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5 Advanced Content Distribution Strategies and 7 Tips to Do It Right in 2024

DATE POSTED:May 9, 2024
5 Advanced Content Distribution Strategies and 7 Tips to Do It Right in 2024

“Content distribution” is a phrase that may seem mystifying to you. However, when it’s working well, it simplifies your content creation efforts.

One piece of high-quality content can work for you repeatedly by simply breaking it into 5–7 pieces and distributing it across several different marketing channels.

Here we’ll de-mystify content distribution, define what it is, best practices, and how to use some advanced content distribution strategies to get the most out of your marketing assets. 

What Is Content Distribution?

Content distribution is the strategic process of sharing content across a variety of channels to reach a target audience.

At their best, content distribution strategies maximize the visibility and impact of your content.

Common types of content that can be distributed include:

  • Email newsletters
  • White papers
  • Case studies
  • Infographics
  • Blog posts
  • Podcasts
  • Videos

It’s important to promote content across different channels and media formats to maximize reach and engagement. 

Content distribution graphic

(Image Source)

For instance, the demographic that listens to podcasts may not be the same demographic that reads white papers. But both groups are nevertheless in the target audience you are trying to reach.

By creating one piece of content and distributing it through several different marketing channels, you are maximizing your reach while keeping the output of your resources nearly the same.

In fact, promoting content is your best friend when it comes to increasing the return on investment (ROI) of your marketing efforts

Video clips from a larger webinar, including AI-generated videos, can be included in newsletters to your email list. Newsletters can be re-formatted as blog posts. Blog posts can be broken down into 5–7 social media posts, all of which, in turn, create an inbound marketing trail.

The key is to be strategic, have a plan, and follow the plan consistently.

Importance of Effective Content Distribution

Consistently creating high-quality content is a challenge on its own, but it’s only half the battle. After all, the most impressive content in the world won’t do your marketing goals any good if no one ever sees it.

This is why effective content distribution is so important. When done well, it increases brand awareness, solidifies brand authority, and boosts audience engagement.

Let’s take a closer look at how effective content distribution contributes to overall marketing ROI.

Brand Awareness: Collaborating with influencers or thought leaders and getting featured in their content, which is then shared on their platforms, can generate backlinks to your website, enhancing online visibility and brand awareness. Create a partnership proposal to get started on your first collaboration. 

Brand Authority: Contributing expert opinions or insights to industry publications positions your brand as an authority in the field, resulting in media mentions that enhance credibility and expertise.

Audience Engagement: Launch user-generated content campaigns where your audience contributes content related to your brand, encourages social media shares, builds a community around your brand, and enhances engagement.

screenshot of ROI of varying distribution channels

(Image Source)

Types of Distribution Channels

There are three distinct categories of distribution channels — owned channels, earned or shared channels, and paid channels.

It’s important to understand the distinctions between each so you can build your content distribution strategy accordingly. 

Owned Channels

These are platforms that your brand has control over, such as your official website, blog, and social media profiles. You have full ownership over your owned channels and your content, branding, and connection to your audience. 

However, building and maintaining traffic and consistently having to produce high-quality content to keep them engaged is a challenge.

Earned/Shared Channels

Earned or shared channels involve leveraging third-party platforms or audiences to distribute content. This includes things like media coverage, influencer collaborations, and user-generated content. 

The benefit is the potential for extended reach through established audiences you normally wouldn’t have access to. Challenges may arise over having less control. 

For instance, becoming dependent on external factors you have no influence over and having to adhere to the values and requirements of third-party platforms.

Paid Channels

Paid channels involve investing in advertising to promote content. This includes social media ads, search engine marketing, and sponsored content. The advantages are immediate visibility and targeted reach. 

Challenges include the expense, the need to optimize ad performance, monitor AdWords competitors, and ensure the content aligns seamlessly with platform and audience expectations. 

It takes time to get dialed in, and paid channel distribution can get costly quickly as you experiment with what works.

Best Practices for Content Distribution Strategies

Your content distribution should be done strategically. Gone are the days when content distribution meant simply publishing a blog post and pasting its URL to your social media profiles. 

