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Content Marketing: How to Write Great Blog Posts

February 4, 2015 by Michele Elliott

Blog imageOriginal blog posts have become de rigueur in content marketing strategy.  And, while many small business owners know they should be writing a blog, they often don’t know where to start.

Why write blogs?

One of the most important things to realize is that your blog is an inexpensive, yet highly effective, marketing tool.

Blogs help small businesses achieve several important marketing goals at one time:

  • Building robust website content
  • Appearing higher in search results
  • Establishing their expertise in the community and marketplace
  • Helping customers get to know them
  • Developing a loyal customer base
  • Engaging customers and potential buyers
  • Attracting social media followers

Plan Blog Topics and Keywords

Map out your topics 3-6 months at a time, keeping in mind that everything you post should have a strategic purpose that directly relates to your business and marketing goals. There should be a regular interval between each post, as well as a deadline for every article. Make sure you identify who in your business will be writing each post and that they stick to the schedule. Your article plan should include an article title; keywords that you want to appear in the title, subheads and body; and a brief description of what you want the article to accomplish.

Basic Blog Format

If you look at blogs as a very subtle soft-sell marketing method, rather than a press release or a news article, you can start to envision where you want to go with the copy.  What types of challenges/problems/wants/needs do your customers have and what do you do to help those customers? Educate your customers, and then provide tips and solutions for them.

I usually shoot for an ideal range of 500-800 words per post. I like to use subheads because they help with SEO, as well as make the copy “skimmable”. Other ways to help readers skim your text is by using bullets, numbers and lists.

Provide Links in the Text

It’s important to include some text links back to your website to help with the post’s SEO rank. I am not a big fan of overdoing text links. I think it’s a turnoff and, anyway, most people view articles with too many links as overt selling. The whole point of doing blogs is to NOT be too obvious. That being said, if you have a good opportunity to link to more information on a certain topic, especially if it’s another post you wrote, include the link.

Don’t Plagiarize

Your blog needs to be ORIGINAL. It should be in your words, written in your tone, in language that you use and that your customers understand. Statistics and supporting quotes should be cited.

Your entire site’s search rankings can be seriously penalized if Google detects too much duplication on even one page on your site. That means, if Google deems that your site contains too much duplication of any other online page, even one on your own site, your site will start appearing lower in search results. And believe me, Google CAN and WILL know. To protect yourself from plagiarism, invest in Copyscape, an inexpensive and very easy to use tool that can check each article for duplication/plagiarism.  There is no hard and fast rule about how much duplication is OK. In my opinion, your duplication rate should be less than 10% of the text for any one source.

Be Relevant

Your blog posts need to provide relevant, valuable information that people are searching for online. Google and other search engines are always looking for ways to provide more value to their users and customers. The more valuable your information (i.e., the more people that are searching for it), the more Google will reward you with higher search results.

For more information on content marketing and tips to write effective copy, visit my blog or contact me. Look at all those links!  I just broke my own rule.

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Filed Under: Blog Posts, Content Marketing, Copywriting Tagged With: blog posts, content marketing, copywriting, low-cost marketing, small business

7 Keys to Effective Marketing Writing

December 4, 2014 by Michele Elliott

writing-520x359For many business owners, writing marketing copy does not come naturally. But whether they are managing their social media pages, developing website content or writing letters to clients, many business owners need to write marketing copy at one point or another.  I recently spoke at a marketing session for the Lord Fairfax branch of the Virginia Small Business Development Center, and after my talk, more than a few people came up to me for pointers on effective copywriting.

Effective Copywriting Starts with a Goal

Well-written copy can make or break an ad or marketing piece. For marketing writing to be effective, it needs to accomplish your goal. What do you want that bit of writing to do for your business? Do you want it to generate solid leads, brand your company, establish your expertise, reinforce a message, raise awareness, combat a negative perception or increase referrals? Once you know your goal, you can begin crafting your message.

Here are the seven main steps I take when writing copy for a client:

1. Give the reader a reason to read. What is the benefit to them? Why is your service or product valuable to them? What can you do for them that your competition can’t? What is the added value that you provide to your customers? Knowing all of the benefits (big and small) and being able to clearly communicate them up front is essential.

2. Be the person you are selling to. Get to know what makes your target demographic tick. What are their wants and needs? What irritates them? What “language” do they speak? Are they male or female, young or old, educated or not? What are they passionate about? When you can get into the mind of the person you are selling to, and can speak their language, you will naturally be able to communicate appealing information about your products.

3. Don’t make it all about you. Eliminate most of the “I, me, my, mine, we, us, our, ours” and instead focus on “you, your, yours” when writing copy. This will also help you accomplish step number 1, above. When you have to talk about them and not you, it’s easier to focus on what is important to them. Instead of writing copy that explains what your company does and how it does it, tell the customer how their lives will be easier, better, more fun, more beautiful, richer, less stressful, healthier and more. Readers connect quickly to copy that identifies with aspects of their own lives. This connection personalizes your copy for them and makes it more effective.

4. Clean up the clutter. When you provide too much information and detail in your copy, you risk losing the prospect’s attention, or worse, the possibility of them forgetting or missing the most important part of your message. Stick to what they need to know to make a purchase, make a phone call or whatever it is that you want them to do. People don’t need to know all the technical details of how it works – they need to know how it benefits them and how it is better than the competitor’s product (faster, cheaper, more reliable).

5. Tell them what to do. The whole reason you are writing the copy is to motivate your audience to act. But, so many pieces of copy fail to actually tell the reader what to do. Include a strong call to action every time. Create a sense of urgency and give them instructions (“Call now”, “Share for a chance to win”).

6. Get a proofreader. Don’t lose credibility because of mistakes in your copy. Your word processing program’s spelling and grammar check is not going to tell you when you are using a word in the wrong context, and there are many other types of errors those programs cannot catch. So, you need to print out your copy and read it carefully and then show it to a proofreader who is an expert in spelling and grammar. This goes for social media posts, too. Don’t post on the fly. Type it, check it, have it checked again, then cut and paste.

7. Ask for help. If you still find the task of effective copywriting to be daunting, ask for help. Ask yourself if doing the writing is an effective use of your time. The Elliott Group provides extremely reasonable copywriting services to a variety of businesses and has expertise in every type of marketing medium. Let us craft an effective marketing message for you.

 

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Filed Under: Advertising, Copywriting, Marketing, Small business marketing, Writing Tagged With: copywriting, marketing, small business, writing

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