The Biggest Content Marketing Mistakes You Keep Making

the-biggest-content-marketing-mistakes-you-keep-making
a man cringing at the marketing mistakes he keeps making!

Careless content marketing mistakes are costing businesses more than their monthly budget.

Blindly navigating your marketing strategy can cause your content to capsize. If you simply dive in and start randomly publishing blog posts, youโ€™re unlikely to see any real results from your efforts.

An ineffective strategy will both pause a businessโ€™s growth and decrease their probability of sales by 40%. This doesnโ€™t mean that content marketing doesnโ€™t work โ€“ just that youโ€™re doing it wrong.

In this post, we discuss some of the most common mistakes businesses make in content marketing. If your content ship is sinking, itโ€™s not too late to anchor into new strategies. By understanding what not to do and keeping an eye on current content marketing trends, you can turn your mistakes into mastery.

1. Not Basing Your Content Strategy on Data

Relying on intuitive instinct to define your content marketing strategy is a great way to waste time and money.

Knowing your business is a key part of driving traffic to your site. But you need to choose data over guesswork every time.

Instead of channeling your higher self, evaluate competitor success. Use the highest ranking articles to determine which are driving the most ROI and accurately addressing SEO (more on that later, wink-wink). Then, ask yourself the following questions:

  • How long are these posts?
  • Is there value in recreating this content?
  • Is there key information missing from this article?
  • How many external links and backlinks are included?

Your answers will help determine which articles your team can improve. Pencil those babies into your content marketing calendar and voilร ! You now have a list of content topics backed by data instead of divination.

2. Not Speaking To Your Target Audience

No matter how consistent your content is, itโ€™s going to flop if your readers canโ€™t relate.

Start each post with identifying your target audience and determine what needs to be included for readers to find value. When you share valuable content that educates and entertains, your audience will trust that youโ€™ve got more where that came from.

When your audience feels seen, theyโ€™re also likely to repost your content throughout their personal networks. More than 50% of content in social media news feeds comes directly from peers. Itโ€™s likely that youโ€™ll reap the benefits of a visibility boost and even gain more loyal readers.

target audience

Image Source: Sprout Social

3. Writing for Search Engines, Not Humans

Keyword research is one of the key components of a successful marketing strategy, but keywords are just a small part of the puzzle. By all means,ย do your researchย and know what keywords youโ€™re targeting but donโ€™t try to shoehorn them in.

Forcing in too many or using unnaturally phrased keywords that stand out from a mile away will create a poor user experience. This can also lead to an โ€œover optimizationโ€ penalty from Google if they deem your content to be keyword-stuffed.

Instead, writing quality content should be your number one aim. Keywords are a lower priority. Search engine algorithms are sophisticated these days โ€“ they know that someone searching for โ€œSan Francisco car repairsโ€ has the same intent as someone searching for โ€œcar repairs in San Franciscoโ€. Thereโ€™s no need to force in multiple variations of the same search term.

If you aim to make your content thorough (both in terms of length and depth), the appropriate keywords will find their way in naturally.

4. Not Building a Business Case Upfront

Content marketing ROI starts with a strong business case. Think about what you are trying to achieve. Are you trying to create affinity for your brandโ€™s products? Are you trying to generate quality leads? Are you trying to engage new buyers with your brand? All of these things are key elements that must be decided upfront as the foundation of your content marketing efforts. Without this, your program will struggle to prove its value and ROI.

5. Not Documenting Your Content Marketing Strategy

After awhile we start to sound like a broken record about this, but its importance cannot be emphasized enough. A 1979 Harvard MBAย studyย asked students, โ€œHave you set clear, written goals for your future and made plans to accomplish them?โ€ The result, only 3% had written theirย goals and plans, 13% had ideas of goals, but did not have them in writing and 84% had no goals in their heads or on paper.

