Monday, April 29, 2019

BIGLIST of Top Social Media Marketing Blogs for 2019

Social Media Marketing Blogs

Social Media Marketing Blogs The world of Social Media is probably responsible for more innovation in digital marketing over the past 5 to 10 years than nearly any other discipline. From ephemeral story based content to live video to all the things being done with data for more personalized marketing, staying in top of what's real vs. the hype is increasingly difficult. Top help marketers find great sources of marketing advice, we've curated the BIGLIST of marketing blogs and more recently a marketing blogs from martech companies. Adding to that curation effort is today's list of social media marketing blogs. This list focuses in on blogs covering all aspects of social media marketing including the usual suspects of platforms including Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and LinkedIn as well as newer platforms like TikTok. From trends to strategies to tactics to analytics, this group of blogs about social media and marketing is a great mix of big names, publications, platforms and a few names that are hopefully new to you. 1. Adweek Social Pro Daily Our favorite post: Social Networks Finally Bypassed Print Newspapers as a Primary Source of News 2. Andrea Vahl Blog Our favorite post: Facebook Video Ads - What's Working Now 3. Awario Blog Our favorite post: 10 of the best social media marketing tools for 2019 4. Brian Solis Our favorite post: The Past, Present And Future Of Social Media – How We Fell To The Dark Side And Why The Force Is With Us 5. Brand24 Blog Our favorite post: A Complete Guide to Social Media Analysis 6. CinchShare Blog Our favorite post: Grow your team on Facebook by doing these 3 things 7. Digimind Blog Our favorite post: Optimize Your Content Marketing Strategy in 13 Steps with Social Media Intelligence 8. DreamGrow Blog Our favorite post: How To Integrate Social Media With eCommerce in 2019 9. Facebook Business Blog Our favorite post: Turn Interested Shoppers Into Buyers with a Guided Shopping Experience in Messenger 10. Falcon Insights Hub Our favorite post: 5 Social Media Trends to Watch in 2019 11. Gary Vaynerchuk Blog Our favorite post: 5 LinkedIn Marketing Strategies for 2019 12. Gleam Blog Our favorite post: Stop Buying Likes: 25+ Tips to Drive Real Engagement on Facebook 13. Grow Our favorite post: What Is Your Social Media Marketing Purpose? (If You Don't Know, This Will Help) 14. Hopper HQ Blog Our favorite post: How to Measure B2B Social Media Marketing Success 15. Hot in Social Media Our favorite post: How to Use TikTok Like a PRO: Actionable Tips for Marketers 16. Iconosquare Blog Our favorite post: Instagram Marketing Strategy: Your A-Z Guide 17. Instagram Business Blog Our favorite post: Creative Secrets of Instagram Stories 18. Jeff Bullas Blog Our favorite post: 9 Insider Tips For Increasing Your LinkedIn Leads 19. Jon Loomer Blog Our favorite post: How to Edit a Facebook Ad and Retain Social Proof 20. Karen's PR & Social Media Blog Our favorite post: Super Bowl 2019: Trends & Takeaways from a Social Media Professor 21. Katie Lance Blog Our favorite post: How to Attract Your Dream Client Through Social Media and Storytelling 22. Keyhole Blog Our favorite post: Hashtags: A Beginner’s Guide and How to Use them Effectively - Keyhole 23. Later Blog Our favorite post: Real or Fake: 5 Instagram Algorithm Rumors Explained 24. LinkedIn Marketing Solutions Blog Our favorite post: 10 Content Ideas for your LinkedIn Page 25. Louise Myers Visual Social Media Blog Our favorite post: How to Boost Your Social Media Strategy for 2019 26. Madalyn Sklar Blog Our favorite post: How to Grow Your Twitter Community: 7 Essential Tips 27. Meltwater Blog: Social Media Our favorite post: Social Sidekick: Your Monthly Guide to Social Holidays, Themes, and Noteworthy Events 28. NetBase Blog Our favorite post: Social Media Monitoring vs Social Listening – Yes, There’s a Difference! 29. Planoly Blog Our favorite post: How to Stay Motivated with Your Blog and Instagram 30. Problogger Our favorite post: How to Start a Blog When You're Not an Expert: 11 Ways to Make it Work 31. Snapchat for Business Our favorite post: CPG on Snapchat: Why Gen Z and millennials make all the difference 32. Socialnomics Our favorite post: 22 Social Media Tips From The Pros To Skyrocket Your 2019 ROI 33. Social Insider Blog Our favorite post: The Most Impactful Social Media Trend That Businesses Should Integrate It In 2019 34. Social Media Examiner Our favorite post: 10 Metrics to Track When Analyzing Your Social Media Marketing 35. Social Media Explorer Our favorite post: p And Coming Social Media Trends Driven By Millennials And Generation Z 36. Social Media Lab (Agorapluse) Our favorite post: LinkedIn Post Length: Does Data Support the Idea that Longer is Better? 37. Social Media Today Our favorite post: Social Media Calls to Action: 19 Words & Phrases to Generate More Engagement 38. Social Media Week News & Insights Our favorite post: Boost Your Instagram Stories Game for 2019 With These 10 Practices 39. Social Report Blog Our favorite post: 10 Top Social Media Scheduling Tools to Save Time in 2019 40. Social Sorted Our favorite post: 60+ April Social Media Ideas - Videos, GIFs and more! 41. Spiderworking Our favorite post: Relationship Marketing With Jessika Phillips, Pots Of Gold And LinkedIn Networking 42. Sue B Zimmerman Our favorite post: How To Grow Instagram Followers in 2019 43. The Social Media Hat Our favorite post: How to Create 26 Pieces Of Content From A Facebook Live 44. Talkwalker Blog Our favorite post: Social media trends that will impact 2019 45. Twitter Marketing Blog Our favorite post: 10 ways marketing changed with Twitter 46. Unmetric Blog Our favorite post: Brands vie for the throne in the game of social media marketing One trend I've noticed is that many individuals that have really made a name for themselves as trusted voices in the social media space during the formative years of the industry simply are not blogging as much or have diversified into other areas of marketing. At the same time, a steady drumbeat of social media marketing advice can be found amongst a smaller number of highly focused industry blogs and companies serving the social media marketing industry. Speaking of the social media marketing industry, you may have noticed some well known social media marketing technology brands are not on the above list. That's because we've already included them in the martech list, but they certainly belong in this collection, so here they are: If you're more interested in following specific people in the world of social media marketing, then be sure to check out this list of social media marketing influencers for 2019. Which social media marketing blogs would you add?  

