Build Content off of Unique Data

Objective: Earn backlinks, press coverage and traffic to your content.

How: Investing big on content can often be a risky move. Simply pumping more money into your content marketing won't necessarily get you results. In the same vein, not committing enough is likely to yield much. That's why focusing your efforts on bigger plays can be a better strategy to follow.

If you're looking to earn mentions in top publications and generate all the traffic that comes with that, sourcing original data is one of your best bets. Journalists love original data, especially if it can be used to tell a wider story. Add to that the right timing and you're onto a winner.

Here's a nice example of a campaign that I worked on that did just this...

AppInstitute Pokemon Go Traffic

The above chart shows the traffic over a two-week period for a single piece of content that we launched, producing over 100,000 unique pageviews. Not only that, but it also netted over 500 backlinks from over 300 different domains. This includes the likes of TheNextWebIncAndroid AuthorityGames Radar and Capterra.

This was all through creating a piece of content based off of data. It makes getting attention from journalists and big sites so much easier, and the boost in traffic and links has a huge knock-on effect across your whole site.

Contrary to popular belief, this doesn't need to cost huge amounts and it isn't just for big brands - trust me, I've done this for brand new startups and big brands alike.

Here's my typical process:

  1. Figure out a topic relevant to your buyer persona/offering. I'm not going to dive too much into this but the main takeaway is to try and keep your idea relevant in some way to your business.
  2. Find a specific question you're going to answer within that topic, using data. To us the above example, "How much revenue does the Pokemon Go app generate?"
  3. Figure out the data points you will need to answer the question.
  4. Map out how to gather this data. Will you need to do some secondary research (i.e., you'll be patching existing data together to make it more valuable cumulatively) or do you need to conduct primary research (e.g., running surveys through services like PollFish)?
  5. How can you add credibility to the data? One good way to do this is by getting sector experts to give a quote around your findings. A nice way to do this is to search the New Releases section of Amazon to find recently published authors and reach out to them for a quote (having a quote from a published author goes a long way with journalists). Thanks to Kirsty Hulse for that tip.
  6. Visualize the data. Try not to overthink this part. Don't just create some crazy interactive piece because you think it's 'cool'. Format the content into something that will make the takeaways easy to digest, and in a way that the target reader will find easiest to consume.
  7. Reach out to the press with some exclusives on the data before you go live. You can use a tool like Lumanu or JustReachOut.io to find influencers/journalists to reach out to.

Here are a few great examples of data-backed content that have performed really well:




7.2
Implementation: 4 hours
Effectiveness: 4/5
Difficulty: 4/10
TAGS
#Content marketing #Acquisition