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Content Marketing

Developing a Visual Content Strategy

Developing a strategy is complex, and for many of us, anxiety inducing. It’s not easy to figure out where to start and how to proceed. Too often, content marketers are out there working without a strategy, or working within one that is far too restrictive. When things don’t work out as planned, it’s necessary to go back to the beginning and reassess the foundation of the strategy. This is difficult because it means giving up on good work in progress, work that would be nice to complete, but ultimately distracts from the bigger picture.

According to the Content Marketing Institute, only 32% of B2B marketers have a documented content marketing strategy, and 51% of those marketers say that creating visual content is a priority they are focusing on in the coming year.

You don’t want to, and can’t likely afford to, waste work – so the right visual content strategy can prevent this. But what makes a good strategy? You need a strong foundation, but something that gives you the flexibility you need to move – you need agility. There’s a difference between being agile and winging it – so here’s a six step process you can use to guide you.

Step One: Identify Your Core Purpose

Understand who you really are as a company and what you’re after. Your business purpose is not the same as your measurable objective, and it’s not to double your business or increase your leads by a certain percentage.

Get to your purpose by answering: Why does my business exist? If it disappeared tomorrow, what would be lost in the world? If you achieve what you’re building, how is the world different?

Spending time on this task is crucial because it informs your company culture, which powers content creation and efforts in many other areas of your business.

Once you figure out what your core purpose is and have tweaked it to the point where everyone is excited about it – it’s time to move to the next step.

Step Two: Refine the Audience

If you’re building a business and content around you, it won’t connect with your audience. By shifting the spotlight away from yourself as a company to the customer, you’ll build trust, relationships, and ultimately increase conversions. Build your content not to impress co-workers, but to impress your prospects.

If you’re a growing company and have a huge overall market for the products or services you’re offering, that’s great – but it can be problematic. If you’re defining your market broadly, such as people who lie to eat food, you’re trying to be too many things to too many people.

This is why you must segment your audience into smaller pieces. For instance, rather than focusing on everyone who likes food, you could begin with a focus on a certain geographic location who want to lose weight and eat healthy, but just don’t have enough time to cook.

Narrowing your focus shouldn’t be confused with thinking smaller. With agility in mind, you focus on the work that makes the biggest impact at the moment, while still keeping your larger purpose in mind.

Identifying a market segment you can address immediately lets you run experiments to get the information you need to continue expanding in the future.

When you know who you’re specifically targeting with your offers, you can create content to speaks to them directly. This builds a core audience of people who love what you do and will help you grow so you can choose additional customer segments in the future.

Step Three: Identify Your Customer’s Unmet Need

As a marketer, it’s easy to spend a lot of time thinking about what people want. Once you know who your audience segment is, you should do research to find out what they want – rather than working based on what you think they want.

You must find the things your customer needs to do, but cannot get done. Conduct market research in the form of surveys and focus groups to get this information. Build a list of questions to help you get inside the mind of the customer. Find out what their main pain points and frustrations are, and any other issues your product or service can help solve. Your content is how you’ll communicate your solutions.

Use everything you learn here to create detailed customer personas. Having these fictional people in front of you can help you with content creation. It’s as simple as writing as if you were speaking directly to that person.

Step Four: Choose the Best Distribution Channels

The hardest part is out of the way now. You know who you’re dealing with and know how to empathize with them. Now, you’ll have to find out where they are when they’re not busy with work and hobbies. This way, you know what channels to focus on when you distribute the content you create. If your audience isn’t on Instagram, don’t waste time and money creating content specifically for that platform! Only invest resources in platforms where you know your customers are. Use your analytics to determine which platforms bring traffic to your site and start there.

Think about where you are currently publishing your content – and the benefits of each channel. Consider how you’re promoting your content and ensure you’re following best practices to get your content in front of as many eyes as possible.

What do you hope the next step will be after viewing your visual content? Craft a buyer’s journey that will transform your content marketing into sales.

What publishing partnerships have yielded the best results in the past? Which new ones would make a big impact? Everyone wants to be on a site like Huffington Post and things they have a great story worth publication there, and if you do, that’s awesome. But look for other ways, too. What would happen if instead of focusing on that, you tripled down on a content partnership with an influencer that caught your eye last year?

