The internet is content. Without content, what do you have? Google SERP would be like a series of Instagram posts without hashtags or words so how would you even find the content in the first place? Images are incredibly important but without accompanying narrative, they only tell half the story.
Content for companies comes in a few different forms: web copy, product descriptions, captions, video descriptions, blog posts, and more. Although the internet makes it seem like video is the future and the only way to drive business, just because we (also) recommended that some video content should be incorporated in your 2019 marketing strategy, that doesn’t mean blogging should be ignored. In fact, one of the most important types of content for businesses is blog copy. Here’s why blogging matters and best practices.
Blogging really pays off. Of all of your efforts (think our bullseye marketing approach discussion), content marketing (i.e. blogging being part of that) will often generate the most ROI. Content marketing keeps your audience interested, it builds brand awareness, it generates leads and leads to direct sales.
It’s plain to see that people like blogs from companies and it’s a useful part of your overall marketing strategy.
Blogging builds trust and brand awareness. Blog content is there to educate prospective customers and clients regularly to help them and to lead them towards your product or service as a solution for them.
Overall for your company, companies who blog gain 97% more inbound links to their websites than those who do not blog. Since inbound links not only help people find your website but they also help Google see you as credible and trustworthy as well as increase domain authority, which is all overall a positive net effect for your business.
Furthermore, blogs can help you reach the first page in Google, which is important since many users (75%) do not go beyond the first page of the SERP.
One of the best reasons to blog is that content marketing generates 3x more leads and costs 62% less than traditional outbound marketing methods.
Blogging may have an upfront expenditure, but it can work when you’re sleeping. You could make 100 calls a day and hope that 3% of those leads convert into customers or you could be passively gaining followers, building up your brand recognition, being seen as an industry expert, and helping potential customers with your content–all because they’re reading your blog. You may have hundreds of people read a blog post, some may share it on social media, others may subscribe to your blog or email list, others may be convinced enough to buy a product–either way, you’re creating a way for people to interact with your brand. The type of blog post can help nurture potential customers into actual customers.
You want to write the content that not only appeals to your readers (your customer personas) but also answers their queries. Your blog should not be a platform to blast how awesome you think you are as a business. You may very well be, but if you’re not showing how you can help your reader achieve their goal, solve their problem, or make their life more interesting, you aren’t giving them value.
Good blog content should add value to your reader whilst–hopefully–solving their problem or helping them along the way to solving their problem. Maybe you’re a bakery and you’re targeting kids’ parties and birthday cakes. A father whose child’s birthday is in a month has been tasked with baking a cake for his son’s birthday and has come across your blog about how to bake a cake for a three-year old’s party. You give comprehensive instructions and advice on how to bake a spiderman cupcake tower, but at the bottom you also say that ordering a custom cake from you saves you time and effort (if not money), so that father clicks on your pricing options, you live in his local area, the prices are reasonable, and now you have a customer. If you deliver a superior product on that day, that customer may well be ordering a cake for his mother’s upcoming 70th birthday party too.
So, the bottom line is you should write content that pertains to your business, but is also helpful to your reader and will nurture them (eventually) into trusting your brand and purchasing your product or service.
Here are some best practices to get you started.
Now that you know the types of content you should write, who you should write to, and what you should say, what are you waiting for? Get started on your blog. You’ll be glad you did.
62% of companies outsource their content marketing. Nearly every company feels that blogging is an excellent value for money, generating ROI and giving you insights into your customer base. If you aren’t sure where to start and want a consultation on generating ideas for your blog or getting you started, get in touch.
Elaine Frieman holds a Master’s Degree and is a UK-based professional editor, educational writer, and former marketing agency content writer where she wrote articles for disparate clients using SEO best practice. She enjoys reading, writing, walking in the countryside, traveling, spending time with other people’s cats, and going for afternoon tea.
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