內容策略:準備、製作、出版和推廣的終極指南

已發表: 2021-08-15

創建出色的內容(並始終如一地執行)並非易事,這就是為什麼如此多的內容創建者、營銷人員和電子商務品牌都犯錯的原因。 在本文中,我們將揭示我們在過去幾年中製定的內容策略,因為我們的博客每月有超過 200,000 名讀者。

本指南將帶您完成內容準備、製作、發布和推廣過程的每一步,其中包括我們自己學習、開發和使用的所有信息、最佳實踐、建議和技巧。 我們在本文中沒有隱瞞任何內容,因此它是我們作為一家公司為運營成功的電子商務博客所做的工作的原始而真實的表示。

如果您對製定自己的內容策略、學習如何撰寫博客文章、如何管理博客、博客寫作要素、內容推廣、內容營銷、創建內容營銷策略和開發內容日曆感興趣,那麼這是給你的文章。

警告:沒有捷徑。 這是很多工作。 一步一個腳印。

讓我們跳進去吧。

獎勵:在這篇文章的最後,我們為您提供了對我們在過去 2 年中創建和改進的 Airtable 模板的訪問。 該模板為您提供了我們整個內容策略的完整概述。 它很好地存儲了有關我們已發布、計劃發布的每條內容以及我們所有內容創意主題的所有信息。 滾動到帖子底部以獲取我們模板的副本,或單擊此處。
內容策略 Airtable Base
單擊此處使用我們的模板

目錄

  • 內容策略步驟#1:準備
    • 是什麼讓內容很棒
    • 不同類型的內容
    • 誰寫你的內容?
    • 確定你的作者聲音
    • 定義您的主題類別
    • 集思廣益的內容創意和獲得靈感
    • 如何查找熱門內容主題
    • 與客座作者聯繫和合作
    • 研究關鍵詞
    • 了解您的內容目標
  • 內容策略步驟#2:製作
    • 如何寫出引人注目的內容
    • 正確的拼寫、語法、標點符號和句子結構
    • 如何格式化博客文章
    • 為您的文章和最佳實踐採購圖片
    • 內容內流量生成策略
    • 鏈接到內部和外部資源的重要性
    • 如何增強您的內容
    • 10% 與 10x 內容
    • 字數統計以及如何知道一段內容何時完成
    • 校對內容
  • 內容策略步驟#3:發布
    • 制定發佈時間表和發布頻率
    • 對格式、結構和錯誤進行最終審查
    • 包括作者署名和頭像
    • 約會你的出版物
  • 內容策略步驟#4:推廣
    • 內容推廣優化
    • 內容推廣文案
    • 內容推廣渠道
    • 創建內容推廣系統
  • 我們的內容策略、時間表和電子表格
    • 我們如何規劃、組織、管理和系統化我們的內容
    • 我們在 Airtable 中的內容主題電子表格
    • 我們在 Airtable 中的內容時間表電子表格
  • 結論

內容策略步驟#1:準備

內容準備

對於未受過訓練的人來說,寫博客文章似乎只是坐下來寫內容,而實際上,在內容製作真正開始之前,還有很多準備工作要做。

製作內容是過程的一小部分,首先是準備。 在創建任何類型的內容之前,重要的是要為未來的任務做好實際準備,這樣您就可以順利地進入流程的下一階段,確切地知道您對內容的意圖是什麼以及您計劃如何將內容變為現實。

我們在下面討論的一些準備步驟是您只需考慮一次的任務,然後您就可以將它們應用到您將來創建的每個內容中,而其他準備步驟則需要在每次您即​​將創建時考慮一個新的內容。

準備階段的最終目標是確保您創建的每一條內容都與您的整體品牌保持一致,並且通過採取準備步驟,您能夠更高效、更輕鬆地製作內容。

那些沒有做好準備的人,準備失敗——所以讓我們來看看創造偉大內容需要什麼。

是什麼讓內容很棒

首先,要準備好創建出色的內容,您必須了解製作出色的內容需要什麼。 畢竟,如果內容只是很棒,那麼創建內容的意義何在?

偉大的內容可以由各種參數來定義,但最終,當內容為觀眾提供價值時,它才是偉大的。 偉大的內容可以是有趣的,它可以是有用的,它可以是信息豐富的,它可以是有趣的,它可以是嚴肅的,它可以是短的,它可以是長的,它可以是任何東西——只要它為那些增加價值的人消耗它。

偉大的內容是關於:

  • 了解觀眾想要什麼
  • 了解什麼使內容可共享
  • 了解內容如何傳達您的信息
  • 了解如何推動您需要的行為,無論是銷售、電子郵件選擇加入還是分享
  • 然而,對於企業來說最重要的是,優秀的內容需要滿足您的業務目標; 即增加客戶關係、轉化率和保留率

因此,您在內容策略過程中的第一步是準備製作出色的內容。 為此,請考慮您的內容將如何為您的受眾提供價值,然後在每次創建內容時執行該內容。

不同類型的內容

接下來,了解現有的不同類型的內容很重要,這樣您就可以決定哪種類型最適合您的品牌。 這樣做將幫助您以最佳方式和受眾最容易接受的方式傳達您的信息。

了解向受眾展示內容的不同方式很重要,因為它將定義內容的重要特徵,例如如何格式化文章、文章的適當長度、最適合的寫作風格等等。 事先考慮這些細節非常重要,這樣您就可以創建適合文章風格的內容,而不是先創建內容,然後再嘗試使其適合特定的文章風格。

這是您每次準備製作內容時都需要考慮的準備步驟。 首先,考慮您要解決的主題以及如何最好地將其傳達給您的受眾,然後決定以下哪種類型的內容是將其交付給您的受眾的最佳方式,然後最後創建適合的內容那種風格。

這些是您可以為在線文章製作的最常見的內容類型:

  • 號召性用語帖子:這種類型的帖子旨在讓讀者採取特定行動。
  • 案例研究:分享別人的經驗,包括成功和挑戰。 分享他們的旅程、他們的學習和他們的發現,以幫助其他走類似道路的人。
  • Cautionary Tale Post:分享一個警告讀者不要做什麼的故事。
  • 清單或備忘單:提出一個常見的或看不見的問題,並逐步提供該問題的解決方案(這也可以採用列表帖子的形式)。
  • 比賽或贈品帖子:通過吸引讀者參加比賽來宣傳產品或服務。
  • 眾包帖子:在博客帖子中展示用戶生成的內容(這也可以採用列表帖子的形式)。
  • 鼓舞人心或鼓舞人心的帖子:分享一個旨在鼓勵讀者的鼓舞人心的故事。
  • 指南帖子:提供有用的產品或服務指南,以幫助讀者為他們正在尋求更多信息的任何內容做出最佳選擇(這也可以採用列表帖子的形式)。
  • How-To 或 Instructional Post:教讀者如何做或實現某事(這也可以採用列表帖子的形式)。
  • 互動帖子:邀請讀者參與一項活動或活動,然後在參與後根據他們的反饋或貢獻更新帖子。
  • 採訪:採訪某人並在您的博客上展示他們。
  • 發布帖子:發布新產品或服務並撰寫博客文章作為公告。
  • 列表帖子:列表帖子以易於閱讀和消化的格​​式列出文章的內容,以便讀者可以輕鬆瀏覽文章。 列表帖子的標題中通常包含一個數字,例如:“25 個適合您在線業務的華麗 Instagram 模板”並列出整個帖子中的討論項目。
  • Newsjacking Post:寫一篇博客文章,評論媒體的熱點情況。
  • 新聞報導:撰寫與您的品牌相關的新聞報導。
  • 個人故事:講述一個與讀者分享課程的個人故事。
  • 極化帖子:站在一邊並就您的利基市場中的問題或與您的品牌相關的主題分享您的意見。
  • 簡介:簡介某人或某事,分享背景信息和有關該人或某事的故事。
  • 問答:以“問答”格式寫一篇文章,以幫助讀者更好地理解一個概念。
  • 研究細分:在博客文章中寫下與您的品牌相關的研究、調查、研究甚至學術論文。
  • 評論:分享你對某事的看法,以幫助讀者決定它是否適合他們。
  • 綜述:在博客文章中總結和比較相關或競爭的產品、服務、事件、功能等(這可能採用列表文章的形式)。
  • 諷刺帖子:諷刺一個問題以在評論文章中表達觀點。
  • 推薦資源:向讀者推薦資源以幫助他們解決特定問題(這也可以採用列表帖子的形式)。
  • 思想領導力:在意見文章中引導有關主題、問題或趨勢的對話。
  • 視頻節目註釋:在博客文章中分享有關視頻片段的想法或更深入地討論該主題。
  • 播客節目筆記:分享一篇總結或討論播客節目的博客文章。

誰寫你的內容?

