TheRodinhoods

Startup Marketing 101 – The Only 3 Things You Need to Start Content Marketing

Disclaimer – I’m part of the team that handles inbound marketing at AdPushup and this post is the result of an email conversation I had while helping one of my entrepreneur friends.

She is a PR specialist and wanted to start her current company’s blog (she has been hired as their marketing manager) so when she asked for my advice on how to do that, naturally I obliged.

The text below is 90% exact of what I sent her in the email (yes, I actually wrote such a huge reply). The only changes are that I formatted the post and added links to whoever I mentioned.

So let’s do this.


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1. Firstly, here are the 3 things you need to concentrate on (you can’t go wrong with them!) –

#Keyword Research

#Content

— Keyword research
— What topics your competitors are writing about
— Evergreen content (guides, tutorials, how-tos, best-practices)
— What the industry experts are tweeting, sharing on social media
— Comments on blogs and from relevant communities
— Round-up posts (“15 Growth Hackers Whose Blog Posts You Should Follow”, “40 Experts Share Their Favorite WordPress Plugins” among others)

#Distribution

— Publish content.
— Share on our company’s and our own personal FB, Linkedin, Twitter, Google Plus profiles
— Share on relevant social communities e.g. FaceBook, Reddit, Google Plus, GrowthHackers.com, Inbound.org and if the content is exceptionally writen and relevant then HackerNews. [Beware; engage with the community and provide value or you risk being hell banned which is basically ‘game over’ then.]
— Whoever we mention in our post, product or person, we send them or the relevant team members an email telling them about the mention and encourage them to share it on their social media. Most people do actually share if you ask them. Also, it helps if you are relatively well known and the content is really well written. If we do not have an email id, then a Twitter shout out works as well (I have personally never done that but might start soon).
— 3 posts from the week go out as a weekly newsletter to our email subscribers on Tuesday.
— Re-tweeting and re-sharing the content for/after 2-3 days (yes, distribution is a continuous process)
— Pitch it to another site and try to get it re-published.

2. Look for guest posting opportunities because they are an effective way to make your presence in the industry. And guest post only on sites that are relevant to your audience, have a very high volume of traffic and well respected (e.g. HubSpot,KISSmetrics)

3. Influencer marketing is probably what will get you traction vis-a-vis your blog. You need to reach out to them and start being proactive on their blogs, engaging them in the comments section. You can and should email them and ask for their advice regarding a genuine problem. You will soon notice that people are generally nice and are ready to share their knowledge if they have the time. But influencers are busy people so this approach might not always work. So here’s Wikipedia Founder Jimmy Wales advice on how startups should write an email to him if they want a response.

4. Measure everything. Unless you don’t measure, you won’t know what is working and what is not. Always start with a marketing goal/hypothesis in head as to what you’re testing with a post that you’re writing. Meaning you could be testing –

Once you have a sufficient success in measuring ROI – cut out what is not working and concentrate only on what is getting results. And always keep testing and creating hypothesis.

5. Make sure your email marketing is sorted out. Put pop-up email capture boxes in your blog to encourage visitors to convert into subscribers. I suggest that once you have a decent number of subscribers (300+) and are pushing content out regularly, start rounding them up and email them to your subscribers in the form of a ‘weekly newsletter’.

6. Create buyer personas. Buyer persona is basically a description of your ideal customer – someone who will directly benefit from your product or service. Creating content around and for them is what will get you more traffic, engagement and a sustainable growth. Here’s Buffer’s guide on the subject.

7. Read a lot – you may or may not be doing this already but I suggest you get after this religiously. The more you learn, the better. Luckily, the current shift in startup content marketing is that founders/core team members are sharing how they reached their goals (which happen to coincide with what you and me are hoping to achieve). E.g. Groove. So basically there is a lot to learn out there. You just need to get started 

Q. “What are some of the challenges that I will face with inbound/content marketing ?”

Currently we’re struggling with distribution (which is a very hard nut to crack) and even you will when you start. Other than that,

  • Consistently publishing 3-4 pieces of quality content on your blog, if you are new to writing.
  • Successfully pitching and getting the opportunity to guest post and then building on that relationship to regularly publish content on that website.
    Note: Our Co-founder Ankit Oberoi has guest posted a lot before I joined (on Entrepreneur.comKISSmetricsConversionXL) and he tells me that although our website received traffic from these sources, it was not relevant traffic. So, repeating myself, concentrate only on guest posting on sites which have your target audience.
  • Finding your target audience and understanding their pain points.
  • Deciding which metrics to track to see a return on your efforts.
  • Reaching out to influencers. Here’s a post from Inbound.org featuring the best advice I’ve come across to successfully engage influencers.

