Creating, managing and distributing useful, usable content on a regular basis is hard enough, but have you ever tried to sell it?
Agencies and in-house teams alike are having a hard time getting buy-in for meaningful content initiatives that provide tangible value for their target audience. All too often decision makers tie our hands, focusing too heavily on what competitors are doing instead of highlighting their unique value in a way that resonates with the people that matter most: Customers.
This presentation aims to provide actionable tips, tactics and real world use cases for selling strategic content to the people who write the checks.
61. SLIDE #9 - So You’ve Heard about Web Content Strategy. Now What? by Nell Kauls – Link
SLIDE #10 - Web Strategies Sites Content Matrix – Link
SLIDE #11 - Using Mind Maps for UX Design by Catriona Cornett – Link
SLIDE #12 - Content Inventory – Degree Programs by Russ Beeson – Link
SLIDE #13 - How User Personas Can Improve Your SEO Strategy by KISSMetrics – Link
SLIDE #14 - Content Templates to Get Your Clients Thinking Content-First by James Deer – Link
SLIDE #15 - Governance Model for SharePoint 2010 by Microsoft – Link
SLIDE #54 - Academia Sucks the Soul Out of Design The Presentation Designer – Link
SLIDE #57 Developing an Experience Strategy in 4 Parts by David Armano – Link
*All Photos Are Property of The Respective Copyright Holder
62. 1. Content Strategy: Connecting the Dots Between Business, Brand & Benefits by Rahel Anne Bailie &
Noz Urbina– Link
2. Managing Enterprise Content: A Unified Content Strategy by Ann Rockley – Link
3. Selling Content Strategy by Karen McGrane – Link
4. The Business of Content by Melissa Rach – Link
5. Selling the Value of Your Content Strategy By Steve Walker – Link
6. Content Strategy: 3 Ways to Get Buy-In from the Corner Office by Ahava Leibtag – Link
7. Pitch Before You Plan: Selling Content Strategy Internally by C.L. Kennedy – Link
8. 2 Foolproof Methods for Getting Content Marketing Buy-In by Joe Pulizzi – Link
9. Why Your CEO Doesn’t Care About Content Marketing by Chris Winfield – Link
10. Selling Content to the C-suite Ahava Leibtag– Link
11. Starting Out Organized: Website Content Planning The Right Way by Kristin Wemmer– Link
12. Selling Content Strategy: A Continuous Process by Rick Allen – Link
13. Prove Content Marketing ROI to Your CEO: 4 Values to Communicate by DJ Miller – Link
14. Getting Internal Buy-In For a Content Marketing Strategy by J-P De Clerck – Link
15. Content Marketing: How To Sell Executives On The Idea & Cost Greg Shuey– Link
16. How To Get Your Breakthrough Ideas Approved by Decision Makers by Charles Purdy – Link
17. Selling to Big Companies by Jill Konrath – Link
18. The Win Without Pitching Manifesto by Jey Pandian – Link
19. Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet by Steve Floyd – Link
63. Steve Floyd
Founder / Principle at AXZM
twitter: @nawlready
phone: (214) 272-9109
www.axzm.com
For the last decade I have been
creating digital marketing solutions
for businesses large and small. In
that time I’ve learned a few things
about the governance and creation
of web content and how that
content ties into other marketing
channels. Content is often swept
aside as the last part of a project,
when I believe it should be one of
the very first things addressed
(even before design).
Notes de l'éditeur
Selling Guns to Gandhi: The Art of Content Buy-In by Steve Floyd – CEO of AXZM – www.axzm.com/about/steve-floyd
No, I’m not selling any guns (and certainly not to Gandhi) but it can certainly feel that when you are trying to get buy-in for strategic content initiatives.
I got your attention though!
That’s the whole point. You need to stand out among all the other voices in your organization, or your strategy will get pushed to the side for another shiny object.
Let’s be honest here, planning and executing a content strategy is hard.