You should keep these things in mind from the beginning of content ideation. All components – the subject matter, format, and distribution channel will contribute to your overall success.

Step Five: Create Your Visual Language

Your visual language is how you’ll communicate your message to your audience. Will you strictly follow your brand guidelines, or will you experiment from time to time? Your visual language should include your voice, your brand identity, a flexible and scalable design system, and clear visual hierarchy.

Step Six: Generate Ideas for Content

You’ll want to generate a lot of ideas for content at once, so you always have something to be working on, and there’s always something ready to push out in line with your campaigns. A good piece of content should be told from a user’s perspective or experience, explains how value is created for the customer, is as specific as possible, has business impact, provides some form of value – no matter the size or form.

Visual content helps your brand exponentially online. It builds brand awareness, trust, credibility, and more. Building a strategy ensures your content creation efforts are never made in vain. Whenever you get stuck, start at step one and re-evaluate.

Categories
Content Marketing

7 Types of Visual Content You Should Include in Your Strategy

Anyone with an internet connection can create and share content – visual or otherwise. This translates to a vast array of professional and amateur content, and a crowded environment. To stand out in any content marketing campaign, you must have quality, of course, but visual content can set you apart from the crowd.

Why visual content? 90% of the information the brain processes is visual. 65% of people are visual learners. And, when people hear information, they’re likely to remember only 10% of that information three days later. But, when that information is paired with a relevant visual, the three-day memory retention rate increases to 65%.

If you want people to remember your message, visual content is key. Creating a variety of visual content assets ensures you can reach a wide audience.

 

Photos and Images

Whether you take the photos yourself or get them from stock photo sites, images can break up the monotony of large blocks of text. The old saying goes, “A picture is worth 1,000 words” and it rings true, especially in the world of online content. Articles that include images get 94% more views than those that don’t – so you’re not doing yourself any favors by skipping them in your blog posts.

Where can you get high quality images for use in your projects?

The first three websites offer free photos under creative commons licensing. Depending on the terms of the license, you may be able to include the photo without attribution. The last three sites are premium photo repositories, where credit may or may not be required depending on the terms of the licensing and the way the photo is to be used. Most of the time, you can get the photos you need without having to pay for them, but you should never simply Google and take images from the results. If you’re not sure what the licensing requires, always provide credit to be safe. When looking for photos under creative commons licensing, if you’re using them for your business blog or any other related projects, you must make sure those images are safe for commercial use. If not, you are violating the licensing terms.

 

Slideshows or Presentations

If you’ve got something that would work great in a Powerpoint type format – then you can make it a valuable content asset for your brand. Thanks to platforms like Slideshare, it’s now possible to share those presentations with the world, making it even easier to connect with your audience. Research shows that presenters who make use of visual aids are 43% more effective when it comes to persuading audience members than presenters who do not make use of visuals.

 

Videos

According to a 2015 study, four times as many customers would rather watch a video about a product than read about it. 25% of customers lose interest in a company that doesn’t have video. Customers are nearly 50% more likely to read emails that include links to video. And 80% of customers say a video that demonstrates how a product or service works is important.

You don’t have to have fancy video equipment, or be a professional actor to do well with online video. You can use a smartphone or DSLR camera with a tripod as long as you’re in a decently lit area. It’s even possible to use screen capture software like Camtasia Studio or Screenflow to record video straight from your computer screen. Then you can use something like iMovie or Movie Maker to handle the editing. When you grow and can to invest more into video creation, then it’s okay to upgrade your equipment.

According to The Next Web, the ideal length varies depending on the type of video you’re creating, but you want to keep it as short as possible.

  • Tutorials/Explanations: 45-90 seconds
  • Creative Commercials: 15-59 seconds
  • Crowdfunding: Average 2:30 minutes. This time should be used to create credibility for the project and provide depth about it.
  • Testimonials: 60-119 seconds

 

Infographics

Infographics are a wonderful way to visualize data that’s boring when delivered in a standard text format. It helps to make the information more appealing, which reduces boredom and helps keep people interested. It’s easy to relay information in this format, and makes it more memorable and persuasive.

