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Risk vs. Reward: How to Build a Diversified Content Portfolio

content marketing investment

Great content marketing looks a lot like a diversified investment portfolio.

Smart investors realize that different types of investments serve different purposes. Index funds, for example, offer a slow-but-steady return. And while they’ll never surprise you with stunning overnight returns, they’re virtually guaranteed to pay off in the long-term. Individual stocks are a higher risk, sure, but the potential upside is far greater.

Crucially, these investors also know that different classes of investment are strongest when used in combination. The strengths of one offset the weaknesses of another, and vice versa. There is no universal “best investment opportunity.” The right choices depend entirely on the goals you’re looking to achieve.

The same is true of content marketing. There is no “best type of content marketing”: each content lane, from search content to sales enablement to thought leadership, is stronger in some areas and weaker in others. Focusing solely on the latest marketing hack du jour is like slamming all of your disposable income into shares of the first tech company you stumble across. While there’s a chance it’ll work, there’s a far larger chance that it will fizzle out to nothing.

Instead, great content marketing strategies ensure that:

In this article, we’ll walk you through the relative strengths of the three pillars of a diversified content marketing strategy: search content, thought leadership and sales enablement.

1. Search Content: The Traffic Engine

Search-optimized content is like our index fund. Publish two search-optimized articles each week, fast-forward a year or two, and you’re virtually guaranteed to be sitting on a pile of keyword rankings and organic search traffic.

For that reason, search content is the primary growth engine behind most content marketing strategies. By systemically targeting relevant keywords with content, companies can ween themselves from an over-reliance on paid traffic and begin to grow their website traffic in a predictable, sustainable way. For many companies, this is where content marketing strategy starts and ends.

But while search content is great for generating traffic, it’s no panacea. The same traits that make “How to’s” and listicles so effective at ranking for keywords and matching search intent also limit their ability to provide ongoing value. Search content is, very often, too boring and situational to build a sizable audience or generate a significant number of backlinks.

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“Your readers are likely not part of a growing audience, but rather a continuous stream of people with a problem to solve. At the moment they need an answer, they search Google and find you. Your ‘audience’ is actually a different group of people each day.“

2. Thought Leadership: The Storyteller

Thought leadership refers to content created by people or brands with the intention of increasing their authority in an industry. It’s articles that share experiences, opinions and data. A VC explaining their investment thesis. A founder telling the story of how flat structure failed his company. A research company arguing that the consulting industry is doomed.

Where search content is weak, thought leadership is strong. It provides excitement and intrigue that SEO is hard-pressed to deliver. It builds brand affinity and creates a human connection between the reader and the business. In some cases, it even can go viral and provide a much-needed shot in the arm.

Blogs driven by thought leadership look like mountain ranges: alternating peaks-and-valleys of traffic, gradually trending upward over time. For many companies, that’s enough. But if you’re looking to build a predictable growth engine, churning out an ever-increasing number of leads each and every month, thought leadership alone might not be the answer.

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3. Sales Enablement: The Persuader

Sales enablement content is designed to accelerate the sales process using case studies, product comparisons and customer stories to address common questions and lend social proof to the decision-making process. In the same way that search content and thought leadership have distinct primary distribution channels (SEO and social sharing, respectively), sales enablement is distributed primarily by your sales team or through lead-nurturing sequences for self-service products.

Search content and thought leadership are focused primarily on education and storytelling. These are crucial objectives, but for content to deliver an ROI, it needs to result in sales. That’s where sales enablement is strongest. It’s the closer that capitalizes on the goodwill resulting from the rest of your content.

Crucially though, sales enablement content will rarely have an audience outside of your current prospects. Its usefulness depends on having an existing flow of inbound prospects, allowing you to convert, engage and nurture them towards sales. On its own, it’s unlikely to generate much in the way of traffic.

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Creating a Diversified Content Marketing Strategy

In the same way that only naive investors pile their capital into the latest hot tip, be wary of anyone who advocates for a one-size-fits-all approach to content marketing. The right mix of content marketing types is unique to your company, at the current moment in time, and it’s influenced by a host of factors:

Some companies might be best served by going all-in on thought leadership. Others might need search content to build brand awareness or sales enablement to convert existing traffic. Some companies can afford to justify all three.

The “right“ content marketing strategy will change as your company grows, your priorities shift, and you learn from your market. In fact, the only “wrong” approach is to pick a single type of content and assume it will achieve every ambition. Like investments, content marketing should be diversified.

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