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CONTENT MARKETING EDITORIAL PLANNING GUIDE

Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

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Page 1: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

CONTENT MARKETING EDITORIAL PLANNING GUIDE

Page 2: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

With a disconnected pile of assets, we’re unable to measure the efficacy of the

program because it’s not a program. It’s a collection of disjointed assets.

Page 3: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

How do we change that?

Begin with the end in mind.

Page 4: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

First thing’s first

Required checklist BEFORE you start planning your editorial calendar

1.  Mission statement

2.  Categories

3.  Topics

4.  SEO keywords

5.  Editorial guidelines

6.  Imagery guidelines

Page 5: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

MISSION STATEMENT

Page 6: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

What is your editorial mission statement?

Brand Purpose

Editorial Mission Statement

Brand Mission Statement Target Audience

What Customers

Want

Content Marketing

Page 7: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

What is your editorial mission statement?

Brand Purpose

What are you going to do?

(You can probably find this on your company

website)

Who are you trying to reach? (This may or may

not be your buyer)

What Customers

Want

Content Marketing

Page 8: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Editorial mission statement components

1.  The core target audience 2.  What will be delivered to the audience

3.  The outcome for the audience.

Sample Mission Statement: Inc. magazine

“Welcome to Inc.com, the place where entrepreneurs and business owners can find useful

information, advice, insights, resources and inspiration for running and growing their business.”

Page 9: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Your editorial mission statement

“...”

Page 10: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

CATEGORIES + TOPICS

Page 11: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

How will your content be organized?

1.  What are different ways you could organize your content?

2.  What perspectives can differentiate

your brand from others?

3.  Draw out common themes

4.  Can double as site navigation

5.  Show visitor what space you’re in

6.  Have a goal of ultimately publishing 1

piece of content per pillar per day

Page 12: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

How will your content be organized?

CATEGORY CATEGORY CATEGORY CATEGORY CATEGORY CATEGORY

Description Description Description Description Description Description

Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic

Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic

Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic

Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic

Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic Topic

Page 13: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

SEO

Page 14: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

KEYWORD CURRENT RANK COMPETITOR #1 RANK COMEPTITOR #2 RANK

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

keyword current rank competitor #1 rank competitor #2 rank

SEO keywords

Page 15: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

EDITORIAL GUIDELINES

Page 16: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

People don’t always remember what you say or even what you do, but they remember how you made them feel.

Maya Angelou

Page 17: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

QUESTION What is tone in relation to writing?

ANSWER Expressing personality through vocabulary.

Page 18: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Developing your brand’s tone:

•  Look at internal communications and how formal people are •  Commonly used words, greetings and sign-offs

•  Always keep in mind that brands are people, not services and products

•  Examine how the thought leaders at your company communicate

•  Employees who truly understand what a brand stands for tend to communicate in

the same manner

•  Always remember the KISS method – Keep It Simple Stupid

Page 19: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

•  Distinctive

•  Recognizable

•  Unique

A brand’s tone should be:

Page 20: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

STAY AWAY from having your brand seem robotic.

It’s possible to be professional

AND human.

Page 21: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Approachable Tone + Insightful/Actionable Advice

= Tapping Into Your Readers Emotions.

•  Listen to your audience, don’t just speak to them.

•  Goal should always be to tap into your readers emotions.

•  Hook audience in with opening sentences and continue to

play off of their emotions throughout the article.

Page 22: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

An editor should be an integral part of your content marketing team in

order to align the language.

Page 23: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Formal versus informal language

FORMAL

PROS CONS

Professional Stiff

Authoritative Lacking personality

Respectful Boring

INFORMAL

PROS CONS

Personable Reckless

Warm Lacking professionalism

“We wish to inform you of a new offer currently available.”

“Watch out! We gotta great deal for you.”

Page 24: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

No matter the industry you’re in, a good writer can communicate complex topics in an accessible manner and in a way that doesn't feel like it's dumbing the subject down or overwhelming a

reader with jargon.

1  Use everyday language your audience will understand, wherever possible

2  Remember journalistic principle KISS – keep it simple, stupid

3  Customers favor more naturalistic language in marketing copy

4  Obscure terms may alienate customer who will find text overly difficult to read

Technical language

Page 25: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

1. Focus on “quality of insight”

A really important aspect of content, particularly on the web, is the

quality of insight. And insight doesn’t need to be surprising. It can

be insight about things that are very familiar, and that give us a

frame for things that are already top of mind.

Page 26: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

2. Hold yourself to a high standard

Brands should hold themselves to an awesome standard. If a brand

wants to make a powerful piece of content, they should make something

that is truly exclusive and inherently fascinating and not just their take on

what everyone is talking about. I think brands should be doing things that

are awesome, new, original and totally fitting with the brand.

Page 27: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

It’s most important to know what they have read. People want to

read stories that they’re a little familiar with. It’s important to know

what they’re aware of, to know what to talk to them about.

3. Think about your audience

Page 28: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Emotion is a really important part of successful digital pieces. People are

hunting for positive or negative emotions they can share with other people.

Since emotion is really important in articles but absent in economics, I often

have to inject emotion into the headline. Like, “17 Astonishing Facts about

U.S. Inequality.” Statistics about unemployment aren’t inherently emotional.

You have to give the reader a bit of a preview, and say, “Here’s the emotion you’re going to feel when you read these statistics.”

