Peter Fougerousse: Helping You Succeed at Blogging and eCommerce!

The Best Beginner’s Step-by-Step Content Marketing Guide

Working on Content Strategy

This comprehensive guide is not only for beginners, but also serves as a crash course. It’s packed with resources and tips that could easily form the basis of a college course. All readers, especially business executives, should give it a read to learn what to do when their marketing team runs out of ideas or loses momentum.

Content marketing is crucial for growing a blog or business in 2024. If you want to increase web traffic, improve your domain authority, and boost sales, you must leverage the power of content marketing. Although it’s not difficult, there are proven techniques, tested tools, and best practices to follow in order to execute a successful content marketing strategy. As a business owner, you don’t want to overcomplicate your content marketing plan or waste time and money.

This long and detailed article provides clear and concise instructions, including a table of contents for easy navigation and an FAQ section with quick answers to questions like “what is content marketing?” and “what are the different types of content marketing?”. It covers the most up-to-date and effective content marketing strategies for 2024.

Content Marketing Meaning and Value

What Is Content Marketing?

Content marketing, as defined by the Content Marketing Institute, is a strategic approach to marketing that involves creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content in order to attract and retain a clearly defined audience and ultimately drive profitable customer action. Unlike traditional marketing techniques that focus on promoting products or services, content marketing aims to provide valuable information to the target customer, whether by answering a question or solving a problem.

In simpler terms, when you use any type of content – written (such as blog posts, articles, ebooks, or social media posts), visual (such as videos, infographics, or social media graphics), or audio (such as podcasts) – to market to your customers, you are engaging in content marketing. The more helpful and relevant the content is to your audience, the more valuable it will be for your business.

Why Content Marketing is Necessary for Your Business

What happens when you make great content that engages your customer? It gets the word out about your business (brand awareness).

What if you focus on answering questions, offering in-depth explanations about important topics for readers, and solving problems for customers? You become an authority in your industry.

What if you consistently create quality content and become a trusted source for that sought-after information? Your site becomes THE go-to source above your competitors for reliable content.

So, what are the results of good content marketing? More traffic, more brand advocates, more backlinks, more domain authority, and more sales… all the good stuff.

Proof That Content Marketing Works

I know what you’re thinking…show me the stats! It’s one thing to say “take it from me, content marketing is amazing,” and it is another thing to actually demonstrate it.

Here’s the thing: with more than 4.5 billion internet users worldwide and 3.5 billion social media users (Oberlo), it’s a no-brainer that you need to attract and engage your audience where they’re at all day, every day… online.

Check out these content marketing statistics from Demand Metric:

Examples of Content Marketing

There are many types of content marketing and you can and should use as many as possible to reach your audience. This list covers the most popular content marketing varieties.

  1. Blog Posts
    Blogs are the cornerstone of content marketing. They will live forever on the internet and can continually provide value to your reader and, as a result, can be valuable to your company. Blog posts need to be useful (informative, entertaining, educational), high quality (not just a bunch of filler from a content farm), updated regularly (avoid outdated, stale content), and SEO optimized (so the search engines and your readers can actually find you). Typically long-form blog articles get better SEO results, although the suggested word counts for blog posts can vary by industry. It makes sense that more great content = more traffic, but there isn’t a perfect formula for how many blog posts you should produce on a weekly or monthly basis.
  2. Ebooks
    Ebooks are next-level content, in both breadth and depth. They allow you to tackle a more complex topic and expand on it in a way that just isn’t feasible in a blog post. Ebooks can establish your knowledge authority on a subject or in your industry. An Ebook offer can inspire your reader to engage further with your brand, for example, by joining your mailing list to gain access, thereby feeding your email marketing channel. Content from your ebook can be repurposed to inform your blog posts and vice versa.
  3. Case Studies
    If you have a product or service that you are selling and want to show how it has worked for other customers in a demonstrable way, then a case study is a handy sales tool. Case studies are a valuable content marketing tool because they essentially show potential clients how you have made past clients successful.
  4. Templates
    Creating templates and offering them to your readers for free is a pretty awesome way to attract readers to your blog and customers for your business. By putting the hard work into creating great templates and giving your customer free access, you have saved them time and money and most likely inspired loyalty. For example, if your blog is about recruiting you can provide a resume, cover letter, and email template to your readers. Or, if you have a blog for writers, you can offer templates for PR pitches, email outreach, or freelance bids. Templates are invaluable time savers for entrepreneurs!
  5. Infographics
    Infographics are quick to read, visually pleasing, easy to share on social media, likely to be a source of backlinks (if it proves to be of interest to other writers covering similar topics), and a valuable accompaniment for your articles, blog posts, or email marketing. User-friendly design software like Canva makes the process of creating professional and appealing infographics simple.
  6. Videos
    In 2024, Video really should be part of your content marketing toolbox. Video is more likely to be shared, often more engaging than the written word, and more likely to build a rapport with your audience. Plus, YouTube is a great source of traffic and video tends to provide more entertainment value. There are many types of information that are just better executed in a video format. If your blog is about graphic design software or video editing or photography, chances are your readers are going to want to WATCH you explain your process and SEE you doing tutorials vs. simply reading how-tos.
  7. Podcasts
    Podcasts are a very popular, powerful, and informative medium that can be a phenomenal marketing avenue. Podcasts give you the ability to speak in your own voice directly to your audience, use storytelling, and build a relationship with your audience – all great stuff.
  8. Social Media
    Chances are you are already using some or all of the social media platforms listed below to reach your target audience. If you are using many channels, lots of services like Buffer are available to help you keep track of your social media content marketing campaigns. Research shows that over 70% of Americans use social media, with many using it weekly and even daily. The top 8 Social Media Networks are listed here in order of popularity.
    1. YouTube
    2. Facebook
    3. Instagram
    4. Pinterest
    5. LinkedIn
    6. Snapchat
    7. Twitter
    8. Reddit
    9. TikTok

