Do We Talk With Our Writers?

Your account manager handles speaking all the communication between you and your writers.

Your account manager is like the quarterback of a football team. This saves you a lot of time and your account manager makes sure that everyone is on the same page.

You can always track the status of your content from the time you submit your topics up until your content is delivered within our proprietary content marketing platform.

Project management can be a huge time commitment when it comes to content marketing – luckily working with an account manager is included in all content subscriptions.

How to Provide Your Writers With a Clear Direction

Already know what you want to write about? Perfect. Tempesta Media provides you with a writing team of experts in your industry, making it easy to order content.

Goal: What should the content accomplish?

Common goals for content pieces include attracting new prospects, converting leads, educating customers, etc.
 
Example: This blog article should educate C-Suite executives about why content marketing is the most cost effective method for lead generation and encourage them to write their first blog article.

Format: How would you like this article to be written?

Example: Listicle? How to? 5 reasons why..?
 
Example: This should be a problem-solution layout.
taking decision

Overview: What is the topic of the content?

Example: The blog article should introduce at least 3 different methods for analyzing content marketing performance. Then provide tactical steps to accomplish each method.

Key Points: A list of the key points the writer should address.

Example: Different channels to incorporate content marketing within your business
  • Sales Enablement
  • Lead Generation
  • Customer Success
  • Branding and to Establish Credibility

Sources: Any relevant links or resources you wish to provide.

Example: Please use a similar format and style to this article, but provide your own unique take.
 
Example: Or, please incorporate research from this article.

How Do You Incorporate SEO Into the Content?

Our customers extensively use Tempesta Media’s content and influencer marketing platform for SEO. 

As you know, SEO performance is based on both on-site and off-site factors, like inbound links.  Companies that show examples claiming that content drove specific SEO results are not being factual with you.
 
For example, I could create a garbage piece of content, publish it to a large and established customer’s website, then spend a tremendous amount of money and time amplifying that content through inbound links, social posting, and much more. 
 
Despite creating garbage content, it would still rank well, because I would be leveraging the SEO strength of their website, and my amplification efforts.
 
To be successful in driving results, not just ranking higher in the search engines, you need to create content that is optimized for BOTH the reader and the search engines.  That is where Tempesta Media excels.

seo

How we optimize your content for SEO

Before the content even gets to you for review, a tremendous amount of work is done on your behalf, to optimize for BOTH SEO and the reader.  Here are just a couple of things that are done for you:
 
  • Editorial calendar – Before we even write the first word of content for you, our content strategy team develops a thorough editorial calendar and content plan, which is based on your specific industry, your business objectives, competitive environment, seasonality, your target audience’s mindset, social and search trends, and much more.
  • Focus keyword phrase – Before content is written, a focus keyword phrase is selected.  The focus keyword phrase is used to drive the content and it meta information.
  • Content – Content is created in such a manner that it drives awareness, interest and action with the reader, while subtly intertwining key SEO best practices.  This includes focus-keyword driven content titles, sub-headers and more. 
  • Meta information – We craft meta titles and keyword descriptions for each piece of content written.
  • Plagiarism screening – We have sophisticated plagiarism screening, which builds upon and extends capabilities found from industry standard – Copyscape.  This protects your brand, and helps to prevent algorithmically-driven search engine penalties.
  • Deep dive editing – Having content that is spelling and grammar error free has a direct impact on how well it will resonate with your readers and the search engines.  Our in-house editing capabilities go well beyond proofreading.  Our editors work to ensure your voice, company culture, target audience and business objectives are accurately and consistently reflected in the content that we produce for you.
The bottom line is that to be successful in ranking with the search engines, you need a well-rounded SEO program that is supported by an effective and compelling content marketing program.  We’re your content marketing solution.

Can the Same Content Writer Write for My Competitors?

All Tempesta Media customers get the benefit of working with an optimized team of writers who are able to capture your company’s cultural style and have the necessary industry expertise.

Your writing team will not be writing for any of your competitors. We create a unique writing team for your company. Any competitors will have a completely separate writing team and a separate Tempesta Media account manager.

Do We Choose the Topic or Do You Choose the Topic?

You can either choose a topic or you can use your editorial calendar.

If you choose your own topics your writers are already experts in your industry so they won’t require a great deal of hand holding. However, we recommend you include the topic and the key points you want included within the article. For white papers, a general outline including the subsections and key points are recommended.

If you are not sure what you want to write about our platform supplies you with an in depth editorial calendar. Our content strategists research what is trending in your industry, what content topics you’ve already covered, as well as gaps in your competitor’s content strategy that you can take advantage of.

Your account manager will go ahead and schedule your editorial content topics in advance so you will simply be notified once the content is ready.

How Would We Start Working With Tempesta Media?

At the beginning of our partnership we ask you to answer an online questionnaire to begin establishing your Voice Profile.