The post BIGLIST of Top Social Media Marketing Blogs for 2019 appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Top Takeaways from LinkedIn’s New ‘Enlightened Tech Buyer’ Report

Key Takewaways from LinkedIn's Enlightened Tech Buyer Report

Key Takewaways from LinkedIn's Enlightened Tech Buyer Report Technology is one of the fastest-growing B2B sectors, for reasons that are self-evident. As new solutions and innovations continue to enhance the way businesses operate across every industry, every key department has increasing tech needs and buying power these days. The folks at LinkedIn* recently released a 2019 global report, The Enlightened Tech Buyer: Powering Customer Decisions from Acquisition to Renewal, and it merits attention from marketers of all stripes. As the “enlightened” descriptor implies, tech buyers (for reasons that are also self-evident) tend to be ahead of the curve when it comes to research, consumption, and purchase behaviors. Today we’ll take a deeper look at LinkedIn’s new data around this trendsetting cohort, breaking down five key revelations within.

5 Telling Trends Revealed in LinkedIn’s Tech Buyer Report

Here are some of the most eye-opening tidbits we saw based on LinkedIn’s survey of “5,241 global professionals who participated in or influenced the purchase of various hardware or software solutions at their organization within the last three months.”

#1 - Tech Buying Committees are Expansive and Diverse

We all know that, in general, B2B buying committees are expanding faster than the Night King’s army of wights. This dynamic is especially pronounced in the tech space. “Where previously 3/4 of enterprise employees were part of technology decision-making,” LinkedIn reports, “today the total universe of end-users and decision-makers who impact business technology investments encompasses 4/5 of employees (roughly 86%).” Tech Buying Decision-Making As tech products and services become increasingly integrated with every aspect of an organization, more voices are coming into play. End users, external influencers, and cross-functional stakeholders all tend to have a role. This reinforces the imperative of establishing strong brand awareness throughout a business, which is a central focus of account-based marketing.  

#2 - The Purchase Cycle is Shortening

The report notes that the process of reviewing, selecting, and implementing new tech solutions has accelerated over the past few years, with the average purchase cycle now checking in at about 25 months. This could be viewed as good news or bad news, depending on how you look at it. On the one hand, that’s still a fairly long timespan, providing plenty of opportunity for marketing content to make an impact. Meanwhile, the increase in velocity could suggest buyers are becoming more deliberate and urgent in identifying solutions. But on the other hand, this also means that we as marketers have a smaller window than before to engage and persuade. We now need to make each interaction count more than ever — especially if we’re pursuing a new account. LinkedIn’s study shows that shortlists are becoming more competitive than ever for vendors.

#3 - Vendor Websites Are a Prime Resource

Across every B2B tech category, vendor website/mobile app is the top research destination for buyers. In aggregate, this source is followed by blogs/forums/discussion boards, product review websites, and technology media/trade journals: In short, buyers are seeking out trustworthy information — be it from a company’s own website or from unbiased third party resources. This accentuates the importance of building credibility with best-answer content, which can satisfy a decision maker’s questions during research while also positioning your brand as helpful and knowledgeable.

#4 - Buyers Want Partners, Not Sellers

Above all, tech buyers value the overall quality of a product or service above all when choosing a vendor. (Duh.) But the next two factors are interesting: both the ability to consistently meet a buyer’s needs, and the ability to answer questions to a buyer’s satisfaction, rank above affordability/pricing in importance: Choosing a Vendor This is why the customer experience is becoming such an overarching imperative. Effective marketing now goes beyond the scope of traditional functions. Brands need to be readily available, with the right content at the right time. Strategies must account for every touch point. Always-on approaches are becoming the norm. And this level of attentiveness should go beyond the actual purchase itself...  

