Saturday, April 30, 2016

EP42: 2 Facebook Campaign Metrics that Drive ROI

In this episode, our experts explain how you can
increase your relevance score and click-through-rate on the
Facebook platform. Using these metrics correctly will have a
lasting impact on your campaign's ROI – both in the short-term and
the long-term.


Gain better understanding and
control of your Facebook ads following these simple strategies, and
Facebook will reward you with better impressions and cheaper
clicks.


 


IN THIS EPISODE YOU'LL
LEARN:



  • How to lower your cost-per-click
    by increasing relevance score and
    click-through-rate.


  • The simple (but rarely used) rule
    of thumb that can indicate if your ad is going to work in the
    long-run (< ROI).


  • How to use these 2 metrics to make
    the necessary changes to your campaign (< to your ROI goal).


  • The “Share to Like” Ratio that
    measures the success of your ad campaigns.
    "s2">


 


LINKS AND RESOURCES
MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:


"https://www.digitalmarketer.com/podcast/episode-03-facebook-video-ad-game-plan/"
target="_blank">Episode 3: Facebook Video Ad Game
Plan


"https://www.digitalmarketer.com/podcast/the-ad-grid/" target=
"_blank">Episode 33: The Ad Grid: How to Build Campaigns that
Convert and Scale


"https://www.digitalmarketer.com/podcast/persuasive-ad-copy/"
target="_blank">Episode 34: 14 Elements of Persuasive Ad
Copy


"https://www.digitalmarketer.com/podcast/facebook-ad-campaign-mistakes/"
target="_blank">Episode 37: The 5 Biggest Facebook Ad Campaign
Mistakes


"https://www.digitalmarketer.com/podcast/critical-facebook-metrics/"
target="_blank">Episode 40: 4 Facebook Metrics Critical to Your
Success


"https://www.digitalmarketer.com/podcast/landing-page-conversion-rate/"
target="_blank">Episode 41: 9 Ways to Increase Landing Page
Conversion Rate


 


Press and hold link to visit
the page


"http://www.digitalmarketer.com/podcast/facebook-metrics-roi/?utm_source=Perpetual%20Traffic&utm_medium=podcast&utm_content=episode42&utm_campaign=Podcast%20Descriptions"
target="_blank">Show Page Notes


Thanks for
Listening!

Snapchat Delivers 10 Billion Video Views Daily: This Week in Social Media

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Welcome to our weekly edition of what's hot in social media news. To help you stay up to date with social media, here are some of the news items that caught our attention. What's New This Week Snapchat Now Serves 10 Billion Daily Video Views: “Now users are watching 10 billion videos a day on [...]


This post Snapchat Delivers 10 Billion Video Views Daily: This Week in Social Media first appeared on .

- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

Friday, April 29, 2016

8 Old School SEO Practices That Are No Longer Effective - Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish

[Estimated read time: 14 minutes]

Are you guilty of living in the past? Using methods that were once tried-and-true can be alluring, but it can also prove dangerous to your search strategy. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand spells out eight old school SEO practices that you should ditch in favor of more effective and modern alternatives.



8 Old School SEO Practices That Are No Longer Effective Whiteboard

Click on the whiteboard image above to open a high resolution version in a new tab!

Video Transcription

Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're going to chat about some old school SEO practices that just don't work anymore and things with which we should replace them.

Let's start with the first one - keywords before clicks.


Look, I get the appeal here. The idea is that we've done a bunch of keyword research, now we're doing keyword targeting, and we can see that it might be important to target multiple keywords on the same page. So FYI, "pipe smoking," "tobacco smoking," "very dangerous for your health," not recommended by me or by Moz, but I thought it was a funny throwback keyword and so there you go. I do enjoy little implements even if I never use them.

So pipes, tobacco pipes, pipe smoking, wooden pipes, this is not going to draw anyone's click. You might think, "But it's good SEO, Rand. It's good to have all my keywords in my title element. I know that's an important part of SEO." Not anymore. It really is not anymore an important . . . well, let's put it this way. It's an important part of SEO, which is subsumed by wanting to draw the clicks. The user is searching, they're looking at the page, and what are they going to think when they see pipes tobacco, pipes, pipe smoking, wooden pipes? They have associations with that - spammy, sketchy, I don't want to click it - and we know, as SEOs, that Google is using click signals to help documents rank over time and to help websites rank over time.

