When you first start out with content marketing, you often have a very basic challenge: you have to build an audience for your content. Even if you're a large brand with lots of people who are passionate about you, they're not yet conditioned to see you as a publisher of valuable content. In other words, either way, you've got work to do.
In today's post, I'm going to outline why you should focus on reach and influence, and how to do it so that your content marketing efforts can deliver the maximum ROI.
Map your marketplace
The first thing to realize is that number of potential customers in a marketplace is finite, and so are the number of major media sites and blogs that have any real audience. A typical audience reach for the bloggers and media in a marketplace might look something like this:
Traditionally, SEOs have focused on trying to publish content on as many different domains as possible. In the early days of SEO, the theory was that getting links from as many different domains as you could was how you maximize overall rankings impact.
This still has an element of truth to it today if you view the Google algorithm from a narrow perspective, but I believe it's best to take a more holistic view of the market. Frankly, I don't want the hard task of fighting for every link I get; I want people to give them to me because I've shown I deserve them.
I don't want to fight for every link I get; I want to earn them because I've shown I deserve them.
For that reason, we urge our clients to focus on building authority, reach, and influence. If you do this well, you establish a solid base for earning links organically. Consider the value of publishing content and having it get links with minimal effort on your part.
While you all shudder at the concept of “build it and they will link to you,” if you implement a fully integrated campaign with an audience that is anxious to see what you have to say, the task of attracting links becomes significantly easier.
To make that work for you, you'll need relationships with key influencers, bloggers, and media people, and you'll need to prioritize who are the people who can help you most.
The catch is, the most influential players in a marketplace have assets to protect (their relationship with their audience), and they're not going to help you unless you find ways to help them bring even more value to their audience.
That means you'll need to establish your business as a top source of content and ideas. You’ll also need to be seen by them as a partner, and that you support their goals, not just your own. So now, let's get to work!
Identify your real audience
First, let's look at another map, this time looking at the makeup of the people in a given market:
Who in this chart do you think might reshare your content or link to it? It's certainly not the laggards, or even the early or late majority. Generally speaking, these are not the people with large social media followings, or highly popular blogs or columns on your market. The people who do have these things are highlighted here:
Innovators and Early Adopters are the ones that might share or link your content in a way that has a large impact. If your content is not good enough to interest them, then you've failed. Not only can they get more eyeballs on your content, but when they reshare it, it acts as an endorsement of its value.
Cater to this audience. Even for a large brand, it's essential that you get good engagement here, as it helps give your content credibility.
Go to where your target audience resides on the Interwebs
Your target customer spends a lot of time in various places across the Internet. Consider engaging with them where they are.
The reason for doing this is to accelerate the growth of your audience and their engagement with your content. I often refer to this as getting in front of OPA ("Other People's Audiences"). It's one of the most powerful ways to increase your own audience and loyalty. It also creates opportunities to build your own direct audience.
That said, you need to do this with great care. If you dive willy-nilly into public forums with commercial messages you'll be seen as self-serving and overly aggressive. Better approaches include:
- Establish columns on high-authority media sites
- Share valuable info via your social media presences
- Interact with influencers online
- Participate in online and offline events (webinars, conferences)
These are just a few ideas. Remember, you're there to add value, and adding value doesn't mean showing people all the great things they can do with your products. Create useful, non-commercial, content, or address questions without your products or services being the explicit answer.
Adding value doesn't mean showing people all the great things they can do with your products.
The role of columns
As we've established, the top media sites have the most influence in a marketplace. Here's another way of looking at it:
If you're looking for OPA, the top media sites that cover your market have plenty of it, and if you're allowed to publish on their sites without having to pay for it, they also provide an implied endorsement. Old-school SEO would tell us that columns are not that valuable because Google used to value visibility on a larger number of domains more than they valued repeat presence on the higher-authority sites, but digital marketing life is no longer that simple.
You can argue about how far that pendulum at Google has swung, but you can't deny that it makes sense that an ongoing relationship with an authoritative site is a stronger indication of your authority than ten meaningless one-time relationships with sites no one, or almost no one, ever visits. If you don't think that Google gets this, you're definitely stuck far in the past.
Other publishing efforts
It's great to get high-value columns, but not every major media site will grant you that opportunity. Let's say you manage to get a column on three of the top sites. This may expose you to this type of reach:
There will also be major media sites where getting a column or publishing content is not an option. But, can you build relationships with their editors and writers? Will they reach out to you for fact checking or quotes when they write a related story? Are they interested in interviewing you?
A deliberate program to build these relationships is a must in any reach and influence building strategy. Some of the key steps are:
- Build a list of the top relationships you should target
- Try to obtain info on their social accounts and email addresses
- Study what they're about, and what's most important to them
- Actively reshare their relevant stories via your social media
- Engage with them in ways that will add value, and that shows them why a relationship with you would be valuable for them
- Consider implementing targeted paid social campaigns that will expose them to your best content
- See if you can structure opportunities to meet them face-to-face.
Use all of these tactics to map out your strategy and show yourself as a leader in your market, and to show your willingness help them with their needs.
The role of influencers
Media people are influencers in their own right, but there are types of influencers as well. Their presence may be in other places, such as social media or streaming media, and there are usually many of these out there in any given market. With these types of influencers you can potentially leverage a few additional tactics, such as:
- Interview them and publish the result on your site
- Pay them to reshare your content on social
- Pay them to write for you (and ask them to share the article via their social)
- Engage them to help you more broadly as a spokesperson
- Find ways to collaborate on projects with them and then co-promote the results
- Or, try a more limited project-based engagement
The value here is very similar to that of major bloggers and media. Their engagement with you reinforces the quality and value of what you're doing online. As with the media, there are probably a small number of influencers with significant reach. The cool thing here is that the people they influence only overlap partially with the people reached by media. Let's look at how they overlap:
If you are able to establish relationships with a few of the top ten (non-media) influencers, your reach and influence will go up yet one more notch.
Organic social media
Social media is a great way to build relationships directly with bloggers, media, influencers, and to access your target customer base. Too many businesses view social media in a very tactical way. Either they focus on pushing commercial messages through their accounts, or they work towards shallow goals, such as increasing likes or followers.
If you're looking to expand your true reach and influence, you should leverage the strengths that social media has to help you accomplish that. Even in a world where major social platforms such as Facebook are limiting organic reach, there is still much to be gained by posting high-value content on these platforms. First of all, not all of the social media platforms limit your organic visibility, and there are also many community opportunities on them as well. And second, you can use that content as a sort of “credibility calling card” as you try to build relationships on social with influencers. If they look at your profile, your content serves as a resume that says you’re worth engaging with.
But nothing free lasts forever, so make a point of finding ways to migrate the relationships you create on social media sites onto other platforms.
Make a point of finding ways to migrate your relationships on social media sites onto other platforms.
One way to do that is to share great content published on your site, and then find ways to lure people into signing up for a newsletter, your app, or find some other way to get them connected with you going forward. By all means, don't abandon your connection with them on the social media platform where it started, but don't be wholly dependent on that platform either.
Paid social
There are tons of opportunities in the world of paid social, and they are worth exploring. Some of the platforms, such as Facebook, offer tremendous targeting options that allow you to get extremely granular with your campaigns. Have a mailing list of 10,000 people? Imagine targeting a Facebook ad campaign that runs solely in front of that audience. Sounds awesome, doesn't it?
You can actually do this, but the only catch is that the email address you have for them has to be the one that's used for the user's Facebook account. In our experience, that may cut the actual list reached by half or so, but this type of campaign is still an enormous value add.
There are other effective ways to target on paid social media platforms, but the big key is to invest the time to get your targeting right. So many companies dabble in social media advertising, try a few things, look for an instant return, and then give up. You need to have patience to figure out your best targeting options, and work to get it right.
To do that, you'll need to invest some money with a not-so-great ROI for a while, in order to get enough data to get your targeting where it needs to be. If you're willing to do this, you can gain a nice market edge for yourself, especially since it’s very possible your competition isn’t willing to put in that effort.
One approach to help with extending your reach and influence is to build a list of bloggers, media, and influencers, and do the hard work of building targeted ad campaigns just to that list. This is a great way to get your content in front of those that matter most.
We've seen results in campaigns like this that deliver engagement (likes, clicks, reshares) for as little as $0.30 per action. Other campaigns we've run have shown action rates in the $1 range, but this is still a phenomenal value.
Summary
Keep your focus on the goal of extending your reach and influence. No matter how large your brand is today, you're living in an uncertain world. If you're heavily dependent on organic search results in Google, know that the concept of the search box is likely to disappear in the next five years. Or, if you're heavily dependent on people walking in to your stores, you've already seen the massive shift of activity online. More change is guaranteed, and the exact shape it will take is not clear to anyone.