The Content Marketing Funnel

Content Marketing Funnel Explained

Just like the buyer persona is a fictional representation of your customer, the marketing funnel is a visual representation of the sales process. The marketing funnel describes the journey of the customer and documents the stages from the very first moment they became aware of your existence to the point of purchase.

In a perfect world, the funnel would be shaped like a cylinder, and every sales lead would become a loyal customer. But, in reality, the number of people that learn about your product or business or blog and the number of those people that become customers are not equal. That’s because gaining new customers, building relationships, and closing the sale is more involved and certainly less predictable than that.

Hence, the marketing funnel helps us to break down and address these stages.

Top Of The Funnel – Capture Attention

Goals: Your audience is just discovering who you are and what you are all about. At this stage, you are looking to build brand awareness (get your name out there) while simultaneously adding value (providing helpful and memorable content) to attract potential customers.

Tactics: Good SEO and Social Media Marketing are great ways to attract your target audience. Blog posts with relevant topics of interest, comprehensive guides with useful information, and videos that can be shared on social media are good examples of how to help your audience discover you at this stage.

Metrics: Ways to measure success in the awareness phase include social media reach, the number of keyword searches, and site traffic (how many visitors are coming to your site, how many pages they are viewing, and how long they are staying).

Middle Of The Funnel – Engage & Educate

Goals: Here your goal is to convert your reader into a sales lead. Now that they know who you are and associate you with valuable content, you can build on that growing trust relationship by diving deeper into your value proposition.

Tactics: Case studies that show how your products or information have helped others, ebooks, downloadable templates, free tools, whitepapers, tutorials (that show how to use your products), detailed how-to blogs, instructional videos (that demonstrate value to your customer), webinars, seminars, and free email courses will all nurture the relationship with your audience at this stage.

Metrics: Measure site engagement by tracking how your visitors are navigating your site and where they are spending the most time. Measure customer engagement by tracking the number of opt-ins to your email lists, sign-ups to your free courses, or the number of downloads of free ebooks or templates.

Bottom Of The Funnel – Convert to Purchase

Goals: This is the stage where you want to close the deal, make the sale, convert leads into customers, and turn occasional visitors to your blog into regular subscribers.

Tactics: The most effective content for helping a potential customer commit to a sale are product testimonials, product and service reviews, introductory or free trial offers, mini-courses or product spec sheets, limited-time promotions/discounts/coupons, and free consultations.

Metrics: How many customers purchased and how did they buy – via social channels, email links, referral links, or directly on the website?

After The Funnel – Retention

Goals: You don’t just want to make one sale, right? You want repeat customers. You hope for a loyal readership that chooses to return to your site over and over again. Even better, you want brand advocates that will vouch for your company to their friends, family, and contacts, who will spread the word far and wide and even create content on your behalf, in a really organic way.

Tactics: By offering incentives like discounts or premium perks, you can encourage brand ambassadorship via reviews, testimonials, or social media shares. Customer loyalty can be fostered through rewards programs and earned discounts, outreach, and follow-up by phone or email. You can even encourage your customers to be involved with decisions about the design and features of future products, services, or content offerings, allowing them to feel personally vested in the outcome.

Metrics: Know how well you are inspiring customer loyalty by measuring the number of repeat purchases, brand advocates, social media ambassadors, glowing reviews, customer referrals, etc.