So if they're judging this, you're going to fall in the rankings, versus a title like "Art of Piping: Studying Wooden Pipes for Every Price Range." Now, you're not just playing off the, "Yes, I am including some keywords in there. I have 'wooden' and 'pipes.' I have 'art of piping,' which is maybe my brand name." But I'm worried more about drawing the click, which is why I'm making this part of my message of "for every price range." I'm using the word "stunning" to draw people in. I'm saying, "Our collection is not the largest but the hand-selected best. You'll find unique pipes available nowhere else and always free, fast shipping."

I'm essentially trying to create a message, like I would for an AdWords ad, that is less focused on just having the raw keywords in there and more focused on drawing the click. This is a far more effective approach that we've seen over the last few years. It's probably been a good six or seven years that this has been vastly superior to this other approach.

Second one, heavy use of anchor text on internal links.


This used to be a practice that could have positive impacts on rankings. But what we've seen lately, especially the last few years, is that Google has discounted this and has actually even punished it where they feel like it's inappropriate or spammy, manipulative, overdone. We talked about this a little in our internal and external linking Whiteboard Friday a couple of weeks back.

In this case, my suggestion would be if the internal link is in the navigation, if it's in the footer, if it's in a sidebar, if it's inside content, and it is relevant and well-written and it flows well, has high usability, you're pretty safe. However, if it has low usability, if it looks sketchy or funny, if you're making the font small so as to hide it because it's really for search engines and not for searchers and users, now you're in a sketchy place. You might count on being discounted, penalized, or hurt at some point by Google.

Number three, pages for every keyword variant.


This is an SEO tactic that many folks are still pursuing today and that had been effective for a very long time. So the idea was basically if I have any variation of a keyword, I want a single page to target that because keyword targeting is such a precise art and technical science that I want to have the maximum capacity to target each keyword individually, even if it's only slightly different from another one. This still worked even up to four or five years ago, and in some cases, people were sacrificing usability because they saw it still worked.

Nowadays, Google has gotten so smart with upgrades like Hummingbird, obviously with RankBrain last year, that they've taken to a much more intent- and topic-matching model. So we don't want to do something like have four different pages, like unique hand-carved pipes, hand-carved pipes, hand-carved tobacco pipes, and hand-carved tobacco smoking pipes. By the way, these are all real searches that you'll find in Google Suggest or AdWords. But rather than taking all of these and having a separate page for each, I want one page targeting all of them. I might try and fit these keywords intelligently into the content, the headline, maybe the title, the meta description, those kinds of things. I'm sure I can find a good combination of these. But the intent for each of these searchers is the same, so I only want one page targeting them.

Number four - directories, paid links, etc.

Every single one of these link building, link acquisition techniques that I'm about to mention has either been directly penalized by Google or penalized as part of an update, or we've seen sites get hit hard for doing it. This is dangerous stuff, and you want to stay away from all of these at this point.

Directories, well, generic directories and SEO directories for sure. Article links, especially article blasts where you can push an article in and there's no editorial review. Guest content, depending on the editorial practices, the board might be a little different. Press releases, Google you saw penalized some press release websites. Well, it didn't penalize the press release website. Google said, "You know what? Your links don't count anymore, or we're going to discount them. We're not going to treat them the same."

Comment links, for obvious reasons, reciprocal link pages, those got penalized many years ago. Article spinners. Private link networks. You see private and network, or you see network, you should just generally run away. Private blog networks. Paid link networks. Fiverr or forum link buys.

You see advertised on all sorts of SEO forums especially the more aggressive, sketchy ones that a lot of folks are like, "Hey, for $99, we have this amazing package, and I'll show you all the people whose rankings it's increased, and they come from PageRank six," never mind that Page Rank is totally defunct. Or worse, they use Moz. They'll say like, "Domain authority 60-plus websites." You know what, Moz is not perfect. Domain authority is not a perfect representation of the value you're going to get from these things. Anyone who's selling you links on a forum, you should be super skeptical. That's somewhat like someone going up to your house and being like, "Hey, I got this Ferrari in the yard here. You want to buy this?" That's my Jersey coming out.

Social link buys, anything like this, just say no people.


Number five, multiple microsites, separate domains, or separate domains with the same audience or topic target.


So this again used to be a very common SEO practice, where folks would say, "Hey, I'm going to split these up because I can get very micro targeted with my individual websites." They were often keyword-rich domain names like woodenpipes.com, and I've got handmadepipes.net, and I've got pipesofmexico.co versus I just have artofpiping.com, not that "piping" is necessarily the right word. Then it includes all of the content from all of these. The benefit here is that this is going to gain domain authority much faster and much better, and in a far greater fashion than any of these will.

