Tag Archives: content writing

Website Content and Penguin Protection

Later this year Google will introduce a new Penguin update to its search algorithm, the so-called Penguin 2.0. As with earlier versions, it will be targeting websites that have boosted their ranking by buying links and engaging in suspect link exchanging. The hype is that this Penguin will be even more voracious than the last in chewing up sites that try to achieve high ranking positions through any means other than providing valued website content.

The Value of Website Content

This really helpful infographic from Brafton explains the story of Penguin to-date and shows you how to protect your site against the coming update. Links will continue to be important if you want to maintain a high ranking; but they must be links that you earn with engaging website content rather than ones that you trade.

Key messages:

  • provide plenty of relevant website content that people want to engage with!
  • use social media intelligently
  • earn your links with top quality content

Brafton's Infographic: Website Content How To Avoid A Fight With Penguin

website content and SEO

 

I write website content that is loved by humans and search engines. I’m based in the South West and I support clients across the UK 01823 674167 richard@rshcopywriting.co.uk

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Do Terms like Content and Inbound Marketing Help or Confuse?

Marketing confusion Richard Scott via Compfight

Marketing people love inventing new terms for what they do. You could trace the history of marketing just by listing a whole load of terms and arranging them in chronological order. Latest among these you’ll find digital marketing, content marketing, inbound marketing, social media marketing and reputation management.

I often wonder how helpful these terms are to somebody looking for the most cost-effective way to promote their business. Often the implied message is ‘forget what you’ve been doing – this is the way you should be marketing your business now.’ Perhaps it’s more helpful to focus on the fact that it’s still ‘just marketing’ but done in a way that takes advantage of new tools and technology.

Focus on the basics

I sometimes meet business people who have come away with the impression that social media marketing means learning how to use Twitter and LinkedIn, or that content marketing means starting a blog. That approach will probably run out of steam pretty quickly. Why? because these approaches focus on the tools rather than the purpose.

The following definition of comes from businessdictionary.com, and is quite helpful:

‘As a philosophy, marketing is based on thinking about the business in terms of customer needs and their satisfaction. Marketing differs from selling because (in the words of Harvard Business School’s emeritus professor of marketing Theodore C. Levitt) “Selling concerns itself with the tricks and techniques of getting people to exchange their cash for your product. It is not concerned with the values that the exchange is all about. And it does not, as marketing invariably does, view the entire business process as consisting of a tightly integrated effort to discover, create, arouse, and satisfy customer needs.”

Focus on the the last few words: ‘discover, create, arouse and satisfy customer needs.’ That’s what effective marketing has always been about. It’s no different now, except that we have some great tools to help us do the job better.’ (Outraged sales people, please address your comments to Theodore, by the way).

Marketing involves listening

Social media tools help you tune in to what your customers are concerned about, what they need, and the things they value. Social media is not just a way to push out your content and sales messages – it’s also about listening and genuine engagement.

Marketing is all about value

Creating and arousing needs are areas where content is critical. We used to do this (and still do) with brochures, marketing letters, flyers and static websites. We’ve now added blogs, video, email, infographics and on-line discussions to ways that we can make people aware of how what we do could add value to their lives or business. The internet and social networks mean we can reach more people. But without a clear focus on the needs of your customers, none of it works – no matter how often you blog, tweet or post things on LinkedIn.

Meeting Needs

When it comes to meeting needs, what could work better that a good content strategy?   Demonstrating that you can meet your customers’ needs and have done so for similar businesses time and time again. The simple message is that you need to build your content around the things your customers need and care about rather than the things that you do.

OK, on-line marketing does mean learning how to use some new tools effectively. But it’s just as important to keep hold of what you already know how to do: learn what your customers need and show how you met those needs. You also need good, persuasive content, but then you always did. You just need more of it now.

I’m Richard Hussey, Owner of RSH Copywriting. I’m based on the Devon Somerset border. I help businesses use written content to drive growth. Use the Contact tab on the left if you’d like to talk to me about your content marketing needs.

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High Value Blogging

Growth strategies and content marketing plans can sometimes be complex. Often you need a much simpler statement to help you focus on what really matters when you’re making day-to-day decisions. Here’s mine: I focus on giving my customers something they value and then look for more customers and give them something they value also.

content marketing needs direction

Does your content marketing lack direction?

Lori Greig via Compfight

OK, I know the above approach sounds a bit like those trite maxims, loved by business gurus, that you see littered all over Twitter. But focusing in this way helps to guide business development and provide a direction for content marketing.

If you’re lucky or talented enough to have invented a killer product or service, a marketing message should be simple to create.  If I’d invented a car that performs like a Ferrari and runs for a thousand miles on a litre of petrol, I wouldn’t need to think too hard about how I’m going to market it. For most of us it’s a bit more tricky.

Content marketing: focus on value

If you’re stuck for things to blog about, have a think about how you add value to your customers. Write some blog posts about how people can add value to their business or lives by using the things you provide.  So, if I were in the Customer Relationship Management systems business I would be illustrating, in a multitude of ways, how a structured approach to prospecting and communicating with potential clients works much better than an uncoordinated scatter-gun approach, without overtly saying ‘buy my CRM system’ (that’s called advertising).

