To successfully engage and educate your target audience, you must create content that resonates. But this can be hard – to ONLY share relevant, helpful, and interesting content requires a lot of marketers.Â
First, you’re required to deeply know your Ideal Target (see Easiest Win #1) – their priorities, their pains, and their desires.Â
Second, you’re required to stay disciplined about keeping your customer as the hero. When your content is focused only on your company and not on your customers’ problems (and how you guide your hero, not take over being the hero), then you are being self-serving, not helpful.Â
Learn more about our Hero Story Outline
Third, you are required to resist the urge (or direction from others) to make price or promotion the centerpiece of your communications. Price and promotion have a role in marketing, but if you are predominantly communicating about price, you can be sure your content isn’t helpful or interesting.Â
It is no small thing to ask a person to spend time with the content you create. Before you approve and send any piece of content, ask yourself:
Is it relevant?
Is it helpful?
Is it interesting?Â
If the answer is no, then head back to the drawing board. If the answer is yes, then your rewards will include more engaged users, improved SEO, and higher trust and credibility among your audience.Â
Follow these steps to get a better response to your emails.
Download our Content Calendar Template
If you found this insightful, be sure to read our other Easiest Marketing Wins and our 5 Marketing Pitfalls:
- Easiest Marketing Win #1: Be Very Clear on Who You Want to Serve
- Easiest Marketing Win #2: Conduct a Source of Business Analysis BEFORE Creating Your Marketing PlanÂ
- Easiest Marketing Win #3: Stay in Touch with Current Customers
- Marketing Pitfall #1: Not Being Clear on Business Goals
- Marketing Pitfall #2: Not Having a Clear Brand Strategy
- Marketing Pitfall #3: Not Tracking Metrics or Tracking the Wrong Ones
- Marketing Pitfall #4: Doing a little bit of everything and expecting it to work
- Marketing Pitfall #5: Expecting A Lot with Little Support