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Content, strategy, marketing, conversion: how does it all fit together?
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Content, strategy, marketing, conversion: how does it all fit together?

An integrated approach to content, marketing and conversion

 

 

 

Following on the upcoming Liferay Commerce, Mattew Draper wrote an excellent blog last month on the importance of connecting content and commerce. He made a solid case for building both sides on a single platform so businesses can connect their products and services with the interests of their customers and utilise data to better understand their customers needs. This, in turn, should lead them to purchases that were supported throughout the customer experience with content that helps evaluation and self-education.

 

So e-commerce and content are intrinsically related but content in itself is an extensive subject. The purpose of this blog post is to simply clear up some definitions about content and highlight the relationships that exist between the various content-related terms you might hear in relation to e-commerce.

 

Firstly let’s get down to basics by defining content itself. Steven Grindlay, Co-founder of the Content strategy Alliance, came up with a very insightful definition for it:

 

Where there is communication, there is content. Every organisation engages in a wide variety of internal and external communications with consumers and stakeholders. Taken as a whole this communication exerts enormous influence on behalf of the enterprise and its brands.

 

An aspect of this definition I like is the reference to ‘internal and external communications’. The latter points to another term we will be looking at: content marketing.

Content marketing is the use of content—any of it—to help meet a marketing goal for your organisation. In this instance, you produce content which solely focuses on attracting customers, helping them make a purchase decision and hopefully retain them.Those familiar with marketing might be aware with the purchase funnel, a marketing model that illustrates the customer journey towards the purchase of a product or service. The obvious shape being a funnel as the assumption is that only a fraction of potential customers will actually convert. These potential customers will go on a journey from initially being aware of your product and then to consider it as a need, before they go and purchase it. There are a few versions out there developed from the original model, which is almost a hundred years old!

 

The aims of content marketing are to support these stages of the purchasing funnel with content that your customers find useful and informative rather than pushy or irrelevant. Content marketing pieces are often found in the form of blog posts, white papers, case studies, testimonials, etc. On November 14, I will be hosting a webinar to cover the various stages of the funnel and look at more concrete examples of the types of content you could create to support the marketing effort of your organisation.

 

Now, what ties everything together in terms of content is content strategy. Content strategy is a more encompassing concept than content marketing. But it is not surprising that organisations might jump straight into producing marketing content that is not aligned to their own content strategy - that if there is any in the first place!

 

Our initial definition of content becomes more significant at this point: content strategy should steer both internal and external communications and it is where key business aspects take shape. Content strategy is the thoughtful approach of presenting the most relevant, appropriate content to the appropriate user for the purpose of achieving the organisation’s business objectives. Content marketing supplements the overall content strategy by focusing solely on the creation, publishing and measurement of content pieces for specific marketing-related objectives. Content strategy is the foundation for all content efforts from an organisation.

 

You can certainly start writing content to promote, influence and sell but you would be taking a tactical approach and that never works long term. Instead, consider starting with a content strategy. Set the right foundations by:

  1. Defining how you will be using content to meet your organisation goals and satisfy your users’ needs
  2. Guiding decisions about your content with a well-defined lifecycle and governance model
  3. Setting benchmarks against which to measure the success of your content efforts

Building ecommerce and content on a single platform seems like a good plan. But as you plan the details of your contract pricing, order workflows, order forecasting, etc. also pay attention to the content supporting the purchase cycle. A content strategy should be the place to start with before moving into more tactical, marketing-oriented content decisions.

 

Webinar: An integrated approach to content, marketing and conversion

Understand the relationship between content strategy and content marketing, and then dig deeper into how compelling content can be created, promoted and analysed for better impact.

Register Now  
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An integrated approach to content, marketing and conversion
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Following on the upcoming Liferay Commerce, Mattew Draper wrote an excellent blog last month on the importance of connecting content and commerce. He made a solid case for building both sides on a single platform so businesses can connect their products and services with the interests of their customers and utilise data to better understand their customers needs. This, in turn, should lead them to purchases that were supported throughout the customer experience with content that helps evaluation and self-education.

 

So e-commerce and content are intrinsically related but content in itself is an extensive subject. The purpose of this blog post is to simply clear up some definitions about content and highlight the relationships that exist between the various content-related terms you might hear in relation to e-commerce.

 

Firstly let’s get down to basics by defining content itself. Steven Grindlay, Co-founder of the Content strategy Alliance, came up with a very insightful definition for it:

 

Where there is communication, there is content. Every organisation engages in a wide variety of internal and external communications with consumers and stakeholders. Taken as a whole this communication exerts enormous influence on behalf of the enterprise and its brands.

 

An aspect of this definition I like is the reference to ‘internal and external communications’. The latter points to another term we will be looking at: content marketing.

Content marketing is the use of content—any of it—to help meet a marketing goal for your organisation. In this instance, you produce content which solely focuses on attracting customers, helping them make a purchase decision and hopefully retain them.Those familiar with marketing might be aware with the purchase funnel, a marketing model that illustrates the customer journey towards the purchase of a product or service. The obvious shape being a funnel as the assumption is that only a fraction of potential customers will actually convert. These potential customers will go on a journey from initially being aware of your product and then to consider it as a need, before they go and purchase it. There are a few versions out there developed from the original model, which is almost a hundred years old!

 

The aims of content marketing are to support these stages of the purchasing funnel with content that your customers find useful and informative rather than pushy or irrelevant. Content marketing pieces are often found in the form of blog posts, white papers, case studies, testimonials, etc. On November 14, I will be hosting a webinar to cover the various stages of the funnel and look at more concrete examples of the types of content you could create to support the marketing effort of your organisation.

 

Now, what ties everything together in terms of content is content strategy. Content strategy is a more encompassing concept than content marketing. But it is not surprising that organisations might jump straight into producing marketing content that is not aligned to their own content strategy - that if there is any in the first place!

 

Our initial definition of content becomes more significant at this point: content strategy should steer both internal and external communications and it is where key business aspects take shape. Content strategy is the thoughtful approach of presenting the most relevant, appropriate content to the appropriate user for the purpose of achieving the organisation’s business objectives. Content marketing supplements the overall content strategy by focusing solely on the creation, publishing and measurement of content pieces for specific marketing-related objectives. Content strategy is the foundation for all content efforts from an organisation.

 

You can certainly start writing content to promote, influence and sell but you would be taking a tactical approach and that never works long term. Instead, consider starting with a content strategy. Set the right foundations by:

  1. Defining how you will be using content to meet your organisation goals and satisfy your users’ needs
  2. Guiding decisions about your content with a well-defined lifecycle and governance model
  3. Setting benchmarks against which to measure the success of your content efforts

Building ecommerce and content on a single platform seems like a good plan. But as you plan the details of your contract pricing, order workflows, order forecasting, etc. also pay attention to the content supporting the purchase cycle. A content strategy should be the place to start with before moving into more tactical, marketing-oriented content decisions.

 

Webinar: An integrated approach to content, marketing and conversion

Understand the relationship between content strategy and content marketing, and then dig deeper into how compelling content can be created, promoted and analysed for better impact.

Register Now  
Originally published
October 15, 2018
 last updated
October 22, 2018
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