2016-01-13



Content curation is an amazing way to engage your audience and increase your social media presence without big investments in content creation.

In this massive 8,000 words guide you’re gonna learn how to start curating content for your company in a successful way!

Introduction: Why Curate?

Getting Started with In-Depth Guides

Determining Your Target Customer Personas

1. Talk to Your Customers

2. “Spy” on Your Customers

3. Conduct Keyword Research

4. Real Hard Data

5. Empathy Matters

How to Identify “Relevant” Content

6. Highlight Problems

7. Offer the Solution

8. Don’t Write It, Visualize It

9. Soundbites + Key Takeaways

10. Prioritize Interaction

11. A Unified Content Strategy

Increase Virality with Blog Posts

Creating a Curation Workflow

12. List Your “Inputs”

13. Capture, Process and Queue in One Place

14. Create SMART Goals

15. Break your SMART goals down into monthly, weekly and daily activities.

Content Creation Tips to Maximize Reach

16. Write Engaging Headlines

17. Where’s the Hook or Lead?

18. Use Snappy Formatting

19. Play on Emotions

20. Visualize Wherever Possible

Distributing Your Content with Email + Social

Populate Social Channels by Repurposing Content

21. Turn a Blog Post Series into a Guide

22. Powerpoint Presentation into a Slide Deck

23. Interviews into “Expert Advice” Posts

24. The “Hub and Spoke” Method

25. Slide Deck to Infographic, Diagram or Flowchart

26. The One Topic Series

27. Video and Podcasts to Text Blog Posts

How to “Fail-Proof” Your Distribution

28. Don’t Forget How SMART Goals Impact Distribution

29. Simplify the Creation-to-Distribution Process.

30. Create a Content Repurposing Timeline

31. Create a Distribution Timeline

32. Track Basic Click Analytics

33. Track the Output vs. Input

Time Hacks to Simplify Your Life

34. Test; Don’t Guess.

35. Utilize a Swipe File

36. Work Smart, Not Hard

37. Automate Follow Ups

Conclusion

Introduction: Why Curate?

Let’s take a step back for a minute.

Why curate?

There are 2 million blog posts published each day. The rise of the Long Tail, coupled with simple publishing tools like Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr and WordPress, has turned everyone into a content creator. For better or worse.

Curation helps people cut through the clutter.

And some of the most cutting edge media platforms are using it to augment (or replace) their content.

Inside.com is a news application built on curating the top news stories for people within specific content verticals.

Twitter just released Moments, originally dubbed Project Lightning, which puts a greater focus on live events.



It was inspired by Snapchat’s Live Stories. Which also just inspired Instagram’s own version.

The problem today isn’t having a method to reach your customer. The problem is that there’s too many.

The solution is (a) getting and then (b) keeping your customer’s attention long enough to build trust and get your point across.

That doesn’t happen in a single website visit. Or a single tweet.

Rather it takes many website visits, and many tweets, for someone to eventually build up enough interest and trust to purchase something from you.

Content is one of the best ways to do that. Which can be everything from the headline on your ad that makes people click. The copy on your pages that cause people to stick around. And the content in your emails that inspire repurchases and referrals.

Trouble is, original content is tough.

However, original content is tough to produce. It’s time consuming, and expensive (if not impossible) to hire out.

Curation provides many of the benefits, including customer relationship building and industry networking, without the high costs and time to create. It’s a staple of most modern marketing playbooks, up to 85% according to one research report.

There’s a few reasons why:

It’s faster and easier to curate content than produce original content. That means your cost to execute, and timeline, just shrunk dramatically.

But it also provides most of the upside. That means you stand to gain the same benefits, whether that’s intangible (like increased thought leadership) or quantifiable (like visits or shares).

While that sounds great in theory, there’s still a learning curve before you can put it to work.

It’s not brain surgery, but it does require that you know what successful content looks like and how to create it. You’ll need to understand how to set-up and manage a successful workflow from capture to distribution. And then it helps to know a few tricks that can make all the difference.

So before getting into the tactics of how to do it, let’s start what it looks like, and how you can identify it.

Getting Started with In-Depth Guides

SEO sucks. Honestly.

