As an extension to many marketers’ strategies, collaborative content has been an area of consideration as a tool that reinforces inbound marketing campaigns. Like most areas of business, partnerships are key to gaining recognition, advancement and influencing growth. The same can be said for working with influential partners to produce collaborative content. Partnerships aid the visibility and growth of a particular site, page, product or campaign.
There are many benefits to using collaborative content for the launch of a campaign including expanded reach and relationship development. However, there are a few considerations to review before choosing a partner:
Does it scare you to think about tapping into your network, identifying influential prospects and taking a risk by asking them to either contribute or allow you to contribute? If it does, keep reading.
Leveraging relationships to create strong marketing partnerships can be beneficial for both parties and should be embraced in a positive way. Here are five tips to help you take the first step in identifying content collaboration opportunities to launch a successful campaign:
Look through your LinkedIn connections, address book, Twitter followers, and rolodex (I know, old school) to make a list of the top 10 – 15 most connected, influential and dynamic individuals with strong reach among their networks.
Next, branch out a bit and do some research on who is writing about a particular theme or topic by using advanced searches on Twitter, BuzzSumo and other resources. Dig a little deeper to check out the number of followers or level of engagement for each of these writers.
Your list of 800-pound gorillas can be more than just individual people – business or trade organizations, clubs, publications, media reps, podcasters, and bloggers are all perfect candidates for this list. Most people recognize these people and organizations as “influencers” among their respective network, area of expertise or industry. This is a resource that you should hold near and dear; these are your 800-pound gorillas.
The most important consideration after building the list is doing the necessary homework to learn more about their expertise and interests. Use this information to construct a personalized message requesting a content collaboration partnership.
Be clear about what you want from your 800-pound gorillas and think about what that might look like in practice. Do you want them to be contributors, promoters or both? By being a contributor, they will likely also be a promoter. In the case of a trade organization or publication, the partnership will likely be based on the value that is provided to their members and readers.
A workflow is a sequence of automated actions that are triggered into place depending on the reader’s behaviors or contact information. The concept of workflows was designed to allow marketers to keep their goals at the forefront of the campaign process while showing a definitive return on investment.
Once your content creation and collaboration plans are in place with your partner, consider putting solid workflows in place to take advantage of every opportunity to capture reader’s email addresses and, ultimately, get them into your sales funnel. This is especially important when implementing a collaborative content campaign because of the increased opportunity to reach prospects that are just being introduced to your brand.
When mapping out your process, first decide your overall workflow goal. Is it to further engage current leads? Are you trying to re-engage past customers? Are you working toward acquiring new leads? After your goals are established, you’ll have a better understanding of the process needed to convert more leads into customers because workflows give you the powerful ability to segment.
Do you send mass emails without personalized content to an entire, un-segmented database? If so, you may find that your success rates are not what they could be. The benefit of workflows is that you can chuck the old philosophy of sending mass emails out the window and begin providing more relevant information to your prospects based on their wants and needs. Here are a few workflow and marketing automation stats that are hard ignore:
A customer’s path to purchase is not always as direct as we expect. Your intention may be to create a campaign with collaborative content and persuade a prospect to fill out a form, download a valuable offer like an ebook or tip sheet, and become interested in purchasing all in their first visit to your site. While possible, this scenario is not likely.
Marketers should be ready to help their prospective buyers along a path that may have a few more twists and turns. This is where the use of retargeting comes in. There are a few common ways to employ this strategy, depending on the goals of your campaign.
Campaign tracking is a tactic that allows you to add a tracking code to your content’s URL so that visits to the link can be tracked. The tracking URL allows you to see referrals from a web source, an email campaign, online ad or more – thus measuring the success of each channel.
One easy tool for creating tracking URLs is the Google Campaign URL Builder. It’s as simple as adding the link you want to track, adding parameters for tracking, and then using the URL that Google supplies in your campaign.
Pixel-based retargeting is an incredible way to share your information again with any of your site visitors. While this strategy has been questioned in the past in regard to privacy, today it is one of the most common types of retargeting.
The concept is simply this: when someone visits your website or content page, an unobtrusive piece of JavaScript (the pixel) is placed in their browser – often referred to as a “cookie.” When they leave your site, the cookie notifies retargeting platforms to serve specific ads based on the pages they visited on your website.
There are a number of options available when considering retargeting as an element of your campaign (including third-party platforms that provide web and social retargeting) such as PerfectAudience, AdRoll, Retargeter, Bizo, and many more. You can also incorporate retargeting through specific social platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
Sponsored content and native advertising have been a hot topic among marketers and online publishers over the past few years. Companies and publishers alike have expanded their teams and divisions to broaden the production of ads that impersonate editorial content.
Whether you are on the side that views this concept as deceitful to consumers, or the side that views it as an effective way of getting the attention of prospects – the reality is that it’s not likely to go away soon.
As discussed earlier, certain types of advertising should supplement your inbound content efforts. This can be done through retargeting, promoted posts, PPC and even sponsored content. It should be done in an effort to promote your content, not your product.
When incorporated into a campaign and collaborative content strategy, sponsored content and native advertising will cast a wider net to strengthen your efforts. Inbound marketing will take a campaign a long way, but if you have the minimal funds needed to broaden your reach, then sponsored and native content methods are worth considering.
Brandscaping is a concept coined by Andrew Davis, author of Brandscaping: Unleashing the Power of Partnerships. Andrew explains Brandscaping as a way of leveraging the audiences of others for the benefit of both partners. In his book, he shares some valuable insight in regard to common collaboration mistakes to avoid:
The incorporation of collaborative content has been a hot topic for those who have fully adopted various online and social channels as a means to share information about their expertise and brand. Not unlike the partnerships in our personal lives, collaborating with someone on something – an influential product, service or brand – can help you reach a new audience and level of success.
This post was originally published on February 18, 2015 on Relevance.com.