Content Strategy

Before you sink your teeth into content creation for your business, you need to have an idea of where you are headed, what your final goals are, and what kinds of results you are aiming for. A haphazard approach will be frustrating: no less time-consuming, but almost certainly less fruitful. You want to be knowledgeable and clever in your approach while being purposeful and organized in your execution.

Content Strategy Explained

A Content Marketing Strategy essentially outlines your vision (where do you want your blog or company to be in the short and long term) and the framework within which you will accomplish your goals using content marketing.

Your Content Marketing Strategy is defined by what values will drive your content (how can it solve a problem, and/or entertain, inform, educate?), what types of content you will produce, at what frequency that content will be created, on what channels that content will be published, the underlying messaging of your content, what will differentiate your content, what audience you will reach, and for what ultimate desired outcome.

Why You Need to Create a Content Marketing Strategy for Your Business

Whether you are an entrepreneur or a marketing team member within a business, it is not only wise but necessary to have a clear content marketing strategy in place before you start creating or outsourcing your content.

Bottom line – this is about time and money.

Creating a content strategy requires an upfront time investment no doubt, but will save you tons of time and prevent you from spinning your wheels going forward. Equally as important, a defined content strategy can save you money by properly allocating your budget and ensuring cost-effective expenditures by measuring the performance of your strategy using ROI metrics.

Here’s How To Create an Awesome Content Marketing Strategy

Define Your Content Marketing Vision

In a nutshell, your content marketing mission statement should define your vision by outlining what you hope to accomplish with your strategy, who you are targeting, and how your strategy will be mutually beneficial (a win-win) for your company and your audience.

Let’s say you run an auto parts website. Your content strategy mission might be to offer tutorials about how to fix cars and reviews of automotive parts brands (type of content) for discerning DIY customers and car enthusiasts (target audience) and by way of answering their questions and offering solutions about car maintenance and repair, you are building trust and establishing authority in your industry (intangible business goals) which converts into increased traffic and sales (tangible business goals).

Run a Content Audit

If you have an existing blog with content, you need to figure out what is actually working towards achieving your marketing goals. That is why a content audit is an important first step in devising your content strategy.

What Is A Content Audit?

A “content audit” is the process of analyzing the quality of the existing content on your website to figure out how effective it is and to weed out problems. The ultimate goal is to find what is working and what is missing. The results of your content audit will inform how your content plan can be adapted to better meet your current marketing goals.

Step 1: Inventory

Start off by logging all of the content you have using tools like Screaming Frog to crawl your site to pull your URLs and then use Google Analytics to analyze. After crawling your site and grabbing the URLs, you can assess the quality of your content – looking for duplicate pages, broken links, missing titles or descriptions, missing meta descriptions, bad redirects, etc.

Step 2: Organize

Next, organize your content in a spreadsheet by assessing your content through the following categories. This content audit template will make it easier.

Step 3: Metrics

With Google Analytics you can figure out how your content is performing and estimate how effective your content has been in achieving your marketing and business goals.

Step 4: Analysis

Now that you have gathered all of the info, what story does it tell?

Set Your Content Marketing Goals

Once you have outlined your vision and completed your audit to see how your existing content is performing, you can move forward and set some specific content marketing goals.

Keep in mind that goals should be SMART (Specific/Measurable/Attainable/Relevant/Time-bound).

Your goals will likely run the gamutfrom increased sales or conversions to expanding brand awareness and customer base, to building trust and reputation within your industry.

Know Your Target Audience

Who will be reading your content? In order to reach your audience, you need to know your audience. If you try to appeal to a really broad and undefined audience the “general public” so to speak you will end up creating cookie-cutter, uncompelling content that doesn’t really appeal to anyone.

For example, in everyday life, I am guessing you use different words and communication styles depending on who you are talking to. When you speak to a child, sibling, parent, grandparent, boss, co-worker, teacher, best friend, stranger, customer, etc., you use different ways to express your ideas that are fitting to your audience.

This becomes even more true when you are creating content for your customer when you may only have one chance to excite, inform, entertain, and compel your reader to come back for more.

Create Customer Personas:

You need to know who you are speaking to when you are creating content – this will inform you every step of the way. Creating a buyer persona (a fictional representation or avatar of your customer) will help you to clarify and visualize who you are marketing to.

Value Proposition

Solve problems for your readers. What are your customer’s pain points and how can you address those? People are looking for answers to questions, solutions to problems, ideas for inspiration, innovative ways to address business needs, creative inspiration for tackling issues, technical expertise, and so on.

You need to figure out what problems you are solving and what solutions you are offering. This will inform your content and keep your audience coming back for more.