It’s incredibly important. But also insanely confusing and complicated.

A difficult topic to learn, especially when you need to be careful of where that information is coming from.

Thankfully, HubSpot reached out to some of the most well known people in the industry to put together their “Learning SEO from the Experts” ebook.



Long, in-depth pieces of content are notoriously difficult to create (you don’t want to know the number of coffees it took to complete this).

But rounding up the expert opinions of others helps cut down this time dramatically, while also providing new exposure for these influencers to a new audience (who might be interested in what they have to sell).

In this case, HubSpot also does a great job of using one unified narrative to bring everything together and keep it all on point.

Utilizing influencers like this also provides a ton of extra credibility, because they’re able to “piggyback” on their expertise. HubSpot no doesn’t have to be an expert in SEO if they can find others who are.

This also gives you a built-in distribution network once it’s time to go live. It gives you a (reason) to reach out to other influencers or people in your niche.

Think they’d give you the time of day otherwise if you asked them to share something? Probably not. But if you’re offering to help and highlight them, then it’s a totally different conversation.

Another form of detailed, in-depth content is a webinar. And the Kissmetrics Webinars are a perfect example, bringing in experts to help supply their knowledge.

Kissmetrics benefits by gaining the valuable content. While the content creator (or presenter in this case) benefits by getting a HUGE platform to share their insight.

Another example along the same lines are the “Mozinars”, who does webinars twice a month.

These high value, in-depth guides are a perfect way to start generating leads and the nurturing them over time.

But how do you get started?

Where do even you begin finding a topic to talk about?

Ideally, with your customer personas.

Determining Your Target Customer Personas

What content should you create?

Beats me.

Go ask your audience.

Everything starts with their ideas, their quirks, and their behaviors. The best way to uncover these, and shortcut your path to generating endless content ideas, is through some basic customer research.

Customer personas, or “fictional, generalized representations of your ideal customers”, are the ideal end result of your research – giving you someone specific to speak to when sitting down to brainstorm new content ideas.

Here are some ways to create effective customer personas and do some basic research so you’ll know what your audience is interested in (and what they’re not).

1. Talk to Your Customers

Yes, this first one sounds dumb.

We’re off to a great start.

But it’s amazing how many companies try to do research without actually ever engaging their customers and asking in-depth, open-ended questions.

For example, you probably know your customer’s basic demographic information off the top of your head. Most do.

But what’s more important is their motivations. What makes them tick? Why do they buy? What makes them choose one brand over another?

These are the things you need to elicit with one-on-one customer interviews, with open ended questions, the Five Why’s, and more.

Even a simple emailed survey will do. Just make sure to keep it simple and actionable. Too many surveys contain complex questions in confusing formats (like, WTF is a “Likert” scale?). Nobody wants to answer those. Garbage in, garbage out.

Instead, get to the root of the issue by starting (a) with their goals and aspirations, (b) address the challenges holding them back from reaching these things, and then (c) how they personally might want to overcome them.

(That last bit is where your product or service might come in, so listen closely to their preferences to reverse-engineer your own messaging).

Interested in learning more about customer research? Here are five ways to get started.

2. “Spy” on Your Customers

Most online Q&A sites are nice in theory. Except that most customer-generated content ends up being crap in reality.

But depending on your vertical, there are some really good ones out there like Quora or Stack Overflow.

On these sites you can “listen in” on people from your target market having conversations related to your business. It’s an easy, effective way to learn what people like or don’t like, while also seeing what they’re personally struggling with.

No good Q&A site in your industry?

One tip from Joanna at Copyhackers is to reference Amazon customer reviews. Look up books that relate to the problem your product or service (i.e. the solution) fixes, and see exactly how customers are talking about these issues or pain points.

This is especially good for “sensitive” topics that people don’t like discussing, or would feel uncomfortable answering in a traditional survey or interview.

For example, Joanna used this technique when writing copy for a rehabilitation center in Florida. Because the subject of drug and alcohol recovery is such a sensitive one, Joanna had a hard time getting the personalized information she needed.

