Archive for the ‘B2B Marketing’ Category

Content Creation & Social Media: Jobs for the Entire Company

Monday, February 13th, 2012

For many marketers, content and social marketing presents tremendous opportunities, but also some considerable challenges.  We frequently see marketers that get off to a great start, delivering engaging content and participating fully in the social discussion, but run out of steam as they realize that once you start feeding the beast, you can’t slow down.  The best marketers turn to one simple technique to ensure they can keep up with the demands of their audience – leveraging the skills of their entire company.

Frequently, marketers do not realize that there is a bounty of amazing content available right inside their company. When it comes to content development and social media participation, it is important to utilize the strengths of the entire team, as it is entirely possible that a relevant blog post, whitepaper or a podcast could originate from any source within the company.

Ideally, content marketers should create a team of individuals who offer different perspectives from their respective departments. For instance, a developer who has identified a new or interesting way to use your product to solve a specific business problem could be the ideal author of a useful and informative whitepaper.

Unfortunately, this subject matter expert may not necessarily have the writing skills, or time, to sit down and turn it into a finished product. We find that an effective way to tap into this source of knowledge is for your marketing team to create a list of questions for the expert then interview them either on video or audio tape. The original ideas are captured, and once transcribed, a professional writer can turn that interview into an amazing piece of content.

This method is an interesting way to get all kinds of people involved in content creation. At Manticore , we are big believers in recording, transcribing and then editing in order to create relevant, compelling content for use in our overall content marketing effort.  (In fact, this blog post started from a recorded interview.)

The same principals can apply to social media engagement.  Different employees in your company can be given the responsibility to represent the company in different forums based on their area of expertise.  It is important to provide employees with a set of guidelines as to what is appropriate (and not appropriate) to post, but you don’t want to put handcuffs on them that prevents them from doing anything interesting around social networking. They must be allowed to help the company, utilizing the appropriate message and tone. In general, companies need to give people guidelines, provide them with adequate training, and then turn them loose allowing them the trust and freedom to make their own decisions in regard to social media outlets.

In our case, we routinely participate in the various marketing automation forums.  We have a group of people with diverse talents who monitor these groups and participate in the discussion on a regular basis. These are indiviuduals that we fully trust and do not need to monitor their activity. We do not review their answers or put them up for approval. We rely on the training we provided and the choices we made in selecting these employees to represent our company in the social world.

Content creation and social media participation can be overwhelming for the marketing managers responsible for them.  Leveraging non-marketing employees by enabling their participation helps lighten the load and increases the diversity of both your content and your social presence.

For more ideas on content development, see our blog post  “Inspiration for Compelling Content Found in the Simplest of Places”.

 

Share
Jeff Erramouspe

Reflections on the 2nd Annual Content Market Retreat

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

As the 2nd Annual Content Marketing Retreat unfolded, the Langley Center for New Media was like a petri dish for best practices, thought leadership, and revolutionary ideas for content marketing. I was honored to be a speaker (and Manticore Technology a sponsor), joining experts from across the U.S. to present on current issues surrounding content marketing and share case studies and tips on how to maximize various aspects of a successful content marketing campaign. The experience was very enlightening. Personally, I acquired enough knowledge on these two days to fill a book (now there's a content marketing idea), and I wanted to take a minute to share a few key ideas from the retreat that had the biggest impact on me as a B2B marketing entrepreneur.

  • Tell stories. Story telling not only creates engaging content, but stories help build rapport with your audience. It is important when building a content marketing campaign to define and construct the story you wish to tell. Your story should create an emotional connection with your audience that turns leads into customers.
  • Content curation is an art form.  You don't always have to create original content to be an effective content marketer.  As a curator, your goal is to precisely select the best content to support a story that is meaningful for your audience. Adding to the conversation by collecting the right content is like being a museum curator; you're helping find relevant content your audience wants to see. 
  • Content turns customers into advocates.  When your not in the room and someone says something bad about you, will your friends defend you?  If you're a company and the room is the Web, who will come to your defense?  Engaging your customers with good content that delivers on your brand promise will turn them into advocates - and your defenders when you're not in the room.
  • Speak to your audience's "wants" not just their "needs". As marketers, we're trained to tell our prospects what and why they need our product.  As Rod Brooks, CMO of Pemco Insurance stated, "People need insurance, it doesn't mean they want to talk about it."  To fully engage your audience, make sure your content talks to their wants, not just their needs.
  • Marketers must become publishers. Content marketing requires a steady flow of quality content to be effective.  As such, marketers must adopt content creation, editing and production processes that mimic publishers' processes.  Even more important, marketers must tell compelling stories and really understand what their audiences want to read in order to be effective.

The 2nd Annual Content Marketing Retreat was a huge success and an exceptional two days of idea sharing and industry best practices for content marketing.  Read more from the speakers at the Content Marketing Retreat here.

Read more about the Content Marketing Retreat here.

Share
Jeff Erramouspe

Winter 2012 Continues the Tradition of Usability and Power

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

After much anticipation, we are pleased to announce Manticore Winter 2012, the latest version of the Manticore marketing automation platform. Winter 2012 is loaded with our latest advancements in marketing automation funcationality. Marketers will be able to take advantage of  customizable features for managing their daily work, reports and marketing assets, as well as a set of powerful email and landing page design capabilities and email testing tools.

The most impressive feature is the brand-new design wizard for emails and landing pages. This tool is unique in that marketers and designers now have their own individual work spaces, ensuring optimal productivity and a minimum of the typical back-and-forth involved in campaign development. For example, a designer has the ability to customize an email template separately and provide that template with specific editable spaces to a marketer for the inclusion of content without the fear that the marketer might accidentally compromise the integrity of the design itself. With this new capability, marketers and designers optimize their time by doing what they do best. The new wizard acts as a set of guardrails, keeping mistakes at a minimum, while still allowing more advanced users to move through it quickly and easily.

Another exciting feature in the new release is the email testing capabilities with Litmus.com. The client preview test allows an email sender to test the aesthetic quality of an email by sending a test email to over 30 different email clients and devices, including the latest mobile phones. Litmus provides snapshots of what the email actually looks like in each of those email clients. Additionally, Litmus provides a spam scoring test, sending an email through various spam traps and filters and providing the sender with either a pass or a fail for each one.

We leveraged six years of marketing automation expertise and in depth customer feedback in the design of this new product. The goal was to ensure the best possible user-experience for the everyday marketer while maintaining our capabilities as a powerful marketing automation platform. In addition to the visible features in this product, we've also done a lot of "under the covers" work that will enable our development team to rapidly innovate and add new features throughout this year and beyond.

We're thrilled about this new release and what is coming, so stay tuned for some exciting new announcements from Manticore Technology in 2012.

Share
Jeff Erramouspe