對於這個問題,每個品牌的答案都不同。 有些人有時間和能力為自己的品牌創建所有內容,而其他人可能缺乏專業知識或技能來創建他們希望在其網站上展示的內容。 “誰”為您的品牌創建內容由您決定,但事先考慮很重要,這樣您就可以在需要時提前開始聯繫作者或獲取內容創意。

在為您的品牌創建內容時,您有多種選擇:

  • 您可以為您的網站創建每一條內容
  • 您可以展示來自來賓貢獻者的文章
  • 您可以聘請代筆人為您創建內容以自己的名義發布
  • 以上選項的任意組合

例如,在 A Better Lemonade Stand 上,我們在內部編寫了大部分內容,但我們也會刊登來自各自領域領導者的客座貢獻者的文章,以進一步為我們的觀眾提供我們可能沒有專業知識的優質內容為他們提供。

在開始您的品牌博客時,作為您內容策略的一部分,確定誰最能將您的信息傳達給您的受眾,以及如何最好地創建內容。 如果這是將內容創作外包給第三方作家、代筆作家、客座作家或您自己,那麼知道您將如何在需要時開始採購該內容。

以下是一些可幫助您尋找第三方作家或代筆作家的資源:

  • 寫手
  • 加班
  • 五福
  • 文章寫作公司
  • 工作架
  • WordGeeks
  • 內容飛翔

確定你的作者聲音

為了保持整個內容的一致性,考慮“作者的聲音”很重要。 你的作者聲音指的是第一、第二或第三人稱敘述,可以像這樣區分:

  • 第一人稱敘述:根據您自己的經驗提供建議,並使用代詞 I、我和我的說話。 例如:“當我開始我的第一筆生意時,我成功的三個主要因素是……”
  • 第二人稱敘述:直接向讀者講話,就好像他們在那裡一樣,並使用代詞 you 和 yours 與他們交談。 例如:“當你開始你的第一個業務時,你最成功的三種主要方式是……”
  • 第三人稱敘述:作為客觀的第三方向讀者報告和建議,該第三方無所不知,但不直接參與,並使用他、她、它和他們等代詞。 例如:“為了成功開創第一家企業,所有新企業家都必須遵循這三個步驟……”

在確定您的整體內容策略時,請考慮您的作者的聲音將如何影響您的內容的有效性以及您的觀眾將如何看待它。 在某些情況下,可能只適合根據您自己的經驗說話,因此以第一人稱敘述說話最有意義。 但是,在其他情況下,最好通過以第二人稱敘述方式撰寫您的內容來直接提及觀眾,或者僅作為客觀的第三方發言,以第三人稱敘述方式提供所有事實。

最終,沒有正確或錯誤的答案,只有最適合您創建的內容類型的答案。 您甚至可能會發現,您會在內容中混合使用兩種甚至全部三種敘述風格! 理想情況下,不要在一個內容中,因為這可能會讓您的觀眾感到困惑,但有些文章可能以一種風格編寫而另一些文章以另一種風格編寫更有效。 如果您與來賓貢獻者合作,請確保您可以在您的網站上展示多位作者,而不會影響整個網站的整體聲音。

這裡的目標是在你的作者聲音中保持足夠的一致性,讓你的聽眾知道會發生什麼,並且永遠不會被“誰”在和他們說話而感到困惑或迷惑。

定義您的主題類別

如果不了解您將在網站上涵蓋哪些主題以及它們之間的關係,則任何內容策略都是不完整的。 主題類別很重要,因為它們可以幫助您創建與您的受眾直接相關的內容,並有助於使您網站上的內容井井有條,以便訪問者可以找到與他們最相關的內容。

您可以擁有任意多或少的主題類別,這完全取決於您製作的內容類型最有意義的內容。 在 A Better Lemonade Stand,我們確保我們製作的每一條內容都至少符合以下類別之一,因此我們知道我們的內容始終走在正確的軌道上,並符合我們的讀者期望在他們來時學習的內容到我們的博客上。

我們的內容類別可以在我們的貢獻頁面上找到,但我們將在這裡回顧一下:

廣告

  • 產品和利基選擇
  • 採購供應商
  • 品牌與設計
  • 獲取流量
  • 轉化優化
  • 運輸和履行
  • 運營和客戶服務
  • 戰略與分析
  • 會計
  • 金融與法律
  • 採訪與靈感
  • 個人發展

為了確定這些類別,我們對我們博客上當前存在的所有文章進行了清點,並將它們組合在一起,直到我們可以在帖子組中定義一個主題。 如果您剛剛開始寫博客,並且沒有可藉鑑的現有博客文章清單,請先定義一小組主題並從那裡開始工作。 撰寫文章以填寫這些類別,並在需要時擴展您的類別選擇。

集思廣益的內容創意和獲得靈感

為了創建出色的內容,您需要從一些內容創意開始。 這可能是準備過程中最重要的部分之一,當然不是您在出版過程中可以跳過的步驟。

我們強烈建議您有一個地方(無論是實體筆記本還是數字筆記本、文檔、記事本或其他),您可以在其中寫下您想到的任何內容創意。 確保它是您可以隨時隨地輕鬆更新的內容,以便您可以在您最不期望的時候捕捉到這些想法。 想出一個內容創意庫,您可以在需要撰寫主題時參考。

一些博主遇到了不知道接下來要寫什麼的問題,所以如果你發現這種情況適合你,你的內容庫應該是一個你可以去尋找內容創意靈感的地方。

如果您一直缺乏內容創意並需要建立您的內容庫,請查看其他人在您的細分市場中正在做什麼並做得更好。 不要復制它們,不要創建“靈感”的內容,實際上只是用不同的詞反芻他們的想法和想法,而是實際看看他們創建的內容,然後將其用作跳板來製作更好的內容,以及更好的內容,以至於與他們最初創建的內容不同。

在線空間中沒有什麼比複製作品更缺乏想像力的了,所以不要成為那種創作者。 Google 等搜索引擎實際上會對複製或複製內容的創作者進行處罰,因此如果您想在網上取得成功,請不要自行承擔。

如何查找熱門內容主題

如果您不僅希望獲得一些內容創意靈感,而且實際上想要找到您知道流行、相關且及時撰寫的內容主題,那麼這些是一些很好的入門來源:

  • 紅迪網
  • 通過 KWFinder 進行關鍵字研究
  • 谷歌趨勢
  • Hubspot 博客主題生成器
  • 推特趨勢
  • 知乎

與客座作者聯繫和合作

如果您的內容策略的一部分包括與客座作者合作,請考慮以下幾點:

  • 制定一些適用於所有客座海報的基本規則和要求,以便他們了解您的期望。 例如,我們有一份完整的清單,列出了我們所做和不接受來賓貢獻者的內容,包括必須滿足的最少字數、格式要求、圖像格式首選項等。 這有助於我們從來賓貢獻者那裡獲得最優質的內容,並幫助他們了解我們對他們為我們製作的內容的期望。
  • 考慮您是否會持續與客座作者合作,他們每個人都為您的博客提供一篇文章,或者您是否會與同一位客座貢獻者反複合作,他們會一遍又一遍地為您的博客寫作。
  • 想想您將如何創建一個來賓作者網絡以供合作。 您將如何联係來賓作者並確保來賓貢獻者為您的網站寫作?
  • 您將如何為您的網站做出對您的客座作者有價值的貢獻? 你的觀眾會給他們什麼樣的認可、流量或回應?

