSS, just for the confidence that it's readable by the search engines (and a bit harder for people to steal). It'll be even better when HTML5 and CSS3 have extensive browser support.
Glad you touched on this. I've definitely been morphed into the kind of hybridized role you described above... and our company's seen increased sales because of it. So.. it works. Hurray!
Hybrid roles are definitely the way forward, even if it's just basics. As well as making you more employable, it also means you never get bored!
Plus, HTML/CSS is generally a lot easier for most SEOs than design work ;)
I'm a little anxious at the reception my comment might receive here, but there is something to be said for drawing your own ideas, graphics etc on dare i say it, paper. Scan it, watermark it, tag it, use it in your content.
You could probably get an idea down in moments and save yourself a lot of time rather than trying to learn a software program like photoshop/illustrator. Of course I understand that your doodling abilities might need some judgement before publishing, and indeed some people just don't have these type of skills, which is even more reason to think about using video and audio which in my mind is vastly underused in content marketing.
Honestly, I think that's a great point. I actually did those whiteboard-style drawings on paper first, with marker. Unfortunately, being a perfectionist, I just didn't like the end result (in this one case). It did, however, give me the basis for something that I could easily translate into Illustrator. The creative part took place on the paper.
If nothing else, I think switching modes is incredibly important to creativity, even if it means taking your laptop to the park. If you break out the markers/crayons/paint/clay once in a while, all the better.
My anxiety has been eased! Thank you Dr Pete. I reckon you must have kids if you're breaking out with the clay. Either that or you're into pottery.
Joking aside, I was wondering why video/podcasts are not used in the prolific manner that it could be on the SEOMoz site. It could be a fantastic example for content marketing for people who learn in certain ways.
The Whiteboard Fridays are always a 'must-see/hear' for me as I get to understand something very quickly, which almost certainly appeals to my preferred ways of learning - a mixture of visual (seeing more than reading) and auditory - I never read the transcribed version on Whiteboard Fridays. I'm very glad that I'm given a choice and can watch the video.
I guess I'm asking for more videos in content marketing, and on SEOMoz, please!
Dr. Pete, you make great points here—even with modest design skills, we can liven up our content and make it more attractive.
I wish you had also made this post accessible. Had you included appropriate alt text (not the filename, as it usually is here, but the brief version of wording that would replace the image if people cannot see it) and a long description (longdesc; a link to a file that presents an extended description of the image), then people like Jamie Teh, one of the developers creating the screen reader NVDA for NV Access, might be able to get an idea of simple things he could ask a designer to do for him to make his site more engaging for people who can see. (Jamie, you see, is blind.)
Also, search engines would know that these terms were at least mentioned in your post:
As it is, neither Jamie nor Google can tell that you've touched on these concepts. That's a shame. It really would be nice for all the world to be able to find and appreciate the value of your message.
I apologize for that. I'm generally conscientious about decent ALT text (for both SEO and accessibility), but since many of these images were linked/borrowed from other posts on our site, I didn't want to disrupt the original posts. Unfortunately, after I decided that, then I realized I also didn't add ALT text for the couple of new images. I'll make an effort to go back and do that.
Also, I do admit that putting text in image form (like some of the examples here) is generally bad for accessibility. That can be a tough trade-off, because from a marketing standpoint, they really do have a huge impact on a post's success. Unfortunately, HTML/CSS just isn't flexible enough at this stage, and so we're sometimes caught in the middle of creating content that's attractive vs. content that's accessible. We've gotten better about transcribing some content, especially videos, but I recognize that some of our in-post images are completely inaccessible to people using screen readers.
I liked this article. The pictures are what really kept me reading... haha.
Content, content, content! Add in really good design skills, along with your SEO and SEM skills, and you're a force to be reckoned with. I believe that eventually content will be the primary differentiating factor for a business to win on the web.
haha. I think that list of seo responsabilities is going to keep growing. I love that seo is now a balanced mix of social, art and science.