Ten years later, the same group was interviewed again. The 13% of the class who had goals, but had not written them down was earning double the amount of the 84% who had no goals. The 3%, however, who had written goals were earning ten times as much as the other 97% of the class combined. The same principles apply to content marketing strategy. If you write down your content marketing goals and plans to achieve them, you are more likely to do so โ€“ in fact, 5x more likely, according to Content Marketing Institute.

6. Focusing Too Much on Sales, Not on Providing Value

Consumers have become incredibly efficient at filtering out promotional content. If youโ€™ve created a piece of content with the sole aim of making sales, it will not only be obvious, but itโ€™s also unlikely to have the intended effect. People can sniff out a sales pitch a mile away.

Good content marketers know they canโ€™t dupe their audiences, and donโ€™t try to do so. Remember, content marketing is notย copywriting and you shouldnโ€™t treat it as such. Instead of thinking about what you can get out of each piece of content, focus instead on how it can help your customers.

Consumers todayย want content that educates or entertains them. Shameless promotional plugs turn them off. If you provideย compelling content, theyโ€™ll be more likely to engage with your content โ€” and share withย their networks, too.

Donโ€™t make your content all about you. If your industry or niche is intrinsically uninspiring, itโ€™s easier to fall into this trap. By providing the best possible value to your customers through helpful and interesting content, youโ€™ll gain their trust and respect, which will ultimately lead to more sales further down the line.

7. Ignoring Your Customersโ€™ Questions (And Needs)

The basic principle of content marketing is to simply answer your customersโ€™ questions. If youโ€™re not doing that, youโ€™re not doing content marketing properly. Sometimes we see brands struggle with understanding what ย their customers want from them. For example, a health insurance company may think providing healthy recipes would be something their audienceย would find of interest. Sure itโ€™s possible, but more likely that not many people are looking for their next summer salad recipe from their insurance company. The type of questions theyโ€™d be askingย their insurance company would be more along the lines of, โ€œHow do I choose between an HMO or PPO plan?โ€ or โ€œIโ€™m getting married in a few months, how should my insurance change?โ€

Shopkeep, a point of sale system for small businesses, finds itsย blogย content topics by going straight to the source. Paul Nugent, Shopkeepโ€™s Director of Content, explains,

โ€œWe interview merchants constantly. We ask them their pain points, area of concern, what theyย would want inย their inbox every week. Weโ€™ve learned there are subjects that are more compelling, even within the same industry. For example, layoutย design is more important for a full service restaurant than a quick service.โ€

With this strategy, thereโ€™s no doubt that what theyโ€™re publishing will be tremendously valuable to their customers.

Proper research is vital for your content marketing strategy, not so much to identify keywords, but rather to identify the topics that your customers are looking for.

One mistake that businesses make time and time again when producing blog posts is that they create general content thatโ€™s vaguely related to their niche or industry, not specific content aimed at solving problems.

By getting really deep into your research and understanding your customers, youโ€™ll get to know their pain points and therefore the content you can produce to help them overcome their challenges.ย 80% of consumers believe brands donโ€™t understand them as an individual, resulting in poorly targeted marketing messages.

Letโ€™s say you run an online toy store and want to start publishing a blog to bring in more search traffic. You can write dozens of generic toy reviews and gift idea round-ups. Theyโ€™ll probably bring in a few hits to your site but you wonโ€™t really be providing truly useful and insightful content to your audience.

However, if you realize from your research that lots of parents are searching for how to teach their kids to tie their shoelaces, youโ€™ve identified a problem to solve. You can then write a blog post explaining the importance of fine motor skills development to master skills such as tying shoelaces and include a few links to some toys that can help to build these skills.

Youโ€™ve now got a piece of content that is providing real value and generating sales for you at the same time.

8. Skimping on Design, Creatives, Visualsย and Graphics

Articles that include visuals receive 94% more views than those without. An effective marketing strategy doesnโ€™t overlook the importance of creative content design.