這些只是一些想法,可幫助您開始在您的網站上尋找並與客座作者合作。 如果您還沒有客座作者網絡,您可以接觸內容,開始接觸您欣賞的作者、內容創建者或博主,並開始與他們建立關係。

研究關鍵詞

這是您每次編寫新內容時都會進行的內容策略準備方面的一部分。 在開始創建內容之前,您必須定義該內容的目標關鍵字是什麼。

這是一個重要的步驟,原因如下:

  • 它可以幫助您定義文章將要討論的內容,因此您知道您正在撰寫的主題是什麼,您知道文章的目的是什麼,並且您知道您試圖與觀眾交流的基本信息是什麼. 您的關鍵字本質上是您文章的主題,因此在開始撰寫文章之前定義它很重要。
  • 您的關鍵字在您帖子的 SEO 中發揮著重要作用,這是讀者有機地發現您的帖子的主要方式之一。 如果您需要有關關鍵字研究和 SEO 相互之間有什麼關係以及如何進行關鍵字研究的介紹性課程,請查看我們的關鍵字研究終極指南。
  • 當您提前知道您的關鍵字時,您可以在創建文章時針對該關鍵字優化您的文章。 這將幫助您圍繞每篇文章的關鍵字編寫更好的內容,並幫助您更好地格式化每篇文章以針對 SEO 等進行優化。

要開始進行關鍵字研究,我們建議您使用 KWFinder 之類的工具來幫助您找到與文章相關的關鍵字(閱讀我們的 KWFinder 評論以了解有關它們提供哪些功能和服務的更多信息),然後開始組織關鍵字列表,包括每月搜索量和難度排名,因此您可以在相關時將其應用到您的博客文章內容創意庫中。

了解您的內容目標

最後但同樣重要的是,在內容策略的準備過程中,您必須定義您的內容目標。 這意味著了解您將每條內容髮佈到您的網站的目的是什麼。

正如我們在本節開頭所討論的那樣,發布不好的內容並且不會為您的受眾提供價值是沒有意義的,因此每次您創建一個內容時,請具體問問自己您的內容將如何為您的受眾提供價值你的聽眾。

例如,這些是您每次發佈內容時可能具有的一些目的、目標或目的:

  • 它提供可操作的信息,幫助您的聽眾更好地理解主題。
  • “支柱”內容是品牌核心的基礎。
  • 它提供有關某個主題的思想領導力,以引起聽眾的反應。
  • 它旨在激發您的聽眾採取行動。
  • 它足智多謀,並提供誠實的建議來幫助您的聽眾。

除了為您的受眾提供價值的意圖之外,您的內容可能還有其他目的,也可以為您的品牌增加價值,例如:

  • SEO 驅動的內容,可幫助您在搜索引擎中排名更高並獲得更多流量。
  • 包含指向您的合作夥伴的附屬鏈接的內容,因此您可以獲得佣金。
  • 有助於獲得社交分享、關注和吸引力的內容。
  • 與特色企業建立關係的內容。
  • 贊助內容有助於為您的品牌提供資金。

然而,重要的是要注意,成功的內容總是首先為觀眾提供價值,其次是品牌的任何附加價值。 始終首先為您的受眾提供價值,然後,如果可以的話,以某種方式為您的品牌也創造價值,但絕不能以犧牲您的受眾為代價。

內容策略步驟#2:製作

內容製作

準備階段完成後,您就可以很好地了解在內容試圖實現的目的、目標關鍵字、誰在撰寫您的內容、您的作者的聲音等方面的立場。是時候繼續實際製作您的內容了。

那麼你如何創造偉大的內容呢? 讓我們深入了解一下。

如何寫出引人注目的內容

我們討論的第一個概念是優秀的內容為觀眾提供價值。 因此,最終,您可以通過編寫值得觀眾閱讀的非凡內容來創造出色的內容。

這些是編寫出色內容的基礎:

  • 卓越的內容才是人們真正想要的
  • 出色的內容是人們分享的理想內容
  • 卓越的內容就是谷歌想要展示的全部

您通過以下方式編寫了出色的內容:

  • 了解類似文章的當前格局,以便您可以創建更好的文章
  • 製作一段將成為該主題最佳內容的內容
  • 了解內容/市場契合度並深入了解您的受眾是誰
  • 為您的觀眾提供其他內容所沒有的東西

一段非凡的內容(通常)具有:

  • 一個引人注目的標題
  • 精美的特徵圖像(也稱為“英雄”圖像)
  • 一個介紹,準確說明文章的內容以及讀者將從中學到什麼
  • 設置和支持主題的背景信息和統計數據
  • 良好的格式,有條理,清晰易懂且易於理解
  • 一個全面的結論
  • 號召性用語來激勵讀者
  • 支持該主題並幫助讀者了解更多信息或將該主題付諸實踐的資源
  • 大量字數,徹底涵蓋主題,但不會太過分

正確的拼寫、語法、標點符號和句子結構

在撰寫精彩內容時,永遠不要低估正確拼寫、語法、標點符號和句子結構的重要性。 在這些方面中的任何一個方面表現不佳都會使您的內容看起來不如您希望的專業和值得信賴,這可能會導致您的觀眾對您的技能和能力產生懷疑。

不是每個人都擁有完美的拼寫、語法、標點和句子結構技巧,雖然你當然不必完美,但你應該以高標準為目標。 如果您自己無法達到該標準,則需要使用工具來幫助您達到該標準。

Grammarly 和 Title Case 等工具是作家和內容創作者最好和最常用的兩種工具,所以如果你知道你會在這方面掙扎,或者你只是想確保你的寫作是一流的,那麼檢查這些服務。

如何格式化博客文章

為在線受眾創建書面內容最容易被忽視的方面之一是如何以有趣且易於閱讀的格式實際呈現內容。 一堵文字牆對讀者來說既不有趣也不吸引人,因此在創建內容時,請考慮如何拆分文本以使其更易於閱讀和更美觀。

以下是您可以添加到博客文章中的一些格式元素,以使其更易於理解:

  • 為每個部分或標題使用圖像
  • 在引用作者、演講者或貢獻者時使用塊引號
  • 使用風格化按鈕而不是簡單地添加超鏈接
  • 使用“水平線”功能(WordPress 中的一個選項)拆分文本或將其分離並組織成連貫的文本部分
  • 使用標註框提請注意獎勵、額外閱讀、更多信息、提示或警告
  • 使用 H 標籤來製定標題和副標題。 它們也在現場搜索引擎優化中發揮作用,因此通過包含關鍵字來戰略性地使用它們
  • 對信息組使用要點和編號列表
  • 在適當的情況下使用粗體和斜體(以突出某些點並強調重點),但要考慮到兩者過多會使整篇文章看起來凌亂
  • 為標題、副標題和段落字體選擇適當且符合品牌的字體,這些字體易於閱讀。 在我們的電子商務品牌指南中了解有關為您的業務和品牌的其他方面選擇最佳字體的更多信息
  • 使用簡短的段落來分解文本並添加變化
  • 混合使用較短和較長的句子以避免變得單調
  • 視情況在文章末尾或整篇文章中添加要點、總結或結論。 這些是強調關鍵點的好方法。

通過戰略性格式使您的內容更易於掃描,您有更好的機會吸引讀者。當您以易於消化的方式提供時,即使是長篇博文也可能從令人生畏變成誘人。 考慮您可以利用哪些元素來最好地格式化您的內容。

為您的文章和最佳實踐採購圖片

如上所述,在您的文章中包含圖像是吸引讀者並直觀地展示您可能提出的任何特定觀點的好方法。 不過,獲取高質量圖像可能很棘手,尤其是因為它們通常受到版權和許可要求的約束。

因此,在向文章中添加圖像時,您可以從以下位置獲取高質量圖像:

  • 您可以截取您在網上看到的網頁的屏幕截圖,並使用它們來說明您的文章。 例如,在我們的全球 10 大最佳共同工作和共同生活空間文章中,看看我們如何使用每項服務的主頁屏幕截圖來說明內容? 但是請記住,您永遠不應僅對您在網上看到的圖像進行截圖,而無需提供任何有關其來源的上下文,因為這會侵犯受版權保護的作品。
  • 您可以自己創建圖像,無論是照片、數字藝術還是使用 Adob​​e Photoshop 或 Canva 等服務創建的圖像。
  • 您可以使用圖像創建服務或市場,例如 Creative Market
  • 您可以從免費或優質庫存圖片網站獲取圖片,例如我們在 200 多個精選圖形和品牌設計資源文章中精選的圖片。
  • 您可以通過 Fiverr、Upwork 或 Dribbble 聘請平面設計師為您創建圖像。

在文章中放置圖像的位置方面,使用一個“英雄圖像”作為文章的主要圖像。 此圖片應出現在博客文章的頂部,“折疊”上方,並且應該是用於所有營銷和社交媒體通信的圖片。 您在整篇文章中使用的圖像來說明您討論的概念、想法或資源,應該一致且統一地使用,並且僅在有意義的時間和地點使用。