#5 - Smooth Implementation is Essential

Per LinkedIn, “The #1 indicator of customer renewal success is successful adoption and product satisfaction.” No surprise there. But it’s another reminder of why the full customer experience needs to be addressed. “The data shows direct vendor engagement among buyers dropping off in later stages of purchase, meaning that there’s an opportunity to be more present and engaged with customers post-sale,” according to the report. “Marketers need to play an active role in the implementation and adoption process of new technology. A seamless customer experience also demands alignment with customer support in activities, training and key education resources.” How can marketing continue to shape experiences in these later stages and after the sale? It’s a vital consideration for profitability, since we all know the relative cost of acquiring new customers compared to retaining existing ones.

Follow the Tech Buyers

None of the nuggets revealed in LinkedIn’s “Enlightened Tech Buyer” report are especially surprising, but they do reinforce some of the trends we see playing out at large:
  • Buying committees are becoming more distributed
  • Researchers seek out objective information and best-answer content
  • We need to help, not sell
  • Marketing is starting to impact more parts of the customer experience
To get the full scoop on today’s B2B tech buyer preferences, check out LinkedIn’s report. *Disclosure: LinkedIn is a TopRank Marketing client.

The post Top Takeaways from LinkedIn’s New ‘Enlightened Tech Buyer’ Report appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.

Monday, April 22, 2019

10 Inspiring Examples of B2B Influencer Marketing in Action

B2B Influencer Marketing Examples

B2B Influencer Marketing Examples While Instagram influencer marketing is expected to hit $8 billion in spend by 2020, the growth trajectory of influencer marketing is not limited to consumer brands. B2B companies are also realizing the value of collaborating with influential experts for marketing purposes and count the practice as one of the top 4 tactics planned for 2019, according to a study by Spiceworks of B2B tech marketers in North America and Europe. Many B2B brands are considering engaging influencers for marketing but are not clear on exactly how or what the best practices are. Having worked with B2B brands that range from Dell to SAP to LinkedIn on influencer marketing programs over the past 6 years, I’ve had a chance to dig deep into exactly what makes influencer marketing work for B2B. To help illustrate how business brands we work with are driving results with influencer marketing, I’ve pulled together ten examples of B2B companies that represent a mix of approaches and performance outcomes.

B2B tech marketers’ adoption of influencer marketing is expected to grow to 48% by the end of 2019. @marketingcharts

Prophix Influencer Marketing Example

1. Prophix - Driving a Message of Innovation and Influence with Interactive Audio

Situation: Prophix is a corporate performance management software solutions company serving the finance industry. They believed that finance leaders have the opportunity to shape the future of business and take a more prominent seat at the leadership table. Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning will be critical to the innovation of finance, so Prophix wanted to start conversations and answer key questions on the role of AI in the next evolution of finance amongst its target audience. Solution: To build thought leadership for the brand around AI and ML innovations in finance amongst its audience, experts collaborated to co-create an industry resource. To add a tech-savvy flavor to the content experience of this resource, a simulated AI personality voice named Penny was created to help users navigate a microsite featuring industry experts. The site was titled, Adapt & Innovate: AI and the Next Evolution of Finance. The microsite was complemented with a mix of content including promotional motion graphics video, email promotions, landing page, supporting blog content, social content and custom graphics for the contributing influencers to share. Results: 642% increase in engagement, new relationships with top influencers and numerous conversations amongst the target audience about AI and finance in connection with the Prophix brand. DivvyHQ Influencer Marketing Example

2. DivvyHQ - Create Thought Leadership & Lead Gen Momentum with Multi-Campaign Influencer Program

Situation: As an award-winning content planning and marketing software company, DivvyHQ wanted to elevate its reputation and more actively engage potential buyers. Solution: A survey was conducted to surface top challenges and insights around content planning and marketing, sparking a multi-campaign program focused on future-proofing content marketing that included over 30 marketing influencers. Each of the 5 campaigns focused on content and influencers specific to the topic ranging from the research report to a strategy ebook to a series of video interviews about content planning. The final campaign repurposed the “best of content” from the first 4 campaigns into an interactive microsite using a Back to the Future theme. Each campaign was supported by blog posts, organic social content, influencer promotion and some paid social. Results: Each campaign exceeded goals including 300% more downloads of the research report, hitting some KPI goals within a week of publishing, thousands of video views, new relationships with top marketing industry influencers and 140% of one conversion KPI within a week of publishing. Introhive Influencer Marketing Example

3. Introhive - Improve Lead Quality with Influencer Insights and Research

Situation: The legal industry has been slow to adopt Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems, something that Introhive, an automation solutions provider wanted to change. Solution: With the goals of raising awareness and leads from the legal community, Introhive wanted to engage the audience they were marketing to through an industry survey and insights. The survey identified the top challenges and Introhive designed a Playbook to solve those problems with a combination of brand insight and expertise from speakers at the industry’s Legal Marketing Association event. During the conference, the contributors shared the playbook and Introhive promoted it using the event hashtag. Additional pieces of the content mix included 12 blog posts, landing page, organic and influencer social shares, paid social and email promotions. Results: Improved marketing qualified lead quality, more playbook downloads in the first month than in the entire lifetime of previous reports, nearly 50% of all brand blog content views for the quarter and an 85% increase in new Twitter followers. Cherwell Software Influencer Marketing Example