When is the best time to use an infographic? If you have data that you want to share with the public, but it is best explained with graphs and pictures, then that’s the perfect opportunity. We’ve done a few infographics here at Sach’s Marketing Group, to help simplify long processes, like the Ultimate Social Media Launch Guide.

You don’t have to be a graphic pro to have a successful infographic. It helps to know one, but there are various tools online to help you build one on a budget. Take a look at Canva, Picktochart, and Vizualize for places to start.

If you’ve got a bit more freedom, consider using a platform like Fiverr or UpWork to hire a top-notch graphic designer to build it for you. You can write the script and include the sources, or hire a writer to handle that part for you.

When your infographic is ready, host it on your website or with a third party hosting platform, like Dropbox, Photobucket, or OneDrive. Include the embed code, which is the HTML code people can copy and paste into their own blog posts to share the graphic with their audience. This helps with distribution, and each time it’s embedded, there’s a link back to your website, which helps boost your search engine optimization (SEO) efforts. If you want to learn more, take a look at my post about infographic distribution.

 

Screenshots

Screenshots, also known as screen captures, are an excellent visual to add to any tutorials or anything that is technical in nature. It’s nothing more than an image of something on your computer screen. There are many ways to take screenshots – the simplest being using the print screen button on your keyboard, and then pasting into a Paint doc. This only works in Windows, but what that button does is “copy” the screen image.

If you’re doing a blog post about the installation process for your product, then it’s a good idea to include screenshots of what each step looks like, so people can make sure they’re on the right track. Keep in mind, however, that if you update your software in anyway that changes the screen appearance dramatically, you should update the screenshots in the article accordingly to avoid confusion.

You can also use screenshots to document a timestamp.

Popular screenshot software options include:

  • Snipping Tool (Windows, free)
  • Lightshot (Windows and Mac, free)
  • Jing (Windows and Mac, free)
  • Skitch (Mac, Free)
  • net – free online screenshot capture and editor. There’s also a desktop version, and app in the Google Play store.

 

Quote Cards

Do you have a favorite quote? I have several…. And I’m willing to bet you do, too. Whether inspirational, motivational, or related to your niche, there’s a quote (or two, or 10) that you could find to share with your audience on social media. But simply typing out the quote with credit? Why be that boring when you could use a tool like Canva to create a stunning visualization that matches your brand colors?

You can tailor the quote your message, adjusting things like your color palate and typography to reach your audience and connect with them in a new way, leaving quite an impact. Plus, these images are highly sharable like memes. They’re easy to create, and have viral potential.

 

Memes

Meme was a term first coined in 1976 by Richard Dawkins. The word was used to describe the phenomenon of an idea’s capacity to replicate itself into different meanings from person to person. Today’s definition describes images featuring humorous captions, and you can find thousands of them. If you can’t find one you’re looking for, you can use a meme generator to make one.

Though they began primarily as a way for college students to entertain themselves, memes are wildly shared across social media today, and have become an integral part of content marketing simply because it’s a quick and easy way to create visual content.

A word of caution: memes are not appropriate for every niche. When used correctly, however, they can set you apart from the competition and evoke positive emotion. If your brand is targeting a younger audience, then it’s fairly safe to say memes should be a part of your strategy.  You can create a number of memes with jokes about your industry, to foster community while making people laugh.

You can find funny memes for any number of niches out there, but here are a few of my favorites from the realm of internet marketing.

 

Visualizations Make All the Difference in Content Marketing

The internet isn’t going to run out of content any time soon. And the written word will always have its place here, but adding visuals makes it a bit more fun and enjoyable, not only for the content creators, but for the readers, too.

Take a few minutes to think about your current content marketing strategy. Where are you already using visual content? What types of visual content are you using? How is your audience responding? Use the answers to these questions to determine what other kinds of visual content you could add to your next campaign. Test a number of different memes or quote cards to see what they respond to best before spending a lot of time and effort in asset creation. Try one infographic before investing resources into a full series.

If you’ve already got a killer visual content strategy, that’s great – but there’s always room for improvement. Share some ideas about how you’ll make your next one better. Tell me what kinds of visual content you’re using and how it’s working out for you in the comments below.

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