2021 content marketing trends to watch

Empathy. Human. Connection. Transparency. Trust. Authenticity. These are all buzzwords you’ve likely come across when developing your content marketing strategy in the past, but due to the global pandemic and everything else 2020 brought, they will be more important than ever in 2021.

Your content marketing strategy should feed your digital and traditional advertising, social media channels, emails, website and blog. It should showcase who you are as a brand, connect with your audience on a deeper level, and provide value, entertainment and education to your customers and prospects.

Content strategies should be the backbone of marketing plans. Here are a few trends I’ve found to keep an eye on for 2021.

  1. Keep creating

Without content, your business will struggle. It’s an honest fact.

However, many of us are facing challenges we didn’t in past years, like significantly smaller budgets or less manpower. Don’t let those challenges stop you from creating.

If you have the time and money to invest in content, do it. You won’t regret building that into your budget and plan. However, if you don’t, creativity, consistency and authenticity can still go a long way.

  1. Include content in your customer journey

What do you know about your audience? What is their customer journey? Everything you know is likely translated into your marketing plans, and that information is used to create ideal marketing and nurturing campaigns for customers and prospects.

Consumers need you to be where they are when they need you, and each micro-moment is an opportunity for you to use content to move customers through the conversion funnel and customer journey.

Create mobile-first content, lead generation forms and opportunities. Make your content easier to find and navigate. Optimize for local searches and important industry keywords. Try creating content specific to your buyer personas and directed more toward the bottom of the funnel.

And as you do all of that, showcase engaging, entertaining or educational content instead of sales CTAs.

  1. Remarket

We’ve all been to a website, or looked at a product on Amazon, and then seen an ad for the same or a similar product in our Facebook newsfeed. This is a form of remarking, and it should be part of your marketing strategy.

However, consumers are savvy, and they are being more selective about the brands they engage with and purchase from. Your traditional remarking ad may not be enough anymore. Instead, use content to increase brand awareness and keep your product top of mind.

Make your content personalized. Allow the consumer to pick up where they left off. Tie other channel’s such as email, Google ads, social media ads and others together with the personalized content. Make the remarking ads seamless across channels.

  1. Diversify and include

If you have a blog, and that’s been the focus of your content marketing efforts, that’s a great start. However, it may no longer be enough. Diversify your content marketing efforts to be more inclusive of other tactics and channels.

This can include videos, infographics, memes, and gifs. In fact, video streaming has become even more popular than ever before, and with the introduction of Tik Tok and Instagram Reels (in addition to Stories and Snapchat), people are consuming video at record-breaking amounts.

Then, once you diversify your content, include it in everything. Tie together your website and blog, social channels, email and other marketing efforts. Make sure the tone, information and strategy carry over.

If you repurpose content, be sure to alter it (even if slightly) to fit the format and expectations of the channel you’re repurposing on. For example, you shouldn’t promote a blog post in an email the same way you would on your Facebook page.

  1. Improve the experience

How your audience interacts with your content is just as important as what content they are interacting with. In order to drive ROI with content, you need to focus on improving the content experience.

Analyze metrics like bounce rate and time on site, scroll depth, and clicks. It’s not enough that visitors come to your site, they have to engage and spend time with what’s on the page.

Try different content layouts, images, videos and types of content. Offer videos, webinars, white pages, podcasts, and images. Test which topics are the most engaging and informative. Be more tactful about placing CTAs and asking for email addresses. Be more strategic about how you more the consumer from that piece of content to the next step in the funnel.

  1. High-quality SEO

SEO (search engine optimization) has been a content marketing buzzword for years. However, as competition increases, attention spans decrease, and customers are being more selective about brands they interact with and where/how they spend their money, SEO will be a critical piece of your content’s success.

Figure out how you can differ yourself and your content from the big competitors. Focus on more niche, targeted and long-tail keywords. Be sure your content is engaging, including having a low bounce rate, and high time on site and scroll depth.

Take time to create an actual SEO strategy. Include members of your team, like your web analytics team and search engine marketers, to find the opportunities that will be key for you and your brand.

it’s a digital world (part 2: content)

A couple weeks ago, I published part one of a three-part series sharing some of my favorite statistics supporting social media marketing and how it can change the way you market and share your business.