4. Cherwell Software - Achieve Thought Leadership, Engagement & Lead Gen Goals with Influence Optimization

Situation: With ambitious objectives to continue its rapid growth, Cherwell Software wanted to increase brand awareness as a leading ITSM software provider and develop a network of IT influencers. Solution: Using insights gained from research of target accounts, 15 influencers were researched, identified and engaged to co-create content and promotions around next-generation IT Service Management. The content mix included blog posts, IT Service Management 2020 ebook, landing page and both paid/organic social content for influencers to share. Results: The ebook was viewed 170% more often than previous assets and shared nearly 2,000 times. Additionally, this one campaign was accountable for 22% of all sales leads for the entire year. SAP SuccessFactors Influencer Marketing Example

5. SAP SuccessFactors - Increase Performance with a More Sophisticated Influencer Mix

Situation: Wellness programs are common but SAP SuccessFactors wanted to accentuate the importance of employee wellness from a more holistic approach to wellbeing. Solution: To raise awareness of their health care management suite, SAP SuccessFactors developed a program to share relevant, useful and actionable insights about wellbeing from trusted experts, peers and even one business celebrity. Just as the best wellness solutions are holistic, so was this approach to partnering with influencers including industry influencers, internal experts, SAP partners and clients. The content mix included an ebook titled The True Impact of Health and Well-Being featuring 10 influencers, motion graphics, landing page, social content for the brand and influencers to share. Results: 272% increase over the goal and a 68% conversion rate on the ebook downloads. Influencer shares represented 86% of all ebook views and 69% of the conversions. Dell Technologies Influencer Marketing Example

6. Dell Technologies - Increase Brand Thought Leadership with Influencer Interview Podcast

Situation: While many companies focus on working with influencers, Dell Technologies wanted to partner with industry influencers to simultaneously create useful content for their customers and increase the influence of their internal experts. Solution: Dell has developed relationships with a network of influencers including Mark Schaefer and Doug Karr, who host the Dell Luminaries podcast. Their discussions with technology visionaries from inside Dell and out, putting a human face on technology innovation. Results: The Dell Luminaries project effectively created a single platform to bring voices from multiple companies under the Dell brand together following a common thread while staying true to their individual expertise and influence. 3M Influencer Marketing Example

7. 3M - Humanize Science with Influencers and a Podcast

Situation: Science can seem out of reach to many and 3M wanted to make the innovations and complexities of science accessible to the everyday person. Solution: 3M conducted the largest ever science study about global attitudes about science, the State of Science Index research report along with the launch of 3M’s first podcast: Science Champions Podcast. Hosted by 3M’s Chief Science Advocate, Jayshree Seth, the first season of the podcast featured twenty one science experts and influencers on topics ranging from an introduction to science in everyday life to careers in science. Results: Outside of creating relationships with science influencers and showcasing an internal influencer, the Science Champions podcast exceeded all expectations for downloads and engagement, resulting in the launch of season two in March 2019. CMI Influencer Marketing Example

8. Content Marketing Institute - Activate Event Awareness & Engagement with Themed Influencer Content

Situation: There are many choices for marketers to attend industry events and Content Marketing Institute wanted to create broader awareness of its conference and showcase its speakers in a way that tapped their influence and helped them become more influential. Solution: Many months before the conference, a selection of content marketing speakers were identified and engaged to share their expertise on specific content marketing topics. With a conference theme of “Game on", the 36 influential marketing speakers’ contributions were assembled into a 48 page ebook called The Ultimate Guide to Conquering Content Marketing with a retro video game theme. Each section of the ebook was supported by corresponding animation videos using an 8-bit video game theme featuring game character avatars for each influencer. The content mix also included 6 long-form interviews, multiple promotional blog posts, email marketing, custom social graphics for the brand and influencers to share, organic and paid social promotion. Results: A 258% increase in views of the main ebook asset and over 30,000 views of the promotional 8-bit video game interviews. SAP Leonardo Influencer Marketing Example

9. SAP - Create New Platform Thought Leadership & Credibility with Influencers

Situation: SAP launched its Leonardo platform at the annual SAPPHIRE conference. With an event this large, key announcements can blur in the noise of communications. SAP wanted to launch Leonardo as a transformative technology vision. Solution: An interactive experience called The Path to Digital Innovation was created showcasing SAP CEO Bill McDermott and 32 top industry influencers sharing insights across transformative technologies including IoT, machine learning, AI, blockchain, analytics, big data and cloud. Results: 100% of participating influencers shared the Leonardo Path to Digital Innovation content, many of them multiple times. Reach was unprecedented, with over 21 million views of the interactive experience. Oracle Dyn Influencer Marketing Example

10. Oracle Dyn - Create Credibility for a New Capability with Relevant Influencers

Situation: Known for world-class managed DNS services, Oracle Dyn wanted to create awareness and authority for their web application security solutions focused on bot management and mitigation services. They also wanted to develop relationships with relevant industry influencers. Solution: To create awareness and credibility for this new cybersecurity capability, internal subject matter experts and relevant industry influencers including Eric Vanderburg and Kevin L. Jackson with authority in the cybersecurity space were engaged to collaborate on The Cybersecurity Intelligence Report: Bot Management and Mitigation. Results: 100% of the influencers engaged shared the report and all program goals were exceeded within 60 days of the launch.