Let's say that it was possible that there is no bias against the exact match domain names folks. We're happy to link to them, and you had just as much success branding each of these and earning links to each of these, and doing content marketing on each of these as you did on this one. But you split up your efforts a third, a third, a third. Guess what would happen? These would rank about a third as well as all the content would on here, which means the content on handmadepipes.net is not benefitting from the links and content on woodenpipes.com, and that sucks. You want to combine your efforts into one domain if you possibly can. This is one of the reasons we also recommend against subdomains and microsites, because putting all of your efforts into one place has the best shot at earning you the most rankings for all of the content you create.

Number six, exact and partial keyword match domain names in general.


It's the case like if I'm a consumer and I'm looking at domain names like woodenpipes.com, handmadepipes.net, uniquepipes.shop, hand-carved-pipes.co, the problem is that over time, over the last 15, 20 years of the Web, those types of domain names that don't sound like real brands, that are not in our memories and don't have positive associations with them, they're going to draw clicks away from you and towards your competitors who sound more credible, more competent, and more branded. For that reason alone, you should avoid them.

It's also that case that we've seen that these types of domains do much more poorly with link earning, with content marketing, with being able to have guest content accepted. People don't trust it. The same is true for public relations and getting press mentions. The press doesn't trust sites like these.

For those reasons, it's just a barrier. Even if you thought, "Hey, there's still keyword benefits to these," which there is a little bit because the anchor text that comes with them, that points to the site always includes the words and phrases you're going after. So there's a little bit of benefit, but it's far overwhelmed by the really frustrating speed bumps and roadblocks that you face when you have a domain like this.

Number seven - Using CPC or Adwords' "Competition" to determine the difficulty of ranking in organic or non-paid results

A lot of folks, when they're doing keyword research, for some reason still have this idea that using cost per click or AdWords as competition scores can help determine the difficulty of ranking in organic, non-paid results. This is totally wrong.


So see right here, I've got "hand-carved pipes" and "unique wooden pipes," and they have an AdWords CPC respectively of $3.80 and $5.50, and they have AdWords competition of medium and medium. That is in no way correlated necessarily with how difficult they'll be to rank for in the organic results. I could find, for example, that "unique wooden pipes" is actually easier or harder than "hand-carved pipes" to rank for in the organic SEO results. This really depends on: Who's in the competition set? What types of links do they have and social mentions do they have? How robust is their content? How much are they exciting visitors and drawing them in and serving them well? That sort of stuff is really hard to calculate here.

I like the keyword difficulty score that Moz uses. Some other tools have their own versions. Doctor Pete, I think, did a wonderful job of putting together a keyword difficulty score that's relatively comprehensive and well-thought through, uses a lot of the metrics about the domain and the page authority scores, and it compensates for a lot of other things, to look at a set of search results and say, "This is probably about how hard it's going to be," and whether it's harder or easier than some other keyword.

Number eight - Unfocused, non-strategic "linkbait"


Last one, some folks are still engaging in this, I think because content strategy, content marketing, and content as a whole has become a very hot topic and a point of investment. Many SEOs still invest in what I call "nonstrategic and unfocused link bait." The idea being if I can draw links to my website, it doesn't really matter if the content doesn't make people very happy or if it doesn't match and gel well with what's on my site. So you see a lot of these types of practices on sites that have nothing to do with it. Like, "Here are seven actors who one time wore too little clothing." That's an extreme example, but you get the idea if you ever look at the bottom ads for a lot of content stuff. It feels like pretty much all of them say that.

Versus on topic link bait or what I'd call high quality content that is likely to draw in links and attention, and create a positive branding association like, "Here's the popularity of pipes, cigarettes, electronic cigarettes, and cigars in the U.S. from 1950 to today." We've got the data over time and we've mapped that out. This is likely to earn a lot of links, press attention. People would check it out. They'd go, "Oh, when was it that electronic cigarettes started getting popular? Have pipes really fallen off? It feels like no one uses them anymore. I don't see them in public. When was that? Why was that? Can I go over time and see that dataset?" It's fundamentally interesting, and data journalism is, obviously, very hot right now.

So with these eight, hopefully you'll be able to switch from some old school SEO techniques that don't work so well to some new ways of thinking that will take your SEO results to a great place. And with that, we'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.


Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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Google AMP: What Bloggers Need to Know

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Have you heard of Google AMP? Want to know how it will impact your blog? To discover more about Google AMP and the future of blogging, I interview Leslie Samuel. More About This Show The Social Media Marketing podcast is an on-demand talk radio show from Social Media Examiner. It's designed to help busy marketers [...]


