editorial calendar software – Curata Blog https://curata.com/blog Content marketing intelligence Fri, 30 Aug 2019 18:26:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.1.3 https://curata.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Curata_favico.png editorial calendar software – Curata Blog https://curata.com/blog 32 32 Content Marketing Editorial Calendar Templates: The Ultimate List https://curata.com/blog/content-marketing-editorial-calendar-templates-the-ultimate-list/ https://curata.com/blog/content-marketing-editorial-calendar-templates-the-ultimate-list/#comments Mon, 08 May 2017 15:00:28 +0000 https://curata.com/blog/?p=3820 Need an editorial calendar to plan out your content? Use this ultimate list to weigh your options....Read More

]]>

Those responsible for content within an organization have to plan out content for the upcoming weeks, months and year. This helps build alignment between teams and also keep writers accountable for their work. According to Curata research, 90 percent of marketers now use an editorial calendar.

For top-of-class calendar functionality, workflow, and analytics, the Curata CMP content marketing platform is one of several options available on the market. There are also several excellent free templates availableincluded below.

The following table lists the creator of the template, the format (Microsoft Excel, Google Sheets, WordPress plugin or PDF) and its accessibility (gated or un-gated). This will help you choose a template based on your preferences.

A more detailed description of each template and a glimpse of what each one looks like follows. Cross-reference with The 12 Must-Have Fields for a Content Calendar to ensure your template has all the essential attributes.

Do you use a template that we haven’t listed here? Let us know in the comments below!

Content Marketing Editorial Calendar Templates

Content marketing editorial calendar template list

Excel Spreadsheets

Madison Miles Media

Download here
Accessibility: Gated

Keep assignments organized with this excel template. Align content with keywords and audience segments, connect content to the buyer’s journey, and track keyword usage.

Curata

Download here
Accessibility: Gated

This template features 12 essential fields for creating an editorial calendar. (Learn more about the importance of these fields in this step-by-step process.) Detailed instructions, steps, and suggested meta tags are provided for each field, as well as links to additional resources.

Hubspot

Download here
Accessibility: Gated

This template lists a week’s content on each tab, allowing plenty of room for details such as keywords, personas, and calls-to-action.

hubspot

Convince & Convert

Download here 
Accessibility: Ungated

Look at the year ahead with this template. It lets you see several months at once, along with a tab called “Content Repository” to dump ideas in.

cc

Pam Moore

Download here
Accessibility
: Gated

This template separates each month into a different tab, along with a tab for “Content Inventory” to keep track of published pieces.

Screen Shot 2014-10-02 at 10.56.14 AM

Bob Angus

Download here
Accessibility
: Ungated

A standard calendar that includes a high-level road map to view large events throughout the year such as product launches and conferences.

Screen Shot 2014-10-01 at 8.15.56 PM

VerticalMeasures

Download here
Accessibility
: Ungated

This color-coded template offers both a month-to-month view and an entire year overview.

Screen Shot 2014-10-01 at 8.18.26 PM

Lee Odden

Download here
Accessibility
: Ungated

This spreadsheet simply lists each piece of content in chronological order. It suggests filling in several categories, such as audience, media, keywords, and tags.

toprank

Shareaholic

Download here
Accessibility
: Gated

This week-by-week spreadsheet also includes a tab to track URLs of content to enable campaign tracking.

Screen Shot 2014-10-01 at 8.24.58 PM

myMarketingCafe

Download here
Accessibility
: Ungated

This basic template also comes with a small business marketing guide, including a general marketing calendar.

mym

Web. Search. Social.

Download here
Accessibility
: Gated

This spreadsheet allows you to categorize content in a number of ways, including keywords, status, topic, talking point, and due date.

webss

Content Marketing Institute

Download here
Accessibility: Ungated

CMI’s template includes a general marketing calendar, an editorial calendar with a week-by-week view, and a spreadsheet to store all blog post ideas.

cmii

Bluewire Media

Download here
Accessibility
: Gated

This template provides a color-coded key to categorize pieces of content by stage, such as pending, planned, or published.

bluewire

 

98toGo

Download here
Accessibility
: Gated

In addition to a basic editorial  calendar, you can track assets by type—such as blog post or eBook—and by buying-cycle stage.

Screen Shot 2014-10-02 at 8.54.42 AM

Brett Snyder

Download here
Accessibility
: Ungated

This template is chock-full of examples. It provides plenty of space for detailed responses in many categories such as subject, focus keywords, key elements, and sources.

