Prologue
āEwwwww.ā
āItās wet under there.ā
We were pulling up carpet at the fishing camp weāre fixing up this past weekend and discovered that one of the guest bedroom closets that backs up to the bathroom is an absorbant flood zone for some sort of leak we didnāt know about until now.
The process of pulling up carpet is typically gross in general.
Dust.
Foam that sticks to concrete.
Seeing all the things that have been intentionally covered up.
But when it becomes an archeological dig and you hit water, itās extra gross.
The leak isnāt horrible.
Itās a slow bit of water that appears on the floor every once in awhile (believe us, we did a weekendās worth of watching).
But itās there.
And we thought not using the sink while we wait for a plumber would help us isolate the source.
But it kept happening.
Soā¦ likely the toilet is involved, we think. Itās the only one in the camp.
But once our family left and Sal went back to meet the plumber (who didnāt show, by the way), he couldnāt recreate the leak.
Weāll try again when the plumber is actually available (turned out he had a chemical burn incident that explains the no-show).
And, for now, we wonāt put down new flooring or finish work in the closet.
Thereās no point in doing it until the issue is resolved.
Is there a newsletter lesson here?
Maybe.
But it feels more like a content marketing one:
Donāt skip on foundational stuff.
And donāt ignore it when it needs fixing.
Because you donāt want to use amazing content (like your newsletter, social media posts, podcast, or blog) to get peopleās attention and then not actually be able to help them learn what you do and how it can help them.
They need to be able to understand what you do and convert.
Otherwise youāve got a leak in the closet and canāt put the pretty new floor down.
Youāll find more thoughts on this topic in this issueās Marketing section.
Update: Weāre ripping up some metaphorical carpet over at Audience Ops (a Simple Focus brand) and itās going to be fun.
Itās also got me very focused on the larger category newsletters fit into: content marketing.
So focused, in fact, that weāre going to begin to shift the balance of this newsletter from mostly newsletter with some marketing content to mostly marketing content with some newsletter tips.
Send me feedback if you have thoughts on the transition.
And for anyone who read last weekās issue and is curious: Nora will be able to use my old calculator. Score!
Marketing
A Bottom Up Content Approach
Iāve been having an ongoing conversation with the Audience Ops team (and clients) lately about what types of content a brand should create first.
Itās really enticing to want to start with more creative mediums, āOh, letās do thought leadership pieces,ā before you have some fundamentals in order.
What Iām in favor of is something Iāve started calling a bottom up approach (Iāll let you know if the name sticks), which basically means a brand should have the product marketing and proof it works nailed down before investing in top-of-funnel SEO blogs.
And my main point here is that if your content marketing objective is to draw attention to your brand by creating valuable content, youād better have what you sell and why to buy it nailed down so the value you distribute can actually lead to conversions.
In other words, donāt write checks that canāt be cashed.
Itās why I love starting with CEO/founder-led brand narratives case studies:
You talk directly with the person who decided it should exist in the first place about why they built it AND with buyers about why they bought and results theyāve seen.
This week, Shiv Narayanan reinforced this idea twice:
Here, he provides an order that prioritizes core messaging:
- Product Marketing
- Sales Enablement
- Customer Marketing
- Nurture Content
- Thought Leadership
- SEO
And, in this issue of How To SaaS, he offers a framework that encourages companies focus on differentiation to prioritize GTM:
- Invest in understanding market dynamics and customer pain points
- Build a strategic narrative to educate the market on how to resolve those pain points
- Create content to educate buyers on the strategic narrative at every stage of their journey
- Leverage demand generation channels and campaigns to scale distribution to ideal buyers
Go follow Shiv. Heāll inspire you.
LinkedIn Content Marketing Goodness
My LI feed is sizzling lately with solid posts about content marketing (and also a bunch of people plagiarizing, so watch out). Hereās what resonated:
Types of Content
Lyndsay Cambridge writes āyou often have to go bigger and better with your content to stand outā. Her LinkedIn post offers 4 content types that actually stand out.
SEO
How do you feel about SEO? Nicole Bump acknowledges our (sometimes frustrated) feelings and explains why a strong SEO strategy is actually an asset.
To top that off, āSEO should be the seasoning, not the steak.āāJohn Bonini reminded us that, ultimately, people determine contentās successā¦not Google.
