The Digital Conversationalist

9 Reasons Content Marketing Isn’t Succeeding in Asia

For 18 months I’ve been working exclusively with brands to launch content marketing strategies and campaigns across Asia. It’s been an exciting time, but a challenging one too. The challenges are varied and have been learnt the hard way. So if you want to skip a little bit of pain, I encourage you to take heed.

Content Hub

First and foremost, if you do not have a destination for customers to visit, you are wasting your time. Content must have a home. Your customer likes your story, they want to come back for more, but where is back? Don’t make them work hard to find you, they’ve got other options.

Also how do you get a consolidated view (aka the ROI) without a content hub? So the first thing you must do, if you are serious about content marketing, is build a content hub for your business.

In Asia, you can be part of a global hub, but it’s extremely challenging to own that asset (and it’s slow to get your content up), so I encourage you to build your own site, or at least build your regional site within the global site. Too many marketers in Asia feel powerless within the global business set-up. We need to change that because while global content is relevant, local content is when you really see an impact. Of course, it’s expensive to do multi-language sites, so start with English first if this is an issue.

Another important point when designing a hub – traditional Website companies are not necessarily best equipped to build a content hub. You must have people who understand content driving and collaborating the front-end design.

Here’s a few favorite Content Hubs. There are many more – Adobe’s CMO.com, GE Reports, Gap Gemini Content Loop, IQ by Intel, and Think With Google.

CTAs

Once you have your content hub, you want people to do something else – read more, call you, attend an event, download a whitepaper, subscribe to an email, etc… So please make sure the customer can do something else, but don’t expect them to become a lead after reading one piece of content – do you become a lead after one piece?

Customers and prospects may come back time and again to read your content before they do anything else, so make sure you’re aware of what they’re up to and what they’re interested in, driving them in that direction with great content, not sales! Keep them on the site, keep them engaged, keep them coming back, but focus on delivering value first – focus on tantalizing them. Sales are for later.

Also when working out what to measure, think about how content is consumed, versus what is currently measured. This Outbrain piece ‘Why Time on Page Is a Broken KPI for Content Marketing’ is a must-read to ensure you don’t think you’re failing when you’re actually succeeding!

Content strategy

It’s well documented that companies who fail do not have a content strategy. Defining this up front is CRITICAL! Who is your customer? What do they care about? Read this Marketing Insider article: Why Customer-Focused Content Should Be A Priority for more on that.

Right at the beginning, work out who the human is at the other end of your current marketing/sales programs, and then define a strategy that is going to help that person be successful AND build their loyalty to you.

There’s loads of information on this, but look at Adobe’s site I suggested earlier CMO.com. Adobe sells to CMOs and it owns the CMO conversation on this site. Read the content – it’s about helping CMO’s be successful.

L’Oreals Makeup.com teaches customers make-up tips – great right?

Neither are directly selling to customers, but you bet they are in the end. And why wouldn’t you buy from them if they made your life better, easier, more fulfilled, or whatever other goal a brand puts behind its content strategy?

HubSpot has always been that brand for me. I’m grateful to them.

Ownership

This is a big issue in Asia. Who owns content marketing? Right now, the door is open for marketing and communication professionals within brands to step up and become the rock stars of their business. Because content marketing needs central ownership inside the brand.

You need someone who drives this internally. Someone who chases people across the business to get involved, contribute content, share content, and generally get behind the initiative to make your content successful.

The owner has to have a lot of guts, because they’ve got to stand up to everyone and they’ve got to face the doubters and drive it through anyway. It’s not easy in this region, but that’s how it succeeds. So whoever is the owner, your first job is to get the top boss’ ear and convince them this stuff works. They need to champion what you’re doing, and then you need to be insanely focused on ensuring you are successful. It’s a wonderful opportunity for anyone with big goals and big dreams for the future.

Oh and don’t think an outsourced agency can do this bit. We can’t. You need an owner inside, and you need a powerful and supportive partner outside to deliver content and to back you up.

This is your opportunity to shine. Go for it. You got the guts to be a star?

