Content Marketing with Purpose: It Takes Some Discipline

Content Marketing with Purpose: It Takes Some Discipline

In today’s fast-moving digital world, content marketing takes some discipline. You can’t rely on great content alone — it demands structure, consistency, and a results-driven mindset. To establish true thought leadership and maintain brand credibility over time, organizations must adopt a rigorous approach to content planning, creation, and distribution. Below are some proven best practices that can help advance your overall content marketing program from good to great.

  • Develop an Editorial Calendar – Plan your content ahead of time, aligning with product/service launches, company or industry events, webinars, speaking engagements, and more. Don’t forget strategically aligned social holidays, which can help drive engagement.
  • Be Helpful and Educate – Drawing from your ideal customer profile and target personas, think through their pain points and what your product or service helps them solve. Think through the questions they ask themselves every day and answer them! Driving out educational and informative content is a great way to position your organization as a thought leader and the go-to resource for smart, useful content.
  • Be Relevant – Track the trends and news events in your industry and reference and tie to these regularly. Consider a weekly insights column or quarterly report to curate the top trends to watch with your take on why it matters.
  • Create a distribution tip sheet or checklist – Develop a PESO-based content distribution framework specific to your company and refresh it quarterly. I call it this the “Content Marketing Wheel.” Pull it out and review it for each new content opportunity. There are now more channels than ever before from news releases to YouTube and this tool will help you think through the opportunities well suited for each piece of content.
  • Monitor and Measure – Use analytics tools to track engagement, media mentions, and conversion rates. Regularly analyze these metrics – some of the best content marketers do this daily! Assess and adjust your content marketing strategy based on channel performance.
  • Engage with Industry Influencers – Build relationships with journalists, analysts, and other industry thought leaders to enhance your reach. Foster collaborative opportunities for content co-creation such a joint webinar or co-authored thought leadership article with a business partner — 1+1=3!
  • Encourage Employee Advocacy – Empower employees to share content on their professional networks to expand visibility, credibility and optimize content reach. Leverage internal experts and lift them up as brand ambassadors to enhance the credibility of the expert and the organization.

Maximizing Earned Content – Four Key Tips

Earned content — media coverage, awards, analyst reports, and speaking opportunities — is one of the most credible forms of content, but it’s often underleveraged in content marketing and the PESO model. The key to maximizing earned media is following a “create once, share everywhere possible” approach:

  1. Repurpose Media Coverage – If your company is featured in an article or analyst report, don’t just let it sit on the website of that publication or firm. Share it across your company’s blog, social media channels, and presentation decks.  When sharing via blog post, include additional commentary to showcase your expert insights and include a backlink to the article or report. Backlinks to reputable media outlets bolster your website’s authority ranking on search engines like Google.
  2. Leverage Awards and Recognition – If your company wins an award, create a news release and issue it on a wire service, share the news on social media, update your website, and include it in email campaigns. Consider running a paid campaign sharing this exciting news. Recognition builds credibility, but only if people know about it.
  3. Maximize Speaking Engagements – When a leader from your company speaks at an event, record it, create short video clips for social media, and repurpose key takeaways into a post or infographic for your company’s blog. Consider turning the presentation content into a LinkedIn article series, a webinar or a podcast episode for additional mileage. Don’t forget to do a news release covering the speaking engagement either before the event or after and be sure to include details and key callouts from the high-value presentation itself.
  4. Cross-Promote on Different Channels – Content should not exist in silos. Leverage your high-value content everywhere possible. Reinforce thought leadership by integrating earned content across the many channels you have available to you. When you get a piece of high-value earned media coverage, pull out your Content Marketing Wheel to decide where to share it.

Make Every Piece of Content Count

Be disciplined, stay proactive, and always look for ways to get more mileage out of every single piece of content you create.

Great content doesn’t just inform — it influences, builds trust, and opens doors. By applying structure to your content marketing strategy and embracing a disciplined, PESO-aligned approach, you can unlock the full value of every asset you create. Always ask: how can we make this content piece go further?

If you’re looking to bring more rigor and results to your content marketing, the A-Team is here to help. From strategy to execution, we know how to make your content work harder — and smarter — for your brand or business.

 

Content Calendar: A Key Component to any Strategic PR Plan

Content Calendar: A Key Component to any Strategic PR Plan

Oftentimes public relations professionals think of content calendars as a tool for marketing communications programs. Having an internal editorial calendar is absolutely important for any content program. Since an integrated public relations campaign has evolved from just media relations, PR pros should also consider a content calendar as part of their overall strategic PR plan.

Knowing your audience(s) is one of the primary tenants of public relations, and the purpose of any good content is to engage, educate and encourage action. Therefore, it is necessary for us to identify those people who really are influential and approach them through high-quality content rather than corporate or product blurbs.

It is also essential to make sure that a content calendar is developed based on your overall marketing goals. What do you want to accomplish this year? What new products will be announced? Are you a start-up just entering the market or are you positioning for an IPO, other investments or hoping for an exit strategy? Positioning your executives as subject matter experts and/or thought leaders is always a good strategy in any PR Plan.

So, what should be incorporated into a public relations content calendar to reach appropriate audiences and support marketing objectives?

Events

Events are one of the best opportunities to make your public relations strategy successful, whether it is through external trade shows such as HIMSS or other health/medical conferences or internal events such as webinars and user groups. Listing upcoming events in your content calendar allows you to develop content that strategically targets potential buyers as well as current customers, and position executives and thought leaders, all based on the timeline for the events. You can tie press releases and customer case studies to events, announce executive speakers or even blog about your giveaways at a trade show.

Press Releases

A well accepted strategy in PR is to average one press release every month. This allows you to keep your name and messaging top of mind and fresh with reporters. Scheduling your press releases in advance of industry events and around product launches helps your PR team coordinate with your marketing team to make sure the news is ready to be disseminated at the right time.

Articles/Case Studies

Thought leadership articles and case studies are excellent tools in the arsenal of any PR professional to demonstrate your knowledge and experience. Planning to develop these types of articles in your content calendar and then pitching for placement in key media outlets is the kind of valuable coverage many organizations desire. Compare the articles you plan to develop to the next category editorial opportunity calendars and you’ve got a head start on content that can be published.

Editorial Opportunity Calendars

Years ago, editorial opportunity calendars were the bread and butter in any PR campaign. With the move towards online media, many publications no longer publish or adhere to editorial calendars. But some still do and researching those calendars and adding key opportunities to your PR content calendar allows you to develop content in a timely basis to pitch to those media outlets. Make sure, however, that you build in lead times into your calendar. Another benefit to editorial calendars is they give you an idea of what topics the media is interested in covering and can help you develop a list of content ideas for the year.

Other categories that can be included in an integrated PR content calendar are blogs, customer newsletters and social media outreach. There are plenty of free tools on the web that you can use to develop a content calendar.

In the end, it all works together. Having a calendar of events, press releases and editorial opportunities allows a public relations professional to strategically plan to develop content that meets deadlines, achieves marketing goals and engages, educates and encourages action from your key audiences.