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7 Fluff-Free Reasons Your Online Content Isn’t Spreading

 

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Does this sound familiar? You’ve read the books, blogs like this one and attended the webinars/conferences. You get it. Online content is important. You understand we are entering a huge shift in marketing and promotion going from product pushers to trusted resources and that drive, creativity and passion count more than a big budget, especially with all the amazing tools available online.

Trusted resources like you create valuable, interesting, educational and/or entertaining content.

This might be in the form of a blog, web show, online magazine, webinar series, ebook and the list goes on.

So, you decide to hop on the content train for your business either by creating or curating the best content in your niche.

But it isn’t spreading. Nobody is commenting. Nothing is really happening. You start to get nervous. “Is this worth it?” you begin to ask yourself.

Why isn’t it spreading? Sort of like looking in the mirror and saying, “Is it me or is it you?”

Normally there isn’t just one answer and it isn’t black and white. Some things directly matter and others go a little bit deeper with more abstract, yet equally important ideas like trust and authority. But, everything adds up.

Here are a few reasons why your content is lonely and how to get back on the right track with a few hundred or thousand friends:

1. Bad Web Design

If you website looks stuck in 1997 with a construction guy digging and music playing or like a run of the mill template, there is a lack of credibility and trust. Do you share content from sites that you don’t trust?

I wish it wasn’t true, but looks matter. Think about first impressions. It is worth investing in a site that is functional and reflects your personality and brand.

2. Lacking Ease Of Sharing

The best content is like peanut butter, easily spreadable. Easily spreadable doesn’t mean that it takes a scholar to find how to share easily via social networks, email, etc.

Enabling your community, no matter how big or small to share with ease can make a huge difference.

Do you have one click sharing?

3. Product Focused Content

The best content isn’t about your product. The harsh reality is nobody cares about any of our products. People do care about interests, passions, hobbies, solving their problems, getting answer to key questions, learning etc.

For example, let’s pretend you sell dog food. A mistake is to make the content about the food. Meaning features and benefits.

The fix here is to focus on an interest or passion. People aren’t passionate about dog food. Instead, I bet there are plenty of people passionate about dogs. Training dogs, dog health, etc. A better play is for the content to focus on the bigger picture and not just the product. 

4. Not-You Focused Content

Injecting personality, passion and quirks into your content? Always a good thing. Making it about you and how amazing you are. Yikes.

Make it about them, not you. It will do better. Trust me.

5. Lack Of Passion

If you aren’t passionate about your content, it will show and will hinder progress. Nobody spreads half-baked material. If you can’t get excited and pumped up about your content, how can you expect anyone else to be?

6. Unclear, Boring Or Ridiculously Long Titles

I get it. Don’t judge a book by its cover or a piece of content by its title. Fair enough. However, the reality of the matter is titles matter, a lot. They matter for search engines and humans. When you have 50 titles in front of you, which ones jump out? Why?

Spending time on titles is worth the time.

7. Oops, I Forgot My Marketing

We have all fell into this trap. You spend all the time creating the content and posting it and then no time is left topromote it. You can have the greatest content in the world, but if you don’t spend time marketing and promoting it, then it will be the loneliest, saddest, greatest most useful content in the world.

My recommendation, especially when getting rolling is to spend 80% of total “content time” marketing and promoting.

This means creating one-on-one connections on social media sites, expanding your network, digital schmoozing, perhaps hosting an event or meet up. Often the best online marketing happens offline.   Content plus connections equals success. You have to give to get.

One bonus fun fact: Time. Trust, influence, authority and community isn’t built with just one post or overnight. It takes blood, sweat and tears.  While the opportunity to create has been democratized, that means you have to work hard to stick out. Keep at it, experiment, refine brick by brick, click by click, over time you might be the ruler of the next content empire.

What has been your experience? What would you add to the list?

This was a guest post by David Siteman Garland. Garland is the Founder of The Rise To The Top, The #1 Non-Boring Resource For Building Your Business Smarter, Faster, Cheaper. He hosts RISE, a web show for entrepreneurs and marketers featuring unique interviews and advice, and The Rise To The Top TV show on ABC. He is the upcoming author of Smarter, Faster, Cheaper: Non-boring, Fluff-free Strategies for Marketing and Promoting Your Business (Wiley 2010) now available for pre-order.

Photo Credit: ginnerobot 

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Posted by Kipp Bodnar on Fri, Jul 23, 2010 @ 12:00 PM

COMMENTS

Thanks everyone. Always great to write for Hubspot!