The Voice Profile is a style guide for content to capture your unique voice, personality, and many other nuances to ensure the writing matches your brand.

Then we will ask you to participate in an interview call with your Tempesta Media account manager and content strategy team. During the interview we dive deeper into your target audience, discuss your content marketing goals, and walk through any of the key themes you’d like to highlight within your content.

We use the insights gathered from the questionnaire and the interview, coupled with additional research about what is trending in your industry, to provide an editorial calendar with topics that will perform well for your business.

Once the editorial calendar is approved, we schedule the assignments for you within our platform and you are simply notified when they are ready for review.

What Are Average Word Lengths for Content Types That You Offer?

Do you have a list of the content types and the average words that are already populated into your system?

Below I’ve provided a general idea of what the typical lengths are for various content types. As a reminder, you can always update the lengths based on your specific assignment. Your account manager can help you determine what the most appropriate length would be.

  • Blog Article – 500 words
  • eGuides – 1,500 words
  • White papers – 2,000 words
  • Case studies – 1,000 words

To give you an idea, this article is 85 words long.

What Are the Most Common Mistakes Companies Do With Their Content Marketing?

Content marketing is often something that is talked about within an organization – as something that you know you need to do but can’t seem to get around to.

It keeps falling farther and farther behind on your to-do list. Here are the most common mistakes companies make with their content marketing program:

They don’t consider the time it takes to write content

The ideas are great but putting pen to paper takes a lot more time than people realize. Additionally, time should be allotted for the research and the editing. Content marketers also optimize content for SEO by incorporating proper meta titles and meta descriptions, along with great links.

They start with high frequency and then lose steam

Content marketing takes time to develop results. Think of it like a diet – you eat healthy for one week, or maybe a month, and then go back to your old ways. Content marketing is that same way… unless you make a business change and truly adopt a practice of writing and promoting content on a regular basis – you won’t be able to make progress.

notes

The content isn’t focusing on a particular persona or Voice Profile

Content is most effective when it speaks to the reader. By understanding everything about the reader and narrowing in on what their pain points are – you can create content that adds value to the reader. People want to read articles that are helpful.

Start with benchmarks to create reasonable goals

Look at your google analytics to see what your current bounce rate is, pages viewed, and time spent on site. Use these metrics to create realistic goals to achieve once incorporating your content marketing program. Pages indexed will be hugely valuable as well.

How to Create a Holistic Content Strategy

Tasked to create a content marketing program and not sure where to start?

These questions are a great starting place for developing your strategy. Answer these questions and you will be well on your way to a content marketing program that justifies some serious ROI.

Why do I need to create a content strategy?

Creating content involves a lot more than just writing something and sending it out.

You have to think about what your company’s mission is, what your business goals are, who your audience is, and what exactly specific types or pieces of content need to achieve. You also have to do all of that within some sort of sequence in which you decide what you want to convey, how to structure it in the right words or visual form, what tools and resources are needed to get the job done, and how to ensure that everything does what it is supposed to do and how it is supposed to do it.

If you create content without a strategy in place, you are more than likely to miss the objective you are trying to hit, or deliver the message you are trying to convey, rendering your content creation initiatives a failure.
Read: Best practices for developing a successful content marketing strategy.

What is the goal/core message of this content?

The goal should answer the question, “What are you trying to accomplish with the content that you create?” For example, are you using the content to drive new leads, or to move people through the marketing funnel?

The core message contains the key concepts and messages about your company that should be present within the content that you create.

audience

Who is the audience of this content?

Is your content targeted at middle managers? Senior execs? External suppliers? Internal employees? The sales team? Perhaps you are targeting casual customers, or maybe even your most steadfast repeat customers.

Depending on your target audience, you need to tailor your content’s tone and level of technicality to those specific target groups and carefully choose the platforms on which you distribute and disseminate your material.

What tone should my content take?

Your content can take on a number of different tones. For example, content that is targeted at senior execs or decision-makers would take on a formal and professional tone, and content targeted at a younger demographic might take on a more persuasive, informal, or even a colorful or humorous tone. Your tone should reflect your brand and play well with your target audience.

For example, Wendy’s is known to use a very playful tone with all its branding, but Microsoft, which has a very large professional user base, often uses a more subtle and formal tone in its marketing and external communications. This contrasts with Apple and Google that often create content which can be called creative, sometimes quirky, and always ingenious – reflective of the images that both companies strive to maintain.
Read: Find a consistent voice for your company’s content.

What themes should the new content focus on?

The best way to pick a theme for your content is to focus on any one of the following:

  • what your key competencies are (this content will reiterate your commitment to that competency, such as quality for Toyota),
  • what market trends and insights you’ve discovered (this content will position you as an industry thought leader, such as IBM catering to the automated AI bot market),
  • problems that plague your specific industry (this content will position you as a creative problem solver, such as any Apple product, or more recently, Microsoft Surface products) or growing and expanding your business (this content will highlight the value, happy customer base, and product/service benefits that you offer, something GE has done for a long time).