Screen Shot 2014-10-02 at 9.00.17 AM

Google Sheets

Webpage FX

Download here
Accessibility
: Ungated

A robust template that not only tracks pieces of content week by week, but also gives space for ideas and downloadable assets.

wfx

 

Crackerjack Marketing

Download here
Accessibility: Gated

Another option for marketers using Google Sheets, this template has a section specifically for measuring content performance.

cj

WordPress Plugins

EditFlow

Download here
Accessibility: Ungated

If you’re a WordPress user, this is a great way to look at upcoming posts in a month-to-month view. It’s also highly adaptable—you can drag and drop unpublished pieces onto new dates and months.

Screen Shot 2014-10-02 at 10.52.28 AM

 

Editorial Calendar

Download here
Accessibility: Ungated

Similar to EditFlow, this tool allows you to look ahead at all scheduled blog posts in WordPress and also quick-edit titles and times within the calendar.

Screen Shot 2014-10-02 at 10.51.37 AM

PDFs

Roger Parker

Download here
Accessibility
: Gated

Want to print out your calendar so you can scribble all over it? Download this template, which maps out an entire year.

rogerp

 

CoSchedule

Download here
Accessibility: Gated

Another option for printing, this calendar also comes with an eBook detailing the benefits of using an editorial calendar.

cps

 

One of these editorial calendar template options will suit the needs of most content marketers. Want a free editorial calendar template pre-loaded with 12 essential fields? Download Curata’s free template here.

editorial-calendar-cta

]]>
https://curata.com/blog/content-marketing-editorial-calendar-templates-the-ultimate-list/feed/ 76
How to Choose a Content Marketing Platform Vendor: The Complete Guide https://curata.com/blog/choose-content-marketing-platform-vendor/ https://curata.com/blog/choose-content-marketing-platform-vendor/#comments Mon, 19 Dec 2016 13:00:35 +0000 https://curata.com/blog/?p=7472 Content marketing involves a complex process of strategizing to achieve goals, producing content, distributing it, and analyzing the results. In a market flooded with information, integrating content...Read More

]]>
content marketing platform wrappingContent marketing involves a complex process of strategizing to achieve goals, producing content, distributing it, and analyzing the results. In a market flooded with information, integrating content with a variety of distribution options, and catering to a risk-averse buyer means this four-step process is challenging, even for the pros. Enter the content marketing platform.

With a 124% higher response-to-win rate and 44% higher conversion rates for content marketing software users, it’s clear that a connective-tissue solution aiding all stages of content marketing is necessary in an increasingly complex content marketing landscape.

However, there are over 100 vendors selling content marketing software. Plus, hundreds of dedicated solutions for email, marketing automation, content management, digital asset management, and social media management. This means the process of finding a solution to simplifying your content marketing strategy can be just as convoluted as executing it.

ContentMarketingToolsUniverse

This article covers everything you need to know—including the right questions to ask—to pick the best content marketing platform (CMP) for your organization.

Step 1) Understanding What A CMP Is

First some background. The shift from outbound to inbound marketing started over a decade ago. As digital grew, the need developed for sales force automation software (SFA), followed by a need for marketing automation software (MAS).

SFA and MAS centralized sales and demand generation in one place. In conjunction with the emergence of sales and marketing operations teams, SFA and MAS increased the visibility and accountability of marketing leads and activities. However, even with the introduction of SFA and MAS, there was still a missing level of support necessary to the sales and marketing process.

Content Marketing Platform

Content fuels and supports marketing automation. It’s needed for everything from website content (which marketing automation tracks), to email campaigns, to pay-per-click landing page offers. Without content, many of marketing automation’s key components are irrelevant. Drip campaigns don’t work if there is no content to drip to leads. Lead scoring stops without content for a lead to browse.

A Content Marketing Platform is a software solution that enables marketers to drive awareness, leads, and revenue from content. It makes it much easier and more efficient to supply content downstream to generate and nurture the leads that are converted to opportunities and then revenue by sales. It enables a data-driven, scalable, and multi-channel approach across four process areas: strategy, production, distribution analytics.