Where Does B2B Influencer Marketing Go From Here?

In the research report, Influence 2.0: The Future of Influencer Marketing by Altimeter Group’s Brian Solis, 48% of B2C companies are running ongoing influencer marketing programs vs. only 11% of B2B brands. Nearly half of B2B brands are still in the experimentation stage, according to the study, which was conducted by Traackr and TopRank Marketing. But this trend is changing and more B2B brands are realizing that while different than B2C, working with influencers in a business to business context represents a significant opportunity to create more credible content that can be promoted to interested buyers by people they trust. Many of the examples in this article started with customer research and added outside expert commentary in a way that was relevant to both the brand and the audience. This shift in focus from the brand talking about itself towards a more collaborative approach involving external and internal influencers represents a key change successful B2B marketers have realized. Trends come and go, but the value of trusted sources of information to customers looking for solutions couldn’t be any more timeless. For more information about how TopRank Marketing works with B2B brands to improve industry awareness, increase influence and community engagement, drive leads and sales by partnering with industry experts, check out the influencer marketing section of our website. A version of this post originally published on the Digital Marketing Institute website.

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Thursday, April 18, 2019

Everything Old Is New Again: Why & How to Refresh B2B Content

Why & How to Refresh B2B Content

Why & How to Refresh B2B Content Content creation—it’s the linchpin of our B2B content marketing strategies. And 56% of B2B content marketers have upped their investment in content creation over the past year—more than any other spending area. Without a steady cadence of fresh, quality content we can’t proactively adapt to our audience’s changing needs nor consistently reach, inform, engage, entertain, or inspire action within them. And for most content marketers, this effort is often grounded in creating net-new content. But freshness is the eye of the beholder; quality content creation doesn’t have to be done from scratch. Refreshing existing content is a massive opportunity, playing an integral role within your always-on content marketing strategy. It’s not only more efficient to produce, but when done strategically, it can also boost results, improve user experience, and extend the life and relevance of the content you’ve worked so hard to produce. As it’s been sung, everything old can be new again. Below are all of the reasons why you need to identify refresh opportunities and how you should approach it.

3 Reasons to Refresh Existing Content

#1 - Content takes time to “mature in search”—and needs to be nurtured.

SEO is a foundational element of content marketing. You know your buyers are becoming increasingly self-directed in their search for answers, and you’re creating SEO-informed content to satisfy their queries. But if you just focus on new content creation, you’re leaving potential on the table. We’ve all experienced those sweet, near-instant wins in search results after a new post goes live. But typically, it takes time and smart optimization to gain consistent organic traction. In its post analyzing top ranking factors, Moz’s Jeff Baker discusses three different correlations between the age of a post and its keyword position. Based on their research, it took roughly 100 days or more for a new article to realize its full potential. Moz Data on Page Age & Keyword Position Image credit: Moz.com While pages need time to mature, without the proper nurturing their relevance can degrade over time; this is the “fresh” factor. Essentially, strategically updating older posts can improve rankings as search algorithms prefer fresh over stale content. Data and insight should guide the type of updates you make, but updates could include optimization tweaks to capitalize on new related keyword rankings, expanding or refining content around certain themes, and link building. Once again, Moz illustrates how freshness can fade in the eyes of search engines. Graph from Moz Showing Content Freshness Image credit: Moz.com [bctt tweet="Content takes time to mature in search, and it needs to be nurtured. @annieleuman #B2BContentMarketing #contentrefresh" username="toprank"]

#2 - Refreshing allows your content to grow WITH your audience.

Search is constantly evolving. Not only are search engines getting more sophisticated, but the way people are searching has changed as well:
  • Half of all smartphone users use voice technology. (comScore)
  • Mobile phones are expected to be used for 80% of all internet access in 2019, a 10% increase from 2017. (Quartz)
  • Mobile searches for queries with questions like “do I need”, “should I”, and “can I” have grown by at least 65% over the past two years. (Google)
As queries get more specific and question-based with natural language, making tweaks to your content to match those relevant queries and opportunities allows you to better match users needs. It paves the way for being the best answer, whenever, wherever, and however your audience is searching. Read: Hey Alexa: How Do I Bake Voice Search Into My B2B Marketing Strategy?

#3 - Refreshing could give you leg-up on more than just your competitors.

Content marketing is no longer the new shiny object in the B2B realm. Content marketing is simply modern marketing. As content continues to proliferate you’re likely competing for visibility and reach with your direct competitors within your industry, as well as indirect competitors such as third-party review sites, industry publications, independent bloggers, technology providers, and so on. There are hundreds of billions of webpages in the Google Search Index, and while serving different audiences and thought leadership purposes, there’s likely some overlap in keyword targeting. Let’s take “B2B content marketing” as an example—industry publications such as Search Engine Journal, tools like BuzzSumo or HubSpot, platforms like LinkedIn*, and of course B2B marketing agencies like us, have all produced content on this topic. So, when it comes to refreshing content, you have the opportunity to see how your content is stacking up to all the competition and make data-informed tweaks to differentiate and personalize for your core audience.