You also need to add value by being unique. Your readers WILL come back over and over and your customers WILL buy from you because your blog is different, better, funnier, more in-depth, aesthetically pleasing, data-driven, or all of the above. Know how you are special and try to make those features shine through in everything you do.

Choose your Content Channels

Decide which content you will post where – on your website, blog, social media channels, or on third party websites as a guest poster or contributor. You can adapt the length, writing style, and visual elements depending on the needs or restrictions of those channels. For example, content for social media posts might be shorter, have a lighter tone, and be more image-heavy, as compared to your own blog articles, which might be long-form, data-driven, or infographics-heavy.

The Types of Content To Create

Choosing the types of content to create will depend both on your preferences and expertise and the needs of your customer. Maybe video is the best way to reach your audience, or maybe they prefer to digest information via long blog posts or infographics. Maybe your budget permits you to cover lots of formats. But, if you find yourself limited to a few types, just do what you can in the most effective and efficient way possible.

Content Creation

Content Creation Workflow

In an ideal world your company would have the manpower to assemble a content team including:

But, let’s be real, out of the gate most blog and business owners will be wearing ALL of these hats.

So how on earth can one person be productive and prolific enough to execute a successful content marketing strategy?

One word – outsourcing!

Content Creation Outsourcing

If you tried to create all of the content for your website, you would be subjecting your business to the limitations of your own output. That is to say, even if you had no other business responsibilities and all you had to do was write all day, every day, you would just not be able to grow your blog.

Realistically, using the do-it-yourself method, it could take years and years to see the results of your labor. That just isn’t going to cut it. That being said, you might also not have the budget to hire employees, even on a part-time basis. That is where freelancers come in.

Content Creation Using Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence, and specifically ChatGPT, can be used to enhance and accelerate your content marketing efforts in a number of ways. Here are a few ideas:

  1. Generating content ideas: ChatGPT can be used to generate a list of potential topics or titles for new content pieces, helping you to come up with fresh ideas more quickly.
  2. Creating outlines for articles or blog posts: ChatGPT can be trained to understand the structure of a typical article or blog post and can use this knowledge to generate an outline for you to work from.
  3. Writing content: ChatGPT can be used to write entire articles or blog posts, allowing you to produce content more quickly and efficiently.
  4. Editing and proofreading: ChatGPT can be used to edit and proofread your content for grammar and spelling errors, helping to improve the quality of your content.
  5. Creating social media posts: ChatGPT can be used to generate ideas for social media posts, helping you to come up with engaging content for your social media channels more easily.

Overall, ChatGPT and other AI tools can be a valuable addition to your content marketing efforts, helping you to produce high-quality content more efficiently and effectively.

How To Hire Freelancers

Decide What Content to Outsource – First you need to identify what kind of content you need help with. Do you need a lot of social media posts, website blurbs, long-form conversational blog posts, ebooks, or highly technical, data-driven articles? The type of content, number of words, amount of research necessary to complete the task, and whether a writer needs to already have expertise on a subject, will all play into how you choose a writer.

Set Your Budget – To a large extent, when it comes to freelance writers, you get what you pay for. The level of complexity of the content will lead to a higher price tag no doubt, as will the length of the article. That being said, there is a wide range of pricing tiers. Rates for blog posts will vary greatly from rates for advertising copy or marketing blurbs. You will pay more for a shorter, high impact piece of sales copy. When hiring a freelance writer to create blog articles, you will find average prices ranging from 2 cents to 25 cents per word, with 4 cents to 10 cents per word being a favorable target rate.

Create a Job Listing – Be super clear about the type of content, writing style, word count, and level of expertise you require. Clearly define what qualities, experience, and expertise you are looking for in an ideal freelancer.

Screen Freelance Writers – Ask detailed questions about the writer’s experience in your industry. Require writing samples and links to currently published work online. Find out what their average turnaround time is and if they are available for repeat gigs. It isn’t ideal to go through the hassle of hiring and building a relationship with a writer for a one-off article when what you really need is a dedicated writer. If your schedule is demanding and your expectations high, you will need to find a writer who can produce on tight timelines.

Provide an Outline – Providing a detailed outline with sections and subsections is a really crucial step that will save your writer time and save you from a lot of revisions. A structured breakdown of the article will guide the writer and give you the confidence that all-important elements will be covered. The outline can also indicate desired word count, tone, links to other content to use as an example, etc. The more information the better the outcome.

Start With a Test Article – To ensure that the quality, research capabilities, and writing style of a writer match up well with your needs, it is wise to start off with a test article. This should be an article that reflects the length and breadth of what you are looking for on a regular basis. The test article should be a good indicator of whether the writer is on the same page as you, as far as the overall output and turnaround time.

