Digital Marketing Trends, Part 1 of 5: Discontent Marketing

Warning: this content is older than 365 days. It may be out of date and no longer relevant.

As part of the daily curation I do with #the5, I get a chance from time to time to aggregate all the news I collect to look for trends. In this 5 part series, we’re going to examine some current trends in digital marketing and what they mean for you.

Discontent Marketing

Here are a few of the choice headlines in the last 7 months worth reflecting on:

“Is podcasting the next big thing in sponsored content?”
“Why content marketing is like a food truck”
“Right and wrong ways to ignite your content”
“Media must differentiate your content”
“Don’t let secret sauce thinking ruin your content marketing”

The reality is that much of our thinking about content marketing is still highly executional. How do we know this? Consider the evolution of any marketing methodology:

evolution.jpg

In the beginning, we talk shop. How do you write a blog post? What microphone do you use for podcasting? We focus on the how – and when you examine much of the content being created about content marketing, it’s very much about the how.

Once you’ve figured out the how, you evolve to thinking about what to do, what choices to make. Content marketing isn’t there yet.

The last stage of evolution for any marketing method is strategy, why you’re doing what you do (and how you do it). We’re still in the nascent days of understanding content strategy in a concrete way.

This isn’t to say that businesses and marketers have no strategy at all; content strategy itself hasn’t developed because we still don’t have a great grasp of what works and what doesn’t. Strategy only evolves out of the complex collection of data, analysis, and insights that precede it in execution and tactics.

How To Make Use of This Trend

If you don’t have a clear understanding of what works and what doesn’t, you cannot evolve content marketing beyond the execution phase. You simply throw things at the wall repeatedly and hope. Thus, the foundation of evolving your content marketing to higher levels is based on the accurate collection of data, thorough analysis of the data, and development of insights from your analysis.

Chances are, your competitors haven’t figured out content marketing in any meaningful way. You likely have an opportunity to seize the space and own it, but the window of opportunity is narrow. Try things out with a rigorous discipline of measurement behind your efforts. Quickly identify what works, then scale those efforts while testing new ideas. By doing so, you’ll develop your tactical cookbook faster than your peers. Ultimately, you’ll be able to craft content marketing strategy that’s efficient and effective.

Stay tuned for the next parts in this series!

Digital Marketing Trends, Mid-2015 Edition
  1. Discontent Marketing
  2. Broadcast Social
  3. Video Games
  4. Make It Stick
  5. Winners and Losers

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