There are a few technical skills involved in publishing an article online and then driving engagement and enthusiasm with it.
Far too often, I hear from business owners, artists, or entrepreneurs, who “tried blogging” or did “some” podcasting and all but gave up because they didn’t get the results they expected.
Come on folks, you should know better. As founders and creative professionals, you know better than anyone that the Field of Dreams mantra of “If you build it, they will come,” isn’t remotely accurate. So why are so many writing a blog post, recording a podcast, or publishing a YouTube video and then expecting the audience will just come?
It takes time to build an audience on your site or blog. It takes time to get subscribers and followers. Don’t give up because you don’t yet have them; instead, be smart about leveraging what you create.
“There is a sophistication to HOW, WHEN, and WHERE you create content in the various platforms are not necessarily competitive with one another. Medium is not Tumblr, which is not Instagram, nor Facebook, nor Wix, nor WordPress.” How Content Creation Affects Your Funding
We pushed an article months ago, exploring how this sophistication in content creation not only drives your audience, but can impact what potential investors think of your level of expertise. An infographic then and there, shared again here, gave a bit of insight to how to plan what you do with content but didn’t give much depth on specific tactics to undertake.
Let’s do that.
So, you have a blog post…
Own your content.
What we mean by that is that first and foremost, always write on a domain associated with your personal brand or business (well, almost always).
If you've not done that, go do it now, first. Set up a website and get your content there.
You want Google and social media to appreciate that your domain, where *you* establish, create, and own value, is the host of your content. This is true of anything…
- Launching a podcast? Don’t just put it on Spotify or Anchor. Host your shows and the content about them on YOUR SITE. Everywhere else is a channel.
- Working in video? For the love of media, don’t just host your video on YouTube or Vimeo! Promote it by way of your site and use video sites as audiences.
- Writing? You can write on LinkedIn, Medium, Quora, Facebook, and more. If you **only** write there, you’re limiting your audience, control, insight, and ownership of your content. Why on earth would you do that??
Granted, I said almost anything.
Of course, some content might only be applicable to your LinkedIn profile and community. A discussion in a Reddit thread might only warrant writing your opinion there. An answer you want to write to a question, might only apply to that question being on Quora.
But when you can, why not take what you intend to put there and also create more content for your space? Write and publish your perspective in an appropriate tone and *then* push a varied perspective to LinkedIn, Quora, or Reddit (with a link back to your broader thesis on your site).
Let’s get into specifics. Having published something on your domain, where else should you go with it and what and how should you do so?
Here’s a task list
Notice, I’m going to do something funny in here that might not make sense so let me explain it – with each task I’m encourage you undertake, I’m going to link TO where I’ve done exactly what, on behalf of THIS article, I’m encouraging that you do with yours. Play along and notice I’m doing what you should.
X
- You should already have more than one X / Twitter profile. You have one for yourself, another for your brand or business, and you could still have more related to your industry. Create audiences on X with varied profiles related to what you’re doing.
- Use your favorite scheduling tool and schedule MANY tweets about your article. MANY.
- The headline and link, of course
- A quote from yourself
- A quote you featured from someone else
- Provocative thoughts
- Schedule out the sharing of your content on ALL of your Twitter profiles. Schedule tweets more than once. No one sits on Twitter and reads everything so you absolutely can (and should) tweet something more than once – so followers who didn’t see it previously might still see it.
- Here’s the trick: ALWAYS @tag others. It gets their attention. Tag people you quoted. Tag someone who might have interest. Tag a friend who might enjoy your article. Heck, tag me, I’m @seobrien; you’ll see how I get informed of what you’ve tweeted. Share this and tag me ?
Examples! Here I’ve tweeted THIS article a few different ways: * As myself * From MediaTech Ventures * To Austin Marketers | Trying this crazy kind of education post where I explain how to syndicate content and then link to examples of me doing it for the same article. So… here you are, for this, for that: https://t.co/xY6COuWZIe — Paul O’Brien (@seobrien) July 11, 2019 |
A few ways to appreciate LinkedIn so let’s break them down.
- Your own profile, from which you can post something or write an article
- Your business page, from which you can post something
- A group be that one you created or one in which you belong, to which you can post something
Let me touch on writing an article in a moment. First, let’s keep this simple and focus on just posting your article.
Write a blurb that’s compelling and interesting. Tag (just like Twitter, @[someone’s name]) people associated with your article. Add your link. And post it in varied ways as YOURSELF, your BUSINESS, and in GROUPs.
Appreciate, you shouldn’t post the exact same thing in every context.
Should you instead write an article?? Considering you already have, on your site, it would be easy to recreate the article on LinkedIn would it not?
POST when it’s just something you want to share with your LinkedIn connections and followers. Instead take the article you wrote and publish it AGAIN as an article on your personal profile IF it’s an article you forever want associated with your LinkedIn profile.
Note though, if you want to republish your article in full on LinkedIn, add a link in that article back to the original article written. This is pretty important for some SEO reasons we’ll not get into here. Just remember: when you republish an article somewhere else, link back to the original!
Here’s our post of this to a LinkedIn group, here our business page, and here as myself. And this is what the article looks like.
Medium
Speaking of republishing the article, Medium is a great place to do so.
Again, you want to make sure you link BACK to the original source; Medium makes it easy to do so.
