Secret Sauce: What Every Other Company in Your Industry isn’t Doing
Time to Read: 3m 20s
Paid Content Outreach
Have a great new piece of content that your sales team has been developing for months? Did you recently pay someone a sizable chunk of change to develop a video for a service or product? Has your company been trying to grow a following for your social media accounts or blog, with little to no success? If you answered yes to any of the above questions, read on! If you answered no, it’s time to talk to a professional. The Internet is here to stay. In every industry, lead development, direct sales, and customer acquisition is increasingly moving online. Your industry isn’t a gray duck in a flock of geese; every business, in every industry, needs to be online.The Viral Fallacy
Content, no matter how great, rarely goes viral. You can consistently pump out top notch content, but without a ton of luck, that information is not going to reach a wider demographic. Sorry, but the deck is stacked against you. With social media channels shifting to paid outreach and the vast expanse that is the Internet, it is unlikely that an influencer will find -- let alone distribute -- your beautiful piece of content. This is not to say you should give up. Constant and quality content will still help your site, especially in the SEO department. Furthermore, the more chances you take, the more chances you have to succeed. Try, try again!Manufacturing Infectious Content
Question: If the deck is stacked, what’s a business to do!? Answer: Have an ace up your sleeve. What companies aren’t advertising is that they are using paid content distribution networks. Paid content distribution is nothing new, but technology has advanced to the point where you can pay a relatively small sum to distribute articles or white papers on other, bigger websites throughout the Internet. Outbrain and Taboola are the most popular networks of content distribution, but there are others. You’ve seen paid content distribution before, you simply may not have noticed. This is from slate.com: