Why Content Strategy Using content to show your value
Slide 2
Slide 3
What is content? • • • • • • •
Product details Courses Conference sessions Press releases Program information Membership details Journal articles
• Advocacy issue updates • Original research • Industry standards & guidelines • Support content • Marketing collateral • Etc., etc., etc.
Slide 4
Content takes different forms • • • • • • •
Web pages Blog posts Infographics Images PDFs Video Audio
• • • • • • •
Articles Brochures Reports Social media posts Podcasts Courses Etc., etc., etc.
Slide 5
Content is the way our work is manifested in the world
Slide 6
What is content strategy? The right content To the right person At the right time For the right action
Slide 7
Put another way…. Content strategy is the practice of planning for the creation, delivery, and governance of useful, usable, effective content.
Slide 8
Three faces
Slide 9
Content strategy principles The organization creates content that its audiences want The organization creates content that helps it meet its goals Content has success metrics and is measured against those Content that is no longer relevant is no longer available Content is promoted, surfaced, and cross-linked based on its topic, not its source • Content is created in the organization’s voice • The organization manages content platforms, tools, and channels in a way that ensures their effectiveness • • • • •
Slide 10
Old thinking Department
Department
Department
Department
Content, format, and channel
Content, format, and channel
Content, format, and channel
Content, format, and channel
Audience
Audience
Audience
Audience
Slide 11
Silos
10
Slide 12
Different views of the audience
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Blind_men_and_elephant.png
Consequences • Difficulty prioritizing • Diluted impact • Lack of understanding of your value
Slide 15
“Users don’t care about your org chart.” —Lou Rosenfeld Author, Information Architecture for the World Wide Web
Slide 16
New thinking Organization: Programs, offerings
Content, formats, and channels
Audience
Audience
Audience
Audience
Slide 17
Slide 18
Spirit of partnership
subject-matter expertise
content presentation and sharing expertise
Slide 19
product expertise
course development expertise
content presentation and sharing expertise
research expertise
advocacy expertise
event expertise
Slide 20
product expertise program expertise
education expertise
event expertise
content presentation and sharing expertise
marketing expertise
advocacy expertise
research expertise customer satisfaction expertise
course development expertise
Slide 21
product expertise program expertise
education expertise
event expertise
advocacy expertise
marketing expertise customer satisfaction expertise
research expertise
content presentation and sharing expertise
Slide 22
product expertise program expertise
event expertise
advocacy expertise
education expertise
marketing expertise customer satisfaction expertise
research expertise
content presentation and sharing expertise
Slide 23
product expertise program expertise
event expertise
advocacy expertise
education expertise
marketing expertise customer satisfaction expertise
research expertise
content presentation and sharing expertise
Slide 24
http://chuckclose.com/work253_zoom.html
Slide 25
Slide 26
Typical project flow 1. Understand organization and project goals 2. Understand the dynamics and goals of top-priority audiences 3. Audit and assess content 4. Analyze content from competitive organizations 5. Develop content creation and publishing guidelines 6. Identify roles, content lifecycles, workflow, governance models
Slide 27
Typical project flow 7.
Facilitate the creation of a single, organization-wide taxonomy 8. Plan for content transformation and migration 9. Create a framework for content planning and promotions 10. Determine staffing needs 11. Plan for sustainability