How to Get Started with Refreshing Content

Identify Refresh Opportunities With a Content Audit

You’ve published a lot of content. And more than likely you have several that are top-performers, bringing in tons of traffic. You also may have some good performers or rising stars in there, as well as pieces that simply haven’t gained any meaningful traction. Refreshes can help you bolster those top-performers and hopefully improve performance of other pieces. To know where to focus your refreshing and optimization efforts, you need to know how your existing content is performing with an audit. By auditing your current content for current rankings, position changes, traffic trends, and more, you can see which posts have the greatest opportunity. [bctt tweet="Content refreshes can help you bolster those top-performers and hopefully improve performance of other pieces. @annieleuman #B2BContentMarketing" username="toprank"]

Put Experience in the Driver Seat

Refreshing is about both your audience and the search engine. So, when you revisit posts to make optimizations, you need to ensure you keep both parties in mind. Focusing solely on your audience could mean missing out on a critical SEO opportunity. And the opposite could be said when zeroing-in on SEO. To tick both boxes, carefully research your content’s current user experience with metrics like time on page, click through rate, bounce rate, pages per session, or scroll depth. Analyzing these data points should give you an indication of which areas of the experience need the most attention and which sections of your content may need adjustments. This helps you avoid delivering an unsatisfactory user experience that results in drop-offs from both your audience and site crawlers.

Repurpose Where It Makes Sense

There’s refreshing and repurposing. Refreshing is updating something that already exists. Repurposing is taking something that exists and using it to create something new. And there’s a place for both in your content strategy. When should you repurpose and when should you refresh? A top-performing, broad post is a great repurposing opportunity. You’ve covered the topic with broad strokes. And through repurposing you can dig a little deeper into some of the specific themes or opportunities, using some of the existing content to support your narrative. Conversely, in-depth content that is ranking for several long-tail keywords is another good repurposing opportunity. If you split the content into several pieces, with each one targeting a different long-tail variation, you could drastically improve those organic rankings and traffic — all by repurposing and restructuring the original piece. In addition, repurposing can help you personalize content for specific verticals or audience segments. Through repurposing, you can take an existing article and tailor it for a different target audience with new data that’s relevant for them, solutions to their biggest pain points, and more. Read: A Tasty, Strategic Addition to the Content Marketing Table: ‘Repurposed Content Cobbler’

Refresh for Success

Everything old can be new again. From SEO to growing your content to match your audience’s needs, there are several benefits that come from refreshing content. Refresh for success by conducting a content audit, keeping both humans and search engines in mind, and repurposing when and where it makes sense. via GIPHY How else can you maximize the value of your B2B content? Get an inside look into the future of B2B Content. *Disclosure: LinkedIn is a TopRank Marketing client.

The post Everything Old Is New Again: Why & How to Refresh B2B Content appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Trust Factors: How Best Answer Content Fuels Brand Credibility

How Best Answer Content Builds Trust

How Best Answer Content Builds Trust Page one. Answer box. The top result. In the minds of marketers, these prime destinations have largely been associated with SEO success. From the days of keyword-stuffing and algorithmic alignment to more nuanced modern approaches accounting for semantic voice commands, influencer integration, and search intent, edging competitors on that SERP has been a key source of aspiration. As it should be: heightened visibility on Google makes a big difference in terms of driving traffic. But it’s a little short-sighted to think only about that first, fleeting interaction — the search, the discovery, the click. What about the deeper impact? As customer experience becomes a central focus for brands everywhere, we should be more considerate of what happens after a user clicks through that search result, and how it affects your brand. We talked recently about how best answer content helps fuel strong SEO results. But as part of our new “Trust Factors” series, which examines practical ways for marketers to strengthen trust with their audiences, we’ll shift our perspective and break down the critical benefits of effective best answer content when it comes to building credibility and authority in your niche. [bctt tweet="As #CX becomes a central focus for brands everywhere, we should be more considerate of what happens after a user clicks through that search result, and how it affects your brand. @NickNelsonMN #ContentMarketing #SearchMarketing" username="toprank"]

Beyond the Click: The Lasting Impact of Best Answer Content

Brian Dean of Backlinko is a masterful creator of best answer content. He preaches, and practices, a quality-over-quantity approach. At the recent Social Media Marketing World 2019 conference in San Diego, Andrew Pickering and Pete Gartland (the hilarious speaker duo @AndrewAndPete) shared the story of how Dean decided on a plan of publishing one blog post every 4-6 weeks, investing huge amounts of time into making sure each of those pieces was as robust, useful, and comprehensive as possible. To get an idea of what this output looks like, you can check out his SEO in 2019 or Link-Building for SEO, either by clicking those links or simply typing the basic terms into Google; his posts will show up near the top. Using this approach, Dean reported his blog was receiving more than 200,000 unique monthly visitors with just 51 total blog posts, which is a pretty amazing feat. Obviously, the premium SERP placements have helped him achieve those gaudy numbers. But it’s the substance beyond the headlines and meta descriptions that really makes his content powerful. Perusing one of his in-depth resources, you’re going to learn a ton. The posts are extensive but navigable; technical but understandable; fun but serious. They include videos and images to illustrate concepts and break up the copy. Most importantly, they answer pretty much every ancillary question a searcher could ask about their respective topics — accurately and actionably. Backlinko's Definitive Guide to SEO And that’s how Dean turned his SEO training company from a humble startup to a seven-figure business in five years. His credibility speaks for itself. People trust him and want to learn from him because of the content he creates — not because it ranks so well, but because of how it ranks so well.