This post Google AMP: What Bloggers Need to Know first appeared on .

- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

10 Snapchat features we wish existed

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We here at Mashable are obsessed with Snapchat - the filters, the live stories, and of course, the Discover channels.


But of course, it's not perfect. In addition to a confusing, non-intuitive interface - Snapchat makes you work just to find that black drawing tool - there's a lot we wish it had. Plus, there are older, now-removed features, we want back too, like the "best friends" feature which highlighted who you snapped with the most. 


See also: 7 hidden features in the latest Snapchat update


While the app is always improving and adding new features, we've rounded up our wish list of Snapchat features, from an eraser tool to different fonts. Let's take a look. Read more...


More about Snapchat, Apps, Social Media, and Tech


Thursday, April 28, 2016

How to Repurpose Content From the Hottest Social Networks

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Are you creating content on Snapchat, Blab, Vine, Periscope, or Facebook Live? Want to reuse that content on other social channels? Whether it's a live broadcast on Facebook, a quick snap on Snapchat, or short audio from Anchor, you can save and download your social content and share it across all of your profiles. In [...]


This post How to Repurpose Content From the Hottest Social Networks first appeared on .

- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

How to Use the Pinterest Bulk Editor to Create Promoted Pins

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Looking for a faster way to create promoted pins on Pinterest? Have you tried the Pinterest bulk editor tool? Pinterest's bulk editor tool makes it easier to create and edit promoted pins and optimize multiple promoted pins at one time. In this article you'll discover how to create promoted pins in less time with Pinterest's [...]


This post How to Use the Pinterest Bulk Editor to Create Promoted Pins first appeared on .

- Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

Measuring Content: You're Doing it Wrong

Posted by MatthewBarby

[Estimated read time: 10 minutes]


The traditional ways of measuring the success or failure of content are broken. We can't just rely on metrics like the number of pageviews/visits or bounce rate to determine whether what we're creating has performed well.


“The primary thing we look for with news is impact, not traffic,” says Jonah Peretti, Founder of BuzzFeed. One of the ways that BuzzFeed have mastered this is with the development of their proprietary analytics platform, POUND.

POUND enables BuzzFeed to predict the potential reach of a story based on its content, understand how effective specific promotions are based on the downstream sharing and traffic, and power A/B tests - and that's just a few examples.


Just because you've managed to get more eyeballs onto your content doesn't mean it's actually achieved anything. If that were the case then I'd just take a few hundred dollars and buy some paid StumbleUpon traffic every time.


Yeah, I'd generate traffic, but it's highly unlikely to result in me achieving some of my actual business goals. Not only that, but I'd have no real indication of whether my content was satisfying the needs of my visitors.


The scary thing is that the majority of content marketing campaigns are measured this way. I hear statements like “it's too difficult to measure the performance of individual pieces of content” far too often. The reality is that it's pretty easy to measure content marketing campaigns on a micro level - a lot of the time people don't want to do it.


Engagement over entrances


Within any commercial content marketing campaign that you're running, measurement should be business goal-centric. By that I mean that you should be determining the overall success of your campaign based on the achievement of core business goals.


If your primary business goal is to generate 300 leads each month from the content that you're publishing, you'll need to have a reporting mechanism in place to track this information.


On a more micro-level, you'll want to be tracking and using engagement metrics to enable you to influence the achievement of your business goals. In my opinion, all content campaigns should have robust, engagement-driven reporting behind them.


Total Time Reading (TTR)


One metric that Medium uses, which I think adds a lot more value than pageviews, is "Total Time Reading (TTR)." This is a cumulative metric that quantifies the total number of minutes spent reading a piece of content. For example, if I had 10 visitors to one of my blog articles and they each stayed reading the article for 1 minute each, the total reading time would be 10 minutes.


“We measure every user interaction with every post. Most of this is done by periodically recording scroll positions. We pipe this data into our data warehouse, where offline processing aggregates the time spent reading (or our best guess of it): we infer when a reader started reading, when they paused, and when they stopped altogether. The methodology allows us to correct for periods of inactivity (such as having a post open in a different tab, walking the dog, or checking your phone).” (source)

The reason why this is more powerful than just pageviews is because it takes into account how engaged your readers are to give a more accurate representation of its visibility. You could have an article with 1,000 pageviews that has a greater TTR than one with 10,000 pageviews.


Scroll depth & time on page


A related and simpler metric to acquire is the average time on page (available within Google Analytics). The average time spent on your webpage will give a general indication of how long your visitors are staying on the page. Combining this with 'scroll depth' (i.e. how far down the page has a visitor scrolled) will help paint a better picture of how 'engaged' your visitors are. You'll be able to get the answer to the following:


“How much of this article are my visitors actually reading?”