I just canโ€™t over-emphasize the importance of visual content. Throwing your new white paper into your old template and relying on stock photos may be easy, but will do nothing to help your content stand out. Having a capable designer create custom images that tie directly into the content is going to increase your chances of getting shared, and will get your content seen by more buyers.

Great visual content is key to creating easy-to-read articles that engage your audience. Each post should have at least one image between every 200-300 words to break up text. Similarly, including a video less than 2 minutes long can both boost visual appeal and improve SEO.

A good rule of thumb is that if you donโ€™t want to read it, neither does your audience. Enhance the value of your content by adding a few pictures, videos and engaging text.

9. Not Creating Personalized Experiences

Amazon addresses everyone by first name, but no one feels like Amazonโ€™s best friend. Autofill alone doesnโ€™t turn a generic email into a personalized one. Instead of playing fill-in-the-blank with prospect personalization, use tools to create personalized experiences that get people interested.

โ€œPersonalization includes an array of awesome, data-driven techniques that bring in substantial ROI,โ€ according to an article on email marketing brand Campaign Monitorโ€™s blog. โ€œThese techniques include making recommendations based on past purchases, using dynamic content to fit consumer preferences, showing an understanding of purchasing history, and taking advantage of data to promote compelling offers.โ€

Leverage gated content on your landing pages to turn interest into a mailing list sign-up and a potential conversation. If someone clicks through certain pages on your website, track that activity and provide more information on those topics. Follow up on abandoned shopping carts; send occasional reminders about wish list items. Focus more on individualsโ€™ needs to take connections from passing to permanent.ย 

10. Producing Only One Type of Content, on the Same Platform

To many business owners, content marketing means one thing only: a blog. Itโ€™s true that blogging can be a very effective and important part of your content marketing plan, but it shouldnโ€™t be theย onlyย part.

You need to think about what content formats work best for each of your topics. Some might work best as a blog post while others would be better as a video or infographics. White papers can be great, and many people like them โ€“ but others may download and never read them because it simply takes too long or they are not far enough along in the buying cycle to dedicate a whole lot of time to research. Some people love video content, and are more likely to watch a video than read an article ยญโ€“ but others complain that they just want to skim some bullets and never engage with video.

The thing about content formats is that everyone has different preferences. B2B buyers act in groups, and if you donโ€™t have a wide array of content offers in different formats you may miss the boat on the one influencer that you need in your corner.

Also, consider how youโ€™re distributing your content โ€“ youโ€™re limiting yourself if itโ€™s going no further than your blog. Think about guest blogging for other sites, publishing on social media, and distributing content as ebooks. Donโ€™t forget, your email list is an important channel for your content marketing too.

11. Being Inconsistent or Infrequent in Your Publication Schedule

If you want to get the most out of content marketing, itโ€™s important to stick to a regular schedule of content publishing.

Consistency mattersย when it comes to growing a dedicated audience. If youโ€™re just publishing blog posts randomly whenever you feel like it, your followers wonโ€™t know when to expect new content and will most likely forget about you entirely if you go too long without publishing.

Posting an optimal amount of content can be tricky, especially if itโ€™s your first time dipping your toes in the pool of content marketing.

The key is understanding that more content isnโ€™t helpful if itโ€™s not focused on delivering value. Publishing a little bit of content wonโ€™t make a noticeable impact either, even if itโ€™s quality material.

Successful content creation requires coming up with a solid plan and sticking to it. To see increased brand awareness, your businesses should stick to 1 โ€“ 2 blog posts per week and between 1,000 โ€“ 1,200 words per week.

Image Source: Orbit Media

Planning out content in advance in an editorial calendar means youโ€™ll never be short of material to publish. You can also plan in appropriate seasonal content and tie in promotions youโ€™re running or produce content around other significant dates. This needs to be planned well in advance or youโ€™ll miss the opportunity.

