how to curate content for better engagement
TRANSCRIPT
How to curate content for more engagement
Susan MoellerBusiness Development
Manager @susancmoeller @buzzsumo
“We’re all on the same mission to find the absolute best material to enjoy and to share with our followers.”
- Kristina Cisnero at hootsuite.com
Curation can:
Help establish you as a trusted source for quality information about your industry.
Give you the opportunity to interact with your audience more often--less expensively.
Build your own list of possible blog topics, speeding up your writing by providing a ready list of ideas to choose from, and broadening your format options.
Make reporting on earned media mentions much easier.
Strengthen influencer relationships.
Solidify customer relationships
Content marketing Sherpa?Yes, please.
You need a plan!“Get your team together and create a documented content marketing strategy. “via
@toprank
Share links to other people’s content
Plan
to...
i.e.
Or publish links to news that’s relevant, directly from the source.
Say why it’s important.
Find news: ● Set alerts for
posts at social platform blogs
● Read industry news
● Read financial news
● Set and monitor alerts for network mentions
Or publish links from other sites when they talk about you.
Stretch the reach of the earned media.
Create Earned Media Saved Content ListsFor easier reporting…
For planned sharing...
(...Or rainy days
and Mondays. )
Export lists from “Saved Articles”
Share with your audience when something is genuinely helpful.
@Tag the person who helped you.
Share articles that are beginning to trend.
This helps your audience to see you as the trusted authority on content that’s important to the industry
Share articles written by influencers you would like to cultivate relationships with.
This raises your profile with them while offering something of value.
Find their content. Share. Like. Comment.Make it a habit.
You can create a saved content list for authors, too. Allowing you to bookmark for later sharing, linking, and quoting.
Share links to Competitors’ content?
Yes, I sure do. In this business, and in many others, the "competition" can be your best source of referrals and partnerships. Also, great marketing comes from a desire to serve and help your audience. If someone else creates something my audience would love, I feel like it is my duty to share it. People decide to work with one person over another based more on emotion and connection rather than any one particular piece of content. So, if what I share from someone else really touches a person and they decide to work with them instead of me, that's great for everyone!
-- Alisa Meredith
Alisameredith.com
@alisammeredith
Pro
“I do not share competitor's content, no. The reason being that my main goal and motivation for the work I do is to BEAT my competitors. The last thing I want to do is help them reach their goals faster. That being said, I still respect my competitors; they are still humans just doing their job. But the way I see it is, would an actor auditioning for the role of their life recommend someone else for that role instead? Would Ronda Rousey recommend Holly Holm for an opportunity that would bring her fame and glory? Probably not. So no- I do not and will not share my competitors' content so long as they are my competitors.”
Nadya Khoja
Venngage.com
@nadyakhoja
Con
“To answer your question: as of right now we don’t share our direct competitors’ content. Not just because they’re direct competitors but we find the content is not providing enough independent and resourceful information to our community. Apart from that we are happy to share every content we find valuable in the industry, even coming from potentially competitive websites/blogs.”
Holisoa VahinisonMarketing Director
phydeo.com
Maybe? If it’s good enough
Best Practice tips for sharing links
● Test ratios that work for you
● Add your own spin or take
● Remember: Shared experience and audience building, not hot potato
https://blog.bufferapp.com/self-promotion-in-social-media
“Aggregated content is content compiled automatically without regard to quality.Curated content is hand-picked
content with a focus on quality.”Sean Bestor, sumome.com
Showcase others’ work in your own posts and articles.
Plan
to...
Email a roundup of great posts
Find posts by topic, save to publish at week’s end.
Email a roundup of your own posts that people liked most
Write a post about trending posts.
Write a best of <Insert time frame here> post.
Write a best of tips/resources/ideas post.
Use saved articles to store favorites until you are ready to write.
Write a commentary post
Build your content around ideas gained from others.
Plan
to...
Become a writing idea hoarder.Ann Handley,
Content Marketing World 2016
Build a skyscraper or best answer to beat file
Build a posts that resonate with my audience file
Build an influencers post list so that you can quote them or link to them
Promote your customers’ content.
Plan
to...
Consider user generated content
Rely on customers as resources when you create something new.
Be ethical.
Plan
to...
“Content curation gives credit where credit is due.” Heidi Cohen, at anderspink.com
Great 10 point ethics checklist at Content Marketing Institute.
http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/2013/11/ethical-content-curation-checklist/
I’ll include the link in the follow up mail :)
Questions?Want to talk [email protected]
Thank you.