This is when she decided to turn to Amazon. She looked up books on recovering from addiction and then read the book reviews. From the hundreds of reviews she read, she was able to put together a true-to-life customer persona. She even used a direct quote from a review for the headline on the center’s website. (Quite successfully, in fact! It brought in 400% more clicks than the previous headline!)

Amazon review mining takes a little extra work, but is a great way to get to know your audience’s needs and desires.

3. Conduct Keyword Research

Keyword research isn’t just some dumb SEO tactic. In fact, it can tell you a lot about who your customers are and what they’re interested in.

While volume estimates of keyword traffic are notoriously unreliable, what you’re after is general topic ideas based on relevant queries.

For example, you can drop a few simple ideas into the Google AdWords Keyword Planner, and it will return a HUGE number of recommended, similar keyphrases (while also giving you at least some insight into how popular those topics are).

You can also use Google Trends to get a view of currently trending topics that you can piggyback on top of and ride the wave. The good news about these types of phrases is that the competition (or other content being created that’s going to compete with yours for views and attention) is typically lower.

You can use this information to benchmark the possible competition’s content and discover – before you even start – which topic ideas might be ripe for opportunities or too competitive to even start.

BUT it also gives you a head start into using quantitative data to back-up your claims. Which brings us to the next point.

4. Real Hard Data

Qualitative data is great because it gives you ideas straight from the customer’s mouth.

However, what about all the stuff your customer’s are interested in, but won’t (or don’t like to) talk about?

Here’s where you can use quantitative data to glean insight from real trends you’re seeing develop or “common threads” linking current customers.

For example, you can fire up your own Google Analytics right now, head over to Popular Content, and get a quick run down of the best performing stuff on your site. This should give you a few ideas not only of possible topics to continue exploring, but also the format or style of content that gets the most views, keeps people on site the longest, and more.

You can refer to the graph search and Audience Insights tactic covered in detail here to discover what your users are reading (as well as some additional demographic data).

Another tool that will go deeper into competitive data is the Moz Keyword Difficulty tool. After submitting a few keyphrases, you’ll get a quick snapshot of the top search results currently ranking for each page.

A final quick tip is to use Open Site Explorer (yes, another “SEO” tool), enter your competition or a big, relevant blog or media site, and then search by their “Top Content”.

5. Empathy Matters

You should have a nice list of topic ideas after running through the first few tips.

But the way you frame each (i.e. the “angle” or interesting hook you use) will ultimately have a huge impact on whether that post succeeds (or doesn’t).

Here’s where empathy comes in. You know, “feelings” and “emotions”. Because ultimately each content piece needs to fit your customer’s worldview. Otherwise it’ll fall flat.

Plotting these along an Empathy Map can help you get started by identifying (or helping to answer) WHY your customer or client needs XYZ. Here’s an example of what an Empathy Map would look like:

Image source: minimumviableinc.com/book

How to Identify “Relevant” Content

You can’t fake good content.

“Bad” content might be hard to define, but it’s easy to spot.

And it’s usually the result of a mismatch between the way you (and your company) sees the world with how your customers do.

Once you have the research part down, with topic ideas in hand, the next step is to go out and find what might be appealing or relevant to these people.

Here’s how to get started.

6. Highlight Problems

Most companies know what their products or services GIVE to customers (in other words, the benefits received from using them).

But negative messaging is a better approach for grabbing attention initially and getting people interested.

Shining the spotlight on the problems customers are facing (or the pain points they’re experiencing) can help you cut through all of the other noise faster.

There are basically two ways to do that:

Step 1. Protect them from external threats. There’s a lot of danger, pain and sadness out there in the world. A lot of things that could potentially harm your customers if they didn’t have someone (or something) to protect them. Go on, be their savior.

Step 2. Help them fix the internal mistakes they’re already making. People don’t like looking stupid. Or doing things to themselves (knowingly, or unknowingly) that will hurt their chances of reaching goals or aspirations. Pointing these out can help raise attention and get you on the same page.

7. Offer the Solution

Only when people understand WHY they should be afraid can you properly position yourself as the solution to their troubles.

And if you do it right, you can frame it as a “must have” (as opposed to a “nice to have”).