廣告

例如,在大多數情況下,我們喜歡將圖像直接放置在相應的標題下方,並且我們使用獨特的圖像來說明文章中的每個標題,以便它們在整篇文章中保持一致和統一。

圖像的大小也應該統一,最好適合您的內容列的寬度,並且它們不應超過用戶屏幕的寬度和高度。 用戶應該能夠一次在他們的屏幕上看到整個圖像,而不必滾動查看它的每一部分,並且圖像不應該太小以至於他們無法分辨出圖像的實際內容成為。

在將圖像保存和上傳到您的網站方面,需要考慮很多信息,以便您的圖像具有正確的文件大小。 文件大小會影響網站加載的速度或速度,因此正確執行非常重要。 有關如何為文章正確保存圖像的更多信息,請查看我們的優化 Web 圖像:分步實用指南。 如果您是新手,對數字圖像、JPG 和 PNG 等文件類型以及將圖像製作為高分辨率的所有事情都感興趣,那麼這是一篇必讀的文章。

內容內流量生成策略

搜索引擎優化是吸引您的帖子和網站的最佳方式之一,因此當您在製作內容的過程中,牢記內容內流量生成策略是有利的。 當您這樣做時,您將在生產階段創建對 SEO 友好的內容,而不是事後嘗試做這一切,這將使您的內容更好地針對搜索引擎進行優化並更有可能獲得排名。

Most in-content SEO optimization strategies are very simple to implement, just keep a checklist of these tried-and-true methods so you can check them off as you create each article.

For example, these are some of the SEO optimization strategies you can implement within the production stage to help you attract traffic once you publish your article:

  • A Killer Headline: The best headlines are SEO focused (meaning that they include your target keyword) but also appealing to your audience. Finding a happy medium can be tricky, so spend a little bit of time creating different headlines and choose your best option after.
  • Using Your Keyword in Your Title: Using your keyword in your title is hugely important as it's a way for search engines to recognize what your article is about. Try to use it at the beginning of the title, when possible, rather than the middle or end of the title.
  • List Posts: Not every blog post will work as a list post, but if it does then use it to your advantage. List posts are easily digestible by the readers, they're shareable on social media platforms and they give you an excuse to use a number in your headline which can help to attract traffic.
  • Write With Your Keyword in Mind: Keywords are your SEO optimization strategy's bread and butter. They're the foundation of gaining organic traffic from search engines and they should be the focal point of each blog post. Every time you create content, know what your focus keyword is before you start and have an additional short list of supporting keywords to make use of in your article as well. Write your keyword into your content as often as it makes sense to (but don't overuse it!) and pepper in the supporting keywords to round out the article.
  • Keyword Density: When writing your posts, use your main keyword as often as possible to make your content keyword dense. Keyword density is important because it's a way for search engines to make sure your article is relevant to readers and that the topic is discussed in depth in the article. Make sure you use your keyword in the first paragraph of your article so search engines know you address the topic right away, and then continue to use the keyword throughout the body of the article. Keyword density should be around 0.5%–1% of the article's total word count.
  • Use Keywords in Your Headers (H-Tags): Beyond using keywords throughout the main body of your content and title, make sure to also use your target keywords in the headings and subheadings of your content as well. This helps both readers and search engines to understand what the article is about, and it makes it appear organized and easy to follow.
  • Use Keywords in Your Image Alt-Tags: When adding images into your articles, including your feature images and any images in the body of your articles, you have the option of adding an “Alt-Tag” which is essentially just a text replacement of the image in case it cannot load, and it allows search engines to understand what the image depicts. By integrating keywords into your alt-tag descriptions, where appropriate, you help your articles and images become more discoverable.
  • Setting Up Your Post's URL Structure: Your article's URL or “slug” should also include your keyword, and ideally just your keyword if at all possible. This is another way that search engines recognize what the article is about.
  • Optimizing Your Post's Meta Information: Meta information is the title and snippet of text that's shown in search engine results. Meta titles and meta descriptions are important to optimize for each one of your articles because it's the preview of your article that searchers see and it'll entice them to click through to your article. It's also a way for search engines to understand what your article is about, so optimize both the meta title and the description with your target keyword.
  • Name Names: This is less of an SEO strategy tip and more of a traffic generation tip. If it's possible in your articles, reference quotes, opinions or information from relevant sources like authors, academics, bloggers or influencers so you can reach out to them after the post is published and let them know they've been featured. People love seeing their name in the spotlight, so they may be inclined to share the article with their audience.
  • Run Giveaways & Contests: The chance of winning something is a great way to get readers to engage with your content, and by formatting your giveaways correctly it can also be an advantageous way to acquire new leads and generate more traffic to your site. One of the best ways for ecommerce stores, entrepreneurs, bloggers and influencers to run giveaways is through ViralSweep, which you can learn more about in our ViralSweep Review.

The Importance of Linking to Internal & External Sources

Another important aspect of the in-content traffic generation strategy, but also something that serves additional purposes as well, is linking to internal and external sources in your articles.

Internal sources include any articles or webpages that exist on your website, and external sources include any other website whether it's a resource, service, tool, webpage, etc.

Linking to both internal and external sources is important for a few reasons:

  • External Links: When mentioning products or services in your articles, it's best practice to link the product or service the first time you mention it in the post, but not again after that. Too many links can look messy and be a distraction to the reader, so link to the resource once so the reader can reference it if need be, then leave it at that. External links are also important because they give backlinks to other content creators which helps to boost their SEO, it makes you look like a more reputable source of information in the eyes of search engines and it helps you build relationships with other content creators.
  • Internal Links: Include contextual links that direct readers to other relevant pieces of content that either you've published on your blog before or content elsewhere on your site. This helps your audience to discover other useful content on your site that's relevant to a subject they're already interested in and it also plays a factor in boosting your SEO. Internal links create a web of related content that search engines can use to help better determine which of your pieces of content is a good fit for their users.

So, where appropriate, make sure you link to any relevant external or internal sources mentioned in your article whether it's blog posts you've previously written that your audience might find useful or outside sources that you mention in your article. Not only does it help your readers, but it helps search engines understand your posts better and it shows search engines that you refer your audience to other credible sources. It's a win-win situation for everyone!

How to Enhance Your Content

Beyond just creating written text for your blog posts, make them even more engaging for your readers by adding relevant images, videos, and links. By enhancing your content, you'll entice your readers to stay on your webpages longer, which gives the green light to search engines letting them know that your content is worth reading.

These are some ideas to help you enhance your written content. Add them throughout each article as little surprises for your readers to discover.

  • Images: Images capture and keep the attention of your readers as they read through the article.
  • Links: Links provide additional information and clarification when needed.
  • Videos: Videos are interactive and keep the reader on the page longer.
  • Call-Out-Boxes: These draw attention to important information or bonuses, and help to break up any walls of text.
  • Click-to-Tweet Boxes: They offer the suggestion to your readers to share your content in just a few clicks.
  • Webinars: Webinars help your audience to learn about a topic in a visual and interactive way, and it keeps them engaged and on your site.
  • Surveys: Surveys are an interactive way for your readers to give you feedback.
  • Giveaways & Contests: Giveaways and contests are fun for everyone, and encourage sharing.
  • Slideshows: Slideshows are another way to offer your content in a visual way and also keep readers on your site for longer.
  • Downloadable PDFs: These can feel like bonus content that your reader can get excited about and feel “exclusive” for having.
  • Block Quotes: These help make the post pretty, break up walls of text and draw attention to important or poignant messages.
  • Sharing Buttons: Make it easy for your readers to share your content with sharing buttons.
  • Review Widgets: If you're reviewing products or services, add a review widget so your readers can get a summary-at-a-glance of your review.
  • Shoppable Widgets: If you're suggesting products to your readers or reviewing shoppable items, add shoppable widgets to your articles so your readers can shop directly through your links, which can also be affiliate links.
  • Comment Forms: Use a service like Disqus so your readers can comment on each post and share their thoughts.

10% vs. 10x Content

When creating content for your site, take into consideration that there are two very different categories that the majority of content will fall into:

  • 10% Content
  • 10x Content

This is an ideology discussed by Garrett Moon, the Co-founder, and CEO of CoSchedule, in his Skillshare Content Marketing class (which, if you've never heard of Skillshare, we highly recommend checking it out. You can learn about many different types of topics by taking virtual classes taught by industry professionals, and it's one of the most accessible ways to learn industry knowledge online. Check out our roundup of the 40+ Best Business Classes on Skillshare here) and it's a concept that's stuck with us as we create content for our own site.

Essentially, what it comes down to is that some content you create will help you grow by 10 percent and some content will help you grow by 10 times the amount you were growing at. Meaning, all content will add value, some of it will just add a little bit of value at a time while others will add an explosive amount of value that will likely last the test of time.

As we've interpreted this concept for our own content strategy, we don't try to create 10x content all the time, we just take into consideration which type of content we're creating every time we create an article, and then create the article accordingly. 10x content will get more time, energy and effort invested into it, while 10% content will still get the same care and attention just on a much smaller scale.

When we create our own content schedule, as you'll see first hand in the final section of this article, we categorize each of our articles based on their “Content Type” which includes categories such as “Blog Posts,” “Reviews,” “Super-Posts,” “Roundups,” etc. For the most part, almost everything is 10% content besides super-posts, which are almost always 10x content. We aim to publish one super-post per quarter, so essentially, we aim to publish four 10x posts per year. That's just about the amount of time and energy we can dedicate to those posts because of how much effort they take to create, but even publishing them just 4 times per year is worth it because they 10x our engagement, pageviews, traffic and essentially are worth 10x every other blog post we've published in the meantime.

Looking at this from an ecommerce lens, Brian Dean from Backlinko recently published a great case study on how Emil from SnackNation created a 10x piece of content that led to 41,992 Pageviews, a #1 ranking and $100k in monthly recurring revenue for his companies subscription snack box business (Read the full case study here).

In short, Emil identified the lucrative keyword, “Employee Wellness Programs”, that had significant search volume and which he was confident he could write a more comprehensive piece of content.

By writing a remarkable piece titled “121 Employee Wellness Program Ideas for Your Office”, he was quickly able to rank number one in Google for the term “Employee Wellness Ideas” bringing their site 10,000 visitors per month consistently and translating into $100,000 in monthly reoccurring revenue for Snack Nation.

So, when creating your own content strategy, take into consideration which pieces of content are going to be 10% posts and which will be 10x posts. Both are important and both are necessary aspects of a successful content strategy, but just understanding which articles are which will help you allocate your time, effort and money appropriately.

To help you to determine the difference, in our experience, 10x content is content with high search volume for the target keywords and content that's “cornerstone content” for the blog, which basically means it's foundational information for the blog overall.

Word Count & How to Know When a Piece of Content is Done

Word count is often a topic of conversation that comes up when creating content. There is no such thing as an ideal word count, or a perfect word count, for blog posts but there are some best practices to take into consideration when producing your content:

  • Word count helps get your content recognized by search engines like Google, and the more competitive your word count is the more competitive your content will be. There's really no minimum or maximum word count as all content is indexed by search engines, but in order to get your content on the first page of search results, your word count needs to at least match or exceed the word count of content that already exists on the topic.
  • Speaking from our own experience, we aim for our blog posts to be around 2,000–2,500 words because that's the best fit for our audience and the type of content they like to read and the in-depth nature in which we cover our topics. We do, however, occasionally publish super-posts (10x) that reach anywhere from 5,000 to 15,000 words. It completely depends on the article, the topic and how we want to approach it.
  • We also write 2,000+ word posts because, in our industry, it's nearly impossible to rank for most keywords if our content's word count is less than 2,000 words per post. When creating your own content, pay attention to the content in your industry to understand the minimum length of content you should be writing. Generally the longer and more comprehensive the content, the better—provided it's not just filler content and is actually answering user's queries on Google.
  • So to be competitive on the first page of Google, oftentimes the word count needs to be at least at par with what's already ranking or it needs to exceed it. If you're interested in your blog posts reaching the front page of Google for specific keywords, find out the word count of the current top-ranking articles and then write an even better post that's more thorough and has a more robust word count.

From our perspective, when you go beyond the minimum word count you have more opportunities to create content that will continue to be useful to the reader for years to come, so we recommend focusing on creating valuable, word count heavy pieces of content. This may not work for your brand, though, so find out what does.

Proofreading Content

A small note to end off the publication section of this article, and also the last step in the publication process: Proofread.

Proofreading is the act of reading through your content at least once, if not a couple of times, before you publish it to the public, so you can correct any errors whether they're spelling, grammar, punctuation or formatting errors.

Proofreading is hugely underrated and highly important. It's your last chance to make sure you're putting your best foot forward and providing the best possible content for your audience, which should always be your ultimate goal.

Some proofreading tips:

  • Have an Incubation Period: This is a well-known technique used in the writing community where you take a break from your content after having written it by either stepping away from your desk for an hour or two, or even leaving your content for a more extended period of time such as overnight or for a full 24 hours. After stepping away from your content for a fair amount of time (usually, anything less than an hour is too short, overnight is best) you then go ahead and proofread your content. This gives you a fresh set of eyes on your content as your brain has somewhat forgotten what you've written and you'll be able to pick out your errors more easily. Without the incubation period you can often miss minor (or major!) errors you would have otherwise caught.
  • Read Your Content Out Loud: When reading written content in our heads it's easier for us to glaze over any strange sentence structure or awkward wording, so try reading your content out loud as your proofreading. When you come to a section where you're stumbling over the words, you know the wording is awkward and you should consider correcting it.
  • Get Someone Else to Read Your Content: Sometimes when we write something it makes sense to us, but if anyone else were to read it they wouldn't necessarily understand what we were trying to say. Someone else can help you find and fix any errors or awkward formatting that you may not have perceived as a problem in the first place.

One last final piece of advice: Proofread. Always proofread before publishing. Even when you don't think you need to proofread, proofread. Don't ever neglect proofreading because of the time or effort it takes, it will save you from publishing silly errors that are so correctable before you push your content live to your audience.

Content Strategy Step #3: Publication

Content Publication

The next step in the content strategy process is publication, which basically entails everything to do with publishing content, the process leading up to it and what to do immediately after. There's actually a lot more that goes into the publication process of the content strategy than just hitting the “Publish” button, so let's jump into it.

Developing a Posting Schedule & Posting Frequency

First, and absolutely foremost, is planning a posting schedule and determining what your posting frequency is going to be. This is an absolutely imperative step to the success of your blog because it helps keep you accountable and ensures that you're pushing content out as regularly as you can.

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The most important part of your posting schedule is to actually stick to it. Do not create a posting schedule that you can't keep up with, because you ultimately won't be able to keep up and you'll spend most of your time worrying about posts that aren't getting published and guilting yourself into working on posts just for the sake of your publishing schedule. This is not an effective way to develop a posting schedule.

If you know you can definitely commit to publishing one amazing blog post per month, then set one day per month where your articles must go live by. Once a month is better than never and it's better to consistently post once per month than inconsistently four times per month.

Other options include publishing a post once every two weeks, once a week or two posts per week; it's really up to you and how often you can consistently publish high-quality content.

Here are some tips to help you develop your posting schedule:

  • Your best day(s) to post are the days your website has its highest traffic, so create your posting schedule around your highest traffic day(s). This will be different for every website, so look into your analytics to see which days incur the highest amount of visitors. If you're a new website you may not have this information, so just pick a publishing day and then reevaluate a few months later when you have some data to draw from.
  • Consider publishing every article a day before you promote your post to your email list so that the post can accumulate some organic social shares, thus generating social proof before your email list sees it.
  • When creating your blog post schedule, separate it into the quarters of the year (Q1 being January, February, March; Q2 being April, May, June; Q3 being July, August, September; and Q4 being October, November, December) so you can easily keep track of the articles you want to post and when, and you'll be able to focus your attention on the right articles at the right time. At the end of this article we break down our posting schedule, and you'll see that we structure it in quarters.

Conducting a Final Review for Formatting, Structure & Errors

Even though you've already proofread your article by this point in the content strategy process, make sure you do one last check to make sure everything is as it should be. Make sure you view your article in “preview” mode so you can clearly see any formatting errors, and double-check your SEO section to make sure everything is optimized as it should be.

This may not seem like a very important step, but just like the proofreading stage it's where you're going to catch any silly and easily correctable mistakes, so make sure you take the time to do one last check over before publishing every post.

Including Author Bylines & Headshots

Consider including author bylines and headshots with each article you publish. It's not a compulsory requirement, however, it gives the readers the ability to learn more about who has written the article, their credentials, and their background.

If you're working with guest contributors to create content for your site, you'll most definitely want to include author bylines and headshots with their articles. It helps to put them in the spotlight and gives them credit for their work. It's also best practice to give guest contributors at least one link to their website, blog or social media platforms in their author byline to help boost their SEO and to give readers an easy way to find them online.

Author bylines and headshots can be added to your article either at the beginning of the article or the end. Typically, most websites name the author of the article somewhere near the beginning of the article and then include the full bio and headshot at the end of it.

Dating Your Publications

When it comes to pushing content live, the date matters. The date that a post was published indicates its relevance, which is all that matters in today's fast-paced world.

  • Each article should include its publishing date so the reader knows when the information was at its most recent
  • If you want to make your content more evergreen, you could consider not publishing a date or you could remove the year from the date and just include the day and month
  • When content becomes buried on your blog beneath new content, if it's still up-to-date and relevant information then consider re-publishing the article to bring it back to the top of the pile. All you have to do is change the publish date, you don't have to change any of the content unless you want to update anything.
Bonus for WordPress Users: More recent content is likely to rank better in search engines because it's probably the most relevant, so when optimizing your SEO title considering including a phrase such as: “Updated: %%currentmonth%%, %%currentyear%%”. That snippet of information will appear as, “Updated: May 2018” and will automatically update to the most current month and year as appropriate.

Content Strategy Step #4: Promotion

Content Promotion

Finally, after all the effort of preparing, producing and publishing your content, it's time to promote it! But, don't underestimate the promotion part of your content strategy—it's been said by industry veterans that promoting content is just as important as publishing it, and should take just as much time and effort as it does to create the content.

In this section, we'll discuss the ways in which you can promote your content, how you should approach the promotion process, the necessary elements of promoting content, and more.

Content Promotion Optimization

The first thing you need to do before you start promoting your content is to know what action you'd like your audience to take after engaging with it. For each piece of content the action might be different, so you'll have to take each article into consideration individually.

The action could be for the reader to share the article with their peers and social following, it could be to subscribe to your email list, it could be to check out a featured resource, it could be to sign up for a webinar, it could be to buy a product, etc. Whatever the action is, identify it first before you start promoting the content so you know which direction you need the promotion strategy for that specific article to be headed. Taking this into consideration will give you a better return on investment (ROI) on the content.

Remember the most important lesson of this content strategy article, though: Give value first, then ask for the sale. In your promotion strategy don't get so preoccupied with asking for your readers to take a certain action that you forget to give value to them.

Content Promotion Copy

Before you actually start promoting content on the various promotion channels (which we discuss in the next section), it's helpful to come up with some copy so you have useful, well thought out promotional messages to share with your audience.

Copy is what's going to sell your content and convince your target market to click on the link and read it, so your copy has to be good. 很好。

Generally speaking, copy needs to capture attention, be short and punchy and give accurate insight into what the reader will find on the other side of the link. Copy that's not interesting, engaging or truthful will likely deter the audience and be a detriment to your content.

Here are some tips for creating copy for your content promotion strategy:

  • Keep it Short & Sweet: The more concise, the better. Some promotion channels allow for longer word counts than others but in general, it's best to keep your copy as to-the-point as possible.
  • Make it Interesting: You want your readers to wonder what's on the other side of that link, so make them want to click on it! Try to stay away from clickbait copy, though, as it's likely to prevent your readers from engaging with your content in the long run.
  • Brainstorm: Don't just publish the first sentence of copy that comes to mind. Take the time to write out as many iterations of your copy as you possibly can. Maybe write 20 different copy promos for an article, and then pick the best ones. Likely the first bits of copy you come up with won't be the best ones.
  • Write Multiples: When promoting your content, you're likely to promote it more than once, so come up with more than one set of copy for it so you can promote the same piece of content multiple times without the copy becoming repetitive to your audience. They don't want to read the same copy over and over—it's not interesting—so have multiple different sets of copy prepared.
  • Proofread: Just like with creating content, creating copy is subject to the same proofreading rule. Always proofread your promotional copy before you schedule or publish it on any of your content promotion channels.

To help you write and create copy for your content promotion, we recommend using resources such as the CopyHackers website or copywriting lessons on Skillshare.

Content Promotion Channels

Next in the content promotion strategy is to actually start promoting your content. This is where the main bulk of your effort is going to be put into, and this is the part of the process that's going to take the most time. This is where the magic happens, though, so take your time promoting your content through as many channels as you can.

The more channels you promote through, the more exposure your content gets and the more discoverable your content becomes.

These are the different channels you can promote your content through:

  • Create an email list and send out content to your list frequently
  • Publish on Quuu Promote to tap into new but relevant audiences
  • Promote your content to visitors on your own website with an updatable newsfeed by using Beamer
  • Use a service like MissingLettr to create year-long social media campaigns
  • Promote on industry content & resource sharing sites like GrowthHackers
  • Post to your Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, Instagram & Instagram Stories
  • Pin to your Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+ and save to your Instagram Highlights
  • Use a scheduling service like Buffer, SmarterQueue or Meet Edgar to push out promos consistently on your social platforms
  • Post your articles to relevant subreddits (but be aware of & abide by Reddit's rules. Check out the first tip in our How to Get Backlinks to Your Store article to learn how to promote your content successfully on subreddits)
  • Post your articles to your own subreddit (check out the full explanation of this tip in our How to Get Backlinks to Your Store article. It's tip #10!)
  • Use Facebook Ads to boost your content to your audience or similar (lookalike) audiences on Facebook
  • Create a profile, select posts, and syndicate on Medium (submit to their top publications)
  • Create a profile on Quora and answer questions that are related to your content. In your answer, summarize your post and add a link back to your article. Also, consider doing the same on Yahoo Answers and Stack Exchange.
  • Reach out to influencers in your niche and share your article with them in the hope that they'll share it with their audience
  • Reach out to individuals or businesses you may have featured or linked in your post and let them know that they've been featured. They'll be more inclined to share your content on their social channels.
  • Do a search for the top 5-10 articles currently ranking for your target keywords. Post a thoughtful comment on each commentable blog post or article with a link back to your post. This will potentially give you a backlink and may make your post discoverable to the author and readers checking out the comments section.

Beyond the more traditional promotion methods listed above, there are other methods you can use to get your content in front of larger or more diverse audiences. These methods take a little more time, effort and consistency to make worthwhile, but when they work they really work.

  • Target Influencers: While traffic may be the main priority, people should be at the center of all your efforts. With this strategy, the aim is to develop high leverage, mutually beneficial relationships with thought leaders in your industry and ultimately, get in front of the audiences they've built
    • Create a List of Influencers to Partner With: This can be done using Google (search for relevant thought leader roundups), Instagram (find top influencers in your niche), YouTube (find the top content creators in your market), Amazon (find authors who've written about topics similar to yours) and tools (like Buzzsumo).
    • Social Touchpoints: If you want other influencers to share your content with them, you need to share theirs. You can do this by setting up a Feedly account of all your target influencers and sharing all their new posts. You can even automate this process with IFTTT or Zapier.
    • Direct Touchpoints: Comment on your target influencers' posts, engage with their content by liking and commenting and sign up and reply often to their newsletters. Get their attention and make yourself known. They'll eventually begin to recognize your name.
    • Provide Value First: Where relevant, add links out to target influencers in blog posts you've previously published. These links can either be added within the body of the content itself or at the end of the article in a “Recommended Reading” section. You could also create thought leader roundup blog posts where you mention and link out to the influencer's content. This is a nice way to open up conversations with influencers and show them you're willing to promote their content to your audience, too.
    • Make Contact: Reach out to influencers directly over email after having mentioned them a couple of times on your social platforms or in your content. You could be asking them what they think about your new post, or suggesting partnership opportunities (such as featuring each other on-site in ads, co-creating content assets, writing a guest post, sending out messages to each other's email databases, etc.) This email could also be in response to an email they've sent through their newsletter which can come across as a little more natural and less forced.
  • Submit your article to bloggers who do weekly roundups related to your article's topic.
    • Make yourself known to other creators in your niche who shoutout other brands and share other creator's content.
  • Find people who are sharing similar content and let them know about an upcoming post
    • Perhaps your content could be relevant for them to link in their content, maybe they'd like to share your content with their audience on social media, or maybe your content could feature in their newsletter.
  • Find out which sites are linking to the posts ranking highest on Google for your topics or keywords and reach out to them
    • You can do this using SEMrush.
    • Let them know that your content is similar and a relevant resource to link out to as well.
  • Find the people who comment the most on your competitors' sites and tell them about upcoming content.
    • Clearly, these readers are very engaged with online content like yours, so what's to say they wouldn't also enjoy reading your content? Let them know you exist!
  • Monitor conversations happening around your article's topic using Awario and suggest your post.
    • You'll be sharing your article with people who are already interested, thus reaching out to hot leads.
  • Find and reach out to the most influential people who've shared your content in the past and ask for a share or a comment
    • Let them know that you're still out here making great content and you'd love to have them back to read, share or engage with your latest posts.
  • Find other syndication and guest posting opportunities
    • We recommend checking out this resource on 150+ Sites to Guest Post.

Creating a Content Promotion System

The final most important part of the promotion section of your content strategy is to create a content promotion system and methods to track the growth of your system.

Creating a content promotion system is important so you never forget to put the work into promoting your content. It can be tempting to mentally check out of your content strategy after publishing an article, but just because you publish a piece of content doesn't mean the masses are going to come flocking, so you have to put in the work every time, all the time.

Your content promotion system is simple and it's going to be the same as every other content creators' promotion system:

Every time you publish an article, execute each promotion method.

完畢。 就那麼簡單。

Establish the content promotion methods you're going to employ now, and then set up a spreadsheet or something similar (we show you ours in detail down below!) so you can check off each promotion method you've completed for each article once it goes live. This way you'll visually be able to keep track of your promotion strategy and ensure that you never forget a promotion channel for each new article you publish.

The next best thing after establishing the promotion methods you're going to complete as part of your content promotion strategy is to be consistent. Consistency is the key to gaining traction and building your readership, so even when checking off each step in your content promotion strategy feels futile, keep going. Consistency will bring value to your readers and it will bring success to your content.

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Next, don't forget to follow up with influencers and the people or businesses you feature or link to in your posts. Follow up a few times to make sure they see your post. You want to develop and maintain a relationship with them and seeming eager is the best way to do that (beyond publishing great content that's relevant and valuable to their audience).

Finally, in order to understand whether your content promotion strategy is working, where it's working best and what may need some improvement—you need to track your growth.

Data is one of the few ways you can be sure about the success of your promotion strategy, so beyond creating a checklist that keeps track of each promotion method you use for each article, create a spreadsheet or something similar to keep track of the relevant promotion metrics for each post.

Here are a few examples of the metrics you could keep tabs on:

  • Traffic
  • Social Shares
  • 評論
  • Inbound Links
  • Email Subscribers
  • Leads
  • Sales Driven by Promo Channels
  • Article Page Views
  • Email Campaign Open & Click-Through Rates

There will likely be some that are more successful than others, but you won't know for sure until you track them! It might surprise you which promotion methods work the best for you and which ones don't work as well as you thought they might.

Our Content Strategy, Schedule & Spreadsheet

This section is going to delve into the system we've created at A Better Lemonade Stand to plan, organize and manage our content, and we're going to be sharing the exact tools and templates we use to manage our content strategy.

But first, a little backstory on our founder Richard Lazazzera's journey of creating content, not only for A Better Lemonade Stand but also for Shopify when he worked for the Shopify Growth Team. This should hopefully give you some insight into Richard's perspective when creating content, his goals for A Better Lemonade Stand's content strategy and why content marketing is so effective.

His first piece of remarkable content was one of the first blog posts he wrote for A Better Lemonade Stand: Reverse Engineering the Perfect Ecommerce Product.

For just over a year, I worked on the Shopify Growth Team. In particular, I drove growth for the company by inspiring and educating entrepreneurs to build and grow their online business. I did this through insightful and insanely practical blog posts.

In my time there, my team and I grew the Shopify blog from 200,000 readers per month to 2 million readers per month (in fact, I believe we hit 2 million just a few days before I left the company). I always try to measure my work by the impact it has on others, however, there are numbers I can't share, but one thing I can share is that if you're unsure whether content marketing is important or effective, know that just my top 5 blog posts alone on the Shopify blog (in the 13 months I was with the company) racked up a total of 98,000 hours (10.4 years) of on-site read time.

Now, to be absolutely clear, we were a team and there were many contributors to the blog from several departments that all deserve credit and a standing ovation. While I can't speak to the contributions of others, I can tell you that over the last few years I have gone from someone who never wrote and barely passed my English classes to an online writer who has millions of pageviews under his belt and hundreds of thousands of hours of on-site read time.

It's taken time, but I've developed a content strategy that enables me to consistently create competitively ranking content that inspires, engages and helps our audience and I'm going to share it with you right now.

Why am I sharing our content strategy with you? I debated this for a while because the fact is, my competition can use this against me. But, there's a greater cause here: Content marketing is extremely important and so many creators are still doing it wrong. I want to help fix this and make it easier and more accessible for people to create, manage and systemize their own content strategy so they too can create remarkable content and get it in front of the eyes of eager readers.

Let's jump into A Better Lemonade Stand's very own tried, tested and true content strategy.

How We Plan, Organize, Manage & Systemize Our Content

Airtable

First things first, and possibly the most integral part of our content strategy, is the spreadsheet tool we use called Airtable (Airtable Review). Before this begins to turn into essentially it's own blog post describing every tiny detail of why we love Airtable so much, we'll try to keep it short and sweet by saying we don't know how we ever created content without Airtable. We would never be able to manage our content strategy without Airtable and when we first discovered Airtable around April of 2017, it's completely revolutionized our content strategy.

Initially, we just used Google Sheets to organize, plan and manage our content strategy, but once having discovered and used Airtable to its fullest potential we pity the content creator who still uses Google Sheets to organize and manage their content schedule. Airtable completely blows Google Sheets out of the water in every aspect, including functionality, design, and innovation.

Here are just some of the reasons why we love Airtable so much:

  • It Creates Smart Spreadsheets: Airtable spreadsheets can be anything you want them to be. Keep them simple and straightforward or connect them to one another so you have a full-fledged web of spreadsheets that update instantly any time you make an edit.
  • It's Completely Customizable: With Airtable, your spreadsheets don't have to just be spreadsheets, they can be checklists, they have single or multiple select options, you can add dates, numbers, links, and emails, or you can group the spreadsheet into categories by column, you can inter-link to other spreadsheets, you can view the sheet by grid, form, calendar or kanban view, you can create separate views of the same spreadsheet for different users, etc. The customization options are limitless.
  • It's Free: Airtable offers a very generous free plan that even we've been able to manage an extensive content strategy without having to upgrade to one of their premium plans. Their premium plans do offer more features, but we've never felt limited with the free version. If you are interested in some of their premium features, though, Airtable's Pricing Plans are very reasonable.
  • It's Completely Adaptable: You can create any type of spreadsheet you want with Airtable. No matter what you have to manage or organize, Airtable's features will be able to organize it in the best possible way.
  • There are Free Templates: If creating your own spreadsheet from scratch on Airtable sounds daunting, they offer templates to help get you started. If you want to transfer over any of your Excel or Google spreadsheets too, you can import them as well.
  • Organize By Base, Tabs, and Tables: Organization is much easier on Airtable than any other spreadsheet tool we've used. Within Airtable there are “Bases” that house spreadsheets, and within each base you can have as many spreadsheets as you like that are all neatly organized into tabs.
  • You Can Embed Spreadsheets: The Airtable spreadsheets are embeddable so you can add them to blog posts or pages on your site.
  • There's an Airtable App: Both for mobile and desktop, there's an Airtable app so you can access everything easily from any device.

Airtable can be a bit of a learning curve to get used to initially, especially when transitioning over from other spreadsheet tools, but trust us when we say that once you've used Airtable to its fullest potential you'll never go back to using any other spreadsheet tool. It's the Cadillac of spreadsheets and it's the future of spreadsheet innovation. They also offer lots of helpful videos through their Airtable YouTube channel and other useful guides, videos, and a help center right in the app as well.

Our Content Topics SpreadSheet in Airtable

Our content strategy revolves around two main aspects of our Content Strategy Airtable base: Our Content Topics tab and our Content Schedule & Promotion Strategy tab. These two separate spreadsheets are the foundation of our content strategy as well as our promotion strategy.

Our Content Topics tab is the main hub that our content strategy preparation revolves around. It's the place where we input any ideas or inspiration we have in regards to content we want to create, guest contributors we want to collaborate with and generally the future of where we want our content to go. This Airtable tab is basically a dumping ground where anything and everything related to content topics goes, and we generally like to keep it fairly unstructured so that we can easily copy and paste title ideas, links, images or anything else that has inspired us.