Today, I want to talk about a concept that’s challenging to understand, and sometimes even more challenging to implement: content marketing.

Perhaps you’ve:

  1. Never thought about content marketing.
  2. Have thought about it, but don’t know how it applies to your brand or how it can help generate sales.
  3. Attempted to implement it in your marketing strategy, but aren’t really sure how to execute, feel stuck, or simply don’t have time.

IMPORTANT NOTE: “Content marketing” doesn’t have to mean blogs, though that is the primary tool for most businesses. It can also mean social media posts, video, photos, memes, emails, whitepapers, ebooks, podcasts, and more. The options are endless, and chances are you can find a form of content that works for you and your business.

If you’ve never thought about it, or think I’m crazy to suggest content marketing can help improve customer retention and drive sales, here are a few stats that may convince you otherwise.

  • 77% of internet users read blogs. However, nearly 30% of users block advertising on their connected devices.
  • Content marketing gets 3x the leads per dollar spent when compared to paid search tactics. It also costs an average of 41% less.
  • It generates more than 3x as many leads and costs 62% less than other outbound marketing tactics.
  • Small businesses with blogs get 126% more lead growth than small businesses without.
  • 61% of online consumers make a purchase after reading recommendations on a blog.
  • Content marketing conversion rates are 6x higher than other traditional marketing methods.
  • Websites with blogs have 434% more search engine-indexed pages than those without blogs, meaning significantly more traffic to your website.
  • 70% of people would rather get information about or learn something from a company from an article or blog post rather than traditional advertising tactics.

I could get into stats about individual forms of content and how they can push your business to the next level, but I won’t here because that could be a 10,000 word whitepaper. The point is, content marketing is important, cheap, and can help boost your business and retain your customers.

Plus, the good news is you don’t have to be an “expert” to do content marketing. With today’s technology, building a website, editing a video, posting a photo, or even recording a podcast can be as simple as clicking a few buttons. And while you don’t want to put out bad content that could hurt your brand or business, attempting something can many times be better than nothing.

It can feel overwhelming to get started. But remember – no one knows your business, brand and products/services better than you. Think about what you can share with others regarding your brand. What’s your story? What are the questions your customers are asking? How can you be a solution? What do your customers like, and how can you engage and entertain them through different forms of content?

Check out some of these posts on how to develop a content strategy and get started.

If you want to talk further about how content marketing can help your business, need help getting started, or would like assistance with ongoing support, send me a message today

furthering my education – for free!

Week 22

Part of being a working professional is staying current in industry trends and continuing your education.

I don’t necessarily mean taking college courses or earning degrees. For me, continuing my education happens by reading business books and blogs, watching webinars, taking free courses online, and following industry groups on LinkedIn.

One thing I became particularly interested in this week was certification courses that may help me not only further my education, but build my professional profile and portfolio.

My job has a subscription to the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) and earlier this week I was browsing webinars, conferences and courses they offer. I stumbled upon a Content Marketing Certification course, originally $499, that I can access, take and complete for free. Why have I not been taking advantage of this? What other opportunities are out there?

When I’ve applied for jobs in the past, there was always a place to list any professional certifications I have. I’ve always left this blank and figured it didn’t apply to me. Well surprise – it  can and does apply to me! And it won’t cost me an arm and a leg. A quick Google search produced several marketing-related, free certifications I can take advantage of. (There are plenty more that have a cost, but I’ll be taking advantage of the free ones first!)

  1. ANA – Content Marketing Certificate Program – free
  2. Google Adwords Certification – free
  3. Google Analytics Certification – free (I’ve actually already done this)
  4. Digital Garage: Fundamentals of Digital Marketing – free
  5. Hubspot Content Marketing Certification – free
  6. YouTube Certification – free
  7. Hubspot Email Marketing Certification – free
  8. Hootsuite Social Media Marketing Certification – $199; $249; $999

I love learning and growing professionally. I’m looking forward to tackling each of these and becoming an expert! There are probably hundreds of hours of work in that list, but it’s worth it when I can use the certification as leverage to build my client book or secure new career positions in the future.

Do you have any marketing certifications? Which would you suggest?