“Is the length of my content putting visitors off?”


“Are my readers remaining on the page for a long time?”


Having the answers to these questions is really important when it comes to determining which types of content are resonating more with your visitors.


Social Lift


BuzzFeed's “Social Lift” metric is a particularly good way of understanding the 'virality' of your content (you can see this when you publish a post to BuzzFeed). BuzzFeed calculates “Social Lift” as follows:


((Social Views)/(Seed Views)+1)

Social Views: Traffic that's come from outside BuzzFeed; for example, referral traffic, email, social media, etc.


Seed Views: Owned traffic that's come from within the BuzzFeed platform; e.g. from appearing in BuzzFeed's newsfeed.


BuzzFeed Social Lift


This is a great metric to use when you're a platform publisher as it helps separate out traffic that's coming from outside of the properties that you own, thus determining its "viral potential."


There are ways to use this kind of approach within your own content marketing campaigns (without being a huge publisher platform) to help get a better idea of its "viral potential."


One simple calculation can just involve the following:


((social shares)/(pageviews)+1)

This simple stat can be used to determine which content is likely to perform better on social media, and as a result it will enable you to prioritize certain content over others for paid social promotion. The higher the score, the higher its "viral potential." This is exactly what BuzzFeed does to understand which pieces of content they should put more weight behind from a very early stage.


You can even take this to the next level by replacing pageviews with TTR to get a more representative view of engagement to sharing behavior.


The bottom line


Alongside predicting "viral potential" and "TTR," you'll want to know how your content is performing against your bottom line. For most businesses, that's the main reason why they're creating content.


This isn't always easy and a lot of people get this wrong by looking for a silver bullet that doesn't exist. Every sales process is different, but let's look at the typical process that we have at HubSpot for our free CRM product:



  1. Visitor comes through to our blog content from organic search.

  2. Visitor clicks on a CTA within the blog post.

  3. Visitor downloads a gated offer in exchange for their email address and other data.

  4. Prospect goes into a nurturing workflow.

  5. Prospect goes through to a BOFU landing page and signs up to the CRM.

  6. Registered user activates and invites in members of their team.


This is a simple process, but it can still be tricky sometimes to get a dollar value on each piece of content we produce. To do this, you've got to understand what the value of a visitor is, and this is done by working backwards through the process.


The first question to answer is, “what's the lifetime value (LTV) of an activated user?” In other words, “how much will this customer spend in their lifetime with us?”


For e-commerce businesses, you should be able to get this information by analyzing historical sales data to understand the average order value that someone makes and multiply that by the average number of orders an individual will make with you in their lifetime.


For the purposes of this example, let's say each of our activated CRM users has an LTV of $100. It's now time to work backwards from that figure (all the below figures are theoretical)…


Question 1: “What's the conversion rate of new CRM activations from our email workflow(s)?”


Answer 1: “5%”


Question 2: “How many people download our gated offers after coming through to the blog content?”


Answer 2: “3%”


Knowing this would help me to start putting a monetary value against each visitor to the blog content, as well as each lead (someone that downloads a gated offer).


Let's say we generate 500,000 visitors to our blog content each month. Using the average conversion rates from above, we'd convert 15,000 of those into email leads. From there we'd nurture 750 of them into activated CRM users. Multiply that by the LTV of a CRM user ($100) and we've got $75,000 (again, these figures are all just made up).


Using this final figure of $75,000, we could work backwards to understand the value of a single visitor to our blog content:


 ((75,000)/(500,000))

Single Visitor Value: $0.15


We can do the same for email leads using the following calculation:


(($75,000)/(15,000))

Individual Lead Value: $5.00


Knowing these figures will help you be able to determine the bottom-line value of each of your pieces of content, as well as calculating a rough return on investment (ROI) figure.


Let's say one of the blog posts we're creating to encourage CRM signups generated 500 new email leads; we'd see a $2,500 return. We could then go and evaluate the cost of producing that blog post (let's say it takes 6 hours at $100 per hour – $600) to calculate a ROI figure of 316%.


ROI in its simplest form is calculated as:


(((($return)-($investment))/($investment))*100)

You don't necessarily need to follow these figures religiously when it comes to content performance on a broader level, especially when you consider that some content just doesn't have the primary goal of lead generation. That said, for the content that does have this goal, it makes sense to pay attention to this.