That means in every piece of content, you can subtly position yourself as the “expert” or the “answer”, without having to overtly push the hard sell.

8. Don’t Write It, Visualize It

Facts tell. Stories sell.

In the same vein, nobody cares about your product or service features. Except for you.

The benefits those features provide are a nice start. But still not enough.

The real magic happens when you can translate those features into benefits, and then benefits into verifiable outcomes or concrete end results.

That’s why you should show, not tell.

Whenever and wherever possible, use statistics and anecdotes to support the narrative. Incorporate graphs and charts to paint a picture.

Use examples and screenshots to show exactly what you’re talking about. And utilize diagrams, infographics or tools (like the Rent or Buy calculator from The New York Times) if they help make something that is complex more simple and easily digestible.

9. Soundbites + Key Takeaways

Content length and complexity usually relates to your audience.

That’s why you won’t find many 2000+ word narratives on celebrity gossip.

But besides length or complexity, there’s “memorability” (which probably isn’t a word). The point is, if your stuff isn’t memorable, nobody will remember it (duh).

Soundbites – regardless of how trite you personally think they are – help provide simple and digestible ways for people to remember (and share) your content.

For example, nobody ever forgets (or confuses) what, “We’re not in Kansas anymore,” is from.

“Key takeaways” are also as important as soundbites. After reading, watching, or listening to your content…what is your customer supposed to DO with that information?

If you can get people to take action on something and see (even the slightest) success, you will be a genius in their eyes.

10. Prioritize Interaction

“Content” doesn’t stop at blog posts.

The more you can incorporate interaction between prospects and your stuff, the better.

Interactive-based content, like tools, contests, or quizzes, can help you to engage people longer (giving you a better chance at eventually selling them something). These types of content are commonly more “shareable” and memorable as well.

Random elves dancing? Meh.

But you and your friends dancing as elf cartoons? Hysterical. And most importantly, shareable. Meaning MORE people will see it and engage with it themselves.

11. A Unified Content Strategy

The most successful content strategies are documented and specific. They’re engineered to succeed, and should hit on various themes methodically and strategically.

Edelman Vice President Michael Brito recommends considering these questions while assembling your own:

1. Brand positioning and voice.

What are the most important issues to your brand? For example, do you care about sustainability or “green” living?

Don’t worry, we don’t judge.

But the media might! How do their perceptions matter? How would you like for them to think (and write!) about you when referencing?

For some companies this might be a huge deal. For others, not so much.

2. Community perceptions of the brand.

What does the “community” at-large (could be any type of stakeholders, from employees to fans to customers) think, or how do they engage?

Do they have other interests that you haven’t (or aren’t) addressing – even if it’s “indirect” or unrelated?

3. Historical content performance.

What’s worked in the past, and what has completely failed? It’s always difficult to gauge or judge what type of content will (or won’t) resonate, so pulling from past performance can serve as a roadmap.

You can also look at search behavior by identifying what people are searching for before eventually finding your products and services.

Either way, every single piece of content needs to consistently reference or support these main themes in order to present a unified brand “voice”.

Increase Virality with Blog Posts

Curating blog posts provides many of the same benefits as a larger guide, but in a more condensed, easier to share version.

That means “expert round-ups” that frequently feature have built-in virality, and make it significantly easier to promote.

A perfect example is Buffer’s blogging advice post, which features Brian Clark of Copyblogger.

Having such a nice feature undoubtedly makes it easy to then ask Brian to share with their immense network of followers, fans, subscribers and customers.

Another example is Pawel’s excellent landing page resources guide, which presents an all-in-one guide on the topic.

Even Microsoft gets in on the curated blog post that’s tailor made for Twitter sharing (each tip comes in under 140 characters).

After going through the last section, you should have a good idea of how to come up with topic ideas to begin curating.

But… how do you find it?

And then how should you assemble it to get the best bang for your buck?

Start with your workflow.

Creating a Curation Workflow

Your workflow is an orchestrated and repeated pattern of business operations enabled by the organization of resources.

Wow, that was a mouthful.

Basically, it’s the tried-and-true process of how you get work done – efficiently and effectively.