Your best defense in a rapidly changing world is a passionate and engaged audience that feels loyalty directly to you, and that you have ways of connecting with directly. Build this. Cultivate this.
Then, no matter what direction things go in the future, you'll be in a position to continue to grow and prosper.
Discuss why it’s so important to go to where your audience is on the Interwebs instead of simply expecting them to come to your site, and how that impacts your overall marketing strategy.
Interesting article, but seems to be relevant more to B2C, FMCG type businesses. So, yes, if you're selling a new perfume, get a Youtube vlogger or a Z list celeb (the "influencer").
If you want to sell big ticket items to B2B CEOs or other C-level execs, you need a different approach. You may need to establish yourself as a provider / advisor to their trade body, post frequently to LinkedIn groups where they hang out, maybe even sign up to the right golf club.
Reach and influence for a general audience. Not necessarily always the best choice for either big ticket items, one off purchases or B2B investments ... or am I reading this wrong?
Hi Eric,
Nice post, I'm defending since several years ago what you've write on this post, so I'm really happy about that :)
If you only write and pray for relevance the most of time you aren't going to reach it, I think the main task is about branding and building relationships with other influencers, what do you think about it?
Absolutely makes sense to focus some energy on influencers to build your reach and influence, but you can't ignore the rest of the audience either!
This is a great way of putting it. Although the globe-like-overlap graphics were a bit strange to wrap my mind around at first, it's a great way of showing the importance of focusing on the top, quality, relevant sites to your audience rather than a spray and pray.
It's 100x better to write just one article for the most influential site in my clients niche than it is to write 3 articles for lower tier sites. Or even better than Huffington Post (where they noindex the page and nofollow the links)
I'd like to hear more and see more research on how it's better to have a long-standing column on one or a few sites rather than on many sites.
The importance of reach is one of the reasons I find it so strange that SEO & PR people don't spend more time on social media. At least get to the now the bloggers and socialites in your town.
Completely agree. I think all too often we set out on search campaigns without a proper understanding of the audience - sure we have an overview but not a deep understanding. Like you say, whereas we should be looking at the column, often it's a case of trying to produce as much content as possible and pushing it out as far as possible. I see this with the PR industry as well. Reasonably targeted content is produced and then pushed out as broadly as possible and it loses its uniqueness so influencers don't get behind it. Building up good relationships, sharing unique content that's really targeted to a website's audience and community is the only way to really get other people to start sharing things for you. I always like to give people a reason to keep on referring back to the things I'm pushing out - because it adds weight to the arguments they're making to their audience.
The popularity among businesses for "reasonably targeted" but low quality content for broad distribution... is the reason far east content farms exist. :)
But, I agree, such content doesn't drive influencer buy-in nor attract multiple organic links.
Agreed Simon! And, if you're intending to be a long time player in a market, this approach will net you the best links anyway.
I own a single local business, and would love to get into content marketing. The problem is the curve is so steep and the time required to invest doesn't seem worth it for a single local business. Perhaps for a regional national chain it will definitely be beneficial.
Obviously, if I got traction with my content marketing my local business would be an SEO home-run and I'd get great SERP rankings. I'm just not sure the effort required is feasible for a local business one-man show!
Can someone provide examples of local businesses successfully doing content marketing (single location businesses)?
Hi Caleb.
You have a lot of strengths as a local (and small) business compared to the bigger ones, although they tend to be underplayed.
I can only recommend having a closer look at https://moz.com/blog/category/local-seo and especially the WhiteBoardFridays about local versus global.
Best of luck.
I am in the same position. Looking at my competitors, local businesses with a national ecommerce customers I didn´t find that content marketing was very important to them, but I really think that even when it will take a huge effort to work on it, maybe could be the key to grow your reputation, relevance and natural backlinks.
I am starting to work with a blog located inside the ecommerce site with real technical and original articles (this takes lots of time) and youtube videos to also be included on some of the posts. I will use social media to promote this content in order to try to get clicks to the posts, and will ask for email subscriptions at the end of them to try to convert the people who read the posts into customers using newsletters. This will be my approach, hopefully it can help you.