The link between engagement and ROI


So far I've talked about two very different forms of measurement:



  1. Engagement

  2. Return on investment


What you'll want to avoid is actually thinking about these as isolated variables. Return on investment metrics (for example, lead conversion rate) are heavily influenced by engagement metrics, such as TTR.


The key is to understand exactly which engagement metrics have the greatest impact on your ROI. This way you can use engagement metrics to form the basis of your optimization tests in order to make the biggest impact on your bottom line.


Let's take the following scenario that I faced within my own blog as an example…


The average length of the content across my website is around 5,000 words. Some of my content way surpasses 10,000 words in length, taking an estimated hour to read (my recent SEO tips guide is a perfect example of this). As a result, the bounce rate on my content is quite high, especially from mobile visitors.


Keeping people engaged within a 10,000-word article when they haven't got a lot of time on their hands is a challenge. Needless to say, it makes it even more difficult to ensure my CTAs (aimed at newsletter subscriptions) stand out.


From some testing, I found that adding my CTAs closer to the top of my content was helping to improve conversion rates. The main issue I needed to tackle was how to keep people on the page for longer, even when they're in a hurry.


To do this, I worked on the following solution: give visitors a concise summary of the blog post that takes under 30 seconds to read. Once they've read this, show them a CTA that will give them something to read in more detail in their own time.


All this involved was the addition of a "Summary" button at the top of my blog post that, when clicked, hides the content and displays a short summary with a custom CTA.


Showing Custom Summaries


This has not only helped to reduce the number of people bouncing from my long-form content, but it also increased the number of subscribers generated from my content whilst improving user experience at the same time (which is pretty rare).


I've thought that more of you might find this quite a useful feature on your own websites, so I packaged it up as a free WordPress plugin that you can download here.


Final thoughts


The above example is just one example of a way to impact the ROI of your content by improving engagement. My advice is to get a robust measurement process in place so that you're able to first of all identify opportunities, and then go through with experiments to take advantage of the opportunity.


More than anything, I'd recommend that you take a step back and re-evaluate the way that you're measuring your content campaigns to see if what you're doing really aligns with the fundamental goals of your business. You can invest in endless tools that help you measure things better, but if core metrics that you're looking for are wrong, then this is all for nothing.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

What 300+ Content Marketing Campaigns Can Teach You About Earning Links

Posted by KelseyLibert

[Estimated read time: 9 minutes]

300-campaigns-header.png

In a recent Whiteboard Friday about 10x content, Rand said to expect it to take 5 to 10 attempts before you'll create a piece of content that's a hit.

If you've been at the content marketing game for a while, you probably agree with Rand. Seasoned content marketers know you're likely to see a percentage of content flops before you achieve a big win. Then, as you gain a sense for why some content fails and other content succeeds, you integrate what you've learned into your process. Gradually, you start batting fewer base hits and more home runs.

At Fractl, we regularly look back at campaign performance and refine our production and promotion processes based on what the data tells us. Are publishers rejecting a certain content format? Is there a connection between Domain Authority (DA) and the industry vertical we targeted? Do certain topics attract the most social shares? These are the types of questions we ask, and then we use the related data to create better content.

We recently dug through three years of content marketing campaigns and asked: What factors increase content's ability to earn links? In this post, I'll show you what we found.

Methodology

We analyzed campaign data from a sample of 345 Fractl campaigns that launched between 2013 and 2016. To compare linking performance, we set benchmarks based on the industry averages for links per campaign from our content marketing agency survey: High success (more than 100 placements), moderate success (20–100 placements), and low success (fewer than 20 placements).

We looked at the relationship between the number of placements and the content's topic, visual assets, and formatting. "Placement" refers to any time a publisher wrote about the campaign. In terms of links, a placement could mean dofollow, cocitation, nofollow, or text attribution.

Which content elements can increase link earning potential?

The chart below highlights the largest differences between our high- and low-success campaigns.

Content Marketing Campaigns-02.png

We found the following characteristics were present in content that earned the most links:


  1. Highly emotional

  2. Broad appeal

  3. Comparison

  4. Pop culture-themed

The data confirmed our assumptions about why some content is better than others at attracting links, as all four of the above characteristics were present in some of our biggest hits. As an example, our Women in Video Games campaign checked all four of those boxes.

vice-screenshot.pngIt paired a highly emotional topic (body image issues) with a strong visual contrast. It also included a pop culture theme that appealed to a niche audience (video game fans) while also resonating with a broader audience. To date, this campaign has amassed nearly 900 placements, including links from high-authority sites such as BuzzFeed, Huffington Post, MTV, and Vice Motherboard.