Content marketing: focus on the future

Thinking about the customers you want to have in the future also helps give you a focus. It clearly makes sense to focus your content creation around the needs of the customers you want to have.

You might also want to centre your content creation around the products and services that you think will be your most profitable lines in the future, rather than now.  How much effort do you want to put into marketing lines that will show gradually decreasing margins?

So, if you want a focus to help you decide what content you should be creating and sharing, think about these 3 questions:

1. What do we do that our customers particularly value, why do they value it?

2. What sort of customers do we want to win, what will they value?

3. Which of our products or services do we most want to promote?

This may sound simple, and I make no apology for that. Working through the detail will still require serious thought. Compare this to the approach you often see, with people jumping onto a blogging and content marketing bandwagon without too much thought of what they want to get from all this activity, other than vague notions of increased profile or unspecified new business opportunities.

Other posts you might find interesting:

Don’t let content marketing suck up all your time.

How content marketing leads to sales

PS. If you want regular, well written content for your marketing activities have a look at my monthly budget plan options HERE

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Does your content miss the mark? – 5 steps to content that works!

How often do you find that your marketing fails to deliver the results you expected? Assuming your product and pricing are fine, perhaps the answer lies in your content.

5 steps to effective content writing

Better focus helps your content hit the mark

Websites, blogs, direct marketing letters and brochures stand or fall on the effectiveness of their content. Applying a few simple guidelines can make a massive difference. So, before you trash everything you have and hire a new marketing agency or web designer, have a look at what you have already published with the following 5 points in mind.

1. Grab attention with a strong headline.

Imagine yourself in a busy restaurant wanting another bread roll, what do you do? Just announce the fact into the air? If you really want a roll you will probably attract the waiter’s attention with a gesture and say ‘excuse me’. That’s all your headline needs to do – attract attention and get your target reader to read the first line of your content.

If you’re trying to sell something, then you want to attract the attention of potential buyers – only the people with an interest in what you sell.  The headline must, therefore, use words that appeal to that audience. Consider this: the great advertising copywriters spend hours creating a single headline.  More often than not they will create 2 or 3 versions and test which one works best with the target audience. I’m not suggesting you do this with your blog but it shows the importance of getting the headline right. For direct mail marketing the headline will probably take as much time to write as the rest of the copy.

If you want to get really creative about this, look at the tabloids or magazines like Hello, OK or Cosmopolitan.  Be honest – although we never read these things ourselves, you can’t help but be intrigued when you catch the headlines when queuing at the supermarket. Other variations on the heading for this post could have been: ’5 secrets your marketer won’t tell you’; Try the High Five Approach to Killer Content; or Revealed – The Five Things Every Copywriter Should Know.  Questions can work well – but at all costs avoid any question where the reader could simply answer ‘No’. ‘ List’ headings and ‘How to’ are the staple approaches and there’s nothing wrong with using things that have been shown to work.

2. Aim for Empathy in the Intro

OK you’ve got my attention with the headline, why should I read on? If I don’t find something in the first couple of lines that relates to me, or a problem that I need to be solved, I’m probably not going to read any more. Intro paragraphs can be the hardest bits to write yet often they appear like a throwaway – something to introduce the ‘important’ stuff that comes later. Adopt the throwaway approach only if you’re happy to throw away your audience at the same time. Again, think about the words you use – will they appeal to your target and can you use simpler, shorter alternatives?

3. Unleash the Power of the Sub-heading

We love to think that readers will be so spell-bound with our prose that they will read and treasure every word. Forget it! After reading as much of your intro as they need to confirm that it’s worth continuing, your readers’ eyes are going to be up and down the page like a hyperactive kangaroo. Sub-headings break up the content and confirm that there is going to be other interesting stuff to come.  Make it easy for people to find the things that are going to be most useful for them. Oh, and try to make them interesting or entertaining; I could just have written ‘Use Sub-headings’ for this section – but didn’t.

4. Remember – It’s All About Your Reader

Any bit of marketing or advertising copy that didn’t start out with an image in the mind of the copywriter of who they were writing for, is bound to fail.  If your content is all about you and doesn’t consider what your reader will be concerned about or interested in… well – would you bother to read it? Never underestimate the importance of customer research and split-testing if you want to get this bit right.

5. Know What It’s For

What do you want people to do as a result of reading your content? If you’re not sure, don’t expect them to know. Sometimes content doesn’t need a response – it’s there to provide information, build relationships or reinforce credibility. But often you are developing content to persuade people to buy something or contact you. Make sure you know what you expect and that there is a clear and easily found call to action.

Before you launch your new web content of marketing literature, try the applying these five simple principles.  If you haven’t thought about your content in this way before it should make a big difference.

You might also find these useful:

Lading Pages: Sales Drivers of Nose Divers?

4 Steps to More Effective Writing

BEER Helps Bloggers

 

 

 

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