The main way we organize our Content Topics tab is into various “Content Categories” such as these:

  • To Be Organized
  • Posts to Write Soon
  • Drafts Almost Ready to Be Published
  • How-To/Instructional
  • Longform SEO
  • 評論
  • List Post
  • Resources Post
  • Opinion/Passion/Inspirational
  • Guest Post
  • Emergency Posts
  • 實例探究

This way we can easily scroll to a category, see the content topic ideas we have for that specific category and then create a post based on the topics we find listed there.

This is our main hub that we refer to when planning our content strategy each quarter so that we can be sure that we're creating content based on the topics we want to feature on the blog and content that our readers have asked to see on our site.

We like to keep it very open-ended and in a perpetual state of flow as we add new content ideas and remove ones we've completed, so there aren't many rules that we follow within this tab.

Our Content Schedule Base in Airtable

Content Strategy Airtable Base

CLICK HERE TO USE OUR TEMPLATE
The first tab houses, essentially, our day-to-day operations here at A Better Lemonade Stand. Content is key for us here as we help entrepreneurs to build, launch and grow better ecommerce businesses, and the main way we do that is through the free, accessible, actionable, informative and engaging content we create for our audience.

In order to create great content for our audience, we need to consistently be publishing relevant content, so we have a carefully planned and curated content schedule to help us be consistent, timely, organized and prepared to publish content on our blog regularly.

Without this Airtable tab, we would be directionless and unorganized, so it really is very important to us.

Let's dive into each column of our Content Schedule:

  • Post Title: This column simply lists the title of each post we have in our content schedule.
  • Status: For this column, we've chosen to use Airtable's “single select” feature which gives this column a drop-down menu of choices for us to label the progress of each article with. The 3 options we've chosen that any post can be labeled as are: “Published,” Ready to Publish,” or “Not Ready to Publish” which helps us to understand at a glance the status of each article in the schedule.
  • Content Type: This column helps us get an overview of the content we're putting out on a quarterly basis and includes categories such as just standard blog posts, case studies, roundup posts, reviews, super-posts (lengthy and often SEO focused or very important posts to our overall content strategy), annual campaigns or announcements so we can generally see the type of content we're putting out regularly.
  • Purpose/Goal: This column helps us to set the intention for each article so we can understand our purpose for publishing it. We discussed the importance of understanding the overall goal of each article earlier on in this article, and that's what we do with this column.
  • Category: Each article that we publish on our blog falls within our predetermined categories, which we keep track of in this column to see what type of content we're putting out in which category and how often.
  • Day: In order to keep a sense of which days of the week we're publishing our articles on, we've included this column to help us easily keep track. In some quarters we've experimented with publishing on Tuesdays and Thursdays and in other quarters we only publish on Tuesdays, so this column helps keep track.
  • Publish Date: This column keeps tabs on the actual date of publishing. It helps us to plan our content in advance and keep the articles organized in a chronological fashion.
  • Email: This column includes the date that we send out our email newsletter to our audience, featuring the article as our main and newest blog post. As you'll be able to see in our content schedule, we typically publish our articles on Mondays and then send out the article to our email list on Tuesdays. As we've mentioned earlier in this article, it helps to give the article some time to acquire social shares which acts as social proof when we later showcase the article in our email newsletter.
  • Author: This column helps us to keep track of who the author of our content is, whether it's our founder, regular contributors or guest authors.
  • Keyword: As we discussed thoroughly in this article, keywords are the foundation of well optimized and competitively ranking articles, which is what we strive for, so this column is entirely dedicated to noting down our intended keyword for each article.
  • Search Volume: This column works in conjunction with the Keyword column, and keeps track of the search volume for our target keyword. Keeping tabs on this metric helps us understand the size, volume, and importance of the article.
  • SEO Optimized: This column is just a checkbox reminder for us to ensure that we've completed all the necessary SEO optimization requirements for each article, including the meta title, meta description, featured image, alt tags, URL slug, social titles, and descriptions, etc.
  • Add to SERPWatcher: We keep track of all our major keywords in SERPWatcher to keep tabs on how our articles rank, so each time we publish a new article we add the keyword to SERPWatcher so we can keep tabs on it. To learn more about SERPWatcher, check out our SERPWatcher Review.
  • Blog Post Link: To keep track of our articles and to ensure that they're easily accessible to us, we add the blog post URL for each article into our content schedule.
  • Google Doc: We typically create the draft of every article we write in a Google Doc first, so we also add the link to the Google Doc into the content schedule as well just so it's easily accessible.
  • Image Assigned?: Every article we publish gets its own unique feature image created by our in-house illustrator, so to ensure that the image is always ready to go for publishing day we have a checkbox in our content schedule to remind us that the feature image for each specific article has been assigned to our illustrator.
  • Feature Images: When we receive the feature images from our illustrator (we have a main feature image that serves as the hero image for the article, and then two social media optimized images for Facebook and Twitter) we add them into our content schedule just to know that we have them, and then the images are easily accessible in case we need to access them again at any time.
  • Images in Blogpost: Each blog post we create includes images within the body of the article, so in this column, we upload all the images used in the article just to make sure they're accessible again in case we need them in future.
  • Email Header: This is another column dedicated to images, but this time for the image we use as the feature image in our email newsletter for each article. It'll be the same featured image that was used for the article, just a slightly different size. Again, we include it in our content schedule just for easily accessible reference.
  • Author Bio: Occasionally our articles are written by guest contributors, so to keep track of their information, we have a column dedicated to saving their author bios so we never misplace or mix up an author and a bio.
  • Author Image: In addition, we also keep tabs on their author headshot in our content schedule, again, just to keep track of them and to make sure we have the correct headshot for each contributor.
  • Quarter: The very final column of this Airtable tab is the “Quarter” column. We organize our entire content schedule by quarters which makes planning and organizing content easier. We first started using Airtable for our content strategy in Q2 of 2017, so that's why our content schedule starts there. We use Airtable's “Group” feature to group our content schedule by the quarter, so it's even easier to view and keep track of. When one quarter is done we'll simply collapse the entire group so we can move on fresh to the next quarter.

Not only do we schedule all of our content in this Airtable tab, but we also have our promotion strategy checklist in this tab as well so we can easily access it and check it off for each blog post when we need to. Having it in this tab helps us to keep on top of it and make sure that the necessary promotion has been completed for each article.

Here are the columns that are dedicated to our promotion strategy:

  • Email Campaign: This column helps us to keep track of our email newsletters for each article, we simply add in the link when we've created the campaign.
  • Quuu Promote: Quuu Promote is another service that we frequently use to share our content across other relevant social platforms, so once we've added our latest article to Quuu Promote we can check it off in this column. This is a great tool to use to promote content across social platforms via influencers in your industry, no matter your niche.
  • Post to Reddit: Reaching out to the Reddit community and posting content to relevant subreddits can be a great way to promote content. It takes a bit more work than other content promotion methods because it's generally against the rules of Reddit to post promotional content and the audience there isn't very receptive to it, but if you find the right niche (or subreddit) on Reddit and give value to the community while finding a way to share a link to your content, it can be a very worthwhile promotion method.
  • IG Post: Posting to Instagram is part of our content promotion strategy, so we upload our Instagram image here for each article once it's created.
  • IG Story: As well as posting to our Instagram feed, we also publish to our Instagram story as it's an easily accessible way for our audience to access our content because they can just swipe up on the link.
  • Buffer: To automate our social media posting on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Google+ we use Buffer. When we've scheduled in social posts for each article, we check it off in this column.
  • FB Boost: Facebook ads are a powerful way to get our content in front of our audience, so we post about our content on Facebook and then boost the post.
  • Link Building: For some of our content, in particular, we'll work on specific link building tactics to help boost the article's exposure and SEO value, so any of the link building techniques we've used we'll keep track of in this tab.

So that's our content schedule and promotion strategy explained! It's something we've developed through trial and error over time, and something we adjust to favor our successes and work on the areas we can improve on. It's likely something we'll continually adjust as we learn new tactics and discover new tools, but this is what it's looked like for a while and it's what we've been most consistent with and brought us our current success.

結論

Overall, content is about communicating a message and providing value. As a brand, once you've done those two things successfully, you can then ask for the sale.

Bear in mind that our content strategy took us years to develop, so we recommend starting slowly and building up your own content strategy one piece at a time. Use this information to your advantage to help you avoid pitfalls and to prepare for success, but ultimately, pick and choose the parts that work best for your brand and implement the parts of the process that fulfill your ultimate goals as a company.

廣告

We hope the information and advice from our content strategy can help you establish your own successful blog so you too can provide remarkable content and value for your audience.