I got an email today from a nonprofit asking if Propllr could help with content marketing. The sender had a $4,000 budget and wanted to know if we would be able to create 50 articles of 2,000 words each for this price – aka $80 per 2,000-word piece.
Short answer: no. Loud answer: NO!
But the email got me thinking: what do you do if you determine that content marketing can benefit your business but you have a limited budget for creating that content? And the answer I came up with is not what you’d expect: blow it all in one place.
This, readers, is not what I would have recommended five years ago – or maybe even one year ago. So let me walk you through my reasoning and my recommendations.
The content part of content marketing is something you give away for free. Maybe you take an email address in payment, but generally content is a resource that brands and companies give away gladly. It’s word swag, in other words.
The rationale for giving away content is (at least) threefold:
There are more, reader. But you can find them somewhere else online.
The point is, if you’re giving a gift to the world (and really, to people you hope will one day buy from you), do you want it to be a crappy gift? Would you rather give them 300 dumb pins nobody wants or one glass water bottle they will use every single day?
That’s how you need to think about content.
Honestly, that’s how everyone should be thinking about content, but it’s especially true if you’ve only got a few thousand dollars to spend for the year.
The other reason I’m recommending this strategy is because many companies that do content marketing find that one or two pages drive the majority of their organic traffic, regardless of how much other content they create. Why? Because those pages answer the question that is most important to their prospective customers.
Or they answer a question that nobody else online is answering.
Or because they do something better than anyone else is doing it.
Or because they present something in a way that resonates with a lot of people and so visitors continually link to and share the content and it enjoys a long and happy life of driving traffic.
Or (honestly) because they put a lot of time and effort into that piece and they don’t do the same for the rest of their content.
So if you can spend your content budget on the equivalent of 300 dumb pins per visitor or on the equivalent of one highly functional glass water bottle, always go with the glass water bottle.
How, you ask? Great question.
This is the part you have to get right for my proposition to work. If you only have a little scratch, you can’t afford to throw a bunch of content on your site and see what works. You have to be strategic and careful (which, again, we should all be doing anyway).
Here’s one way to go about identifying the best opportunities for your future superstar content:
At this point, you should have a pretty good idea of what kind of question you should answer or problem you should solve with your content. Now it’s time to get creative. What’s the best way to solve this problem? Will an article do it? A chart? A checklist? An in-depth guide?
You could probably start working with a freelancer at this point. An experienced freelancer will be able to help you identify the best way to turn your findings to this point into a piece of rock-solid content.
The last mile is really important. You’ve identified a piece of content that can have a material impact on the lives of your prospective customers (and on your bottom line). Now it’s time to build it in such a way that they can find it. That means doing the following:
The last step here is to measure its impact on your company as a whole. In a best-case scenario, it will drive enough conversions that you’ll have a bigger content budget next year (or the second half of this year) so you can replicate and amplify your results.
None of this is easy, but it will offer greater positive impact for your company over time than most of the other options you have on a limited content budget.