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Weekly Alert: Why It’s So Hard to Stop

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ubm.com

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cmi@news.contentinstitute.com

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Fri, Sep 11, 2020 05:05 PM

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mlns='> CMWorld keynote announced! / Weekly News 9.11.20 Connect with CMI Why High-Quality Website C

mlns='> CMWorld keynote announced! [View Message in Browser]( / [Add Us to Safe Sender List]( Weekly News 9.11.20 Connect with CMI Why High-Quality Website Content Needs SEO Too You publish first-rate content that Google should love. But that may not be enough. Other SEO factors matter too. Let’s explore five scenarios to help you boost your search engine result page rankings. [Read more]( By Mike Murray [Distribution and Promotion] Some more of this week's best stuff: - [Next-Gen Visuals Demand a Strong Foundation Today]( [Amy Balliett]( [Editorial Process and Teams] - [How to Get Your Podcast to Appear in Google Results]( Aakash Singh [Distribution and Promotion] - [7 Unusual Ways to Increase Your Audience Response]( Nancy Harhut [Content Creation] - [Why is It Harder to Stop Than to Start?]( [The Weekly Wrap]( Robert Rose [Trends and Research] - [So You Think You’ve Built an Audience? Not So Fast]( Robert Rose [Chief Content Officer Exclusive]  A Note From Robert Rose Why It’s So Hard to Stop One of the most interesting challenges in content marketing is that, unlike campaigns, platforms that attract audiences must be built over time. The potential for failure is there. But, because content marketing programs are designed for the long run, deciding to stop them is often a dramatic, painful, and political process. A marketing leader at a large technology company told me they’d made the difficult decision to take down their eight-year-old blog. They’d built a sizeable audience and had gotten quite a bit of business value from it. But in the last two years, growth stagnated, they lost subscribers, and the SEO value mostly disappeared. Stopping the blog wasn’t the challenge. The challenge came in what they did next. The team started a digital magazine. But six months later, it hadn’t gotten any real traction. In the same timeframe, another group launched a podcast – and watched it fall flat. A year into two poorly performing platforms, the marketing exec wondered, “Are we just too late to start anything new in our space?” Spoiler alert: They’re not. Media companies understand two important things about launching products: It’s exceedingly difficult to know what will succeed with audiences. You have to be willing to stop something as easily as you started it. Think about the pilot process the major television networks go through every year. They invest in producing at least one episode with A-level talent of 12 to 20 pilots. The goal is to see if sample audiences respond positively. Only about 20% of those shows ever air on a network. The competition for audiences has never been fiercer. Something like 500 scripted television series were produced in the United States in 2019. Of these, about 150 will be canceled in any given year. Another 50 or so might be considered viable for a long run. And no one knows which, if any, will be winners. Media companies don’t invest millions of dollars just to throw the proverbial spaghetti against the wall. They understand that tomorrow’s mega-hit may come from surprising origins. The key is to do the research, dive in with creative talent, and take the time to develop and test the product. That’s the opposite of how most businesses develop content marketing properties. Too many businesses strategize, come up with ideas, winnow them down based on budget, and then invest in a story or format the available resources can support. Imagine if a media company started developing a TV show based first on budget, not the idea. Then, to maximize that budget, they’d check what talent would fit. Then, they’d figure out what kind of show their cameras and technology would allow them to shoot. Then finally, they’d figure out the story. That approach doesn’t produce many opportunities for a hit. Few companies have the resources – or the checkbook – to develop two dozen blog platforms or produce unlimited content. But brands can change their approach to developing and decommissioning content products. Content marketers can ask better questions: “Do we really need to implement that new blog or resource center into our enterprise CMS system before we launch a prototype and test it?” Or, “Can we redirect creative talent to produce something cool and innovative instead of more infographics for sales?” Or, “How can we build a production studio approach for testing stories, formats, and audience engagement?” And brands can take a different approach to decommission projects. Yes, canceling something that lasted a decade is an emotional experience for the team. But keeping that failing blog going is the fastest way to lose the opportunity to develop new platforms in the future. Let’s commit to reassigning talent, reusing storylines, repackaging content, and figuring out how to launch new ideas. It’s no one’s fault when the story, the platform, or the format stops resonating with audiences (or fails to take off). As Captain Jean-Luc Picard once said in Star Trek: The Next Generation, “You can commit no mistakes and still lose. That is not weakness. That is life.” It’s your story. Tell it well. Robert Rose Chief Strategy Advisor Content Marketing Institute This article from Robert is available only in this newsletter for you, the newsletter subscriber. If you have friends that would see value in Robert's weekly updates, please have them [subscribe](. Tune in to the Weekly Wrap Listen to our final episode, browse the show notes, or watch the video version [right here](.  Content Marketing Job Listings Currently on a job search? Thinking about switching gears with your career? Please check out our job listings below. Available Positions: - Senior Content Marketer, Crisp Inc, Remote - [Learn More]( Interested in posting a job here? Please see our [CMI Careers page]( for more info.  More from CMI Are you ready to hear the truth? Are you willing to “get comfortable with being uncomfortable?” Are you ready to have your mind blown at Content Marketing World 2020? We’re thrilled to share the news that Luvvie Ajayi Jones, New York Times bestselling author and sought-after speaker, will be joining us for Content Marketing World 2020. Join us! [EM100 saves $100]( [»](  CMI Video Looking to learn more about Content Marketing World? Visit our YouTube playlist - complete with some promotional videos along with speaker sessions, advice and more. It's the once-a-year content marketing event that's not to be missed. We hope you can make it this October! [Watch the video »]( [COVID-19 CONTENT MARKETING RESOURCES]( Events Content Marketing World ContentTECH Summit Master Classes Content Marketing Awards Resources Research White Paper/eBook Library Content VIPs CMI Business Directory Education Content Marketing University Chief Content Officer Webinars Career Center Interested in advertising with CMI? [Learn more.]( To stop receiving future Content Marketing Institute update emails, please respond [here](. Copyright © 2020 Informa Connect, All rights reserved Content Marketing Institute, an Informa Connect brand 605 3rd Ave | New York | NY 10158 [Terms of Service]( | [Privacy Statement]( [informa tech]

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