A content marketing platform is NOT a:

  • Marketing Automation Platform (MAP): MAPs allows for automated, repetitive marketing actions such as emails, social media posts, and other website actions. MAPs are lead and demand generation focused. While MAPs are integral to the success of content marketing, they aren’t content focused. Examples of MAPs include: Marketo, Pardot, and Eloqua.
  • Content Management System (CMS): CMSs allow you to build websites and blogs without coding. CMPs and CMSs work together but have different functions. CMPs are designed to orchestrate the development, delivery, and analysis of content to CMSs, as well as many other types of digital media entities. Examples of CMSs include WordPress and Drupal.
  • Project Management Software: Project Management Software allows project planning, scheduling, resource allocation, collaboration and communication between project stakeholders. Examples include Trello, Asana, and Basecamp. While these are useful, CMPs allow you to track productivity as well as align content and campaigns with business objectives, and approach creation strategically around marketing goals and past analytics.

Data analysis

2) Determine If a CMP is Best for Your Organization

Many content marketers today find it difficult to precisely track how their content is performing throughout the entire sales cycle. In fact, only 30% of leading marketers feel they are effective at measuring content marketing’s impact on the bottom of the funnel, and only 8% of marketers consider themselves “very successful” or “extremely successful” at tracking content marketing ROI.

It’s also common for content marketers to store their content supply chain in disparate systems and spreadsheets. A content marketing platform centralizes access to your content, and provides clear analytics to inform your content creation in the future.

A CMP enables content marketers to:

  • Have a unified, consolidated view of your entire content supply chain from ideation to production to promotion.
  • Have top-down visibility on how your content is impacting lead and revenue generation, and marketing and sales pipeline.

A CMP gives content marketing managers a data-driven and scalable way of managing the content supply chain and understanding its contribution to business growth.

A CMP can solve for:

  • Lags in production
  • Organization
  • Tracking to revenue
  • Uncertainty with strategy
CMP Pros CMP Cons
  • Increased productivity
  • You can organize content by stage in creation, funnel stage, content type etc.
  • You can track content production and manage your editorial calendar
  • You can push directly to a CMS or automation platform
  • Detailed analytics inform strategy, ROI, and can generate ideas
  • Added cost to marketing team
  • Time spent implementing and training team
  • Some CMP software can temporarily impact productivity or complicate workflows. Be wary of this when looking at CMP options

 

CMP Alternatives to Consider

  • Excel spreadsheet: This option is cheaper but highly inefficient for metrics and tracking. Tracking manually is time consuming and leaves a lot of room for error.
  • Other software combo: If you already have related software it might save time on implementation. However, integrations don’t always work.

Microsoft Excel

Step 3) Understand Your Specific Needs

If you have determined that your organization needs a content marketing platform, it’s time to assess your wants and needs. The software research and vetting process will be much smoother if you start your search with a good idea of what you can afford, the current gaps in your team’s workflow, and the capabilities most important to your team’s success.

Cost

CMPs can range in price from $8000 to over $100,000 a year. If you’re a small business owner or don’t produce much content, a content marketing platform costing $60,000 a year is unlikely to be great value. It should be obvious that your software and the content you’re creating are generating value, not reducing it.

Time to Implement

Change management is an under-addressed topic when it comes to implementing new marketing software. Switching marketing software can take hours of time per person and temporarily cut into your team’s productivity.

Some options are harder to implement than others. Think about how you would prefer to implement a new software change and a vendor’s reputation for their implementation process. Consider the following questions before researching various software options:

Questions to Consider

How a software company helps you implement their product is often indicative of the sort of relationship you’ll have with them throughout the software’s life cycle, so keep this in mind as well.

Content Gaps and Team Needs

A good content marketing platform should help throughout all stages of the content marketing process. This means there should be some level of support from strategy through to analytics. Different platforms cater to different needs in different stages of the process however. Do a gap analysis of your content marketing process and use that to point to related questions. Here’s how Curata breaks down the parts of the content marketing process, and some areas to examine when determining if there’s holes in a strategy.

Strategy

  • Personas
  • Buyer Stages
  • Keywords
  • Topics
  • Audits
  • Content Marketing
  • Pyramids

Production

  • Curation and Creation
  • Workflow
  • Writers
  • Calendar

Distribution

  • Publication
  • Promotion
  • Sales Enablement

Analytics

  • Engagement
  • Revenue tracking
  • Marketing and Sales Pipeline Impact
  • Operations 

Content Marketing Framework

Content Marketing Platform Features

From gap analysis, determine which CMP features are most important to you. These are the key capabilities to look for in a CMP:

  • Editorial Calendar: Not all editorial calendars are created equal. Be sure to understand how you want to sort, organize, tag, export and distribute through your editorial calendar.
  • Content Auditing: Some CMPs have the capability to look at gaps in your content and content strategy. Eliminating the need to execute a manual gap analysis can be a huge time and cost saver.
  • Internal Communication: This feature enables communication and collaboration on content across teams.
  • Distribution: Distribution features vary across CMPs. Some CMPs allow you to distribute to social, your blog, website, email, native ads, paid ads and more, while others are limited.
  • Integrations: Does it play nicely with platforms such as WordPress or Marketo? These vary widely for each CMP.
  • Leads Generated by Content Tracking: This is a pretty standard feature when it comes to content marketing platforms. Tracking leads generated by your content is integral to the success and development of most marketing strategies.
  • Revenue Generated by Content Tracking: Some CMPs offer analytics that track your content directly to revenue. If you want to prove the ROI your content team is generating, this is a feature to prioritize.
  • Connect to Content Creators: This feature allows you to shop and hire reputable content creators directly from your CMP.
  • Asset Library Management: CMP houses content assets for you in one place.
  • Ideation: Dedicated module for brainstorming and sharing ideas.
  • Content Templates: Customizable templates helps streamline creation for content team
  • Post-Download Engagement: This feature allows you to track your prospects’ interaction with your content after it’s downloaded.
  • Real Time Analytics: Results and insights from your campaigns instantaneously.
  • Account Based Marketing: Drill down into prospect interaction on your website by company.
  • Sales Enablement: Sales enablement features manifest in different ways. This can mean anything from a simple library housing all sales-enablement content, to a feature that, when content is uploaded into your library, pushes custom, automatic notifications to your sales team and allows them to directly attach it to email.
  • Custom Reporting: How many ways can the software run reports? Are you interested in dividing the data in more than one way by buyer persona, stage, author, etc.

Step 4) Research Vendors

After determining your priorities for your content marketing platform, it’s time to start researching CMP options. Consider the following.

  1. Ask Questions

When doing research, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Will my team actually use this?
  • Is this useful for other departments?
  • Is this vendor flexible in price, implementation, etc.?
  • Is the software flexible? Are there varied use cases?
  • Will this software scale with my company?
  • Can it generate custom reports?
  • Does it allow for easy external/internal communication?
  1. Check Out The Vendor’s Content

The vendor’s website and content are a good indicator of how you could use the software and the type of content you can create with it.

  1. Look at Reviews

CMP reviews

Consider these options for online software reviews:

  1. Read Customer Testimonials and Case Studies

Most software companies include testimonial and case studies on their website. If you’re looking for something specific, reach out to sales.

  1. Speak to an Existing Customer

You can do this before or after your demo call. Speaking to an existing customer can give you a more thorough idea of how the software has performed for other organizations beyond the information shared on the vendor’s website.

Step 5) Ask for a Demo/Start Interacting with the Sales Team

After researching vendor options, pick your top two or three CMP choices and schedule a demo. This will give you a better idea of what the interface looks like and how your team could benefit from the software.

Questions to Ask During a Demo

It’s important to be thorough in learning what you’re getting yourself into when examining a new product. Ask the following questions during your software demo: 

  • Does your platform integrate with XYZ software?
  • What training/onboarding is involved, and is it included?
  • What kind of support will I get after onboarding?
  • Is there a limit on the amount of content/leads collected/customers/ etc. before having to pay more?
  • Are you able to customize your software to my specifications (if there’s an added feature or change that would make the platform more attractive to your organization)?
  • How often do you update this platform? What updates are in the pipeline?
  • Why should we choose you over your competitors?

It’s also beneficial to make a list of key features/processes you want the vendor to cover in the presentation and create score cards based on the priorities you outlined above.

Step 6) Make Your Selection and Implement

Once you’ve asked questions, gone over score cards from potential vendors, and reviewed the product demonstrations with your key stakeholders, it’s time to make a selection. At this point, it’s a good idea to develop goals and key performance indicators for the software. This will help you measure the software’s effectiveness and aid your decision-making process when it’s time to renew.

As you can see, choosing a content marketing platform that does what you need requires significant due diligence. You need a clear understanding of what a CMP is, how it can add to your organization’s bottom line, understand exactly what goals/processes you need it for, consider the implementation process, and figure out the key features you need. One of the most important things a good content marketing platform will offer is granular analytics capabilities that allow you to measure exactly how your content is performing. Learn how to use data and technology to optimize your content marketing ROI with The Comprehensive Guide to Content Analytics and Metrics eBook below.

Analytics and Metrics eBook

]]>
https://curata.com/blog/choose-content-marketing-platform-vendor/feed/ 5