If that’s still where you are in your content distribution strategy, that’s okay. It’s good that you’ve started somewhere.

But now is the time to start thinking strategically so you can start seeing some serious ROI for your efforts. 

Here are seven best practices for building content distribution strategies. 

Know Your Audience

Being too general is a death knell for a lot of content marketers. You have a general idea of your target audience and create content around what you think they’ll be interested in.

You may get lucky and strike gold with this approach. But it’s far more likely low traffic, low engagement, and few conversions will frustrate your attempts.

That’s why the first thing you need to do is create an audience persona.

An audience persona (also called a “buyer persona” or “customer profile”) maps out your ideal customer. 

It usually includes things like:

  • Motivations
  • Occupation
  • Pain points
  • Location
  • Hobbies
  • Gender
  • Salary
  • Age
a graphic showing an example of how to build a customer profile

(Image Source)

Let’s take an example of creating personas for gamers. 

Imagine ’Alex,’ someone who loves action-adventure games on PC. Alex is particularly captivated by unique game items, like Catwoman’s grappling claw pickaxe, which symbolizes agility and stealth in gameplay. 

To map Alex’s customer journey, consider how she discovers new games, perhaps through Twitch streams or gaming forums, and her purchasing habits, like opting for complete game editions. 

Understanding these details helps create targeted content, such as in-depth reviews of anticipated action-adventure games or features on legendary in-game items.

This approach ensures your content resonates with specific segments like Alex and her fellow gamers.

Next, dive into the pain points of your customers. What problems do they care the most about solving?

Use tools like:

Google Analytics – gives you insight into user behavior and who is viewing your content.

Glassbox – creates heatmaps and session replays around your website so you can see in real time what content your audience engages with. 

Hubspot Analytics – gives you detailed reports across marketing channels by analyzing lead generation, customer interactions, and behaviors.  

Once you’ve gathered this data about your audience’s demographics, interests, and behaviors, you can tailor your content to their needs.

Just as importantly, you’ll be able to make data-driven decisions about the best content distribution channels to focus on based on your persona research.

Understand the Content You Should Distribute First

To understand the content you should distribute, first, make a list of the types of content assets you already have. For example, take inventory of your blog posts, white papers, case studies, infographics, videos, and similar content.

Analyze the historical performance of each content type on the different channels they’re published on. Which has been the most effective?

Use this information to map out which content to distribute first. 

For instance, if your short-form videos are performing the best, concentrate on distributing them to your email subscribers and as social media posts.

Choose the Right Channels for Maximum Reach and Visibility

Now that your historical content is working for you, you can turn your attention to choosing the best channels to maximize your visibility moving forward.

You’ll take the same approach with this as you did with your historical content.

Compile the data you’ve gathered from your audience behavior tools. See what your target audience is engaging with. Take note of the demographic they’re in.

If your audience is primarily 20–30 years old, using mobile devices, and engaging with your videos, you’ll want to choose to invest in short-form video content.

If your audience is middle-aged professionals who like your case studies, work on creating bite-sized statistics and analytics to share on LinkedIn and your email list.

Lastly, compare the benefits and drawbacks of paid and organic channels. You want to strike a healthy balance between the two for sustainable growth. 

Putting all your eggs in one bucket is never the wisest course of action. However, you must keep your budget and business goals in mind when determining how much to invest in paid and organic channels.

Identify and Set Your Content Distribution KPIs and Goals

Speaking of business goals, you’ll want to map out the key steps for identifying and setting up your content distribution KPIs.

To work towards clear goals, determine relevant metrics and align them with your broader content marketing strategy.

Your goals and metrics should work together.

For instance, if your goal is greater brand awareness, set a metric that monitors brand mentions across media.

If your goal is greater email engagement, set a metric of higher open rates.

Create Engaging Content That Resonates With Your Audience

“Engaging content” doesn’t just mean writing with personality (though that does help).

In the context of marketing, “engaging content” means describing your buyer persona’s pain points, information preferences, and motivations. Then, positioning your product as the best solution. 

To do this, it all goes back to the data. 

With good data, you can create a good buyer persona. Your customer profile then serves as a guide to create content that’ll prompt your target audience to share, engage, and ultimately convert.

