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Content Marketing Traits Crucial to Success [Infographic]

With a majority of marketers increasing spend on content marketing every year, there’s no doubt this job title will be in demand for some time to come. But what are the skillsets and characteristics of rockstar content marketers? If you’re lucky enough to have an entire team of content marketers, what are the key disciplines needed amongst that team?  The following infographic provides the anatomy of this “dream” content marketing person:

anatomy of ideal content marketers

We  dive deeper into each of the skills or traits below, starting at Strategic Thinker and going clockwise.

Strategic Thinker

anatomy-gears

Fifty six percent of B2B marketers do not have a documented content marketing strategy, and this is a problem. Content marketers must have a strategy in place to produce cohesive and actionable content. The perfect content marketer has a list of several goals and ensures every piece of content drives towards that goal. Some examples of goals include:

  • Increase site traffic, brand awareness or lead generation
  • Educate prospects on your industry or product benefits
  • Improve search engine optimization or customer service
  • Build customer trust, rapport, loyalty, or industry credibility

Process-Oriented

Content marketing processes are required to scale your operations. These range from workflow to publishing to promotion to analytics. Within a content marketing process, there must be:

  • Defined roles and responsibilities for direct and extended members of your team.
  • A path that every piece of content must follow, or at least a staged gate process for decisions to be made about how a piece of content is planned, produced, and promoted.
  • An editorial calendar to track content through its various stages.

To learn more about content marketing processes, check out these expert tips to manage your process.

Creative Thinker

anataomy_creative

Too many people are in a state of content shock as they are bombarded by obscene amounts of eBooks, blog posts, and other vendor content. Therefore, it’s crucial that your uber-content marketer is creative.

Design Skills

According to Ekaterina Walter, author of The Power of Visual Storytelling, the brain processes visuals 600,000 times faster than text. Bottom line? If you can communicate your message through a picture or video, do it.

It is important to think visually. It’s even more important to put these visions into eye-catching graphics, infographics, and images that connect to your main message. Content should always include an element of design. So the ability to create these elements using applications such as PowerPoint, Adobe’s Creative Suite, or the free open source image editor alternative, GiMP, is essential. Examples include:

  • An infographic on Copyblogger: “22 Ways To Create Compelling Content When You Don’t Have a Clue,” demonstrates the power of imagery to communicate a message. Instead of a basic list, Brian Clark created images for each of the 22 ways.
  • The ability to repurpose a blog post or eBook into a sharable, compelling SlideShare is essential. This makes long posts or books more digestible for your audience. Learn SlideShare best practices from Todd Wheatland. Also, check out these super SlideShares:

Video Skills

Video editing is a great skillset to have for content marketers, and is only becoming more important. YouTube currently has five billion video views per day. Uploading videos to a company channel is a great way to reach your audience.

Cisco predicts that by 2021, video will make up 77 percent of all consumer internet traffic. So what does this mean? If you don’t have video editing skills, you might not be able to reach the majority of audiences. Take a look at the Content Marketing Institute’s Succeed with Video Content Marketing: 5 Tips and a Case Study to start your education. Also, check out these great uses of video for inspiration:

Energetic and Influential Promoter

anatomy-influential

Social Media Know-How

Too many content marketers fall short in marketing their marketing. “Promotion” is the process step to address this shortfall. However, simply composing tweets or posting on Facebook is not enough. The perfect content marketer knows:

  • Which channels to publish to according to their business and industry
  • The best time to publish for each platform
  • Who to reach out to, to make sure content is amplified across several networks and to a wider audience

Influencer Marketing

Speaking of reaching out to people, you have to get your content to the right people. Establish meaningful relationships with key influencers in your industry. These influencers will share your content with their networks and your reach will expand. Here are some great resources to learn more about this important facet of promotions:

Analytical Thinker

anatomy-analytical

“Be the Analyst”

  • Don’t just communicate facts and figures. Speak your mind, contribute your insights, and voice your opinion
  • Ask “so what?” about everything you produce to ensure that what you’re communicating is of value and action-oriented

Measure, Measure, Measure

The best content marketers constantly measure and evaluating the impact of their content. This enables them to: 1) improve their return on investment, and 2) better demonstrate their impact on the organization. Which best describes your company’s content marketing measurement tactics?

  • Mostly vanity metrics (e.g., social shares or page views)?
  • Engagement metrics?
  • Metrics that determine your team’s impact on marketing or sales’ pipeline?

There are numerous resources online about content marketing metrics. But these will get you started:

Witty and Humorous

anatomy-humor

Inject humor into your content. Nothing makes a piece of content stand out more than when it’s funny or witty. This greatly increases the likelihood of your audience sharing your content with their peers. For example:

  • Marketo’s blog post “You Know You’re a Content Marketer When…” This post uses memes from popular movies and TV shows to exemplify the many habits—and struggles—of being a content marketer.
  • Telekinetic Coffee Shop Surprise” from the movie Carrie. The makers of Carrie prank patrons of a coffee shop by planting actors pretending to have telekinetic powers. The result is a hilarious clip of screams and surprises.

Skillful Writer

anatomy-writer

Creator of Irresistible and Alluring Titles

Remember when I said readers are in a state of content shock? Well, creating an attention-grabbing title that is both relevant and decent can make or break your post, regardless of its actual content. The best content marketers have the ability to create a title that not only entices, but compels readers to click. Here are some well written titles:

Ability to Tell a Story

Instead of us writing about this talent, check out these great examples:

Attention to detail

Every sentence—and every word—counts. The best content marketers know that to keep their audience interested, every element of their content should be precise. Without this attention to detail, content can come across as disjointed and lacking purpose. Lack of attention to detail undermines your persuasiveness and credibility, which are crucial for creating trust.