Drucker said: “Efficiency is doing things right; effectiveness is doing the right things.”.

And while both are important, neither happen without optimizing (or improving) each little step along the way.

12. List Your “Inputs”

The first third of this book was designed to help you differentiate between what good content looks like and…everything else.

The trick is now taking that understanding and applying it to large blogs in your own field or industry.

Typically you’ll want at least one news related site, but don’t overdo it. Everyone (and anyone) can (and will) share the news.

But the best stuff, is the unique perspectives or opinions that get people thinking and talking. Many times these might come from obscure sources or single-author sites that don’t get a ton of buzz.

Besides Googling, Alltop.com is an easy place to find some top blogs in your niche. Otherwise, Twitter (almost no matter the industry) is another great one because it tends to be popular among most journalists and other media aficionados.

When you’re ready, grab as many RSS feeds as possible (hey – aren’t those things dead?!) and get ready to organize everything in one place.

13. Capture, Process and Queue in One Place

The key to content curation is constantly scanning for new stuff. That starts with having a unified place to capture all of your sources in one place.

Feedly is a perfect example, because it compiles all of your online sources into a single “news feed” that updates as your sources do. Instead of getting this information from your email and other already-clogged channels, have one simple tool that houses everything when you’re ready for it.

From there, you’ll want to start processing this source consistently by batching your time.

According to Michael Hyatt, “Batching is simply a form of time management that allows a person to maximize concentration and decrease distraction”.

In other words, batching is doing all of the same tasks in one setting.

For example, instead of answering your phone every time it rings (which is an interruption to your workflow) you check your voicemails twice a day. Or, instead of responding to an email every time you get one, you check your email once a day.

In this case, you can “batch” all time spent finding and reviewing new content, and organize it all at once. For more ways to “batch” your projects for optimum workflow, check out this article.

14. Create SMART Goals

First and foremost – why is content curation important to you?

“Thought leadership” is nice, but not quantifiable. So what does that mean to you? How will it look?  Maybe it will be a certain amount of email subscribers, website page views, or Facebook engagement (just don’t over prioritize “fans”).

The point is, beyond ensuring that you meet deadlines and continue to publish on time, SMART goals will help you make sure that the content you’re curating and sharing matches the campaign or product you’re about to unveil. For example:

Specific. Your goals should include the answers to what, why, and how.

Measurable. Your goals should have a deadline and a way to measure success.

Achievable.  Your goals should be challenging, but not out of reach.

Results-focused. Your goals should be driven something you want to achieve.

Time-Bound. Your goals should be time-sensitive.

Check out Hubspot’s article on creating SMART goals. Bonus, it comes with a free downloadable SMART goal template!

15. Break your SMART goals down into monthly, weekly and daily activities.

Now you that you have an end goal in mind, it’s time to reverse engineer.

What steps do you need to take to get there? Specifically, on a monthly, weekly, and daily basis?

For example, want 10,000 pageviews or 1,000 people “talking about this”?

How many of each do you currently get for each blog post or status update created? Your end goal (10,000 pageviews), divided by your current haul (1000 pageviews per post), gives you an answer (you need 10 posts per month).

Now you can align content needs (output) with your daily habit of scanning inputs, to easily determine the ideal channel frequency. For example:

Blog: 3x / week

Email – 1x / week

Facebook – 1x day

Twitter – 2x day

All excuses (and guesswork) have now been removed.

Yay, math!

Content Creation Tips to Maximize Reach

Wine snobs are going to hate this, but it’s ALL about the packaging.

You can take the worst wine imaginable, put it in a playful bottle with a beautiful label and clever name, and it’s Yellowtail (err, I mean, popular).

The same applies to content.

The best topic, with dense 10+ sentence paragraphs, no images, and a terrible headline will fail.

If God is in the details, here’s how to avoid an awkward confession.

16. Write Engaging Headlines

It literally does not matter how good your content is if the headline doesn’t grab readers (because they’ll never stop, click, and stick around long enough to find out).

Your headline is your first impression with potential readers. It is your opportunity to draw someone in…or push them away. You decide.

Your goal? Entice them to move on to the first sentence.