Getting buy-in for that content strategy can be even harder.
If we want buy-in we need to learn to keep it simple.
Or you may never get the approval you need to implement your strategy.
We give them all this stuff…
- STAKEHOLDER INTERVIEWS- BRANDING / STYLE GUIDES
- CONTENT AUDIT / INVENTORIES- QUALITATIVE / QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS- KEY MESSAGE ARCHITECTURE- USER / BUYER JOURNEYS
- CONTENT MATRIX- CONTENT FLOW DIAGRAMS- METADATA STRATEGY- CONTENT TEMPLATES- WIREFRAMES (HIGH & LOW RES)- CONTENT GOVERNANCE MODEL
And this… Content Matrix
And this… Mind Maps
And this… Content Audits
And this… Personas
And this… Content Templates
And this… Governance Model
And that is all great (and necessary).
But, why are we surprised?
When no one gives a shit.
Or when stakeholders react in a negative way to the extra work you are putting on them? Work they of then do not fully understand.
When senior management and co-workers hate you for trying to take over their content?
All they want is a website. Why all the fuss?
Content strategists know these deliverables are absolutely essential, but it’s not hard to see why there is no buy-in.
This obviously puts us between a rock and hard place.
The key is…
Balance.
Proactively condense and centralizing all your documents in one place for your team is a good idea. This will grease the skids adoption of your strategy.
Give your stakeholders the cliff notes that speak to their initial pain points and KPIs while getting the approval you need to move forward. There is such a thing as too much information.
I know. Sounds like a great theory, but how do I actually do that?!
Exclusive to Big Design conference, I give you….
The Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet – Client Profile & Insights– axz.mx/super-awesome-csw
The Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet – Client Profile & Insights– axz.mx/super-awesome-csw
The Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet – Key Messages – axz.mx/super-awesome-csw
The Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet – Personas – axz.mx/super-awesome-csw
The Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet – Content Audit – axz.mx/super-awesome-csw
The Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet – Editorial Calendar – axz.mx/super-awesome-csw
If we really want buy-in we have to prove our value to the people who write the checks.
You will need ammo to do this. Here it is…
Use every tool in your arsenal (you’re going to need it) and arm yourself with a full clip of data. This will help better inform your content strategy and give you confirmation that the opportunities are there - http://axz.mx/best-tools
Use Google Analytics to track every interaction with your website, so you can continually improve the user experience and conversions. You can also prove the value of the campaigns you are working on with campaign URLs - axz.mx/g-analyze
Set up a Google Analytics dashboard for your company website and track the data points that matter most to your business - axz.mx/ga-dashboards
Use Raventools to manage your ongoing content marketing, social, email and paid efforts. There are also a host of other tools that help you quickly fix technical SEO errors and custom branded reports for your boss / client or customers. - axz.mx/r-tool
Use SEM rush to get traffic estimates on keywords, spy on competitors ad spend and generate reports based on this data. - axz.mx/sem-rusher
Use the Content Analysis Tool by Content Insights to Audit large amounts of content - axz.mx/c-insights
Use Screaming Frog to audit your content on the cheap (FREE & Paid versions) - axz.mx/scream-frog
Let data guide the way, it will set you free - axz.mx/data-sets-free
Your data better be right on the money though, at least if you are going to prove your value, so make sure you do away with vanity metrics that don’t matter to the stakeholder’s bottom line. If it don’t make dollars, it don’t make sense.
The C-Suite speaks in the language of money.
They see all this web stuff as a utility of the IT department (but it’s not).
Learn to speak the language.
Be a chameleon and adapt to your environment. Try to understand what makes the stakeholder tick and what they value. Even go as far as to match the style of dress that your stakeholder is most comfortable in. If they are super conservative in $10,000 suites, it’s probably a good idea not to show up in cargos and flip flops. The same could be said about stakeholders who prefer a more casual style. Don’t show up over dressed or you could alienate yourself. It’s all about listening and building trust, so anything you can do to make that process easier do proactively. It will make the process of buy-in go much easier when the decision maker is bought into you, not just the strategy you are trying to get buy-in for.
