The rise of blogging , Facebook and Twitter has made us all publishers.
Add mobile HD cameras mounted to helmets streaming death defying leaps, extreme bike moves and dives and you have an explosion of multi-media creators and publishers. Mobile and modern camera technology coupled with global social networks are providing platforms and networks with the media fodder that are supercharging content distribution and sharing.
Content and media is no longer gathering dust in the bottom draw or the filing cabinet but is published online. Often it is streaming and unedited. It’s real and raw.
Content now comes in a wide variety of formats and media. It can start with a 140 character micro blog (tweet), a video. image or a long form content piece of 2,000 words on your blog. It can even be a 6 second “Vine” video or a filtered snapshot on Instagram taken on a smartphone.
These fast changing opportunities and mediums are presenting the traditional marketer with some thought provoking and uncomfortable choices. You can almost hear the squirming.
Why content marketing upsets traditional marketers
The old school marketing habits and paradigms don’t cut it anymore because content marketing requires a different way of thinking. It flips the marketing model in many ways.
- Pull rather than push. Its about attracting the customer to you rather than pushing advertisements. That’s different.
- Entertain and educate first and sell second. Traditional marketing never heard of the term educate.
- You don’t talk about your product. Mentioning your product in content marketing is inappropriate. The old school thinking struggles with that.
- You must think and act like a publisher not an advertiser. That is not in the comfort zone.
- You operate in real time. This means you have to be thinking about “continuous marketing” as well as being campaign focused. That’s demanding.
- Need different resources. This includes staff and software. The status quo is being challenged.
- Needs a different culture. Publishing culture is different to an advertising mindset. Newsrooms, reporting and editing are a world apart from corporate marketing and advertising.
These mind warps are presenting some challenges and potential disruption to the marketing department and the CEO. What are the obstacles in moving from traditional mass media habits to a publisher paradigm?
The challenges to becoming a media company
The challenges come from many angles. Some are larger than others. It means adopting a flexible mindset that is open to change. That in itself is a challenge.
Here are a few to keep in mind as you move to a content marketing culture that embraces the new.
- Re-allocation of resources. It is hard to discard old habits but it requires a hard look at what isn’t working or appropriate and try something new.
- Re-educating the team. It will mean sometimes forgetting what was taught at university or college because most of the changes in media are mostly less than a decade old. YouTube is not yet 10 years old (founded in 2005), tablets have only been around for 4 years and Facebook was launched in February 2004.
- Changing the culture. Maybe change management is needed.
- Adapting to a mobile content world. Smartphones only exploded into popular culture when the first iPhone was launched in 2007. Websites need upgrading to be “mobile responsive” and content optimisation now has to consider viewing on smartphones.
- Understanding re-purposing of content. With the broad range of multi-media formats (30 plus at last count) and social networks, brands need to understand that we have different preferences for the media we read and watch and the social networks we use to consume them on. Same message but different media.
- Developing an integrated mindset. This means weaving content marketing into other marketing channels. This includes embedding content marketing in and across all media channels including social, search, email and traditional mass media.
- Creating “conversations around the brand” not about the brand. (Thanks Altimeter for that insightful phrase). This means creating content that has heart and soul of the brand embedded but not mentioned.
So what does this adaptation look like?
The content marketing stages
Content marketing is still embryonic for most companies. Here is how Altimeter sees the stages of content marketing maturity.
Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/11/08/is-this-the-top-content-marketing-company-in-the-world/#5eVc09uyx9ypi8ic.99