Q. “What are some other ways to generate leads and multiply sales?”

  • Inbound marketing is the most cost effective way to achieve that. Period.
  • On your blog, once you have a good number of posts, do massive internal linking to increase a visitor’s session duration.
  • Andrew Chen discusses some tactics that he feels are the only few ways to scale growth and maintain visibility in front of your customers.
  • Since our product hasn’t officially launched, we are still streamlining how we’ll structure our marketing & sales funnel among other processes. I’ll write another post on that once the time is right 

Q. “What tools are you using for content marketing?”

Right now we’re using –

  • WordPress as a Content Management System (CMS)
  • Google Drive (docs, sheets, calendar) for content collaboration and planning
  • GetResponse for email marketing
  • Hemingway App for grammar and language usage (sometimes)

*Q. “What are the estimated cost of hiring a content marketer?”

Costs for hiring a –

  • Rookie content marketer (complete beginner) – 4-5 Lac per annum (INR)
  • Amateur content marketer (somewhat experienced) – 6-7 Lac per annum (INR)
  • Experienced star – 9-10 Lac per annum (INR)

*Q. Which are the channels that help you drive maximum traffic through content?

I’d highly recommend that you look towards Reddit communities. You get mad traffic and shares from there. But you have to post it in a relevant community and also NOT as a plain url link but as a text story, an experience.

Reddit is infamous for being ruthless with spammers and self promoters. So the only way you come across as neither is by providing all the value right there in the community post and add a small link in the end which says something like – “to read the full post, here’s the link” (and provide the exact url, not bitly or any short links). Provide the entire outline right there. Anyone reading it should only click on your post when they know exactly what is in the content and they would still want to read it.

Other than this – (the top reactions we’ve seen community wise are, best to worst)

  • Personally emailing people who we have mentioned in the blog.
    Here’s the email that I sent Neil Patel –



Note: I had to follow up with him (which is something which most people don’t do with their emails, be it job applications or influencer marketing)

His reaction –

  • Twitter
  • Google+/Facebook
  • Lastly, Linkedin (because we’ve not put in much effort to share it there)

* General tips

  • Install the extension called ‘Ghostery’ which basically allows you to see what are the tools that a particular site is running. You can use this information to find out if you want similar tools. Here’s an example of how it works (top left corner) –

  • I don’t want to be telling you how to do your job but before you hire someone see Simon Sinek’s TED talk.
  • Everyone wants to change the world per say but now it has become a euphemism for bulshit in startups. Every startup wants to change the world. The takeaway from this video is not that.
    The takeaway is to find out what is the motivation for people to join you? If you can nail the right motivation factor or inspire such thinking like what Simon says then you’re headed towards sure shot success.
    It will be extremely difficult to get hold of such kind of people because money is the primary motivation factor amongst our .
    — Read this. I strongly believe this article’s applications are not limited to just customer support. When I read this, it confirmed how I personally always felt, is the right way to judge and hire someone.
    — Hire inbound marketers not content marketers. Inbound marketing entails that a candidate has to already have content writing skills and he/she has to perform a number of other marketing related tasks other than creating and distributing brilliant content.
  • Community engagement. Go through this post and see how I’ve replied to everyone and encouraged people to participate.
  • Here’s a link to the content SOP (standard operating procedure; read: guidelines on how to write content for new hires) that I made for AdPushup. It is just an illustration of what you can do. It is not perfect but it is a start. I trust that you will only use it to give yourself direction.
  • Learn what is link building and how to do it successfully. Look up Brian Dean.
  • Read, read, read, read, read, read and then read some more.
  • All of this advice aside, don’t be afraid about failing or not getting it right. My personal work philosophy is to try fail try again, fail, win. You are going to screw up but don’t worry about that. Along with understanding what works, you also have to understand what doesn’t.

Conclusion

I believe that committing to these 3 points is the easiest way to kick-start content marketing. Remember to –
— start with conducting Keyword Research and SEO,
— then move on to creating valuable Content
— and finally, concentrate completely on Distribution
— To get the maximum benefit out of content marketing – Do it consistently. I recommend you start with 2 high quality posts per week  and then work your way up to more as you get experienced at writing.

Of course, when you become more proficient at it then you’ll start optimizing all the process for better results. Best of luck!

P.S. Here’s her reply after reading my email. It made my day 🙂

P.P.S. The above post is an abridged version of a bigger post which you can find here 🙂

On Twitter, you can find me – @SujanDeswal