What categories should the content fall into?

Content can be broadly categorized into educational or persuasive content. Different people are at different places along the product buying cycle, so to teach those at the top of the funnel who don’t know about your product you need educational material. 

Keep in mind, however, that educational material should include less direct selling about your company because too much of it can turn people off. However, for people further along the buying cycle (people who may know about your product but need to be convinced to make a purchase), you can use more persuasive and sales-oriented marketing content to close the deal, and that is the ultimate job of content, to begin with.

taking decision

What is the state of your existing content?

Assessing the state of existing content is made up of several separate yet related steps. First, you need to gauge how well current content is performing in the channels you are distributing it (which is discussed at the end of this article). Next, evaluate existing content against what your competitors are offering and general industry trends to ensure you are not creating outdated or irrelevant content. If the first two steps look fine, you need to apply best practices (explained below) to your content.

Finally, wherever possible, you need to optimize and automate the content creation process and workflow (also explained below) to ensure that your content is not only refined, polished, published and promoted in the right way but that you are also creating the right amount of content for all of the channels you maintain a presence on.

What are the immediate gaps in our existing content?

To answer this, you need to ask yourself if you are creating content around all your company’s core competencies versus just a few, and whether or not known customer pain points are being addressed within the sources you currently have at your disposal.

One way to do this is to pinpoint the channels that your target customers most frequently use (or that they can most easily be found on), and see what kinds of content, customer interactions and visibility you already have on those platforms.

Compare what you find against what people are saying, and tailor future content around trending topics and any insights you may uncover.

What are our competitors writing about?

This is easy to look up, but it is crucial to not missing the bigger picture. Your competitors may have found a lucrative niche, a message or approach that resonates better with customers that you could learn from.

Notice any trends in the content, for example, are they writing about one vertical more than others? Are they offering specific types of content formats that may be more appealing to their audience? All of this helps determine what to write about and how to convey the message appropriately.

Do we need a style guide, voice guide, or brand guideline?

Absolutely. Even if you don’t have one today, it can be developed slowly over time. Tempesta Media’s Voice Profile technology ensures that the writing style and voice of content created for you matches your company’s brand, and you can use our services to build out your branding and develop internal guidelines for all future content.

The Voice Profile also captures who your target audience is, how formal the writing should be, and all the other nuances our writers need to be aware of in order to create high-quality content for you. This is in addition to editing services, SEO, unlimited revisions, and more.

blogging

Who will be creating the content?

Content creation has become such an integral part of business success that there is an entire industry dedicated to it. To create content, you can hire freelancing content creators, in-house copywriters, or partner with a professional content creation company.

You can even write content yourself, but in most cases, it pays for business leaders to focus on running their business and either outsourcing content creation to a third party or hiring a team of in-house writers – but do this only if budgets allow and content requirements can justify and support such a dedicated function.

What timeline should I expect?

Creating content takes both time and money and, depending on the speed at which your industry rotates, you may need more or less content. On average, simply to stay relevant, you should publish at least one piece of relevant, insightful or educational content every week, so you’re looking at a turnaround time of one week per piece of content, but if you are aggressively trying to grow your customer base, you may need more regular posts and sales content going out, as much as two or three times a week.

Be careful, though; many people underestimate the time it takes to write just one quality post. It takes at least 2-3 hours of writing time to compose a 500-word blog, and this is excluding the time it takes to brainstorm topics, time spent editing and revising the content, and of course, adding any graphics and ultimately publishing it.

What types of content should be created?

You can write basic blog posts, have a mini e-book on a topic of your choice, create a podcast, send out a press release if you have had an interesting idea or a relevant event that you could talk to your audience about. If you work in a technical industry, you could even have a white paper written to break down a proposed solution or product, and send it out to the public for feedback, critiques and general opinions.

Who will be responsible for content governance?

Content delivery channels are important gateways and interface points between companies, their customers and the general public, so it is important to manage what content is publicly published, who has access and permission to do so, and that all published content matches your brand guidelines.

Small companies can have a reliable senior team member handle this important function, but larger enterprises should have a dedicated hire who oversees content governance and publishing.

Will there be a content development workflow (from person to person, division to division)?

Most issues with content creation arise because of a lack of clarity about what needs to be done, by whom, how, and by when. When you consider this alongside the fact that it is worth optimizing and automating anything that you do on a regular basis (from sales email funnels to content generation and customer outreach), you should definitely outline a flexible process in which content generation is first ideated/brainstormed, passed through screens and filters for feedback and improvement, and then passed forward for actual composition, editing, review, approval and publishing.

man typing

Where can the content be distributed?