Once you know what makes them tick and what channels they value most, play to those key interests and sell your strategy around it. For example, if they are all about social media and branding but think SEO is snake oil, skew your presentation towards branding and social. The same could be said about stakeholders who value SEO & PPC to drive sales, but think social media is a waste of time. Make your presentation SEO centric.
How you present your pitch is everything.
95% of presentations completely suck. Ask yourself if you would buy into the idea you are selling when you look at your presentation. If you can’t design something yourself, pay someone who can. This is a huge factor in how your strategy is perceived.
Create an experience, not just a pitch. Weave elements of story telling into your presentation that weave all the stakeholder’s biggest organizational pain points into an easily digestible solution. Again, keep it stupid simple. Use metaphors and parables to drive your point across for things that might be over their heads.
Use TinderBox to create, track and manage interactive presentations. - axz.mx/tinder-box
Use BidSketch to create secure, scalable web-based proposals that will speed up your response times and set yourself apart from all the other paperwork on their desk.
That’s the whole point. You need to stand out among all the other voices in your organization, or your strategy will get pushed to the side for another shiny object.
We need to sell content strategy in engaging, useful and relevant ways…
Just like the content we advocate.
“First they ignore you, Then they laugh at you, Then they fight you, Then you win.”- Mahatma Gandhi
Credits:
SLIDE #9 - So You’ve Heard about Web Content Strategy. Now What? by Nell Kauls
SLIDE #10 - Web Strategies Sites Content Matrix
SLIDE #11 - Using Mind Maps for UX Design by Catriona Cornett
SLIDE #12 - Content Inventory – Degree Programs by Russ Beeson
SLIDE #13 - How User Personas Can Improve Your SEO Strategy by KISSMetrics
SLIDE #14 - Content Templates to Get Your Clients Thinking Content-First by James Deer
SLIDE #15 - Governance Model for SharePoint 2010 by Microsoft
SLIDE #54 - Academia Sucks the Soul Out of Design The Presentation Designer
SLIDE #57 Developing an Experience Strategy in 4 Parts by David Armano
*All Photos Are Property of The Respective Copyright Holder
Resources:
Content Strategy: Connecting the Dots Between Business, Brand & Benefits by Rahel Anne Bailie & Noz Urbina
Managing Enterprise Content: A Unified Content Strategy by Ann Rockley
Selling Content Strategy by Karen McGrane
The Business of Content by Melissa Rach
Selling the Value of Your Content Strategy By Steve Walker
Content Strategy: 3 Ways to Get Buy-In from the Corner Office by Ahava Leibtag
Pitch Before You Plan: Selling Content Strategy Internally by C.L. Kennedy
2 Foolproof Methods for Getting Content Marketing Buy-In by Joe Pulizzi
Why Your CEO Doesn’t Care About Content Marketing by Chris Winfield
Selling Content to the C-suite Ahava Leibtag
Starting Out Organized: Website Content Planning The Right Way by Kristin Wemmer
Selling Content Strategy: A Continuous Process by Rick Allen
Prove Content Marketing ROI to Your CEO: 4 Values to Communicate by DJ Miller
Getting Internal Buy-In For a Content Marketing Strategy by J-P De Clerck
Content Marketing: How To Sell Executives On The Idea & Cost Greg Shuey
How To Get Your Breakthrough Ideas Approved by Decision Makers by Charles Purdy
Selling to Big Companies by Jill Konrath
The Win Without Pitching Manifesto by Jey Pandian
Super Awesome Content Strategy Worksheet by Steve Floyd
About MeFor the last decade I have been creating digital marketing solutions for businesses large and small. In that time I’ve learned a few things about the governance and creation of web content and how that content ties into other marketing channels. Content is often swept aside as the last part of a project, when I believe it should be one of the very first things addressed (even before design).