February 4, 2012

If an Ad Agency Produces Your Ads, Shouldn’t a Content Producer Produce Your Content?

Meredith, the publisher of Better Homes and Gardens and several other big magazines, is getting into the branded-content business. The Wall Street Journal has details.

Called Meredith Integrated Marketing, the operation has created custom publishing, email, social media and mobile campaigns for major marketers, including Kraft Foods, Chrysler and Wells Fargo. It recently recruited digital-ad veteran Martin Reidy to lead its marketing arm, and says it is on the prowl for more acquisitions.

I have a hard time putting into words how brilliant this is. And not just because it’s so similar to the work I’ve been doing for Learfield Communications, another major media company.

As I wrote in a comment over at Buzz Machine, advertisers are shifting a lot of marketing dollars toward producing engaging, valuable content for their customers. That content’s not advertising, but it’s marketing. So it makes perfect sense that they would turn to people who’ve been producing content for a living for decades: magazine publishers, radio companies, local TV stations. Workers in those places know how to tell stories, to engage audiences, to inform and entertain people.

My job at Learfield InterAction is built on this premise. Journalists are the best people to create content for audiences of all types — whether it’s the general public listening to a newscast, or a group of 75 donors to a small nonprofit. Why not take some of our journalism expertise and put it to good use for clients? As long as we don’t intermingle that content with our straight-news product (and we don’t), it’s simply another way of engaging audiences.

Disclosure: My employer, Learfield Communications, has a business relationship with Meredith involving one of its magazines. I don’t work on that project.

Get content. Get customers.

Drew McLellan writes about a new book called Get Content. Get Customers. It was written by Joe Pulizzi and Newt Barrett, and it’s about how producing original content to help people can improve your business.  Drew writes,

“That doesn’t mean you have to launch a magazine or put a broadcast antenna on your office building.

It means that consumers are open to listening, if you’re open to
creating relevant content and offering it to them.  You can do that
on-line.  You can do that in a traditional printed piece.  And you can
do it in person.”

The idea of “content marketing” is really the basis of this blog.  As a former (and sometimes current) journalist, I see a lot of opportunity for journalism skills to help marketers and communicators.  With so many options available to people for entertainment or information online, a marketing strategy can only succeed by offering value.  And doing journalism — telling stories and engaging audiences — is one of the best ways to do that.

Why your small idea-driven organization should “go global”

Laurel Delaney at Marketing Profs points to a report that tells us, "In the future, there will be two kinds of enterprises: those that go global and those that die."  The report is long, but worth a look.  And it applies to you, even if you don’t have dreams of exporting products to another continent.

Here’s why: if you’re part of a small organization (whether a business or a nonprofit agency), you have something to offer people. If you don’t, you’ll soon be out of a job, along with the entire organization. Even if that "something" is ideas, it’s valuable to the world. And the value is almost never limited geographically.

I  was on a call yesterday with the directors of several small "regional centers,"  who deal with child abuse prevention issues. As I talked to them, I could tell they were excited about the opportunity to use their blogs as resources for people in their area.  I encouraged them to see their sites as extensions of their office — not merely telling about what the agency does, but doing it online. Even though these regional centers are geograpphically named, the resources they draw on are not limited to one area.  Their blogs will allow them to "go global" by drawing on worldwide resources in the area of child abuse prevention.

Your online presence should do the same thing.  Just as small manufacturers can easily "go global," a small organization with big ideas can become a part of a global community — importing good ideas from everywhere, and exporting good ideas to the rest of the world.

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