The Road to Recognition. Seth Price
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Make your content great
It’s easy to create mediocre content. And most do. They find something that’s performing well and create a copycat version. It seldom works. Amongst the oceans of content, the me-too stuff fails to make a ripple.
But don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying “don’t go there” if the topic you want to tackle is a popular one. In fact, you should. What I am saying is you need to make your content better than the best that exists now. Like most things, to do something remarkable, you need to put extra effort into it.
The book you’re reading is a content project, a large one. While its purpose is to help you understand the most effective personal branding tactics, your authors, Seth and Barry, have a personal branding agenda. We aim to be perceived as experts on the topic of personal branding.
Are we offering you insights into a subject no one’s yet touched on? Don’t we wish? But the topic’s red hot. What we’re trying to do is create the best possible resource and make it unique, not by way of its topic, but in the ways we’ve produced and packaged it.
One lesson you can take from this is quality trumps quantity in content creation. One-hit wonders usually won’t achieve their goals. You accomplish more by creating less content that’s spectacular than you will with volumes of par-for-the-course stuff.
Here are ten more strategies you should apply to make your content great:
Purpose
Make sure your content serves a very clear purpose for the reader/viewer/listener. Avoid being abstract or oblique. Determine what you’re trying to accomplish and nail it.
Relevance
Your content must address the reader’s pain and/or help bring them pleasure. It should enhance their life at work, at play, or in some way. Develop extreme empathy for your audience to help make your content consistently relevant.
Emotional triggers
Don’t make the mistake of believing your readers rely only on rationale to make decisions. It’s what we feel that drives our decisions. Great content trips the reader’s emotional triggers.
Truth
There’s a dreadful amount of conjecture flying around the web which threatens credibility. Backup the points you make with research, facts and quotes you can cite to authoritative sources.
Ease
Ease of access, understanding and readability are all-important to those that consume your content. Compose written content that is easily skimmable and be concise and on-point with your audio/visual content.
Original
Make your content uniquely yours. Even if you’re trodding in common territory with content on a popular topic, bring your point of view and voice to the table.
Headline
Content rule number one: thou shalt aim to arouse the reader with a magnetic headline or title. If it fails to create curiosity and interest, it’ll be the only line that’s read. Write several titles in an attempt to arrive at one that’s irresistible.
Shareable
Make it easy for your audience to do you the favor of sharing. Display share bars that are easy to find and use. Feed readers suggestions and shortcuts for sharing your content and ask them to share it. Thank them when they do.
Optimized
The best way to expand your audience over the long haul is to earn a spot on page one of search. Optimize your content for search engines by using keywords and applying SEO tactics. (More to come in chapters G and K.)
Call to action (CTA)
What do you want readers, viewers or listeners to do? Determine this. Tell them where to go, how to get there, and why.
Think broadly, execute narrowly
A topic related to content marketing that’s finally getting the attention it deserves is promotion and distribution. Together, you can think of them as reach. A chapter about the effective use of content would be incomplete if it didn’t broach the subject. Three important lessons follow, intended to help you maximize the reach of your content.
Think big
Big content takes on deep subjects in detail. Of course, creating it requires more time or money, but it can and should be a smart investment. Not everything you create needs to fall into the “big content” bucket, but some should.
Again, I offer this book as an example. It’s about a big topic. It also contains many subtopics (such as the subject of this chapter) that are big content topics themselves. You may not want to write a long business book at this moment in time, but think about how you might take on a big, juicy topic related to your area of expertise that has the potential to be “chapterized“ and the legs to take you far.
Repurpose your content
Most of the content you create for a single medium can be re-imagined and re-applied in other media. Apply the idea of repurposing content first to media types. For instance, your eBook can be a series of blog posts. A blog post might make a good infographic or podcast.
Secondly, apply the repurposing strategy to create a larger digital (or even physical footprint) for the same or similar content. You might:
Offer PDFs or printed copies of written content.
Create videos for your YouTube channel and publish on your blog or elsewhere.
Turn a list post into an infographic or slide show.
Recreate a recorded interview as text-based content.
Roll several pieces of content into one larger work.
Use existing content as the basis for webinars.
Offer written content for syndication elsewhere or update it for publication on an industry blog.
The possibilities for content repurposing are immense. Doing it purposely, and well, can vastly increase your mileage and ROI.
Promote your content
You want to find ways to get your content out there, earn more eyeballs, and generate buzz. There are tons of