I think a lot of local businesses would look at content from an Instagram perspective; especially if they sell food or anything strong in the visual department. At least this is what some of the local restaurants, bars and ice cream shops in Vancouver do. Maybe if you worked with a local charity or donated money you could film that experience as content.. maybe a local publication (TV or newspaper) picks it up and talks about your business.
Hi Eric,
Good post and very informative. You informed well with facts and figure.
One thing matters most in this industry of content is "Relevancy". If we are relevant enough to our subject then it is good and help drive more potential customers.
Thanks,
Avinash
My favorite line -- "You can argue about how far that pendulum at Google has swung, but...If you don't think that Google gets this, you're definitely stuck far in the past."
The perfect answer to clients if they push hard for links from tons of different domains. Reminds me of the Wayne Gretzky quote, "A good hockey player plays where the puck is. A great hockey player plays where the puck is going to be."
This is great stuff. I was actually thinking about that this morning. I got great content(well i think I do) but no audience, what should I be focusing on...
I agree. Outreach is the most important aspect of IM.
Great list!
Priorities vary to companies depending on their market research and evaluation. "Map your marketplace" is on your top list. With understanding audience, it will be easier to conduct other activities to reach and influence the market! Thanks for this wonderful idea to identify the best priority we should invest in.
Hi, Eric. Great article, thanks for posting. Can you talk to me a little bit about your comment, " search box is likely to disappear in the next five years". I'd like to hear more about your thoughts on this?
Wonder if this refers to the idea that voice and image search are going to take over and text will be less of a thing. Though I doubt the search box will ever go away. They are always those late adopters.
Hi John - I'm alluding to many factors, one of biggest of which is the raise of voice search. The more people use voice, the less they'll not be interacting with a search box.
Eric, I just loved the way you explained the overall concept using the graphical representation. No doubt, media houses and other news websites have the most relevant audience for most of the businesses. These are considered as the most effective platforms that give your content asset a real value. This value can be judged by engagement ratio, social share count and re-shares of your content on other websites or blogs.
But when it comes to SEO, it is important to endure your content marketing efforts just to earn links. So, the ordinary content marketing efforts can’t be ignored at the same time. Because the publication of your content on high authoritative media houses requires time. So just to sustain the flow of your content marketing we need to concentrate on both ordinary and the effective content marketing tactics. (Correct me if I am wrong :) )
Again, I fully agree with your point that these types of magazines and news websites have the most amount of relevant traffic that they can offer you. Let me quote my real life experience here, I posted an article on Entrepreneur which blessed me with tons of traffic as well as it got re-shared on Fox News. So the point is multiple benefits with a single effort.
Cheers!
Hi Abbas - some more tactical stuff can be a big part of what you do, just make sure that the quality level is high enough that it doesn't negatively impact the brand in the process!
Rule # 1 for online marketers should be "entertain me" don't bore me. Attention spans are short and limited...
That’s quite an interesting read, Eric. The target audience graph is pretty impressive- given the fact that it bears a lot of similarities to a business/economic cycle graph.
What I’ve observed is that your target audience is dynamic. That is to say early adopters can become early & late majority at any time, or vice versa.
Secondly, extending your outreach and influence is a little risky, considering the wide range of black hat tactics available.
Lastly, if you’re using social media platforms to build influence, I’d suggest investing in online reputation management as well. Who knows when a well-intended blogging strategy backfires and you find yourself in trouble?
What an informative piece, Eric! You've covered many crucial points. My personal favorite is "The Role of Influencers," because influencer marketing is such an excellent method for businesses and brands to expand their reach and build their influence. It can also help them earn the trust of a relevant audience if they connect with a relevant influencer. I think your readers could really use the influencer outreach tips in one of this post: https://shanebarker.com/blog/influencer-outreach-campaign-tips/. It covers some best practices for reaching out to an influencer, and includes several tools and templates to help them execute their campaigns.
Hi Eric,
Thanks for this detailed post. Up until now, the only thing I did to connect with influencers was follow them on Twitter, share and comment their posts, and then after some time, contact them asking if they can share my content. What I didn't do is offer them some actual value in return. From now on, I will try to create content that will as well help influencers create value for their audience.
Thank you very much, I am new to this web SEO and every day I learn something new. I hope I can continue to acquire knowledge from all of you!
Speaking about influencers, I like the idea of creating content they can share (because you name them, speak about something they want to speak about or all togheter...) instead of the idea of paying them for it