I agree that content marketing is one of the toughest thing to do in recent times. Considering the quality of content that is being generated across the web, it may become a bit of a task to write a really good piece.
btw, apart from Rand's illustrations (which are awesome), I like the minimialistic approaches. They are work of a very creative mind.
Good post Dr Pete. The all-too-popular--although at times appropriate--cheesy stock photo hero-shots are often better off left behind in favour of imagery that help demonstrate concepts instead of illicit emotional responses.
Great post Pete, I know I get so caught up in imaging awesome graphics that would just make a post that I forget a super-simple image would work just as well.
Good post Dr Pete. The all-too-popular--although at times appropriate--cheesy stock photo hero-shots are often better off left behind in favour of imagery that help demonstrate concepts instead of illicit emotional responses.
Link baiting is definitely the most time consuming method there is. It's obvious that infographics are an awesome way to generate links, but one needs a medium to push the infographic out to the net. Maybe if someone made an infographic and then pushed it out to a crowd of bloggers. I guess that'd be a unique angle on a blog contest. Share this on your blog and write your insight. BloggersCompete.com lets you launch blog contests so maybe that's something people doing content marketing could use for link bait promotion.
Great reminder as I'm currently struggling to make a new infographic "perfect."
I created my first "real" infographic recently, and it was really tough, because you see such amazing examples out on the web everyday. So, I tried to stick to what I know - communicating complex ideas simply, and I built on that.
I actually got a lot out of this tutorial, because it felt like the finished product was professional but still something I could hope to achieve:
https://vector.tutsplus.com/tutorials/designing/how-to-create-outstanding-modern-infographics/
Not gonna lie, design is not one of my strongest points, but you've definitely called out a few nice tips here that even I can probably handle! Thanks for the post, Sir Pete!
Pete... this was just an amazing post. Lots of great ideas in here
Great idea for the "Plagarizing Yourself." I also liked your point about the flashy colors to livin things up!
Love the post Dr. Pete. I think what the internet is doing is forcing us to find more efficient ways to funnel complex information into a humanly "getable" form.
This is why infographics have taken off as they have.
This content revolution really is adding value in that it distills, and renders usable, information that would otherwise be lying dormant.
Great post, sometimes we tend to forget the importance of tweaking images and using them to our advantage in posts.
I’m a big believer in #2 – Less is More. I often use the motto, “when in doubt – Helvetica.” The most common mistake non-designers make is trying to adapt their personal taste to a website. Curly-Q script fonts may make your heart go pitter pat but most of us just want clean, easy to read type.
Nice post. By the way, very talented graphic artist ;)
I would encourage people to take the coloured marker approach. I design other people's websites and I've now lost count of the times I've closed the lid of my laptop and got out a piece of paper (or four) and a pencil in order to sketch potential layout ideas, or logo designs. Doesn't have to take hours, but trying a different medium seems to trigger ideas that sat staring blankly at your computer screen doesn't.
We're not multi-media for nothing!
I find there are a lot of great icon directories that provide images from 16x16px upwards of 512x512px in size for free. I usually go there, grab a few, and spice them up with a little text, merge a few together into a 'colleague" basically. 5 to 10 minutes will yield 5 good looking, blog-ready, images.
Wonderful content and content-format.
I am Agree with you on content marketing. Content marketing really helpful to generate high quality traffic and most relevant business.
Not so SEO-related post but a good attempt to tease out our hidden abilities ;-).
Regarding your Eric Slager example - this is really a poster of a designer. Although it is minimalistic you can't design that within a short time ... but I get your idea ...
Clearly, Eric is not talent-impaired, but I thought it was a good example of taking the concept to a bit of an extreme. We get so hung up in the implementation, that we forget that it's the idea that counts. I think infographics can be a great example - there are gorgeous infographics out there that are basically useless, because all the work went into making them gorgeous.