12. Creating Too Much Content

Carlos Hidalgo wrote that โ€œโ€ฆmore and more organizations are increasing their spend on content marketing, but only 30% can demonstrate the ROI from this spend.โ€ It is getting easier to get the budget to create content, but without the proper strategy in place it is very easy to focus on the content that does not serve the buyer.

When product-focused marketers are the only group tasked with creating content, you run the risk of having that content focus on features and benefits rather than the buyerโ€™s needs at every step of the journey. Creating content shouldnโ€™t be an exercise in volume, it should focus on quality and it should be something the buyer wants to read, not that you hope the buyer will read.

13. Not Publishing Enough Content

Not surprisingly, companies that commit to regularly publishing quality content reap the biggest rewards in terms of website traffic and leads. Atย NewsCred, our team found that increasing our posting cadence fromย 6 pieces of content weekly (1 original, 5 licensed) to 10 pieces of content weekly (5 original, 5 licensed)ย increased our unique visitors almost 50%.

Hubspotโ€™s recentย researchย had similar findings in correlation of publishing frequency and generated leads. For the companyโ€™s customer base,ย brandsย that published 16+ blog posts per month received aboutย 4.5X more leadsย than companies that published between 0 โ€“ 4 monthly posts.

14. Not Including CTAs

This is an easy mistake to make if youโ€™re following some of the previous advice about meeting your customer needs and avoiding being too salesy. That doesnโ€™t mean that you canโ€™t attempt to engage with your audience at all.

If youโ€™ve published a great piece of content and the reader has got to the end of it, what do you want them to do?

If youโ€™ve answered their questions and theyโ€™ve got what they needed, theyโ€™ll probably click right back off your site. However, if you include a clear CTA that sends them to another page on your site or encourages them to sign up for your email list, youโ€™ll have captured a valuable lead.

CTAs donโ€™t have to be part of your content โ€“ you may choose to implement them as a pop-up or bar at the top of your site. Just make sure you donโ€™t overlook them completely.

15. Not Providing Social Proof

โ€œAny positive comments about you, your business, or even your product function as social proof,โ€ says Flora Frichou of brand trust company Trustpilot. โ€œThese online sentiments are endorsements that this person, company, service, or product is great, and that the overall customer journey has satisfied previous shoppers.โ€

People trust other people โ€” even people theyโ€™ve never met. Reviews, client testimonials, and case studies can convince prospects that your offerings are the perfect fit for their situation.

Regularly update your social proof to keep pitches fresh and relevant. People will eventually tire of the same two smiling people sharing their love for your brand. But if they see a steady stream of fanatics, theyโ€™ll be triggered to find out whatโ€™s so great about your business.

16. Not Utilizing Your Existing Resources

According to Sirius Decisions, 60-70%of B2B content goes unused. Think of all the wasted time and energy. Instead of starting from scratch, take a look at your database of whatโ€™s already created and see what you can reuse or repurpose. Salesforce has this system nailed down with a planned approach to transform a piece of content into multiple media forms. Salesforceโ€™s content marketing manager, Amanda Nelson explained her teamโ€™sย systemย saying,

โ€œWe had one eBook called โ€™30 Ways to Create Your Social Media Plan.โ€™ We wrote 30 blog posts detailing each piece. We create tons and tons of content from this central focus. By producing two eBooks a month, our content engine is constantly running.โ€

Creating content is expensive and time-consuming, so it is in your best interest to recycleย that investmentย in as many ways as you can.

17. Producing Similar Content for Different Audiences

Personalization is great, but when you have limited information to consider, audience segmentation works almost as well. Instead of sending shotgun-blast emails to every address in your CRM, break audiences into groups to try different messages.ย 

โ€œItโ€™s not enough to change the examples of customers youโ€™ve worked with,โ€ says TJ Macke of sales enablement platform Regie.io. โ€œChange the length, change the focus, try sounding cheeky instead of polished โ€” creating variety will be what gets you to that 10x result.โ€

You can keep your brandโ€™s voice consistent even as you try different messaging strategies. As long as you donโ€™t stray from your companyโ€™s core values and purpose (which you should define, if you havenโ€™t), your customers wonโ€™t blink at an email that might seem out of character on the surface.

