Part of the reason I haven’t blogged here lately is because I was writing up a guest post for the Content Marketing Institute. (Okay, and working too. That tends to take up time.)

And now that guest post is up! Observe:

How to Avoid a Never-Ending Edit Cycle (The Dangers of “Just a Few More Changes”)

Who should read this?

  • Content Writers, Freelance or Staff
  • Marketing/Marcom Managers
  • Smart Companies Who Use The Above

Why?
It’s a reminder about edits. Specifically, why marketing pros should keep the edit cycle in mind. Why you should have a policy when it comes to every edit cycle. And, in case that doesn’t work and you’re stuck in an endless back-and-forth of “just a few more changes,” how to break that cycle and still come out with content intact.

My sincere thanks to the Content Marketing Institute (and Michele Linn in particular) for being so open and helpful. If your job has anything to do with the creation, publication and online marketing of content, visit www.ContentMarketingInstitute.com for a heap of helpful posts.  With more to come (including from yours truly!)

 

A question every web writer – and every web writer’s client – should ask

While sloughing through post topics, I glanced at Twitter.

A tweet came through from Lorraine Thompson, @WritersKitchen – itself a retweet of Nick Usborne’s, who posted a link to the Web Content Strategy Blog titled An Interesting Content Manifesto.

(Why am I thinking of Kevin Bacon all of a sudden…)

Anyway, this blog post makes a very, very crucial point in regards to content. ALL content.

“Content Manifesto: Don’t create content ABOUT something. Create content IN ORDER TO DO something. To achieve goals. All content should be in service of a goal. If not, cut it.”

In service of a goal. I agree 100%.

But what goal?

Do Something?  How about “Spur Reader to Action?”

I have asked clients the question of what goal they want to accomplish with content. Almost every time the answer goes like this…
1. “Just something about the product/service.” (Okay…what?)
OR
2. “It should tell the client about how great our product/service is, how great we are to work with, that we’re the only one to work with…” (See a “self”-evident pattern in there?)

Many clients want the goal of their content to be “talking about themselves.” It’s understandable; if you’re passionate about something, you want to talk about it.

But it’s not the kind of goal you should use when writing content.

Look at that citation again. “Create content IN ORDER TO DO something.” Now obviously, companies want their content to do something.

Like what?

Most would agree that they want their content to spur the reader to action.

Question is…what kind of action?

Examples of Content Goals

Asking questions like this helps us specify the goal for a piece of content. In order to do something, a content’s goal must be specific.
These are a few goals I’ve used when writing content in the past.

  • Drive visitors to sign up on a website.
  • Get prospects to read an email.
  • Reward people for downloading a file or application.
  • Encourage readers to consider a product/service in their project plans.
  • Educate the reader on specialized information the company has.
  • Make people want to bookmark a site and return.
  • Encourage visitors to email the company about a project or question.
  • Purchase a product/service.

Include Content Goals in Content Strategy? Definitely.

The Web Content Strategy post concludes by suggesting a “page goal” be incorporated into content strategy. Again, I agree. For content to belong in a matrix, it must DO something to forward the company’s overall goals.

Wait a Second, Does This Post Have a Goal Too?

Yep. The blog post you’re reading right now? It was intended to remind you – content must do something. You must decide on a goal for your content. That’s the goal here.

And if you read this far, it means the content succeeded!

To what goal will your next content be in service?

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