Distribution
Are you simply āchecking the boxā when it comes to distribution? In another post, John Bonini challenges this approach and suggests strategizing distribution before creation, not tacking it on afterwards.
Great Content Rules Them All
Sara Stella Lattanzioās post explains why ājust creatingā is no longer enough. āHave you noticed? š® By now, most questions related to marketing success can be answered with āš“šæš²š®š š°š¼š»šš²š»šā.ā
Funnel Stage Strategies
How do you strategize for funnel stage? Turns out there are contradictory opinions out there:
Everything Should Fit: In this SEJ article, Kristi Hines offers 5 tips to improve your content strategy and number 2 is this: āMake Sure Everything Fits Into Your Sales Funnel.ā
VS.
Donāt Create for the Funnel: On the other hand, Ashley Lewin argues that creating content for funnel stage at all is a huge miss. Instead, she simplifies it to this: āCreate content for your audience, not your funnel.ā
My take: Ashley Lewinās urge is more about mindset shift than demonizing the funnel. If we strategize for the funnel alone, content gets... forced. Like weāre trying to build a linear journey that isnāt linear at all. Ever.
So what sheās getting at is that we shouldnāt prioritize based on what we need someone to do but instead focus on what they would actually benefit from consuming.
Iām on board with that, but, as mentioned above, I do think your product messaging and story should be prioritized, even if they begin to iterate as you create more and more for your audience.
Writing
Does Your Writing Stand Out?
Josh Spector of For the Interested tweeted 13 ways to stand out, including storytelling, humor, and desire. Full list here.
Discovered via For the Interested.
Dumb It Down
Is your writing too complicated? Here are 2 resources designed to help you simplify.
- Swap your words: When you need a reminder to use plain English instead of big words and formal sentences.
- Shorten your sentences: When your sentences drag on, here are 6 tips on how to shorten them.
Publishing
Stop Overcomplicating It
This weekās Publishing Insights include examples of publishers who are finding success by simply doing what they do well, and offer ways you can simplify, too.
- Cox Enterprises just bought Axios. Sara Fisher explains why it matters here.
- In the UK, The Times, The Telegraph and The Guardian seem to all be in a good place. Esther Kezia Thorpe attributes this to two things: 1. They are spending more and making less 2. They are focusing on reader revenue.
- āNumbers do not speak for themselves.ā In this Nieman Lab article, Joshua Benton makes a case for making it easier for readers to understand complex data in stories.
- Readers want privacy but also expect personalized results. Ray Schultz looks at how publishers can balance the two.
- In this INMA article, Jodie Hopperton uncovers 4 different ways publishers can incorporate personalization.
Money Matters
7 Ways To Monetize Your Newsletter
Think you donāt have enough subscribers to monetize your newsletter? Vidya started monetizing with just 480 subscribers and is sharing 7 monetization methods (plus examples) to help you get started.
Discovered via Inbox Reads.
Curated News
Streamline Your Newsletter Creation By Setting Your Default Subject Line
Seth with Curated, here.
Did you know that you can customize the default subject line for each new newsletter issue you create in Curated? In Curated, the subject line is known as the āIssue Titleā. Customizing your default issue title to match your subject line style is a great way to streamline your newsletter creation process.
Hereās how to do this:
- In Curated, click the gear icon at the top right of the page to open a drop-down menu and click Settings
- In the Publication section, select Issue Title Format
- Edit the text box to customize your issue title template
Now whenever you create a new issue in Curated, the issue title will be the default that youāve set.
By default, the issue title template is āIssue %%issue_number%%ā. The text surrounded by the % sign is code that translates to the issue number your newsletter is on once you create a new issue. Another piece of code that you can use is ā%%issue_date%%ā, which translates to the due date for the issue. For example, if you created an issue with ā%%issue_date%%ā as the issue title and a due date of September 1st, 2022, the issue title would update to āSept 1 2022ā.
If you have any questions about this, let me know!
New to Curated? Make a copy of this Getting Started with Curated Checklist to help launch your newsletter (public, private, or paid).
Opt In Challenge
Design For Email Clients
No matter which platform your readers use to receive email, they should be able to experience the best version of your newsletter. This week your Opt In Challenge is to read this article on the differences between Gmail and Apple Mail, and consider some design tweaks if needed.
Discovered via Email on Acid.