18. Not Diversifying Your Content Formats

Once upon a time , someone told you that the secret recipe for perfect content marketing calls for boosting your blog posts. Although blogging is an important way to drive traffic, thereโ€™s some key ingredients missing from your strategy.

Think about your ROI-driven content topics and determine which formats work best. Consider videos, interviews, social media, case studies and e-books. Add some flavor to your marketing strategy by mixing a variety of avenues into your content.

content formats for b2b

Image Source: HubSpot

19. Not Creating Enough Content for the Top of the Funnel

This one dovetails nicely with the โ€œtoo much contentโ€ problem. Sometimes creating content isnโ€™t the problem, but your lack of credibility as a trusted advisor and partner is a huge issue. Your papers and brochures may do a fantastic job of describing the benefits of your solutions, but if you have not established that you are a trusted advisor that understands the buyer they may be hesitant to invite you to the table.

Years ago when I was working a short stint in B2B sales, I took a course on SPIN Selling, and I still think about the fundamentals of that selling process today. The โ€œSPINโ€ in SPIN Selling stands for Situation, Problems, Implications, and Need payoff.

Many companies create plenty of content talking about the payoff, without showing their buyers that they understand their situation, and the problems they face. And most buyers donโ€™t understand the implications of those problems, and the costs of not acting to correct those problems.

If you can create the content that shows that you have insights into the real issues they face on a daily basis, and then help to educate them on the implications of not acting to correct those issues, then you will do a much better job of capturing leads earlier in the buying cycle. You also are positioning yourself as a partner when they are ready to begin the process of change, and that is invaluable.

20. Not Focusing Enough on Distribution

Creating great content isnโ€™t enough toย get your site to the top of search results.ย Hollywood spends about 50% of budgets on production and the other 50% on distribution. Content marketing budgets should be divvied up in a similar fashion. If youโ€™re just getting started, paid distribution is a great way to jumpstart engagement and reach. Social channels like LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook all have paid distribution offerings. Other vendors, such as Outbrain, have a pay-per-click model, whichย allows you to only pay for the traffic you actually receive.

NewsCred has found success with targeted social promotion, resulting in correlating increases in reach and social shares. The charts above show that our team correctly targeting the right people resulted in them viewing, engaging with, and sharing ourย content.

21. Overdosing on Outbound Marketing

Outbound marketing remains one of the most effective prospecting channels, but potential customers are developing even less patience for outdated communications tactics. To make the most of your outbound strategy, avoid common mistakes that send emails into the trash.

Consumers deal with hundreds of ads and messages every day, starting from the moment they pick up their smartphones in the morning. They donโ€™t have time to listen to irrelevant pitches, nor will they notice anything that blends into the background. You canโ€™t just yell louder to be heard โ€” you need to give people what they want.

Contrary to popular belief, linking to websites other than your own will actually drive traffic to your business as opposed to away.

Link building provides your readers with references and enhances credibility. This gives Google the green flag that your content is trustworthy. It also improves SEO and offers added value to readers, all resulting in boosted visibility and your business ranking higher.

If youโ€™re feeling frisky, start mingling with sites that post similar content and start building a relationship. After getting to know each other, you may find theyโ€™re the perfect match for embedding links back to each otherโ€™s content. We like to call that โ€œlove at first siteโ€.

Enjoy the short video below to learn more about the importance of link building.

23. Not Outsourcing to Specialists

Are you sitting down? Because weโ€™re about to drop a bomb on ya.

75% of people never scroll past the first page of search engines. That means youโ€™ll need sharp SEO skills if you havenโ€™t outsourced an expert to help your business rank on Google.