Create a Content Calendar

There are many ways to build a content calendar. To be the most effective, your content calendar should include:

  • Who is responsible
  • Marketing channel
  • Distribution plan
  • Due dates
  • Format

Color coding is a wonderful way to help keep content calendars organized. There are many tools available to streamline building a content pipeline. Some of the best are Asana, Trello, Notion, and AirTable.

Screenshot of an editorial calendar example built in Airtable

(Image Source)

In addition to an overall content calendar, you’ll need a social media management tool. These tools allow you to create, curate, and schedule posts months in advance and offer valuable analytical data to help you monitor engagement.

Buffer, Hootsuite, and SocialPilot are among the best and most popular. But research the best choice for the size and needs of your team. 

Distribute Your Content and Tailor It to Each Platform

While the purpose of content distribution is to maximize the potential of each marketing asset, content isn’t necessarily one-size-fits-all.

For each distribution channel you’re working with, you need to understand its features and audience.

For instance, content on Instagram may thrive on visuals and concise captions, while LinkedIn favors professional insights and longer-form content. 

If you try swapping the approach for either, you’re not going to see much engagement. 

Because of this, be mindful when you’re adapting content for different platforms and industry-specific publications.

Tailoring your content will help increase engagement and overall reach, especially when distributing content for B2B and B2C companies.

5 Advanced Content Distribution Strategies

Once you have content distribution best practices to build on, you can turn your mind to more advanced strategies to reach your goals.

Here are five of the most important things to consider.

Measure, Analyze, and Optimize

Content creation and distribution alone aren’t enough to grow.

You must analyze your content distribution results by tracking website traffic, engagement, user behavior, and any other relevant KPIs.

Use these insights to determine which content resonates with your audience, which channels are most effective, and when your audience is most active.

The benefit of this data is invaluable as you refine your distribution strategy and create content that drives engagement and conversions.

The challenges involve setting up and monitoring analytics tools, building reports, and comprehensively interpreting your results.

Repurpose and recycle content

Get the most out of your high-performing content assets by repurposing them again and again.

Turn high-traffic blog posts into videos, infographics, or webinars that funnel your target audience through the buyer journey.

Recycle your current content library with updates and refreshes to stay current with your competition and avoid pouring more resources into creating brand-new content.  

The challenge lies in maintaining quality while diversifying content offerings.

Expand Your Reach

Expanding your reach can be done in your owned channels by branching out to something you’re not already doing. For instance, starting a podcast or YouTube channel, beginning an email list, or starting to guest post on large industry blogs.

Shared channels can also be good here, using influencer connections or giving interviews to print publications to reach large, established audiences outside your normal reach.

Identifying the right channels, understanding new audience behaviors, and adapting content to resonate with different communities can cause some challenges. But if done successfully, they’ll expand your reach.

Invest More in Paid Channels

Double down on paid channels that have worked in the past or experiment with new ones. If you’ve never tried Instagram or Facebook Ads, try them. If Google Ads are new to you, get started there.

Paid channels can be an expensive money pit, but if you start small and are strategic, you’ll be able to grow sustainably and increase your reach.  

Email Marketing

Email marketing is a popular channel because it is inexpensive to run and has a high return across industries. If email marketing isn’t part of your current content distribution plan, it absolutely should be.

Create or revamp a newsletter, offer valuable insights for your subscribers, and include shareable content to generate new leads with every issue. 

Building and maintaining a healthy email list, creating engaging content, and monitoring results take time and effort, but the payoff is sky-high. 

Conclusion

Content distribution is the difference between publishing a blog that sits on your website for years underperforming and a booming pipeline of inbound leads across the web.

Concentrate first on the channels under your control (blogs, websites, social media profiles). Supplement your growing content distribution strategy with paid channels (social media ads, ads in print, sponsored content). 

Expand your reach with shared channels (influencer partnerships, PR connections, guest posts), and your marketing content will grow into a robust pipeline of brand authority and healthy ROI. 

Enhance your content distribution strategy through the power of custom curation. Book a demo to learn how.

The post 5 Advanced Content Distribution Strategies and 7 Tips to Do It Right in 2024 appeared first on Scoop.it Blog.