Content Marketing is blogs, it's ebooks, podcasts, videos, it's anything that you can realistically consume. On a more kind of philosophical level, what it really comes down to is providing free or additional value to your Law Firm’s target audience. One of my favorite forms of content marketing is utilizing the power of voice, both in podcasts, vlogs, audio blogs, and other rich media. If you are listening to this, you are a testament that it indeed works.
I think that content does three things primarily provides inspiration, it provides information, and it is entertaining. And there's always going to be overlap. Each of those plays a very important role in helping to solve your prospective client's pain points through the free content that you share and provide. If it's new information, perhaps it's providing a new piece of data that allows them to make an informed decision, perhaps that informed decision is hiring your Law Firm, as you would have established yourself as the specialist or thought-leader in your particular law practice area.
If it's inspiration, maybe it's showing them what they can accomplish, when they actually address that pain point with that new information that they have. Of course, it has to be entertaining, because our attention span as business professionals continues to become shorter and shorter as technology advances. Thus your content needs to be engaging so that your audience can remain glued and focused on your message. Many people believe the following sentiment… Okay, I'm gonna put this blog out there, it's super high quality, it's this great story, it's great information... and then everyone's gonna find it on the internet.
Sorry to say it...but it doesn't quite work that way. You have to allow people to share it, you have to distribute it on social media or on other distribution platforms. There are a number of options to choose from both paid and organic, so you need to make sure that the content is being distributed in a way that your audience can find it. It’s not only crucial for you to understand why you are distributing your content but even more importantly, to know how it's working and why it's working.
If you're looking at bounce rate, or you're looking at traffic, or whatever it is, that's going to be a very, very different kind of measurement than if you're trying to measure for retention, and how your existing users are engaging with the content that you already have. If Legal Marketers are defining their content success metrics or KPIs in a more specific way, then they'll be able to actually measure the kind of success that they're looking for.