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 1:00 PM by David Siteman Garland


Great Great Great.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 1:03 PM by jami


Great article - "Lacking Ease Of Sharing" and "Product Focused Content" seem to be the most common things I run across.  
 
IMHO "Bad Web Design" is only a factor if it is really really bad. I follow several blogs that don't have "good" or even "OK" design. I do so, because I like their content.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 1:38 PM by Jordan Levy


David, 
 
Fantastic job on this guest post. 
 
Great to see that you're using different sources to get the word out about "you." 
 
The Franchise King®

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 2:03 PM by Joel Libava


All good stuff - maybe add RSS to sharing. Lots of people like to use readers for their blog consumption. Or maybe just geeks like me.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 2:06 PM by Michael Daehn


Michael: Good point on RSS. 
 
Joel: Thanks my man. Always trying to help. 
 
Jordan: Very fair point (as do I), but there are lots that are REALLY bad and some that just aren't inspired. I've noticed that there are other benefits such as media coverage (traditional/new) with an inspired design.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 2:12 PM by David Siteman Garland


Too infrequent. Nobody wants or spreads content from some prima donna that only offers content once or twice a month. Thing is, you gottta produce. It's all about flow, son and daughters. Content and quality are important, but regular flow is far more important. A super-cool post every 15-20 days means nothing. Rather a Web 'log' (gasp! What a concept!) of your daily discoveries and insights is FAR better and will get you shared and make you prosperous. -j

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 2:21 PM by John Maloney


I think I fall into the "I forgot my marketing". I spend about 20% of my content time marketing and 80% creating. I'll give your 80% marketing a try. Thank you for the article.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 2:32 PM by Jessica Ojeda


John - Great point on frequency. Nothing worse than those "Oh sorry I haven't posted in 48575756 days" posts. 
 
Jessica - My pleasure. Now get out there and market :)

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 3:34 PM by David Siteman Garland


Great post--especially Point 4, in which Garland tells us to talk about reader problems and interests and not about ourselves/our organization/our products. A little bit of the "me" stuff is OK, but only occasion and when it benefits customers and prospects.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 5:18 PM by Merryl Rosenthal


Great point. I love blogs as an internet marketing tool and feel that they should the focal point of all online marketing not the website. With that in mind, use social media to promote the blog thus creating interest and then to the site to connect as a prospect.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 5:59 PM by doug hay


Great article, David! 
 
This list is so true. A couple of stand outs that I personal face that you listed are a lack of ease of sharing. That is something that I really need to work on myself, especially just starting out. The other stand out on your list is the "Not-You Focused Content." It still surprises me how many new blogs I run into that seem to find ways to turn any topic into a self-promotion.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 6:39 PM by Kerry Buchanan


The marketing part is the most overlooked and misunderstood. Perhaps it is because we don't understand what we have to market? If we could just forget who we think we are, everything would change.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 6:53 PM by Ray Holley & Linda Deir


Excellent thoughts David. I've especially been trying to work on better titles.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 8:32 PM by Justin lukasavige


Wow. Me and my readers think my content is awesome but I FAIL on numbers 1, 2 and 6. Luckily am in the middle of a blog redesign to fix 1 and 2. 6 is hopeless. Thank you for this post. So not fluffy:).

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 9:13 PM by LPC


Great post. I particularly like the one about frequency (I have just moved to daily posts - with great trepidation because my "advisors" were saying people don't want to hear from you every day. But the positive response has been fantastic! 
 
Also love the lucky last bonus tip. How many overnight successes are there that were really "overnight"? Most of them have spend thousand of hours being a "nobody" before they became an overnight success. 
 
Cheers 
 
B

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 9:25 PM by Brenda Thomson


Thanks for the tips. I think I have found myself struggeling with all 7 at one time or another.