Neil Patel and Joseph Putman put together a great headline infographic that highlights four “rules of thumb” of headline writing. They claim that a good headline should:

be unique

be ultra specific

convey a sense of urgency

be useful

There are a number of formulas you can use to help you write a great headline, but when it comes down to it, a good headline is written when you decide to take the time to obsess over it.

Take thirty minutes. Sit at your desk with a piece of paper. Write down as many headlines as it takes until you find the one that is unique, specific, urgent and useful enough to pull readers into that first line.

17. Where’s the Hook or Lead?

After your headline, the hook or lead is the most important part of your article or post. It’s the very first section of content that draws a reader in and gets them interested (before hitting the “back” button).

Every sentence you write should be so enticing that your readers have to read the next one. Your headline should make readers want to read your first line, your first line should make them want to read the second, and so on.

Here are three ways to do this:

Hook your reader with empathy.

Jon Morrow of boostblogtraffic.com is the king of empathy-driven hooks.

His claim is that you can make a powerful connection with a reader when you speak to what keeps them up at night.

Case in point, a recent headline reads, “An Open Letter to Bloggers Struggling to Get More Blog Traffic”. But wait, his hook is even better. It reads, “It hurts me to write this.” Which means you have to stick around long enough to figure out what hurts him.

Start a conversation with a question.

Asking a question at the outset of an article or post is a great way to pull a reader in. You’re not broadcasting, you’re interacting.

Think about your article or post as a conversation. Have you ever been in a conversation where the other person does all of the talking? Was it any fun for you? Probably not.

When you start with a question, you are telling the reader that you want to know what they think about a topic, making them more likely to enter the conversation to hear what you have to say.

Quick tip on leading with a question: be relevant. Only ask questions that your readers are desperate to know the answer to.

Shock your reader.

Opening with a shocking fact, cliffhanger, or seemingly contradictory statement is a great way to get readers to keep reading.

If they are conflicted about whether or not what you’ve written is true, or if you’ve left them on the edge of their seat, they’ll feel they have to keep reading.

18. Use Snappy Formatting

Second only to an engaging headline and hook is the copy – the little bit of an article that entices readers to “click” to read the rest.

In high school, you were likely taught a very specific set of formatting. For example – never were start a sentence with “and” or “but”. Or to write complex sentences. And paragraphs had to have at least 4 or 5 sentences each.

The good news? You can throw all of that out the window.

You’re not in high school anymore. Nobody has time to read confusing dialogue or complex prose.Your audience no longer consists of the teachers on the humanities board.

Short sentences are easier to read and therefore more engaging. They also improve the rhythmic quality. For example, check out Apple’s sales copy for the newest iPhone.

Their headline reads, “iPhone 6s: The only thing that’s changed everything.”

And the description of the design: “A breakthrough in design. Pushed even further.”

Apple’s sales copy is a great example of how to break the writing rules to engage with customers in a personal, human-sounding way.

19. Play on Emotions

Even the driest, B2B environments buy on emotion.

Not only that, but 69% of people who see personal value in a product or service are willing to pay a higher price for it.

Do people make purchases based on logic? Yes…but accordingly to many studies (like these from Psychology Today), we choose to buy something based on emotions. Then logic plays a role by helping us justify spending the money on it.

Did you read that? Most buyers choose to buy based on emotion.

Use this to your advantage, by starting with upgrading your visuals.

20. Visualize Wherever Possible

Visuals (not just photos) are key to helping viewers engage with (and remember) your content.

Don’t believe me? Take a look at these stats on the importance of visuals:

Posts that include visuals are 150% more likely to get shared (based on Twitter reshares).

Of the top 10% of most shared posts on Facebook, 87% where posts that contained photos.

Based on a Social Media study, people are 44% more likely to engage if your posts are visual.

Most importantly, 40-60% of the population are visual learners. And if your goal is to know and reach your readers, you have to “teach” them in the way they learn best.

This is where infographics shine. If you have a good amount of information (or raw data) to give your readers, an infographic is a great way to wrap a narrative around everything and increase the engagement significantly.

