Without promotion, whatever ground-breaking piece of content you’ve created likely won’t have a chance to reach its goals. Similarly, without properly understanding and leveraging your target audience for content, your promotion probably won’t even get off the ground.
Finding your audience and its influencers online
When thinking about content ideation, we talked about why it’s important to understand your audience in order to develop strategies and identify content opportunities that would be valuable to them. That point of view is also needed when it comes to promotion.
To find your audience online, start by reviewing the behaviors and pain points that you identified with the content strategy portion. Research where your customers hang out online. What forums are they using? What social channels do they gravitate towards?
Think not only about your audience and their behavior, but also the influencers who are impacting your audience. What publications or blogs is your audience reading? Who are they following on social media? What do they discuss within their content and social networks? Influencers can move the needle for your brand in a big way if you are able to engage them properly and get them to share your content.
There are several ways to do this, but a few tips are:
Use a tool like Buzzsumo or Followerwonk to understand who is sharing your content and the content of your competitors from a social point-of-view, or Link Explorer from a linking point-of-view.
Use advanced search operators s to search for the types of websites and blogs your customers may be interested in. (ex. “Wedding decor” AND blog)
Identify a model influencer in your industry. Use this person as a starting point, then spiral out to find similar influencers. Who is in their network? Who does Twitter and LinkedIn associate as a similar account?
Influencers don’t just have to be individuals, but they could also be topical publications and websites. For these, explore websites that Google considers related to an already targeted publication (ex. related:moz.com) to find more opportunities.
Review websites that have referred traffic your way already. If this website is sending people who are interested in your brand already, they could be a good outlet to find more people from your target audience. You can use a tool like Link Explorer to identify sites that have linked to you, but you’ll want to take a look in a tool like Google Analytics to see the actual number of visitors referred.
Not every opportunity you find will make sense for your company, so you should put together a framework to help you and your team qualify prospects throughout the process. Here are some considerations when qualifying content promotion opportunities:
Relevance to your brand and campaign
Performance metrics - Does an individual influencer need to have a certain amount of engagement on their website or on social? Does a target publication need to hit certain engagement metrics? Should you be keeping mind a certain level of Domain Authority for each influencer's site?
Aesthetic and perspective - Does the influencer, whether an individual or brand, align with your company and your approach towards the industry?
Post timing - Does an individual influencer have a regular posting cadence? Have they been active in their content posting to this point? What about the same metrics for publications you’re evaluating?
Crafting messaging that resonates with your audience
Even though the content you’re launching should be pretty wrapped up at this point, you’re not finished with the messaging. Make sure communication to your audience and their influencers entices your targets and gives them enough detail to understand what you’ve created. Let’s talk through a few tips to get you started.
Tailoring outreach
Unless you’re an “Inbox Zero” extraordinaire, you likely have pitch emails sitting in your inboxes right now, unread, that will be deleted faster than someone can say “Penguin penalty.” There are many guides about great outreach, so we’ll cover just the basics here:
Tailor your pitches to the different audiences you’re reaching out to. What do they tend to write about? What do they geek out about on social? How does what you’re pitching connect to something they’ve already published?
Stir up emotion with your pitch. We’re not asking these prospects to repost a dry press release. Bring excitement to the table and describe the huge opportunity your idea will address.
Connect the dots for them. Your recipients shouldn’t have to think, "...and why does this matter for me and my readers?"
Show that you’ve done your research. Don’t just look at their last blog post, but also take a look at some of their later content pieces that directly connect your content needs and theirs.
Utilize clear calls to action within your emails, so they will know what the next steps is if they’d like to move forward.
Make sure you take the time to find their name! Nothing says email blast more than “Hi there!” or “Dear sir or madam:”
Keep your initial message brief — tell them what they need to know. You can always explain in more detail once you’ve got them hooked.
Incorporate your company tone and style guides to these emails in order to be cohesive with the rest of your brand.
Don’t neglect the closing statement, which has been shown to be effective for getting people to take action.
An important thing to highlight: most of the time the person on the other end will want something in exchange — in the case of journalists and publishers, it's often early access to information or some sort of exclusive, while bloggers might also be interested in freebies or special deals for their readers. Make sure you've read any submission guidelines they might have before you approach them.
Crafting paid messaging
Paid social allows for extreme granularity in targeting, and you should use this to your advantage as long as it makes sense. If you sell patio umbrellas, your messaging will likely be different in California where there’s sunny weather all year long, versus Michigan, where they may only see two months of patio weather.