Websites to Hire Freelance Writers

Content Ideation

Solving Problems With Content

Are you asking yourself “what the heck should I blog about?” First and foremost, focus on what problems you are solving for your customers. This will guide your brainstorming process and help you to choose the winning content ideas.

The Best Tools for Brainstorming Content Ideas

Content Creation

Use a Content Editorial Calendar

To stay organized, properly plan ahead, and feed your pipeline, you need to document your content production using a calendar or spreadsheet that can be accessed by all contributors. The Content Marketing Institute, Hubspot, and CoSchedule offer free Content Calendar templates where you can log info such as the types of content you create, the publish date, author, where it is posted, etc.

Choose a Content Management System

You will also need to choose a content management system (CMS) which is software for creating, publishing, managing, and tracking your content. WordPress is probably the most widely used platform, but others like HubSpot CMS, or Shopify and Magento for eCommerce are great.

Visual Content Creation Tools

Including nice visuals with your content, whether in the form of images, graphics, animations, or videos, is an absolute must. Visuals are a huge asset to your content. As an attention-grabbing feature and an attractive accompaniment to your text, visuals are instrumental in increasing views, shares, and conversions. Luckily there are awesome tools that make creating professional graphics a breeze for the vast majority of us who don’t have the skills.

Content Promotion

Social Media

Influencer Marketing

  • Find out who the influencers are in your space. Find influential experts with large social media reach with your target audience.
  • Pitch your content to them, highlighting how it is relevant to their audience, will add value to their brand, and benefit their business.
  • Ideally, they will share your awesome content, amplify your voice, and expand your reach to a new, larger audience.
  • Alternatively, you have the option to pay for product placement or endorsement.

Email Marketing

  • Encourage your readers to opt-in to your email subscriber list with tools like Sumo or OptinMonster.
  • Build and reinforce your brand recognition with your audience by sending out email newsletters.
  • Keep email content concise and formatted in such a way that they can be scanned quickly for important information.
  • Include an attention-grabbing headline.
  • Balance good information with promotional material so you don’t turn the reader off with pushy tactics.
  • Make compelling offers that are value-driven.
  • Select an email marketing platform like MailChimp or Constant Contact.

Comment Marketing

  • Find respected websites with authority in your industry that have the attention of your audience and read articles and posts.
  • Contribute to the conversation by leaving interesting comments with feedback, ideas, suggestions, or even a differing opinion.
  • Your insights, especially if consistently offered, will get the attention of the author laying the groundwork for a relationship.
  • Your knowledge will make an impression and build credibility with your audience.
  • Don’t spam by constantly linking to your products and services.
  • Do mention your blog, brand, and articles in a way that is helpful and relevant without being overly sales-y.

PR Outreach

  • Create a pitch for your blog, product, or services and send it to media outlets with the hope that they will write about you.
  • Always include your bio and links to persuasive web collateral, like other articles, accolades, awards, etc. to vouch for you.
  • Keep your pitches short so as not to waste their time and use an engaging email subject line to get their attention quickly.
  • Use one of my favorite tools for PR outreach is HARO, which connects journalists and sources with daily opportunities for coverage.

Analyze and Measure Content Marketing Results

User Behaviour

Use Google Analytics to measure the following elements of your website traffic to create a picture of how your customers are behaving with your content.

Engagement

Monitor how your audience is interacting with your content to learn if they are connecting with it in a meaningful way. The level of engagement of your audience will make it pretty clear whether your messaging is resonating with readers or falling flat.

SEO

The following SEO metrics are a good measurement of how your content is performing and how well it is achieving your marketing goals. Success with SEO directly translates to more exposure for your content and that increased visibility will contribute to your goals of reaching your target market.

Revenue

The goal of great content creation is to add value to your business, and although this value is measured in many ways, the ultimate metric is increased revenue. To gauge success you will want to take a close look at leads generated and conversions.

Reputation

Your company’s reputation is one of your most valuable assets. It needs to be carefully protected and promoted to ensure that it accurately reflects your business and brand values. Measure how well your content strategy is contributing to this process with these metrics.

Content Maintenance

Update Your Content

Keeping your content updated will make you a favorite of readers and search engines alike. Stale and outdated content is the enemy here, but the good news is there are many ways to keep older content feeling current and relevant.

Repurpose Your Content

Published content can be reused and recycled in new and better formats to adapt to different audiences and channels. Here are a few ideas about how to revamp your content:

Keep Evergreen Content Fresh

Your pillar posts are your best blog posts that act as the foundation on which your blog and reputation are built. They contain long-form, evergreen content that covers a broad topic that is relevant to your industry. It’s essential that these evergreen posts remain fresh.

Grow Your Content

To grow your content you need to have a multifaceted approach.