How Best Answers Build Trust

He’s a great example, but Dean is hardly the one out there building trust through best answer content. At TopRank Marketing, this methodology is fundamental to our integrated strategy mix, and we’ve seen plenty of awesome results with our clients. As two examples, there was this content and strategic PPC campaign for DivvyHQ, and this SEO-driven content program for Antea Group. While both of those efforts drove excellent results in terms of traffic and reach, what’s really heartening in both cases is the deeper business impacts.
“Lead quality has definitely improved,” said DivvyHQ Co-Founder Brody Dorland. “The prospects coming through our website front door are much closer to our ideal customer than they have been in the past.” “We’ve been able to marry our field and digital marketing efforts together, resulting in numerous digital leads, real revenue opportunities to the tune of millions of dollars, and credibility with our clients, partners, and media as a go-to source for EHS&S information,” said Antea Group USA Solutions Marketing Manager Margaret Uttke.
As any sales team can tell you, prospects who are both well qualified and predisposed to respect your brand are vastly more likely to convert and become happy customers. Here’s how effective best answer content achieves these outcomes:

Demonstrable Authority

This more or less speaks for itself. When someone finds content on a topic they’re looking for and it gives them everything they need, expertly articulated, it paints your company as a trusted source: These people know what they’re talking about. They know how to present the info. They’ve done it well enough that Google’s algorithm — which now heavily weighs dwell time and quality inbound links — has elevated it above most or all others.

Value First

Sometimes, content marketing can get away from its essential purpose: providing value. Pressured to show results — even if just vanity results — some practitioners blur the line between pull and push with strictly gated content or thinly veiled promotion. Best answer content gets back to the basics. When done right, it’s all about delivering value and earning trust before you ask for anything. Dean spends weeks researching and composing his hefty Power Pages, which are freely available to anyone who visits. He even makes them downloadable in PDF form if you can’t consume all of that content in one sitting, and while the assets are technically gated, in that you must enter an email address to receive them, you aren’t required to fill out a long contact form. [bctt tweet="Best answer content gets back to the basics. When done right, it’s all about delivering value and earning trust before you ask for anything. - @NickNelsonMN #ContentMarketing" username="toprank"]

Competitive Positioning

Yes, it’s helpful to outrank competitors for key terms because you are more likely to bring in that search traffic. But there is also an important reputation element. When you outrank a direct competitor, the optics are compelling. And even if you’re not at the top, simply ranking in the vicinity of a giant company or reputed publication enables you to soak up some of that “second-hand trust.”   It’s a simple psychological phenomenon, as Neil Patel explains on his blog: “This is not just a convenience issue for users. It’s a trust issue, too. When a result appears first, second, or third, users tend to trust it, believing that it is somehow more reliable, popular, or more legitimate than anything lower in the SERPs.” Given that Google is increasingly structuring these SERPs based on indicators of query fulfillment, that’s a valid shorthand conclusion for searchers. And when your page delivers a definitive best answer to back up the ranking, you’ve made the right impression.

Organic and Inbound

It’s getting harder to build trust through ads. That doesn’t mean you should ditch the paid side by any means, but it does raise the stakes for organic content. As digitally native millennials grow to account for more and more of the buying population, we must be cognizant of their ingrained instincts. They are more likely to trust information they find themselves, as opposed to sponsored results or content that is (in truth or perception) pushed on them.

Gaining the Top Rank Is About More than Search Placement

Yes, it’s great to rank at the top of a SERP, for a variety of reasons. But it’s also vitally important to rank at the top of your audience’s mind for strategic topics, through content that satisfies their curiosities and provides legitimate value. As Google’s algorithm continues to evolve and prioritize the most satisfying results rather than the most technically optimized results, you can trust that best answer content — which, when done right, covers both of those bases — is increasingly a no-brainer. Want to learn more about TopRank Marketing’s best answer framework in action? Check out our CEO Lee Odden’s post on How A Best Answer Content Strategy Drives B2B Marketing Results.

The post Trust Factors: How Best Answer Content Fuels Brand Credibility appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.