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 10:33 PM by Jon White


Good post !

posted on Friday, July 23, 2010 at 11:06 PM by John


Great tips. I think I have most of those covered, but the marketing/promoting tip is great and I think I miss the boat on that one for sure.

posted on Saturday, July 24, 2010 at 7:53 AM by Stephan J Smith, DC


Hi, Forgot to say this is a good post! Particularly useful for coaching know-it-alls, baby-boomers and newbies. I would also add to be sure you have contact information. It's 'social' media after all. It is meant to be shared. Contact info is obvious and often absent. It is impossible to find who is writing on way too many sites and blogs. Also, be sure there is no spam in your comments. That show the author/owner might be lazy and probably not reading the comments. Good idea to comment on comments to help sharing and flow. Also, always ask what you want people to do. Be very specific. People are often child-like -- they want to know and to be told what exactly to do! Ask people to share, comment, download, get the trial, etc. That helps sharing. Meanwhile, show people you traffic metrics. Be transparent. Most people are curious if the content is popular how it is tracking. If it looks important people will share it. Concerning attention to marketing your blog, please see: 
 
 
 
http://www.networksingularity.com/ 
 
 
 
-j  
 

posted on Saturday, July 24, 2010 at 8:02 AM by John Maloney


Great thoughts everyone. Appreciate the comments and feedback. So glad you enjoyed the article.

posted on Saturday, July 24, 2010 at 10:55 AM by David Siteman Garland


Great post David - very informative - and so true. For those just starting out paying attention to marketing is probably the most important. There should be a requirement that anyone who starts an online business must take a marketing course!

posted on Sunday, July 25, 2010 at 7:04 AM by Diane Thomas


Good post, thanks for the info.

posted on Sunday, July 25, 2010 at 6:30 PM by SaaS


These are really eye-openers for those who run a business online. Design, content and promotion are very important.

posted on Monday, July 26, 2010 at 12:33 AM by Service Desk


Great post! It's really given me some valuable insight into promoting content. Thanks

posted on Monday, July 26, 2010 at 2:52 AM by GetSmarter


As usual very helpful information for me and for our small business clients. All issues we wrestle with enjoy reading Hubspot's blog never walk off without something to tuck away. Thanks

posted on Monday, July 26, 2010 at 7:16 AM by Herb Lawrence


Thanks, Diane! And everyone else :)

posted on Monday, July 26, 2010 at 7:19 AM by David Siteman Garland


Very good article especially the part about content time and the handy metric.I do fall into the trap of waiting fro the flood of replies to my blog and emails,it doesn't happen without effort.

posted on Tuesday, July 27, 2010 at 5:17 AM by angus


Numbers 2 and 7 really stood out to me and are very true.

posted on Tuesday, July 27, 2010 at 9:38 AM by Mckinley - SEO and Internet Marketing


Great "big picture" view, and very profound, thanks David. We'll be checking out RISE.

posted on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 at 1:24 PM by Larry LaFata


Time, time, time - that is so important. That's not to underplay all other comments - especially those centered around quality of content and frequency - but experience shows it always takes longer than you - or maybe more importantly - the CEO thinks it should. Too often promising activity is derailed too early and that is such a criminal waste of effort. 
 
 
 
Great, thought provoking article.

posted on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 at 2:48 PM by Ian Hilder


Interesting how often we think success happens overnight instead of realising that 10000 hours was often put in and then another 10000 hours. Also as someone said, recently said - reciprocity. You get interested in what I offer because I am interested in what you need.  
And as an aside, when I blog from my heart rather than my head, I enjoy it more and get more readers

posted on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 at 3:53 PM by Roberta


Great comment Roberta. I have been in "sales" most of my working life. Recently signed up a great new valuable client. Somebody told me I had got lucky - yes I had, but I had made 985 calls, emails or other contacts over a four month period to get "lucky." The old adage is true, you get out what you put in. 
 
BTW - that was an outbound campaign and those statics also illustrates how ridiculous that approach is!

posted on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 at 5:40 PM by Ian Hilder


David, 
 
Article really struck home for me. What I've made work for companies I've never been able to do for myself. Sink all this time into creating content, but then have none left over to promote. To go out and find the people who'd find it interesting. Hopefully mistakes I can start to correct! 
 
- Tewks 
www.themarketingmojo.com

posted on Saturday, July 31, 2010 at 1:06 PM by Tewks


Thanks for a good post and comments. BTW, title grammar coud be better. It is 'Fluff-free" not "Fluff-Free" acording to English Language Institute at the University of Delaware. -j

posted on Saturday, July 31, 2010 at 2:19 PM by John Maloney


I'm trying so hard not to fall into the point 6 trap,never could keep things brief.

posted on Monday, August 02, 2010 at 7:36 AM by angus


Excellent article on spreading online content! Thank you for posting. 
 
Tony V

posted on Saturday, August 21, 2010 at 10:45 PM by Website Consulting


Comments have been closed for this article.