1. Quality over Quantity
What is the definition of quality content?
Quality content provides a “real” solution to the reader. It solves a problem and rates above similar content on the web.
Poor quality content offers the same information found all over the web. For articles or blogs, it centers on one or two sentences that are drawn out just to increase word count. Poor content also does not take the audience into consideration. Most likely, the author of this type of content is not concerned with the reader, but with meeting a certain quota for content distribution.
Most of the content you find on the web consists of poor quality content as defined above. This is the reason Google continually adjusts its algorithms to bring searchers the most valuable content when they query.
You can distribute hundreds of content pieces, but if not one is high quality, you could be wasting time and inhibiting profit potential. Every piece of content says “something” about your brand and should reflect your business values. High quality content like this evokes a response from the reader/viewer.
2. Stay Focused
Jack of all trades, master of nothing…
While there are those who knowingly put out poor content, there are others who honestly try to distribute quality content and do so in many different avenues, but the dots never seem to connect.
If you are a “one man show” and you cannot afford to hire a skilled content writer, it can be difficult to know where to begin and where to stop.
One person cannot take on more than a few tasks at a time. If so, quality suffers. You are better off investing more time into less content and making it valuable and of a higher quality, rather than trying to take on every content marketing strategy out there. Once your content converts, you can accomplish more by outsourcing and continuing to grow.
3. Know Your Audience
What does quality content look like? In a nutshell, if you know your audience and their pain points and you solve them with your content, you will be successful.
Unfortunately, this is often easier said than done.
Knowing your audience is more than studying a particular demographic. If you are selling wedding dresses, your audience will most likely be females between the ages of 25 – 45. However, if you stop there, you are doing yourself an injustice.
Imagine you were a customer. What would your thoughts be? What problems would you have? What solutions would you need? What day to day issues would arise for a woman in this demographic?
Take time and research your audience and really try to understand who they are. By taking this more detailed approach, you will be able to identify their problems. Your content should be the SOLUTION.
Summing it Up
These three foundational strategies are, in my opinion, crucial for creating content that converts.
Before you approach every piece of content, reflect on the following statements. The more you do this, the more it will become second nature:
- Consider the reader/viewer’s needs and stay focused on why you are creating the content.
- Put the needs of your audience first and you will receive more in return.
- Speak directly to the pain points of your audience.
- Focus on quality first, not quantity
When the content is complete, honestly ask yourself this question: “Would I read/view this content and see it as valuable?” If yes, you have done your job.
taken from: www.site-reference.com/