It’s one thing to grow your content creation by simply increasing output through outsourcing and scaling with guest posting but it’s another thing to make content that actually converts and to grow your blog in a very tangible way that allows you to generate a steady income from yourself.

This growth will be measured by more traffic, increased domain authority, an ever-expanding and large email subscriber list, and will ultimately be reflected in a healthy and thriving revenue stream.

Here are some solid strategies for growing content that converts.

Grow Your Email List

Building your email list should be a priority from day one of your blog launch! Don’t put this off. Your email list will become one of your most valued business assets and will be key to growing your business.

Not only is email communication a really direct and personal way to engage your readers and customers, but it boasts the highest ROI of any other marketing channel.

Bonus: It is wholly owned by your business, so you can control your message and exposure, unlike with SERPs, where visibility can be sporadic due to Google’s finicky algorithms.

Since subscribers must sign up to receive your emails, you can be assured that your list is highly targeted towards your intended audience, and therefore your email audience is more likely to engage with and share your content.

Hub and Spoke Model

This Hub and Spoke Model describes how all of the content on your blog is related in a hierarchy and interconnected in a web of sorts.

Guest Posting

Writing for other blogs as a guest writer is a win-win for both you and the site that you are guest posting for. You will be providing them with original content and they, in turn, will link back to your site to boost your domain authority.

It’s a great way to increase your exposure with your target audience, grow your backlinks to juice your SEO, and boost your site traffic. Here are a few things to keep in mind.

Networking

As with most fields, networking with other businesses and bloggers is a good way to expand your industry knowledge and reach. Learning tips and tricks from seasoned bloggers is invaluable.

Channels

There are many websites that offer unique opportunities to re-purpose, share, and market your content.

Some of these sites are sort of hidden gems, that might at first glance seem unrelated to blogging or content marketing, per se.

The beauty here is that you can tap into a different audience that might not otherwise see your content, just by sharing it using another medium or channel.

Content Marketing Mistakes to Avoid

It’s true that our failures offer great learning opportunities. But, wouldn’t it be nice to avoid as many mistakes and pitfalls from the get-go as possible? Take a look at some common errors that can be costly, in terms of both revenue and reputation.

FAQs About Content Marketing

  1. What Is Content Marketing?

    According to the Content Marketing Institute, content marketing is “a strategic marketing approach focused on creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and retain a clearly-defined audience – and, ultimately, to drive profitable customer action.”

    In layman’s terms, content marketing consistently provides relevant and high-quality information that is helpful and valuable to the target customer, either because it answers a question or solves a problem, and as a result, builds a strong relationship, creates customer loyalty, and leads to purchases.

  2. Why Is Content Marketing Important?

    Content marketing, by its very definition, is a way to deliver value to your target market by answering questions, solving problems, or filling a need. Because this type of marketing, in and of itself, adds value for your audience by connecting directly with your customer, establishing trust with your customer, and educating your customer and all of these awesome tenets of a trusting relationship, strengthened over time, inform their purchasing decisions.

    Content marketing feeds your customers’ curiosity, equips them with the knowledge they require, and even encourages them to make informed decisions about purchasing your products or services.

  3. How Does Content Marketing Make Money?

    To make money with Content marketing you can use a two-pronged approach. You can make money with content marketing either by selling your own products and services OR by promoting other people’s products and services (or with a hybrid of those two methods).

    Let’s break it down.

    The first approach involves producing high-value, high-quality content that fills a need for your target market, thereby creating a connection with the customer and building a loyal and captive audience, which in turn allows you to sell a product or service which your customer truly wants or needs.

    The second approach also involves making relevant, high-quality, informative, or entertaining content that fills a need for your customer and forges a trusting and loyal relationship, which in turn allows you to recommend and sell the products and services of others by way of advertisements, affiliate sales, and paid brand sponsorships.

    The general rule of thumb to make money with Content Marketing is to produce high-quality content that is valuable to your customer, to be prolific and consistent, and to promote your content activity across all channels. This formula will result in a growth in web traffic, increased brand visibility, improved company reputation, and a strong rapport with your customer which can be leveraged to sell products or services.

  4. What Are the Different Types of Content Marketing?

    Here are the top 20 types of Content Marketing:

    Blogs
    Videos
    Podcasts
    Infographics
    Email Marketing
    Social Media Posts
    White Papers
    Case Studies
    eBooks
    Courses
    Slide Share Presentations
    Google Slides or PowerPoint Slide Decks
    Testimonials/Reviews
    Social Media Posts
    Quizzes/Surveys
    Free Tools
    Checklists/Templates Downloads
    Free Apps
    Webinars/Live Streams
    Memes

    Some of these top 20 types of content marketing will complement your business perfectly, while others may not be a great fit for you, but they all have the same important goals in mind: to drive traffic to your website, increase brand awareness, strengthen customer relationships, improve domain authority via backlinks and social media sharing, and ultimately, convert leads to customers and generate revenue.