Two final tips on visual engagement:

Make sure the visuals you use are relevant. We are nearing the death of the stock photo. No one believes a photo of a group of three colleagues sitting around a coffee table, “crunching” the numbers and laughing. Those photos often feel fake. Give viewers something that is more relevant and relatable.

Make sure your visuals are up-to-date. This one is simple. If you are trying to convey a message about modern technology, or the rise of mobile phone usage, don’t use a photo of someone on a flip phone. Just don’t.

Distributing Your Content with Email + Social

All of the content in the world won’t help you if there’s no promotion.

Actively promoting through

But who said email or social content needs to be original?

A great email example

Moz Top Ten is a monthly email rounding up some of the best SEO and inbound marketing content.

Powering these types of emails has become insanely easy too with new tools like Curated.co which powers the curated newsletter SaaS weekly (among others).

Social

How meta is this:

First up, a curated community of curators on Instagram.

And a curated Pinterest board of content curation examples.

Again, new tools are popping up left and right to help you curate images for these social platforms, like Curalate and Pablo, a new Chrome extension from Buffer.

But where can you find the content to use?

Start by repurposing what you’re already working on.

Populate Social Channels by Repurposing Content

Repurposing content is one of the best ways to leverage your past work to generate future results (all while making your life simpler, too).

But it’s not just a way to save time. Repurposing content opens up opportunities you wouldn’t have otherwise had. It allows you to reach a new audience, to update old ideas, and to expand on or reinforce a topic.

The good news, is you already have everything you need to get started. Here are some techniques, tools and tactics to repurpose the content you’ve saved.

A perfect example? The Moz Top 10 we just recently mentioned, which they also use to create blog content:

21. Turn a Blog Post Series into a Guide

One of the best techniques for repurposing content is to turn “A” into “B”.

Say you’ve written a blogpost series on social media engagement. You’ve covered everything from how to grow an audience to the biggest social media brand fails.

With this series, you’ve reached a specific crowd, like the long-post readers who are taking time to learn how to better engage their own audience.

But when you take your blog post series and turn it into one, short-and-sweet “Guide to Social Media Engagement”, you reach the audience that wants the important details stat.

New audience. Same content.

22. Powerpoint Presentation into a Slide Deck

Most old powerpoint presentations retreat into the dark abyss (aka called your harddrive), rarely seeing the light of day ever again.

But you put a lot of effort into those powerpoint presentations, right?

Well, here’s some good news: dust off your old presentations, update the design and story with new information, and set-up SlideShare to give it new life.

23. Interviews into “Expert Advice” Posts

Everyone loves to hear what other people think about a topic. Especially topic experts and other “influencers”.

Interviews are great because they add variety to your site and give you more authority on a subject by having a well-rounded information base.

More than that, though, interviews can be turned into blog posts, ebooks, or even downloadable visuals very easily — giving you the ability to expand on a topic while also adding your own opinion and information.

Everyone loves a good quote. They are easy to remember and remind people of the content they had been engaging with. Having a visual to go with a quote will only reinforce this.

24. The “Hub and Spoke” Method

One of the easiest ways to quickly spin off tons of content is to take one in-depth piece, and then put together follow-ups, new stats or anecdotes and topical summaries that all reference the original.

When you think of each content piece as a different “variable”, you’re able to mix-and-match things to help (a) reinforce your original message while (b) still keeping things new, interesting and fresh.

Not only does it help you speed up new content creation and aid your curation efforts,  but it also gives you a built-in excuse to continue adding new life to a story or idea that’s proved successful in the past.

25. Slide Deck to Infographic, Diagram or Flowchart

Infographics are ruling the internet because most people (65%!) are visual learners. As many as 85% of “shared” posts on Facebook contain a photograph.

Your slide deck is just waiting to be visualized, and the good news is that it can be anything from a diagram to a flowchart, and still be compelling to new readers.

Basically you can use any visual format to help tell a story or explain a process in a new way. For non-designers, sites like Piktochart and Visually will create infographics for you!

26. The One Topic Series

People love list posts.

They promise instant results, simplifying life and generating tons of ideas.

Like, oh I dunno, the top 37 tips for content curation.

