Conventional marketing reviews may in fact harm your B2B content, chipping away reader value by removing details and reducing candor. Think reader first, not company first.
W.H.Bender Quote 61 -Influential restaurant and food service industry network...
How to ruin your content marketing, one review at a time
1. HOW TO RUIN YOUR CONTENT MARKETING,
ONE REVIEW AT A TIME
By Derek Slater, Content Director
2. “HAVING YOUR BOOK TURNED INTO A MOVIE IS LIKE SEEING
YOUR OXEN TURNED INTO BOUILLON CUBES.”
John le Carre
3. CHIPPING AWAY WITH THE VERY BEST INTENTIONS
The first rule of good content marketing is to put the audience first.
People are pretty sophisticated; they can tell whether you are trying to help or entertain them,
or just pushing your company, product, or marketing message.
Most marketers and business executives get this concept. But often, when they’re asked to
review a piece of content marketing, old habits take over.
Let’s watch the overall effect in a fictional B2B example.
Here’s a snippet from an article about an enterprise technology project at MegaCorp, which uses
software from Tyrell. The target audience for the article is CIOs.
4. Excerpt from the article draft
...But the eight-member Technical Committee’s proposed approach
was subject to vigorous debate.
“We fought like cats and dogs, honestly,” laughs MegaCorp’s CIO.
“The finance guys were focused on performance, because they want
to do their jobs faster, but ultimately we realized the API features
mattered more than that 10% performance boost.”
5. Review by the source
...But the eight-member Technical Committee’s proposed approach
was subject to vigorous debate.
“We fought like cats and dogs, honestly It took careful review to
arrive at consensus,” laughs said MegaCorp’s CIO.
“The finance guys were focused on performance, because they want
to do their jobs faster, but ultimately we realized the API features
mattered more than that 10% performance boost.”
6. Review by MegaCorp’s legal and compliance department
...But the eight-member Technical Committee’s proposed approach was
subject to vigorous debate thorough evaluation.
“It took After careful review we arrived at consensus,” said MegaCorp’s CIO.
“The finance guys were focused on performance, because they want to do
their jobs faster, ensuring 100% adherence to regulatory requirements, but
ultimately we realized the API features mattered more than that 10%
performance boost. we could also have robust API features.”
7. Review by MegaCorp PR/comms team
...But the eight-member Technical Committee’s proposed approach was
subject to thorough evaluation. All products used by MegaCorp are subject
to a rigorous safety review.
“After careful review we arrived at consensus,” said MegaCorp’s CIO.
“The finance guys were department was focused on ensuring 100%
adherence to regulatory requirements, but ultimately we realized we could
also have robust API features. and our customers come first in everything
we do at MegaCorp.”
11. HOW DOES THE TARGET AUDIENCE REACT TO THE FINAL VERSION?
12. “Whatever. We could never do that. It would have to go
through our technical committee and our finance guys, and
we’d probably fight like cats and dogs.”
14. They’re about making the sources or the companies look good.
Instead of being about serving the audience.
The review processes chipped away all the details that would have resonated with the reader.
As a result, the reader gets no value, and the content has no impact.
FOCUS ON THE READER AND GOOD THINGS WILL FOLLOW.
15. ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Prior to joining Ready State, Content Director Derek Slater spent two
decades in B2B technology journalism. He was editor in chief of
award-winning security publication CSO for seven years, and he
previously held editorial leadership positions with CIO and with the
Enterprise IT and Finance media groups at FierceMarkets. He wrote
the book Content Marketing in 30 Minutes and has special interest in
two areas: the use of analytics and SEO data to inform content
creation, and content reuse and recycling. On Twitter he’s
@derekcslater.
Originally published as How to ruin your B2B content marketing (one
review at a time) on the Ready State blog.
http://www.readystatements.com/
http://readystate.com/