  5. How Do I Get Started With Content Marketing?

    If you are wondering how to get started with a content marketing plan, you are not alone. Don’t be intimidated or overwhelmed by the process. Here are the basic steps to get started with Content Marketing which simply involve answering the following questions: Who, What, Why, When, and How.

    Who is your target market, i.e., who will you be communicating with through your content? This is where buyer personas come in handy.
    What is your value proposition? What problem are you solving? What questions are you answering? Keep focused on continually serving up value to your audience, instead of directly selling, to build a solid rapport.
    Why do you need content marketing, e.g. improving engagement, increasing sales, building brand awareness? Why is content the best way to achieve these goals? Understanding what the end goal is will drive your strategy.
    When will you distribute your content, how frequently, and on what schedule? This is where a content calendar comes into play and keeps you organized.
    How will you create the content (which formats will you use – video, podcast, blog, or all of the above) and how will you distribute the content (which channels are the best fit – company website, your blog, third party websites, social media, or a mix of all these)?

  6. What Are the Different Content Marketing Distribution Channels?

    After you create great content you need to share, promote, and distribute your content to reach your audience, and this is done via content marketing distribution channels.

    The channels you choose will vary depending on your target customer and where they spend their time online. The most widely used content channels are your own website and blog, other relevant blogs and websites (as a guest blogger or featured writer), social media platforms (YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, LinkedIn, Snapchat, Twitter, Reddit, TikTok), and email.

  7. What Is a Buyer Persona?

    A buyer persona is a detailed profile of your target customer that depicts who they are (motivations and goals), where they are from (demographics), how they act (behavioral patterns), what they like or don’t like (personal preferences), and what struggles they face (life challenges).

    Creating buyer personas is a research-based and data-driven process that informs your marketing decisions and guides your marketing strategies.

    Because Buyer Personas are characterizations and representations of your ideal customer(s), they help companies to tailor their marketing communications, customize content and create personalized marketing messages that are sure to resonate with their customers.

  8. What Is the Ideal Length for a Blog Article?

    Generally speaking, the longer the blog post, the better. Google’s algorithm clearly favors longer and more in-depth content (and, let’s face it, if Google doesn’t like it then nobody is even going to see it).

    According to Yoast, blog articles should be no less than 300 words.

    Back in 2013, research put forward by Medium indicated that blog posts with 1600 words (7-minute read) were the optimal length.

    In 2024, according to HubSpot data, the ideal blog post length for optimal SEO is between 2,100-2,400 words. Hubspot breaks it down further to identify that Pillar Posts (the best and most comprehensive blog posts at the foundation of your blog) should be about 4,000 words, Listicles (Blog Posts made of lists) should be about 2,300-2,600 words, and What Is? Posts (blog posts that answer a question) should be between 1,300 and 1,700 words.

    A solid suggestion for deciding on the ideal number of words for YOUR blog is to take your top 10 performing blog articles and calculate the average length. Don’t forget that although length is super important, quantity can never be prioritized at the expense of quality.

    Also, although Google prefers long-form content, and longer blog articles arguably add a great deal more value for the reader, it is also true that people have busy lives and might hesitate to commit to reading or be intimidated by a really long blog post as opposed to a super concise article. Luckily there are some formatting tips that can overcome those hurdles.

    Be sure to format your blog posts with a table of contents, bullet points, short paragraphs, and lots of sections with clear headlines. These formatting tips make it easy for the reader to scan the article for important information if they are in a hurry, and jump right to sections that they are most interested in.

  9. What Is Evergreen Content?

    Evergreen content is content that not only maintains its value and relevance in perpetuity but actually gains popularity and traffic over time. Evergreen content is long-lasting and always fresh, as opposed to other content that becomes stale, irrelevant or even obsolete, and loses traffic over time. Derived from evergreen trees that keep their leaves all year long and always have green leaves, evergreen content remains fresh and doesn’t die off.

  10. Should I Outsource Content Creation for My Blog or Business to Freelancer Writers?

    In short, YES! As the owner of a business or blog, you almost certainly wear a lot of hats and are spread thin. The process of creating and promoting high-quality content must be consistent, and due to the demands faced by many entrepreneurs, the best we can muster is often to create mediocre content, and only sporadically. Your time is valuable and delegating content creation, ideation, proofreading, promotion, and search engine optimization is critical to a healthy content marketing strategy.