An easy way to get more mileage out of that initial list, is to now spin off each tip as it’s own stand-alone piece.

Combining some of the past tactics, you can loop in interviews, new statistics, visuals, and more to provide a seemingly unlimited amount of variations that still seem new and fresh.

27. Video and Podcasts to Text Blog Posts

Turning video and podcasts into text-based blog posts is one of the fastest translations possible at your fingertips.

You can use a transcription service like Speechpad to do the heavy lifting for you. Or you can even go the extra mile and create a brand new narrative using the same “core” idea and message.

This tip is especially helpful for those who find writing clunky and time consuming, but can easily talk or explain their thoughts. You can literally record anytime and anywhere, like in the car while sitting in traffic, capturing the stream-of-consciousness as they pop up.

How to “Fail-Proof” Your Distribution

The marketing mix – or the 4P’s – was first developed in the 1960’s. But they still hold true today.

The one easily forgotten one, Place (or Distribution), is about getting your product, message, or whatever, to the right person, at the right time, in the most efficient way possible. That means showing up, where they are, and making it easy to find.

Distribution for content curation gets tricky when you’re working across so many channels, where each needs to be personalized for best results.

Here’s how to simplify and get the most from your efforts.

28. Don’t Forget How SMART Goals Impact Distribution

SMART goals were discussed ad nauseam earlier, so we won’t rehash everything.

But suffice it to say, these SMART goals will guide your distribution efforts (like posting frequency) and relate back to your original (quantifiable) objectives.

While you can’t always control the outcome, you can manage the process. Then you can apply additional tactics each time you go to distribute something. For example:

Earned: Always ping the author of the curated content to get extra attention (+ shares).

Owned: Cross-promote messages from one channel to another to help “seed” an audience.

Paid: Retarget share-ers (see #36 below).

29. Simplify the Creation-to-Distribution Process.

There’s already enough work involved trying to get your “inputs” (from Feedly or other sources) translated into “outputs” (published on content channels). Thankfully, there’s a ton of tools that can help you manage the tough stuff.

You could use something simple, like Evernote or Google docs, to help collaborate on the creation and management process. But sometimes it’s nice to have an automated tool that also helps you schedule and track everything.

One such example is CoSchedule, which acts as a single editorial calendar to get everyone on the same page:

Other tools like Hootsuite and Buffer will also help you take content (once found, recorded, and edited) and simplify publishing or distribution across all various channels.

30. Create a Content Repurposing Timeline

While repurposing helps, it still will take some time. Especially when translating text (like blog posts) into visuals (like presentations or infographics).

If these take a few weeks to complete, then you better make sure your other inputs (the sites you found earlier in #18) will make up for it.

Nobody likes the friend who only talks about themselves. (Maybe you like them, but they probably drive you nuts).

Same is true online. Of course you’ll want to share your own stuff, but you’ll also need to supplement and give credit where credit’s due.

Ideally, sticking to a 1:3 ratio of your stuff vs. others helps keep the audience engaged.

That means you’re going to need at least… 3 times as much content as you’ll probably need. Make sure to get some in the queue prior to focusing on distribution for your own content so there’s no downtime.

31. Create a Distribution Timeline

The best content, shared at random, will provide sporadic results.

Sure, frequency is important. But possibly more so, is sequencing.

What messages, in order, are shared and why?

When will you post each phase of repurposed content?

How much time will there be between posts of the same content?

How do these, in sequence, help you hit an objective?

For example, say there’s a new product launch happening in four weeks. Every piece of content – including the curated ones – should slowly help build attention, interest, and desire for that new product debuting four weeks from now.

This will help you reinforce messaging to make sure what you have to say is heard. But more importantly, it will help get everyone to realize they have a need for your product before it exists.

People won’t act if they aren’t aware that they have a problem your product solves in the first place.

Check out this post from Buffer for more detailed information on social scheduling.

32. Track Basic Click Analytics

You can’t hack and optimize results (foreshadowing), until you know what is (or is not) working.

Gut feelings are important. But data can help you definitively determine which topics work best, or what styles pay off the most.

Ultimately, effective tracking will make sure that your efforts aren’t wasted.

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