Market-alism: How to write copy that customers want to read
Understanding your audience/readership is central to the success of any commercial publication. Ever hear of a thriving news organization oblivious to what its audience of readers or viewers want? In the same vein, marketers tone-deaf to the proclivities of their own market, the content that customers will pay attention to, are short-lived. In marketing today, more than ever, quality content is defined as the kind of material to which your buyer relates and identifies with:
1. It’s about them, not you.
2. It describes their situations, not yours.
3. It makes them, not your brand, most prominent in the story.
4. It’s eminently readable and compelling: the terminology is theirs, the style is engaging, the language vivid.
5. It informs, educates, provokes thought–and it inspires sharing.
The above, by the way, could describe the best and most shared content on the web, on any given day. Which is exactly what we mean by the term market-alism.
What are you doing to instill these practices in your own content: web copy, white papers, case studies, etc.? How does your team ensure that your “out-bound” efforts maximize “in-bound” inquiries and high conversions?