Blog
Why Your Business Needs a Content Strategy
By Kathryn Hawkins
Small businesses and large companies alike need to consider content strategy when creating articles and other content. Here's why.
Everyone’s been telling you that your business needs a blog, or, at minimum, a monthly newsletter to help you generate new leads, keep your existing customers engaged, and increase your search engine rankings.
You might have even gone as far as to hire an SEO consultant to send you some buzz words to include in your blog post titles. Write them up—or hire a $5-an-article intern to do it—and you’re good to go, right?
But Google isn’t everything, and in fact, thanks to Google’s recent Panda algorithm update that weeds the low-quality content out of search results, it’s tougher than ever to get traction with keyword content alone.
If you want to use content marketing to establish your company as a major player in your industry, you need a comprehensive content strategy based on identifying your prospects’ unique needs and the best systems for delivering the information that will help them.
First, think about what your company represents. Ask yourself questions about the image you want to present to the world. For instance:
Are we a fun, flippant start-up, or a serious enterprise company?
Who are our customers? Do we want to create a family-friendly website, or focus on appealing to urban singles?
As far as format goes, would our time and money be better spent on a daily blog, or would white papers and e-books help us build authority and generate more leads from our target audience?
If you’re not sure how to answer such questions, it may be worth investing in a content development consulting company with experience creating custom publications for brands. If you’re not a writer by trade, it’s sometimes tough to take your own personal voice out of the equation as much as you should—or, conversely, to give your clients a glimpse of your personality when you’ve been taught that all business writing should be formal and emotionless.
Together, you can find the right tone to strike, whether that means the hip irreverancy of Groupon, the friendly, down-to-earth attitude of Hannaford, or the suit-and-tie feel of Merrill Lynch. All of these companies thought carefully about their image and messaging before implementing their corporate communications programs; even though you may not have their budgets, there’s no reason you can’t do the same.
Spending time and money on content creation before you have a strategy in place can be a waste of resources. Take the time to focus on the broader picture before you begin filling in the details, and you’ll be doing more than creating articles—you’ll be building a brand.
browse the blog
Recent Entries
- A Three-Step Playbook to Getting Started with Content Marketing
- Why Content Marketing Consultants Can Be Better for Your Business than Employees
- The New Rules of Content Marketing
- Why You Don’t Need an SEO Guru to Optimize Your Content
- Why It’s Worth Paying Professional Rates for Your Business Blog Content
By Month
By Category
Blog RSS Feedour latest news
-
Introducing Eucalypt Media LLC, a Content Marketing Agency
Hawkins Multimedia LLC has rebranded as Eucalypt Media LLC. Here's how our business has changed. Read More»
-
See Kathryn Hawkins speak at Social Media Breakfast Maine
Kathryn Hawkins of Hawkins Multimedia will be presenting a panel on content in social media on July 27th. Read More»
-
Our new site has launched!
Welcome to the new, long-awaited (at least, by us) version of Hawkins Multimedia’s website. Read More»
Client Testimonial
Jeff Hawkins is technically savvy and has a keen business mind and design sense; these three professional prongs create a powerful synergy when applied to digital projects. He is excellent at both strategy-level thinking and on-the-ground implementation, and also understands--like his co-owner Kathryn at Hawkins Multimedia--the best ways to maximize social media avenues on the web. He and Kathryn have made a difference for my own online venture and digital marketing efforts.
Lisa Schiffman—Owner, TuttiFoodie