Monday, April 15, 2019

LinkedIn’s List of 24 B2B Marketers You Need to Know

LinkedIn’s 24 B2B Marketers You Need to Know

LinkedIn’s 24 B2B Marketers You Need to Know In honor of it's fifth anniversary, LinkedIn has released a revamped edition of The Sophisticated Marketer's Guide to LinkedIn. The eBook features a powerful array of digital marketing smarties, each who shared their insights and practical advice on how to get the most out of LinkedIn—from optimizing your profile to expanding your network.  The TopRank Marketing team was privileged to work with LinkedIn team to identify, engage, and gather fresh insights from these brightest marketing minds. If you're anywhere near the B2B marketing world, social selling or recruiting, getting to know LinkedIn is more essential today than ever. Why? Check out these statistics:
  • With over 610 million members in over 200 countries and territories, more than 1 out of every 3 professionals worldwide is on LinkedIn.
  • Professionals are signing up to join LinkedIn at a rate of more than two new members per second.
  • LinkedIn counts executives from nearly all 2018 Fortune 500 companies as members
  • More than 30 million companies are represented on LinkedIn
There simply isn't another social network with that kind of community and momentum for business professionals. And while most professionals have been using LinkedIn for years and may see it as a jobs marketplace, many simply haven't taken the time to optimize or maintain their profiles. They also haven't discovered all the ways you can capitalize on LinkedIn as a marketing and social selling tool. The good news is that quite a few people have. In The Sophisticated Marketer's Guide to LinkedIn, there are 55 pages of advice on reaching the right people and taking your marketing to the next level directly from marketers within LinkedIn, as well as some of the top B2B marketing professionals in the business. There's also an excellent list of 24 B2B marketing experts in the U.S. that LinkedIn suggests we get to know, selected by staff at LinkedIn—and that's where we'd like focus today. Many of the names on the list will be familiar to you, such as our own CEO Lee Odden. But some are likely to be new discoveries. Congratulations to those on the list and to anyone who downloads and reads The Sophisticated Marketer's Guide to LinkedIn.

24 B2B Marketers LinkedIn Says You Need To Know

Robert Rose Chief Troublemaker, The Content Advisory Twitter: @Robert_Rose LinkedIn: /in/robrose Aaron Orendorff Founder, iconiContent Twitter: AaronOrendorff LinkedIn: in/aaronorendorff Ryan Robinson Ryan Robinson Content Marketing Consultant Twitter: TheRyanRobinson LinkedIn: in/theryanrobinson/ Carla Johnson Carla Johnson Chief Innovator, Type A Communications Twitter: CarlaJohnson LinkedIn: /in/carlajohnson Allen Gannett Allen Gannett CSO, Skyword Twitter: Allen LinkedIn: /in/allengannett Shane Barker Shane Barker Co-Founder and CEO, Content Solutions Twitter: shane_barker LinkedIn: /in/shanebarker Ann Handley Ann Handley Chief Content Officer, MarketingProfs Twitter: MarketingProfs LinkedIn: /in/annhandley Katie Martell Katie Martell Marketing Consultant, On-Demand Marketing Twitter: KatieMartell LinkedIn: /in/katiemartell Mandy McEwen Mandy McEwen Founder and CEO, Mod Girl Marketing Twitter: MandyModGirl LinkedIn: /in/mandymcewen Michael Brenner Michael Brenner CEO, Marketing Insider Group Twitter: BrennerMichael LinkedIn: /in/michaelbrenner Lee Odden Lee Odden CEO, TopRank Marketing Twitter: LeeOdden LinkedIn: /in/leeodden Nancy Badillo Nancy Badillo CEO, NancyBadillo.com Twitter: NancyBadillo13 LinkedIn: /in/nancybadillo Jay Baer Jay Baer Founder, Convince & Convert Twitter: jaybaer LinkedIn: /in/jaybaer Jason Miller Jason Miller Brand Marketing Lead, Microsoft Twitter: JasonMillerCA LinkedIn: /in/jsnmiller Vin Clancy Vin Clancy Founder, Magnific Twitter: vincentdignan LinkedIn: /in/vincentdignan Andrew Davis Andrew Davis Keynote Speaker, Monumental Shift Twitter: DrewDavisHere LinkedIn: /in/drewdavishere Heidi Bullock Heidi Bullock CMO, Engagio Twitter: HeidiBullock LinkedIn: /in/hbullock Gina Schreck Gina Schreck CEO, SocialKNX Twitter: Ginaschreck LinkedIn: /in/ginaschreck Doug Kessler Doug Kessler Creative Director and Co-Founder, Velocity Partners Twitter: dougkessler LinkedIn: /in/dougkessler Gabe Villamizar Gabe Villamizar Global Sales Evangelist, Lucid Twitter: gabevillamizar LinkedIn: /in/gabevillamizar Suzanne String Nguyen Suzanne String Nguyen Video Evangelist, Shootsta Twitter: StringStory LinkedIn: /in/stringstory Joanna Penn Joanna Penn Director, The Creative Penn Twitter: thecreativepenn LinkedIn: /in/joannapenn Janet Murray Janet Murray Content Marketing Expert Twitter: jan_murray LinkedIn: /in/janet-murray74 Julia McCoy Janet Murray Content Marketing Expert Twitter: JuliaEMcCoy LinkedIn: /in/juliaemccoy No list is ever perfect, so who would you add to this list? Let us know in the comments. If you're ready to dig in to the 2019 The Sophisticated Marketer's Guide to LinkedIn, start now and grab your own copy here: 2019 The Sophisticated Marketer's Guide to LinkedIn

The post LinkedIn’s List of 24 B2B Marketers You Need to Know appeared first on Online Marketing Blog - TopRank®.