Start here: https://medium.com/p/import
Use that Import Feature to paste the web address of your original article and import the content into Medium. This ensures that the article uses what’s called a “Canonical URL” (an SEO thing) and at the end of the the article will appear a link to the original.
It’s a great idea to do this because Medium is a wonderful site through which you can (and should) build a distinct audience of followers who want to read what you write. And it’s here that our reason for this article should become most clear – Medium, as an example, is a place where you can write and develop an audience; but why would you only do so there? Create your wholly owned foundation of content, your portfolio, and then syndicate it to places like Medium.
Here’s this article on Medium.
Luckily, as we move forward in our list, we can get more concise. Facebook: your personal profile, your business page, and groups. A lot like LinkedIn.
And, like Twitter and LinkedIn, be sure to tag people!
Post that you wrote this article yourself to share it with friends. Post differently on your business or brand page that the company has shared this perspective (and tag yourself as the author!). Post a few times in different Groups related to your topic.
A group post, MediaTech Ventures’ post (note I tagged myself), my own post, and here’s another one on my personal business Page.
Quora
Quora is a personal favorite that I’m going to share really just to help you think outside the box. At the end of the day of course, this list could be endless, and I can’t possibly explain how to share everywhere, so having touched on the big ones, let’s look at something unusual like a Question-and-Answer platform.
Are there ANY questions related to what you’ve covered in your article? Have you answered them?
Hop on Quora and search for such questions. Use excerpts from your article and answer the question, be sure to link back to your article, and boom.
Often, you can re-purpose an article in endless ways to address any number of topics.
Examples!
What of Pins, Instagrams, and more?
Like I said, I can’t possibly get into everything so hopefully this gives a foundation upon which to just change how you think about leveraging your content. We’ve focused on the written word, but the same concepts apply with photos, videos, and podcasts.
Have a tip I’m missing? Let us know in the comments.
Need or want help with this kind of thing? It’s kind of our expertise, grab us on the chatbot.
One more thing! TELL YOUR FRIENDS. Use Slack, Facebook messages, an email, or a company or team policy, to make sure all of your partners are liking, sharing, and commenting on what you create! It starts with just a measure of support, and you can get that from friends.
I look forward to reading this … Bias note, I am never a fan of syndicating content on social – each social channel has a different look and feel, hence so should the content.
Indeed so should the content. Hence the examples
This is so great! Thank you for putting this together and sharing, Paul!
My pleasure Paul, after years of advising startups and hearing from businesses that aren’t making it work, I really am just getting frustrated that people don’t know this stuff. More so in that hinting that Marketers (who should know better) either aren’t teaching it to their employers/clients or don’t know themselves.
No business should be struggling because they don’t have these fundamentals in play. And no one should have anyone working for them in marketing or promotions who isn’t *doing this*
Very much appreciated Paul O’Brien!
<3 <3 <3
Good stuff! I’m most excited to be the first one to point out how meta this is…
Honestly it took me a bit to wrap my head around how to do it LOL
Incredibly, it works better than expected. All the posts everywhere are driving exceptional volume to the root article
Thank you Paul for the great tips! <3 Donna
So helpful
I agree with all of this. One of my thought leadership clients had over 4,000 views of the articles we wrote together using this exact strategy. We use bulk scheduling for social media micro-blogs that lead to the article, reschedule the bulk posts after the first cycle has finished (for evergreen content, you can keep doing this for a year or two) publish article on LinkedIn and on Medium (Medium is a GREAT place for out of network people to find you), I also generate videos on Adobe Spark that communicate the values in the article. It’s interesting that each platform has a different audience engagement level with different content. Some articles are super hot on Medium, but not so much on LinkedIn, and vice-versa. Some social posts generate tons of clicks on Twitter, but none on LinkedIn, and vice-versa. It’s fun to experiment and see what works. I’ve also started exploring helping my clients with “talking head” thought leadership video snippets. Here’s where we’re starting — https://bit.ly/MobileVideoForThoughtLeadership
Great info!
Great article. We just launched an actual strategy and are perfecting our first stab it. It’s difficult, time consuming and VERY valuable so the ROI has been worth the effort. Looking forward to implementing your guidance here.
Great insights! Thank you! Might be even easier with a tool like plannable: https://planable.io/
I know them personally, they’ve done a great job at helping people manage multiple SM accounts for different companies.
top writing interesting stuff! It distracts me because I love learning….damn! Nice piece Paul O’Brien
Great post! Very informative.
Really useful article
This is perfect! As a journalist, it’s not often that I see companies get this strategy.
Amazing share – Thanks very much, Paul!!!
Paul O’Brien always puts out content that’s worth the read (and is oftentimes entertaining). If you’re struggling with content and pouring time you don’t have into it, I highly suggest taking a few minutes to enlighten yourself.
Great insights! As a 2-person operation, it’s been difficult to create an effective content strategy while being mindful of our other time commitments. This is so helpful. Thanks!
Thank you Nana! Works even as a one person team, with practice to get in the habit
Way to take the words out of my mouth!
Great info and concise and to the point! Good tips on getting that SEO juice for your main website.
Precisely the subtle underlying message! Thanks Bryan
Good stuff….but one rule of thumb when it comes to social platforms to share content,.make sure you know where you audience is. Don’t post good content to deaf ears. If Twitter and Facebook aren’t relevant to where you targets hang out…then why be there. No reason to have an online presence just because everyone else does. Do your research.