Skip to main content

New article suggests content marketing doesn't work

http://www.forbes.com/sites/mikalbelicove/2013/09/10/content-marketing-study-suggests-most-content-marketing-doesnt-work/#!

In this article, Forbes states that the marketers' eternal quest for the most eyeballs online is futile, especially when a company uses content to accomplish that mission. Per the article,
InboundWriter's new platform
“Our research proves that in content marketing and online publishing, the subjective ‘hit or miss’ approach is a ‘miss’ 80 to 90 percent of the time,” said Skip Besthoff, CEO of InboundWriter, the company that conducted the study.
How convenient is it that a content firm comes out with a study saying that content doesn't work unless it is measured and analyzed with their proprietary solution.

Many companies are now considering adding video and slideshows, twitter and facebook, to their marketing mix, and few have defined metrics on what works and what is a shot in the dark. The essential thing is not the media but the strategy that drives the media choice. For the past decade, internet-related trends in marketing have come and gone, but they are all a shot in the dark, unlikely to ever reach a prospect or show any ROI unless there is a strategy that drives their inception and a plan to measure their effectiveness that aligns with the company's goals. Small businesses are seduced by the promise of increased web presence and succumb to the lure of the latest marketing firm with the slickest message in the new media format, but without a strategy, the marketing dollars spent will be dust in the wind.

Regardless of the media, a strategy is a must. Nothing works without a plan and a comprehensive solution, whether it is drinking Diet Coke to lose weight or creating a single great video.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Social Media Starting Kit (Part 1): Establishing Your Brand

Businesses, the best businesses, are the response to a problem. And, the entrepreneur's encounter with this problem and creative response is the story. Problem: Children without shoes Response: Tom's  Problem: Unhealthy hair Response: Monat Problem: Children with a lacking education after public school term Response: Classical Conversations Your business tells a story. Its formation, website, branding, and sales style are all a part of that story. But, in a world of billions, how do you ensure that story is being heard? The answer is social media. And, when a story is spread on social media, you have magnified your audience and increased the likelihood of your business' success.  But, how do you engage in social media? A business owner does not have time for rabbit holes, education in social media best practices (which are constantly changing), or endless likes, follows and unfollows, tweets and moments.  Entrepreneur's Social Media St...

The Space between Social Media and Business Acumen

There was a space for an entrepreneur to offer quality and business acumen in social media to other entrepreneurs and small businesses. SDS took it. A Passion for the Written Word There are thousands out there. We're the people who notice a Q without a U, a misplaced apostrophe, and a false word ("conversate"). We strive for meticulosity. We are logophiles and linguaphiles, and we often suffer from infobesity . In the modern business world, we find our niche in the conversation of the day--social media. This passion for the written word is the beginning of the SDS story, but the inception was forced by a frustration with dishonesty and a love of the hustle. A Frustration with the Status Quo Too many are paying too much for too little. This truth is apparent to every business owner who has hired a social media agency and received a smattering of disconnected posts that amount to nothing. However, this is not the way it should be. A social media professional, at h...

The Social Media Starting Kit (Part 3): Calendars and Management

You've got a profile, you've got ideas for a few posts and images, and now it's time to begin posting. But, how do you bring strategy in? When do you post? Where do you post? How do you keep from becoming a slave to your social media? That's where the next two crucial elements of social media management come in: calendars and management. First off, each social media platform has different needs, and each audience within the platform has different expectations. The average consumer expects a response from a corporation in Twitter, and 72 percent of people who complain on Twitter expect a response within an hour, per the HubSpot blog . Otherwise there are standard best practices for when to post and how often to post on each network. Image courtesy of Fast Company SproutSocial posted earlier this year about the best times to post on each social media network for engagement . It is an incredibly thorough post, and I would recommend reading it to begin charting ...