Beyond the Build – What Content Marketers in Australia Must Do Next [New Research]


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Like their peers in North America, Australian content marketers say their organizations are concentrating more on building audiences than they were a year ago.

As reported in Content Marketing in Australia 2018: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends, 85% of Australian respondents agree that their organization is focused on building an audience versus 69% last year. That’s a 23% year-over-year increase, which is higher than the 18% year-over-year increase reported by North American B2B content marketers.

85% of Australian respondents agree their org is focused on building an audience vs 69% last year. @cmicontent Click To Tweet

Growing your subscriber base is an important content marketing goal. However, long-term value is created by providing your target audience with valuable content they want to receive, and building trust over time – not just gathering email addresses.

While the increased focus on building audiences is great news, the data revealed additional opportunities for marketers to address for even better results.

Focus first on audience information needs

Fewer marketers are creating content for their audience versus for their brand. Fifty-eight percent of Australian content marketers surveyed always or frequently focus on creating content for their audience over their brands compared with 72% last year – a 19% year-over-year decrease.

Our take: How can you build an engaged audience if you’re not addressing its wants and needs? Focusing on your company (its products, services, people) rather than providing your audience with valuable information gives people few reasons to care or even stick around.

Focusing on your company gives people few reasons to stick around. @LisaBeets Click To Tweet

Here are some tools to help you take or grow an audience-first approach: 4 Ways to Shift Your Thinking to Truly Focus on Your Audience and How to Take an Audience-First Approach to Your Content.

Deliver content consistently

Fewer Australian marketers are delivering content consistently. Forty-eight percent of respondents always or frequently deliver content consistently (e.g., on a defined, regularly scheduled basis) compared with 60% last year – a 20% year-over-year decrease.

Fewer Australian marketers are delivering #content consistently, according to @cmicontent #research.… Click To Tweet

Our take: Organizations struggle to deliver content on a regular, predictable basis for a variety of reasons. But consistency builds expectation and anticipation for the audience. If you can commit to nothing more than three blog posts a quarter, then commit to publishing one post per month. Just be sure to release it at the same time every month, (e.g., the first Wednesday) so your audience becomes conditioned to expect it. Schedule it, put it in writing, and commit to it. An editorial calendar helps.

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For guidance on how to set up an editorial calendar and/or get maximum value from one, check out Editorial Calendar Tools and Templates.

Survey respondents say email is the format they use most often to deliver content as well as the most effective. How often should your company send emails? It depends on many factors unique to your situation, but 48% of respondents send a monthly newsletter, and that may be a manageable frequency for your content marketing program.

48% of Australian survey respondents send a monthly newsletter. @cmicontent #research. Read more >> Click To Tweet

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To improve the effectiveness of your email program at whatever stage it is in, read How to Deliver Emails That Will Increase Reach, Impact, and Subscriber Satisfaction.

Focus on fact-based, credible content

Eighty-four percent of marketers say they always or frequently ensure that their content is fact-based and/or credible. That’s a high number, but 11% only do this sometimes and 5% rarely or never do.

84% of marketers say they always/frequently ensure their #content is fact-based and/or credible. @cmicontent Click To Tweet

Our take: No matter how many things you do right in your content marketing, none of it matters if you aren’t checking to ensure that your content is truthful. Doing it “sometimes” will never be enough. One mistake, and your credibility is lost. Robert Rose, CMI chief strategy advisor, wrote a terrific article earlier this year on how trust and the relationship with an addressable audience will be the only value left as advertising continues to transform. Check it out here: The Democratization of Distrust Is Our Biggest Opportunity.

And here’s a great resource on how to check your facts with credible sources: Fact-Checking for Content Marketers: How to Protect Credibility in the Era of Fake News [Checklist].

The importance of commitment

While covering the 2017 content marketing research findings, CMI founder Joe Pulizzi stressed the importance of being “all in” – being fully committed – with your content marketing. This year’s Australia report includes a chart showing how survey responses differ based on the organization’s level of commitment to content marketing.

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If you’re not “all in” with your #contentmarketing program, you should stop says JoePulizzi. Click To Tweet

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Our research has consistently shown that commitment tends to strengthen as an organization becomes more sophisticated/mature in its content marketing efforts. A stronger commitment, in general, results in greater overall content marketing success. Those who are more committed tend to spend more of their total marketing budget on content marketing, place more value on creativity and craft in content creation, and have better processes for content production.

If you’re having trouble getting a full commitment for your content marketing program, check out this article: Get Buy-In from Executives with These 6 Common-Sense Reasons and How to Win the Battle for Content Marketing Buy-In.

Conclusion

The research shows that content marketing in Australia is far from dethroned – despite some recent headlines. (If you’re curious about what’s behind the headlines, listen to Joe Pulizzi starting around 56 minutes into PNR: This Old Marketing Episode 207.)

More survey respondents are focusing on building audiences this year than last, which is a great sign. To advance that content marketing success, though, the audience must come first.

As Joe points out in the podcast: “If the content is marketing in sheep’s clothing, of course it won’t work. But if it’s truly valuable, delivered consistently, and builds a loyal and valuable audience, it works better than anything else on the planet.”

If your #content is marketing in sheep’s clothing, of course it won’t work, says @JoePulizzi. #ThisOldMarketing Click To Tweet

To see additional research findings, view the report today. Special thanks to our survey distribution partner, the Association for Data-driven Marketing and Advertising (ADMA), and our sponsor, LinkedIn Marketing Solutions.

To ensure that you receive the latest research when it’s released, subscribe to the free CMI daily newsletter.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute.




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