    That being said, before hiring a freelance writer, you should write your initial set of pillar posts to establish a benchmark for quality and style that your outsourced team can work off of.

  11. How Much Should I Pay a Freelance Writer?

    Freelance writers will charge a wide range of rates based on skills, speed, experience, and industry expertise. Freelancer writing rates will also reflect the amount of research required prior to writing and SEO, linking, formatting, or other technical aspects associated with preparing the article for publication. Generally speaking, your quality expectations should be correlated with price and prices can range from 3 cents per word on the low end to 1 dollar per word on the high end. If you invest the time interviewing and vetting a solid writer to ensure the right fit, it is safe to say you will spend about 10 cents per word, or 200 dollars for an article that is 2000 words in length.

  12. How is B2B Content Marketing Different from B2C Content Marketing?

    Content marketing methods, tactics, channels, and messaging are all determined by and tailored to the audience that you are communicating with, and whether your target market is a private person or a business entity. B2B (Business to Business) content marketing differs from B2C (Business to Consumer) content marketing in that the fundamentally different audiences will substantially affect your marketing strategy. The fact is that B2B and B2C marketing campaigns are by no means diametrically opposed and, in fact, are greatly aligned in strategy. B2B content strategies do tend to be more ROI-focused and data-driven with longer sales cycles, while B2C content strategies tend to be more relationship-centric and emotion-driven with shorter sales cycles.

  13. What Is The Best Method for Coming Up With Ideas for Blog Articles?

    First and foremost, communicating directly with your audience and customers to find out what their wants and needs are is the most direct way to get ideas for new blog articles. Next, market research and competitor analysis will show you what is working well for others in your niche and can inspire your content. Then, refer to your onsite analytics in Google Search Console to see what is working best for you and how you can build on and expand hot topics. Lastly, get a finger on the pulse of your industry by looking for trending topics on Google Trends, finding out what’s popular on BuzzSumo, and get to the bottom of what burning questions are being asked on the internet with Answer the Public.

  14. How Is Content Marketing Different From Traditional Marketing?

    The primary goal of traditional marketing is to communicate its message via advertising platforms (ex: TV commercial/magazine ad) or promotions with the goal of selling a product or service. Content marketing, on the other hand, strives to communicate its message with the goal of filling a need for the customer through content, that has value in and of itself, and as a byproduct, leads to selling a product or service.

  15. How Do Content Marketing and SEO Work Together?

    Content and SEO are intertwined and interdependent. Google likes content, especially high-quality, fresh, and in-depth content that fills a need for people. In order to obtain traffic for your website, earn a high domain authority, and see top results in the SERPs, you need to create keyword-rich, high-value, and consistent content that people are looking for and that other sites will link back to. The bottom line is that SEO requires content, lots and lots of great content. SEO and content marketing campaigns work hand-in-hand to achieve your business goals.

  16. What Is The Difference Between Growing A Blog and Scaling A Blog?

    Growing your blog means that you are increasing your audience and revenue at the same rate as your expenditures. Scaling your blog means that you are adding revenue and expanding your audience exponentially while increasing your expenditures only incrementally. Scaling creates a growing spread between revenue and expenses, leading to ever-increasing profitability. Growing your blog is great, but scaling your blog is the ultimate goal.

  17. How Can I Create High-Quality Content

    To create the most compelling content that will reach the largest audience, get shared on social media, inspire real-life discussions, get mentioned on other websites, you need to focus on one and only thing, adding value for your audience. Focus on their problems, their pain points, their questions, their curiosities, and their conversations and how you can be an impetus for solutions. With value as your beacon, high-quality content that resonates with your audience will follow.

  18. What Is The Content Marketing Funnel?

    The content marketing funnel describes the journey of your customers as they go through the different steps that lead them to the point of making a purchase. The stages can be few or numerous and can have different names depending on which industry marketing professional you ask. But, most marketers would agree that there are 3 main stages that are often referred to as ToFu (Top of the Funnel), MoFu (Middle of the Funnel), and BoFu (Bottom of the Funnel).

    In the ToFu stage, your potential customer is just becoming aware of your business or blog, or product, so marketing tactics focus on building brand awareness and gaining traffic. In the MoFu stage, potential customers are digging deeper to figure out if they want to buy from your company or subscribe to your service, so you want to work on nurturing the relationship and building trust by providing useful and highly valuable content that answers questions and fulfills needs. The BoFu stage is dedicated to converting visitors into customers and closing deals and your content marketing tactics might include product demos, live webinars, personal consultations, or trial offers.

    Once a visitor converts and becomes a customer, the next stages of the funnel will focus on customer retention and loyalty, with content aimed at encouraging repeat purchases, referrals, and customer advocacy programs.

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