Spelling and Grammar

Good spelling and grammer may seem like an obvious trait for a content marketer. However, many of us still make mistake’s. Don’t misspelll words or defy simple grammar rule. You’re reader’s will notice them. (Yes, the mistakes in this section were intentional.) For example, this Huffington Post article titled “The Ten-Second Race to Content Nirvana” has two spelling mistakes in the very first sentence. The first comment at the end of the post points out the error in the article, which ironically is about creating quality content. (Don’t hold back if you find errors in this post.)

HTML skills

Evolving technology is making it easier to create content on the front end. But having a basic knowledge of HTML can help take your content to the next level.

SEO Insight

Content marketers should be primarily focused on creating quality content for an audience. But don’t underestimate the power of also optimizing content for search engines. For tips about SEO when curating content, check out Curata’s list of SEO Do’s and Don’ts. Cyrus Shepard of Moz also had some insightful thoughts on the topic of “How to Survive the Google Tornado” at Marketo’s Marketing Nation Summit.

Street Smarts

anatomy-streetsmarts

Product and Industry Knowledge

It goes without saying that great content marketers know what they’re writing about. Knowing your products can be especially difficult for marketers in the technology industry though. For example, understanding the intricacies of how a semiconductor chip works when you’re marketing to engineers.

  • Work with other functional areas of your company such as product management or product marketing to get a better understanding of your product.
  • Attend industry events, both in-person and virtual, to get smarter in your industry.
  • Set up Google Alerts on your company, your products, and your competitors.
    • This not only helps you generate ideas, but also alerts you when there is news in your industry that you can capitalize upon (i.e., ideation).
  • If you’re a Curata CCS customer, tap into the power of the self-learning discovery engine to bring you the latest and greatest content from across the Internet on your topic of choice. It’s also a great source of ideas for content inspiration, as well as a way to follow your industry’s top influencers.

Customer Insight: “Be the Customer”

As important as knowing what you’re writing about is knowing who you’re writing for. Content marketers need to understand their customers in order to create content that answers their most important and burning questions. They need to understand:

  • What customers want to learn
  • What customers already know
  • How customers are finding content
  • How customers are consuming content

Where can you get this insight?

  • Directly interact with your customers. Go on sales calls with your reps; sit on phone calls conducted by your inside sales team; conduct interviews with your customers as part of a blog post.
  • Go where your customers go. Read your customers’ blogs; attend events they frequent.
  • Use existing research. Check out any voice of the customer studies your company may already be conducting. This can include Net Promoter Score (NPS) research or product marketing surveys.

Read, Read, Read

Content marketing is all about creation and writing. However, reading about your industry, your market, your customers, and how to be a better marketer might be just as important. For example:

Collaborator

anatomy-collaborator

Internal Collaborator

  • Within your company: Team with other functions across marketing such as product marketing and field marketing. And don’t forget the rest of your organization such as sales and product management. Great collaboration supercharges performance across all parts of the content supply chain:
  • Within your content marketing team: It would be ideal to have all the skillsets mentioned in this post embodied in one person. In reality there will be an entire team of people from different disciplines. For example, editors, writers, SEO specialists, designers, etc. The most effective content is the result of the harmonious interaction of all of these disciplines.

External Collaborator

The best marketers understand that partnering with other players in your industry helps increase your credibility and brings in new perspectives. This results in greater value for your audience, and can result in you better leveraging your resources.

Innovative

anatomy-innovation

Persistent

Don’t let small obstacles stop you from creating quality content. If you hit a roadblock, keep trying or come up with a new solution.

  • Can’t get an interview with a key source? Track down a contact on LinkedIn that can make an introduction for you. If you already have their contact information and they’re not responding, keep calling or emailing them.
  • Don’t know how to use Photoshop? Learn.

Fearless

  • Content marketers cannot be afraid to fail. In the history of content marketing, ideas and technologies have come and gone. The next big trend in content may be something you already thought of, but are afraid to voice your opinion or insight.
  • Take risks. Push the bounds to stand out from the crowd. If you make mistakes in the process, learn from them and move on. Whether it’s an edgier title or a new format, it may help generate more traffic and make your content stand out from other companies in your industry.

Resourceful

Let’s face it, we’ll never have enough time, money, or human resources to do everything we’d like to do in content marketing. The best marketers make the most of what they have.

  • Don’t have enough time to write? Hire an agency or a freelancer you trust that will best represent your voice and your audience’s needs.
  • Having trouble finding the time to write that big eBook? Use PowerPoint slides to get your message across. Or simply write a long-form blog post.
  • Repurpose content from that great eBook you wrote six months ago. Turn it into blog posts, infographics, or a SlideShare from the original content.

Do you—or your team—have every trait of the “dream” content marketer? For more on what employers are looking for when they hire a content marketer, check out these content marketing interview questions.

Do You Have Your Ideal Team of Content Marketers?

Still missing a body part? Don’t worry, you’re not alone in this rapidly maturing discipline. Just remember that happiness is in the journey, not the destination. If you want to know more about the arc of a content marketing career, download Curata and LinkedIn’s eBook: The Ultimate Guide to a Content Marketing Career.

Mitchell Hall

Mitchell Hall is Curata’s Content Marketing Director. Online since 1991, he has been writing for magazines and newspapers since 1997, and editing and managing websites since 2006. Mitchell has a BA in Political Science, Philosophy, and English. A generalist, his most covered topics are business and technology. Follow Mitchell on Twitter for links to unique and insightful stories: @mitchellhall

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