4. Weave emotion into dry subject matter

Page 29: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

1.  Look at your internal communications 1.  How formal are they?

2.  Any commonly used words or phrases?

2.  How is the way you work different?

3.  How you might tell a customer about your business over the phone or face-to-face?

4.  Describe your company is three different ways, using different degrees of colloquial

language? If one way sticks out, try to identify what you like about it. 1.  An economically priced hotel located in the city center

2.  Easy on the wallet, this hotel enjoys having the city on its doorstep

3.  This cheap as chips hotel gives you a night’s shut eye, slap bang in the city

Exercises to help you identify your tone of voice

Page 30: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

1.  Technical execution

2.  Tell a human story

3.  Make it relatable

Don’t forget imagery

Page 31: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

1.  Will it interest your audience?

2.  Can it be distributed effectively to reach them?

3.  Does it align with your engagement goals?

4.  How is this an original idea?

5.  Does it fit your brand?

5 question editorial final gut check

Page 32: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

PLANNING YOUR EDITORIAL CALENDAR

Page 33: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

No we’re ready to start planning

•  Quarterly •  Monthly

•  Weekly

Page 34: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

QUARTERLY

Page 35: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Things to think about quarterly

Anything inflexible event (industry events, webinars, employee vacations, etc.) •  These are going to happen whether you want to or not so best to plan around them!

•  Engage in the conversation for industry events

•  Drive registration to any company in-person or online events

•  Coverage plans for employee vacations

Big rock content

•  Far enough in advance to allow for creativity in brainstorming larger pieces of content

•  Think of how each piece of big rock content can be broken into smaller themes

Page 36: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

QUARTER

MONTH 1

WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4

INDUSTRY EVENTS

WEBINAR

THEME

Big rock content

MONTH 2

WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4

INDUSTRY EVENTS

WEBINAR

THEME

Big rock content

MONTH 3

WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4

INDUSTRY EVENTS

WEBINAR

THEME

Big rock content

MONTH 4

WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4

INDUSTRY EVENTS

WEBINAR

THEME

Big rock content

Page 37: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

MONTHLY

Page 38: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Things to think about monthly

Themes •  What overarching topic do you want to talk about that fits within your big rock piece of content?

Titles and descriptions

•  How will they fit together?

•  What value will they provide to your audience?

Ownership

•  Assess bandwidth of your contributors

•  Gives guest contributors enough notice to prepare

Page 39: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

MONTH

WEEK 1

MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY

TITLE

DESCRIPTION

OWNER

Theme

WEEK 2

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

TITLE

DESCRIPTION

OWNER

Theme

WEEK 3

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

TITLE

DESCRIPTION

OWNER

Theme

WEEK 4

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday

TITLE

DESCRIPTION

OWNER

Theme

BIG ROCK CONTENT Big Rock Content

Page 40: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

WEEKLY

Page 41: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Things to think about weekly

Tactical execution •  Most granular level

•  Make sure all pieces of content are correctly tagged and organized within your CMS. This will

make future content audits and analysis much easier.

Categories and topics and SEO keywords

•  Are you covering all categories, topics and SEO keywords relatively evenly?

Buyer stage and call-to-action

•  Ensure you are providing content that moves reader through the buyer journey

•  60 --70% top-of-funnel

•  30 - 20% middle-of-funnel •  10% bottom-of-funnel

•  What is your desired action for the reader (subscribe, continue reading, product page, etc.)

Page 42: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY

ARTICLE TITLE

SOURCE/WRITER

CATEGORY

TOPICS

SEO KEYWORDS

BUYER STAGE

CALL-TO-ACTION

THEME

Page 43: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

WHAT TO TRACK WHEN

Page 44: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Content marketing is not a one and done effort. You must always analyze your data

to continuously optimize and influence your editorial strategy.

Page 45: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Monitor your traffic as frequently as possible

•  Weekly…daily…hourly!

•  Track patterns tied to publishing times

•  Notice spikes by the hour, day and month in reports

•  Always take a look at referrer types and domains

Page 46: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

Questions you should be able to answer on the fly •  What time during the day does your content perform best?

•  What time during the week?

•  What topics are shared most on social media?

•  What article formats receive the most page views?

•  When is the typical spike in traffic during the week?

•  Which one of your writers or sources generates the most page views?

Page 47: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

A/B testing your content: •  Article formats: Q&A vs. Listicle vs. Opinion

•  Publishing times throughout the day, week and month

•  Effectiveness of content featured in newsletters

•  Different formats shared on different social platforms

•  Covering halo topics of interest to your readers

Page 48: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

What to track quarterly •  Cost per lead

•  Percentage of leads sourced by content

marketing vs. other marketing tactics

•  Total conversions

Page 49: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

What to track monthly and weekly •  Time on site

•  Repeat visitors

•  Social likes

•  Subscriptions + unsubscribes

•  Newsletter CTRs

•  Bounce rate

•  Paid vs. organic search traffic

•  Social shares/followers

•  Share of voice/offsite SEO

Page 50: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

What to track daily •  Paid vs. organic search traffic

•  Unbranded organic search traffic

•  Organic search share of voice

•  Visitors

•  Views

•  Shares

•  Leads from gated content

•  Visits per channel

Page 51: Content Marketing Editorial Planning Guide

THANK YOU