Read on for more takeaways on how to increase your content's link-earning potential.

Content that evokes a strong emotional response is extremely effective at earning links.

Emotional impact was the greatest differentiator between our most successful campaigns and all other campaigns, with those that secured over 100 placements being 3 times more likely to feature a strong emotional hook than less successful campaigns.

Example: The Truth About Hotel Hygiene

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Our Truth About Hotel Hygiene earned more than 700 placements thanks to a high "ick" factor, which gave it emotional resonance paired with universal interest (most people use hotels). We've also found including an element of surprise helps strengthen the content's emotional impact. This study definitely surprised readers with a shocking finding: The nicest hotels had the most germs.

Example: Perceptions of Perfection

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In our Perceptions of Perfection campaign, audiences were surprised to see drastically how designers altered a woman's photo to fit their country's standards of beauty. The surprise factor added an additional layer of emotionality to the already emotional topic of women's body image issues, which helped this campaign get nearly 600 placements.

Choose content topics with wide appeal to increase potential for high-quality links.

So we've proven emotionally provocative content can attract a lot of links, but what about high-quality links? We found a correlation between high average domain authority and content topics with mass appeal. Broad topics appeal to a greater range of publishers, thus increasing the number of relevant high-authority sites your content can be placed on.

Some verticals may have an advantage when it comes to link quality too. Campaigns for our travel, entertainment, and retail clients tend to have a high average domain authority per placement since these verticals naturally lend themselves to content ideas with mass appeal.

Some examples of campaign topics with a DA-per-placement average above 55:


  • Cities That Hate Tourist

  • Most Googled Brands in Each State

  • Data Breaches by State and Sector

  • Airline Hygiene Exposed

  • Deadliest Driving States

Pro tip: A site's influence matters more than the type of link you'll acquire from it. Don't fear nofollow links; for two of our best-performing campaigns of all time, the initial links were nofollows from high-authority sites. A nofollow link on a high-authority site can lead to syndication on hundreds of other sites that will give dofollow links.

Use rankings and comparisons to fuel online discussion.

Contrast was a recurring theme in our high-performing campaigns, with strong contrasts achieved through visual or numerical comparisons. More than half of our highest-performing campaigns centered around a ranking or comparison, compared to just a third of our lowest-performing campaigns. Pitting two or more things against one another fuels discussion around the content, which can lead to more placements.

Example: Comparing Siri, Cortana, and Google Now

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Comparing Cortana was a hands-on study for which participants gave a command to their virtual assistant and rated their satisfaction with the response. Comparing the three most widely used smartphone assistants attracted the attention of techies (especially Apple fans) as well as the broader public, since most people have one of these assistants on their smartphone.

Example: Airport Rankings

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The Airport Rankings campaign looked at which airports offered the best and worst experiences, based on data including the volume of canceled flights, delays, and lost luggage. Local publishers loved this campaign; many focused on the story around how their regional airport fared in the rankings. Since most travelers have lived through at least one terrible airport experience, the content was extremely relatable too.

Pro tip: Side-by-side visualizations pack a high-contrast visual punch that helps drive linking and social shares. This type of contrasting imagery is extremely powerful visually since it's easy to process. It helps evoke an immediate response that quickly engages viewers.

Incorporate a geographic angle to earn international or regional links.

Did you notice a majority of the broad-topic campaigns with a high domain authority listed above also had a geographic angle? In addition to broad appeal, geography-focused topics help attract interest from international and regional publishers, thus securing additional links.

Example: Most Popular Concert Drugs

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The Most Popular Concert Drugs, one of our most successful campaigns to date with nearly 1,900 placements, examined the connection between music festivals and drug mentions on Instagram. Many global sites featured the story for its worldwide festivals, including publishers in the U.K., France, Italy, Australia, and Brazil. Had we limited our selection to U.S. festivals, it's doubtful this campaign would have attracted as much attention.

Example: Most Instagrammed Locations

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As with the example above, pairing a geographic angle with Instagram data proved to be a winning formula for the Most Instagrammed Locations campaign. We featured the most Instagrammed places in both the U.S. and Canada, which helped the campaign secure additional coverage from Canadian publishers.

Pro tip: To extend a campaign's reach to the offline world, consider pitching relevant TV and radio stations with geo-themed content that offers new data; traditional news outlets seem to love these stories. We've had multiple geo-focused campaigns featured on national and local news stations simply because they saw the story getting covered by online media.

Include pop culture references to pique audience interest.