I actually put Eric's Muppet print on my Christmas list :)
Really good point that it does not take always have to take a whole lot to add something interesting to content. Thanks for the tips!
Simple graphics can really liven up a post and help illustrate a point. It's much more interesting to read stats in an infographic than a bulleted list. If you've got the time (or in-house talent) to create a few unique graphs or designs to spice up your content marketing, it's well worth it!
Thanks for the post, Dr. Pete!
Adding illustrations to a article not only makes it more fun and interesting to read - it also makes me more likely to link to or share the article. I guess this applies to most people. I know i'm bookmarking articles with great illustrations often.
Definitely an amusing and useful post. Sadly I don't get to play with things like that in the writing I do for work but I'll be keeping these tips in mind for the future. Thanks Dr. Pete.
"Before the days of Roger Mozbot (or, as we call it, the Time of Despair)" = Awesome!
I love your breakdown of design elements and reusing them. So often you want to create a lot and try to create different things instead of just making the same things different. KISS totally applies here. Good post.
Great advice - creating your own imagery and diagrams goes a long way and I'm amazed how many text only blogs (dull, dull, dull) there are out there. I try and have a common theme to illustrations when I write - my standard one is a talking toilet which talks bullsh*t...
Thanks Dr. Pete,
Luckily I have a 4 year old, so I have a plethora of color markers around. Great idea. Going to work on some stick figures this week.
It is becoming essential for marketers to have good copywriting, design and creative skills in order to be effective as a marketer in this day and age.
It is also not too hard to obtain these skills in a short period of time.
What a marketer should be is evolving constantly. Having creative, design, video and copywriting skills is a part of this evolution.
These are some great ideas...but I think an even better idea is to have one or two freelance web designers available to help you out with small projects. I found one freelancer that makes top-notch infographics with information I send her --- for less than $20!
Great advices Pete! I'm sure I'm kinda stuck with my creativity lately and this piece of content is warmly welcomed by my overstuffed brain :)
It is essential to at least have "an" image in every blog; this helps land the visitor. If there are only words the blog post will look intimidating and boring, people online do not want to read an essay. Infographics are awesome because they convey books of data instantly and in color almost negating the need for words at all, but all content pages, blogs, etc need to have at least one image to help land the visitor.
Color is amazing and knowing the psycological values of each color can help land visitors. Green=healing, blue=authority, Purple=royalty, orange=inclusive to both rich and not rich, etc.
Other things that can be done to help land a visitor is to break up your content into easily digestable paragraphs, you can then give each paragraph a header. People usually scan headers and read more if needed; a page that is a full page essay looks like it takes time and work, most users want the info quick and easy. This probably scales with education level of content.
Thanks Dr. Pete. I need to be able to quickly create images and get away from using boring associated stock photos.
Great post to get the creative ideas flowing again!
Good post, I agree that SEO's need to gather skills in all areas the only thing is you can notice the difference between some one who has skills in design and can make graphics and some one who does not have skills and brings out images to the market in lower quality.
I also agree with the point about cutting images down and re using them in further projects that has been something I have been doing for a while.
But yeah you have to keep things "Short, Simple Sweet" =)
Dr Pete, you pretty much always give great post. Thanks.
Great post, thanks for your sharing
... and if you REALLY have no talent, then you can always use marketplaces such as Envato ones (ie: GraphicRiver) to get some visual elements to use in your presentations! :)
As long as you make good use of their licensing options, it is allowed by the artists sharing their work there to help yourself with what they done!
This your post is execllent,I think the goal of these inbound marketing tactics is to establish yourself as an industry leader and expert while building a robust link portfolio that points back to pages of your website. Online content marketing is really anything that you create and share on the web. It consists of everything from articles, Blogs and eBooks, to Facebook posts and Twitter tweets. In order for content marketing to be effective, content needs to be distributed on a regular basis.I use content Marketing,as Content is king but can’t win by itself like in Chess.