Stop with the projects

The madness of the projects has to stop – it doesn’t work. You can’t test this stuff over small amounts of content and over short periods of time. The cyclical, quarterly business model is the way marketing used to be. It’s all changed now. Define your audience and build a relationship over the long term. It’s the only way it can be successful and a project is not going to help you “see if it works”.

Need proof of success? Give the guys responsible for OpenForum at American Express a call. Has this small to medium business site been successful for them as a business? You betcha!

C-level buy-in

I talked about getting the bosses ear earlier, but the reality is, you need the entire c-suite on board. You need to get them excited. You need to turn them into your biggest fans. If you do not have their buy-in, you can do OK at content marketing, but seriously, do you want to be super proud of the work you’re doing and win global awards? Well that’s the difference between doing it all yourself and getting the whole business behind you. It has to start at the top and they need to show real support for your work. You need your c-suite to become content marketing leaders for your business and industry.

Employee advocacy

Which maps into employee advocacy nicely. Get your C-suite trained on content marketing AND personal branding first. Get them committed and involved. Then get your entire employee base trained and launch an army of employee advocates for your business. The average person has 500 connections, so if you have 500 employees reaching out on your brands’ behalf to their 500 connections, that’s the ability to influence 250,000 people. Get them doing it every week and we’re really talking impact right? But the content HAS to be good. They have to be proud to share it. It needs to reflect well on them.

An example this week. If you know anyone that works at Microsoft right now (and I’ve got a lot of them in my network), chances are you saw them share this great piece ‘ Microsoft employees transform lives and strengthen communities in biggest year yet for charitable giving’. And why wouldn’t you? It’s a great piece and something to be proud of.

A product pitch – only your unthinking employees share that stuff!

Social media assets and focus

Another challenge in Asia is social media and integrating this team into the content marketing strategy. None of this can be separate, and the gutsy owner I was talking about before needs to make sure this happens.

Also check out your social media assets. Is the content good? Do you have an 80:20 ratio of 80% valuable customer focused content Vs 20% selly sell? I can almost guarantee you don’t and the majority of brand social assets I review are not that interesting for customers. Take a hard look at your social sites, have clear goals for what you want them to achieve and then deliver great content, mostly about the customer.

Patience

Finally, PATIENCE. You won’t see ground breaking results quickly. You might get lucky for sure, but usually it takes a lot of work, focus, persistence and absolute determination. You’ll have your nay-sayers around you – they’re always there right? But you must understand true content marketing success takes patience and a lot of it.

And you must make sure your bosses get this important point to. Otherwise you’ll quit before you even get started, heading back to the old way of doing marketing, and you’ll probably be one of those companies predicted to be out of business by 2020.

Right, well there’s a few lessons I learned. Could’ve shared a lot more (amplification in particular), but it’s already too long right? I do try to write shorter blogs you know.

What would you add?

Have a great weekend.

Cheers

Andrea

And please, if you like this, I’d love a comment, a discussion or a smiley face. Of course, please also feel free to share this with your communities. That’s what this is all about today – sharing and giving to each other. If you like my style and what I talk about, feel free to follow me on LinkedInTwitter or Facebook. Thanks for reading.

 

2 thoughts on “9 Reasons Content Marketing Isn’t Succeeding in Asia”

  1. I think this also relates back to the maturity model you presented on a previous blog. On one hand, companies need to evolve to engaging an audience on issues based content (i.e. not written by ad copy-writers). On the other, global companies need to trust APJ subsidiaries to connect with their audience on a local issues basis which is a leap of faith for many organizations. Ultimately, I suspect this is just latency in APJ adopting best-practice but you prove – once again – to be a catalyst in this transformation. This is a great article.

    1. Oh thanks so much Tim, really appreciate the support. I felt a bit of a bolt was needed, because the potential with content marketing is so huge, but we’ve all got to get focused on making it work – and that requires a few different parties to be bought in. The leap of faith is a big issue as well. I’ll keep going 🙂 xxxx

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