Luckily, thereโ€™s plenty of content marketing agencies like ours that help businesses grow by providing perfected SEO and written content to their clients.

Great SEO is key to ranking, reaching and engaging your audience through including highly searched keywords in marketing content. Valuable content that jives with SEO research will land you on the first page. Misuse of keywords will send you to the back of the line.

Equally as important as SEO experts, quality writers are key to generating valuable content. Online editing and creation tools are great for correcting grammatical errors. Only professional writers can consistently produce engaging, human-powered content that appeals to real people.

If you believe that your value proposition is too complex to trust with an outside writer, than you may need to hire an outside source to help you simplify that complicated scenario. Sometimes the thing that you need to kick-start a stalled content strategy is an outsider to help break down a difficult barrier to communications with your buyers. Getting an outsiderโ€™s take on what your company brings to the table can be a creative exercise that will pay dividends in the long run.

Donโ€™t miss out on optimized value by relying on overworked internal personnel to do a job that requires a dedicated expert. Kick-starting your content strategy is as simple as leaving it in the hands of an SEO researcher and creative writer.

24. Not Getting A/B Testing Right

Once you find the type of messaging and content that resonates with your audience, donโ€™t overwhelm prospects with similar content or abandon the message altogether. Take the middle road by A/B testing similar content to determine what works best.

โ€œAs you optimize your web pages and emails, you might find there are a number of variables you want to test,โ€ says Lindsay Kolowich of HubSpot. โ€œBut to evaluate how effective a change is, youโ€™ll want to isolate one โ€˜independent variableโ€™ and measure its performance โ€”ย  otherwise, you canโ€™t be sure which one was responsible for changes in performance.โ€

Create one excellent email, then test something relevant to your conversion rate. If you want to improve open rates, for example, you may test two different subject lines. A click-through rate test might change the color, text, or location of your call to action. Whatever you test, segregate your audience randomly to keep your data as reliable as possible.

25. Not Tracking and Measuring Results

If youโ€™re not tracking the traffic that your content marketing brings in, and how it converts, you have no idea of how effective your content is.

Without this information you not only have no idea if your content is actually helping you, but you also donโ€™t know how to improve poor-performing content and produce more of your top-performing content. Youโ€™ll have no idea which falls into each group.

Tracking software these days is easy to setup and activate. It provides you with a huge amount of helpful data. Even if youโ€™re not sure what to do with all this data at first, the most important step is to start collecting it โ€“ you can always outsource the analysis and resulting action plan to an expert at a later date.

You also need to have clearly defined goals within your content strategy. After all, youโ€™re not just putting out content because itโ€™s fun โ€“ it has to work for you and boost your business success too. This may be by bringing more traffic to your site, increasing sales, or just growing your brand awareness.

Once you know what your goals are, you need toย identify the metricsย that you can track to see if you achieve your goals.

Master Content Marketing Today!

Content marketing mistakes are easy to avoid when you know exactly where theyโ€™re hiding.

But very few content marketers hit a home run each time they step up to bat. Weโ€™ve all had our fair share of strikeouts.ย Failures, however, are also learning experiences, especially those made by others. Mistakes provide insight into what to avoid in the future.

As the content marketing space grows overtime, so have the number of trials and errors weโ€™ve found many marketers make. Donโ€™t make the same mistake twice and learn from theย most common onesย we see brandsย making in their content marketing efforts.

Drive traffic to your site and publish quality content by checking out our weekly blogging service now.

The post The Biggest Content Marketing Mistakes You Keep Making appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Previous Post
swirl:-an-open-source-search-engine-with-llms-and-chatgpt-to-provide-all-the-answers-you-need-

Swirl: An open-source search engine with LLMs and ChatGPT to provide all the answers you need ๐ŸŒŒ

Next Post
how-to-execute-a-plan-successfully-(tools-&-templates-included)

How to Execute a Plan Successfully (Tools & Templates Included)

Related Posts