Our campaigns with more than 100 pickups were nearly twice as likely to incorporate a pop culture theme than our campaigns with fewer than 20 pickups. Content that ties in pop culture is primed for targeting a niche of dedicated fans who will want to share and discuss it like crazy, while it simultaneously resonates on a surface level for many people. Geek-culture themes, such as comic books and sci-fi movies, tend to attract a lot of attention thanks to rabid fan bases.

New School vs. Old School

Trending pop culture phenomena are best for making your content feel relevant to the current zeitgeist (think: a Walking Dead theme that appeals to fans of the show while also playing up the current cultural obsession with zombies).

On the other hand, old school pop culture references are effective for creating strong feelings of nostalgia (think: everything in BuzzFeed's '90s category). If your audience falls within a certain age bracket, consider what would be nostalgic to them. What did they grow up with, and how can you weave this into your content?

Example: Fictional Power Sources

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Fictional Power Sources looked at which iconic weapons, vehicles, and superpowers featured in movies were the most powerful. Rather than focusing on one movie, we featured a handful of popular movies - including Star Wars, Back to the Future, and The Matrix - which increased it the campaign's appeal to movie fans.

Example: Sitcom Cribs

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Sitcom Cribs looked at the affordability of the living spaces on various TV shows - could the “Friends” characters really afford their trendy Manhattan digs? By featuring a lot of older TV shows, this campaign had a high nostalgia factor for audiences familiar with classic '90s sitcoms. Including newer TV shows kept the campaign relevant to younger audiences too.

Pro tip: To increase the appeal, feature a range of pop culture icons as opposed to just one, such as a list of movies, musicians, or TV shows. This adds to the range of pop culture fans who will connect with the content, rather than limiting the potential audience to one fan base.

Earning high-quality links is just one benefit of creating content that incorporates high emotionality, contrast, broad appeal, or pop culture references. We've also found these characteristics present in our campaigns that perform well in terms of social sharing.

In particular, emotional resonance is a key ingredient, not only for earning links but also for getting your content widely shared. Our campaigns that received more than 20,000 social shares were 8 times more likely to include a strong emotional hook than campaigns that received fewer than 1,000 shares.

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How can you ensure these elements are incorporated into your content, thus increasing its linking and sharing potential? In a previous post, I walk through exactly how we create campaigns like the examples I shared above. Check it out for a step-by-step guide to creating engaging, highly shareable content.

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What observations have you made about your most successful content? I'd love to hear your thoughts on which content elements attract the most links and shares.


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Meet Talkshow, the latest viral app the Internet is freaking out about

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Look out, Internet. The new Peach has arrived - and we have Taylor Swift to thank. 


A new text messaging app called Talkshow became the buzzy new social platform du jour on Tuesday for its quirky concept: it's like “texting in public.”


The iOS-only app lets users host message-based “Talkshows” about various topics, from sports and politics to TV and music. People notify followers when a Talkshow is live, encouraging anyone who's watching to send messages, post reactions and GIFs or even join in as a co-host. It's like Periscope for texting.



Founder Michael Sippey said in a blog post that the concept is inspired by a conversation posted online of Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran.   Read more...


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6 Instagram Tools to Improve Your Marketing

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Do you want to take your Instagram marketing to the next level? Have you considered using tools to support your efforts there? Adding the right Instagram tools into your marketing flow can help you project a more professional image and give you valuable analytic insights. In this article you'll discover six tools to improve your [...]


This post 6 Instagram Tools to Improve Your Marketing first appeared on .

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Monday, April 25, 2016

How to Simplify the Publishing of Curated Content on Facebook With Free Tools

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Looking for a way to simplify the process of publishing your curated content on Facebook? Want to schedule curated content posts and links to your own blog? By using If This Then That (IFTTT), Pocket, and Google Docs, you can create a cost-effective and time-saving workflow that will help you keep your Facebook page stocked [...]


This post How to Simplify the Publishing of Curated Content on Facebook With Free Tools first appeared on .

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How 'bathroom bills' started an online war over transgender rights

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YouTube star Joey Salads recently watched a video entitled "What Pisses Me Off About Transgender Bathrooms" and came up with an idea for one of his signature "social experiments."


Salads, who declined to provide his legal name for privacy reasons, wanted to test how women react to seeing a visibly transgender woman in a public bathroom. 



He quickly researched gender identity online and chatted with two friends who he says represent opposite sides of the argument. 


Then Salads, 22, donned a dress, purse and blonde wig, and let the cameras roll as he followed women into a public bathroom in a north Hollywood apartment complex. The video, released on Monday, has since been watched more than one million times.  Read more...


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