This document discusses editorial strategy and content strategy. It begins by providing context on content strategy and how it has evolved from a focus on website redesign. It then discusses editorial strategy as a form of product strategy and content strategy, where content is planned and packaged like a publishing product. The rest of the document discusses key aspects of editorial strategy, including defining editorial content, debates around editorial strategy, and how to deliver an editorial strategy through methods like auditing content, developing a content plan and strategy, building content specifications and style guides, and using an editorial calendar to grow content over time.
3. Introductions
I’m an independent content strategist in
NYC. My practice focuses on
editorial product strategy.
‣ Jeff MacIntyre, Principal
@jeffmacintyre
10. Louis Rosenfeld:
‣ “Redesign must die”
‣ “Every large website
is a complex
adaptive system.” Credit: “Redesign Must Die” , louisrosenfeld.com
11. The Content Strategy Gospel
‣ The web is a publishing medium.
‣ Content is integral (to experience).
‣ Content producers = de facto publishers.
‣ To users, the web is awash in content.
Site owners feel the floodwaters, too.
So, sink or swim. Filter or be flooded.
14. “The Day 2 Problem”
Postlaunch is a
project phase.
Nothing shines a light on the good
faith agreement between client and
consultant than thoughtful aftercare.
Editorial strategy is about caring for
content after launch day. Credit: Flickr Commons
21. Do You Have One?
Editorial strategy is ...
‣ a set editorial mix Credit: Jessica Hagy
‣ scheduled release of ongoing content
‣ packaged as a bundle of like content
‣ supported through masthead workflow
‣ guided by a product strategy
22. Defining Editorial Content
What is it? A publishing asset.
‣ Repeatable and repeatedly
published content in a
recognizable form (article, podcast,
etc.) and packaged (e.g., edited) for
consumption;
‣ Made valuable to an audience by:
being innovative; through subject
matter expertise or authority; by
voice or other brand attributes.
23. Example: Slate’s “Today’s Papers”
12 years ago, Slate.com pioneered a daily
form of content aggregation for news
consumers.
It evolved from novel
convenience to meta-digest
to spin-offs to modular, near-
realtime editorial.
24. Key Debates in Editorial Strategy
‣ Free v. paid (rev. models: licensing, etc.)
‣ Production model: factory v. atelier
‣ Curation v. aggregation
‣ Original content: longform/shortform
‣ Editorial mix: stock & flow
25. Editorial Strategy FYI Credit: Jonathan Maziarz, eatmedia.net
Credit: Clinton Forry, content-ment.com
Credit: Jason Santa Maria, SVA presentation
Credit: Luke Hayman, Pentagram.com
Credit: Adam Taplin,
Content Strategy Google Group Credit: Robin Sloan, snarkmarket.com
Credit: Prasanna Lal Das,
prasannalaldas.blogspot.com Credit: Muriel Vandermeulen,
wearethewords.com
Hello, Fort McPherson!
I fell asleep in the barber chair. True story.
I’ve been working as a titled content strategist for about 5 years and been in professional services and interactive media for 10.
The editors of A List Apart asked Kristina Halvorson and I to introduce the field of content strategy to its readers about a year and a half ago.
The rest is history--but let’s have a quick refresher.
To the content strategist, the history of content online is essentially a history of shovelware.
Unwritten: don’t treat content as an afterthought in your web projects.
What’s the role of content strategy--intelligent, structured content--and editorial strategy in advancing from prototype to product? What about packaging, producing and selling it?
How will digital publishers expand their current editorial properties in a way that maintains (and broadens) their relevance online?
They’ll look to something called editorial strategy. And so will anyone looking to effectively engage users with ongoing content production.
He has said similarly that “treating content as a high-value asset requires a publishing approach”.
It’s true. And it’s a good subject for the next time we get together.
Every problem with content is about being effective, relevant and remarkable with content.
The same is true of publishing.
Content strategy, like information science, is descended from publishing.
Content strategy is a form of product development. We are situated between PRODUCT and plumbing.
EDITORIAL STRATEGY
The strategy and tactics underpinning a digital property’s content offering at launch and beyond.
It is a product strategy for establishing the right mix of at-launch content production and aggregation for all content types, including directional postlaunch recommendations. This document informs the Content Specification.
STYLE GUIDE* and EDITORIAL CALENDAR* are cousin deliverables aimed at operationalizing content activities. The Style Guide is a detailed production guide for all content modules intended for content owners and authors. The editorial calendar is dashboard tool for planning, tracking and measuring content production, delivery and related analytics.
The former, often paired with creative design specifications (e.g., image sizes), consolidates house editorial standards as they relate to the new platform. This can include detailed workflows and standardized processes, a governance model for various content types and even walkthroughs and training related to new tools and process improvements. At its most extensive, this document can double as a metadata schema or asset management guidelines.
The latter, combined with a programming matrix, acts as a management tool for rationalizing content production requirements for editorial management and for aligning content activities (in multiple channels) to business and brand priorities through a unified framework.