Friday, December 16, 2011

Taming the article Beast

We've all done it. Whipped out some copy for a website, brochure, ad, or direct marketing piece on the fly and then edited it in the layout to make it more suitable for the vehicle. Sometimes this is needful due to time and other resource constraints, but ultimately it can be a killer to the effectiveness of your marketing communications vehicles, a lot more expensive, and take even more time.

I've said it before, but it is important adequate to say it again-in marketing messaging you must live by the rant "repetition, repetition, repetition." If you say the same thing, the same way, over and over again, finally your audience will be able to repeat your message in the exact way you want it told. And then they tell two friends, and so on. Now, among many other positive results (like efficiency), your brand not only gains awareness, but relevance.

So, how can you tame the content beast?

Writing effective marketing copy for websites, brochures, and other marketing transportation pieces efficiently not only takes copywriting talent, but also the capability to originate a structure that can be repurposed across all vehicles consistently. Over the years, I have helped many clients refresh their marketing materials to reflect a clear, compelling, and consistent message, ending with the one tool needful to repurpose their content into new materials consistently and efficiently-the content Specification. The truth is, taming the content beast does take a petite elbow grease at first, but it can be easier when you use the following steps:

Audit Your Materials. First look at all of your company's marketing materials-direct mail, brochures, website, press releases, media kit, etc-and perform an audit. Make note of what content is used, the inconsistencies you find, and the gaps of content that may simply be missing or inaccurate in each piece. Identify "Repurposeable Content." Once you have completed your audit, you should now be able to identify or originate the content that will be repurposed across all vehicles into a content Specification. I suggest you document your specification in Word, as it is easy to copy and paste from it into all types of manufacture applications. At a minimum, your content Specification should include your enterprise and goods positioning (in 25, 50, and 100 word versions), brand story (your background of how you came to be), brand identity (logo, taglines, etc.), and taste information. These elements should be present in every marketing transportation piece. Be sure to store the content Specification somewhere where anything tasked with content creation can find and use it. Roll In Your Content. The final step is to take the content from your content Specification and roll it into each of your existing marketing pieces, taking great care to make sure that any edits you make in the process get reflected in the expert specification.

Now that you have a structure for your marketing content, you can speedily pull copy together for new pieces and ensure that your marketing pieces work more powerfully together as a system.

During this process, you may inspect that your company's messaging is no longer relevant and needs to be refreshed before appealing forward. If this is the case, you many want to hire an face resource to help you manufacture the consistency you need. A third party brings an face perspective and an objectivity that is needful to creating clear and compelling messaging for all types of audiences.

With a total arrival to content creation and execution, you can put the power of repetition to work for your company. Creating a content Specification allows you to cost-effectively originate consistent marketing messaging and ensures your team can efficiently use it-every time.

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