You can distribute your content on your company website, on a social blogging site such as Medium, as an answer to a question in a relevant thread on curated information sites such as Quora or Reddit, and as insight or guest pieces on LinkedIn or other publications that are well-known and respected in your industry.

Once you have a piece of content ready, it can also be easily shared on social channels in the form of, say, a Facebook post or a tweet to the blog link, and you can even use email marketing strategies and pay for publication in premium news outlets (think of TechCrunch, HuffPost or Wired as premium outlets for the tech industry) to get the word out.

How will content be promoted?

Two of the most popular ways to promote online content are on social platforms (this content would take the form of, say, Facebook posts that can be promoted on the platform itself using paid promotion or social sharing by a dedicated social media manager handling content promotion), and bidding on Google search terms (using AdWords).

You can use one or both of these channels and promote your content on the channel that gives you the highest traction at the lowest cost.
Read: How to allocate your content marketing budget between creation and promotion.

How will success be measured?

A lot of content is created to increase brand exposure and customer awareness, so if you define success in these terms, then social platforms allow for fairly easy collection of basic stats on shares, likes, mentions, audience reach and overall views.

However, since those things don’t always translate directly into sales or an improved bottom line, you might want to measure success against more technical data such as actual sales (and where they came from), customer engagement levels, and turnaround times for things such as delivery or customer support responses.

How Does the Education Industry Preserve Engagement With Prospective Customers?

Although the education industry is spending more time on customer retention, many do not use every available tool out there, and more than a few lack good content to drive their marketing strategy.

But colleges, universities and trade academies are businesses, and to survive they must attract new customers (prospective students), engage those prospective students, and convert them into enrollees.
Here are three strategies that can help educational institutions accomplish these goals:

Use newer technology methods

Technology can either be a tool or a weapon depending on how it is used. For the education industry, there are two tools that can be valuable toward engaging prospective students: gaming and adaptive learning activities.

Remember, content as it relates to the education industry is not just about blog pieces, videos and podcasts; it is also about the type of learning content that students can enroll in online.

One way to engage prospective students is for institutions to offer more game-oriented or game-based learning, which boosts motivation, helps students retain more information and does wonders for their problem-solving skills.

Gamification is hands-on and interactive – two huge ways to boost user engagement. Adaptive learning follows a similar path.

Adaptive learning refers to online learning that is customized to match a user’s learning curve based on previous lessons he or she has completed.

That helps students learn at the appropriate level based on their existing understanding of the material. A one-size-fits all approach may not benefit students who learn at more measured rates.

idea

Keep content updated and fresh

The “buying” process for an educational institution is far longer than for a traditional business. In this case, buying refers to a prospective student who decides to enroll in some type of class or program at the school.

And because this process is so much longer, the content that educators offer must remain relevant and constantly updated.

This does not just refer to website content that may include helpful blogs and guides. Educational courses must also incorporate the most up-to-date information, theories and concepts.

Educational institutions may have to update their online textbooks and manuals to reflect the most recent and accepted information pertaining to a subject matter.

Schools should also update their sites several times per week and ensure that there is at least one new blog post every week. This will make users feel as if they are engaging with a site that is relevant and in tune with current events in education and society.

Remember, quality of content is much more important than quantity of content, so having two fresh pieces a week that are outstanding and valuable is far more important in engaging prospective students than 10 pieces of mediocre or throwaway content.

Focus on e-learning

Although many colleges and universities offer online learning, most do so at a loss to the bottom line.

But some marketing services are helping schools monetize online learning by opening up the subject matters that prospective students can “buy,” including courses in health sciences, business, computer technology, engineering, sciences, art, design, writing and sustainability.

There are three elements to focus on when schools attempt to sell online courses to the public, including:

  • Branding – Schools must communicate their culture and what makes their approach to learning unique.
  • Quality courses – Schools must offer high-end instruction and certification to prove the value of the course.
  • Target the audience – Schools must identify the ideal customer for each course, which will help them create content that this audience would find attractive.

Schools that take advantage of the growing trend toward online learning can attract new, motivated students; they can also make money doing so.

There are many services out on the market that offer course packages, marketing services and online course management, so schools interested in this new avenue of engaging prospects should investigate this further.

Engagement requires constant evaluation

Engaging prospective students is a full-time job that requires constant evaluation of existing content and existing technologies that can excite prospects and make them more likely to become “buyers.” Educational institutions must think like entrepreneurs because there is fierce competition and limited resources.

If you are interested in a review of your content marketing strategy, please contact us today.

You’ve worked hard to hone your trade.

Let us power your lead generation

We know your expertise is in building your business, not crafting digital content. That’s why we handle the content creation for you, with strategies tailored to convert readers into qualified leads.​

Focus on what you do best—leave generating
quality leads to us.​


It’s never been simpler to set your lead generation on autopilot.​