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Content Strategy
  for the Web
     A workshop for the
  School of Visual Concepts
           April 27, 2011




                              Your host: James Callan
                               james@scarequot.es
                                http://scarequot.es
                              Twitter: @scarequotes
If you’re going to tweet about the class,
     please use the hashtag #svccs
(This workshop stands on the
blog posts and books of giants.)
New technology can be interesting without content.
But novelty wears off. Technology alone isn’t enough.
                  Enter content.




             Content can tell a story ...
                                            (Casablanca)
(Note: People still like to see cool tricks with new
         technology. That has its place.)
But uniting technology with good content
can do boffo business and get good reviews.
Cool. But how does this relate
to content strategy for the web?
People don’t visit your site
for a great user experience.
People don’t visit your site
  to see amazing design.
They come for the content.
(Note: UX, design, technology,
   and the other elements of
your website are important, too.
      This isn’t a contest.)
Content is a business asset.
                     It has value.
It brings you customers, wins you fans, builds you an
           audiences, and earns you money.
Content helps define you.
    Let’s look at three sites with a
  similar purpose and explore how
     content distinguishes them.
http://www.youtube.com/
http://vimeo.com/
http://www.ted.com/
So you should get it right.
 Enter content strategy.
So ... what is content strategy?
Back up a step ... what is content?
“In the web industry, anything that conveys meaningful
      information to humans is called ‘content.’”



                                             Erin Kissane,
                                           content strategist


                                     The Elements of Content Strategy
tweets            images
illustrations
                                     ads
e-books     words
                                        error messages
                        photos
       audio
                                    slideshows
           interface copy
podcasts                    Facebook posts

           blog posts                    comments

cartoons                    video
        white papers                     infographics
                            Flickr streams
(It’s not just copy.)
“Content strategy is to copywriting
as information architecture is to design.”



                                             Rachel Lovinger,
                                         content strategy director

                            http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/content-strategy-the
“Like a gentleman in a finely crafted suit who wants
to burp you the alphabet, even if your website looks
nice, no one will stick around to hear what you have
to say if you don’t craft something compelling.”




                                  Jason Santa Maria, graphic designer

                              http://jasonsantamaria.com/articles/the-elements-
                                             of-content-strategy/
“I am a firm believer that content strategy
        is communication design.”



                                Nicole Jones, content strategist

                          http://swellcontent.tumblr.com/post/4072864686/
                            demystifying-content-strategy-part-i-the-term
“Content strategy is the moment when you realise
that you need to do some more thinking. If you think
about all the complexities associated with planning
and creating and governing and editing content, they
raise all these questions that most organisations
aren’t really very well placed to answer.”




                                  Jonathan Kahn, web dev and content strategy advocate


                                       http://lucidplot.com/2011/02/03/content-strategy-
                                                           ux-lightning/
“You are all in publishing!”


                     Jeffrey Zeldman,
                     king of the web




                      http://www.zeldman.com/2011/03/15/web-design-is-publishing/
“Content strategy for the web is about bringing
editorial skill and methods into website planning. In
 order to create good content, you need a plan for
   how you’re going to get it and keep it coming.”



                                             Elizabeth McGuane,
                                       writer/editor/content strategist

                                  http://mappedblog.com/2010/10/04/fear-loathing-
                                               and-content-strategy/
That’s a broad range of answers.
Content strategy is a broad field.
Practitioners tend to specialize.
Is content strategy part of UX?
Yes.
(You can’t create a great user experience
          around bad content.)

                 But ...
It’s not only user experience.
It’s marketing.
     And data modeling.
      And social media.
 And content management.
And information architecture.
 And content development.
       And other stuff.
It’s not any one of these.
  But it touches all of them.
And different content strategists
   have different emphases.
The definition we’re working from:
“Content strategy plans for the creation, publication,
    and governance of useful, usable content.”



                                          Kristina Halvorson,
                                       Content Strategy for the Web
Creation:
Who’s providing your content?
Publication:
How are you getting your content to users?
Governance:
When do you add, update, and archive content?
Useful:
How does this content benefit you?
 How does it benefit your user?
Usable:
Can people find, consume, and act on your content?
What makes good content?
Before we talk about how to
evaluate quality, let’s look at some
  example sites and talk about
whether or not we think they offer
          good content.
http://www.kickstarter.com/
http://seattle.craigslist.org/
http://www.tumblr.com/
http://www.today.com/
http://www.medscape.com/




   (Thanks to everyone who took the survey and suggested sites.)
“Good content” is a relative term.
You need to define “good” before you
   can fully evaluate your content.
What are your goals?
What is your content supposed
     to achieve for you?
“There’s really only one central principle of good
content: it should be appropriate for your
business, for your users, and for its context.
Appropriate in its method of delivery, in its style
and structure, and above all in its substance.”



                                             Erin Kissane,
                                           content strategist

                                     The Elements of Content Strategy
Good content is:

• Appropriate
• Useful
• User-centered
• Clear
• Consistent
• Concise
• Supported



                   Erin Kissane again. Seriously, read her book.
How do you know
if your content is good?

 Inventory and audit.
Content strategy analysis, in a nutshell:
1. What content do we have?
2. What content do we need?
3. Create or curate what’s missing.
http://www.contentmarketinginstitute.com/2011/04/content-mapping-b2b-marketing/
http://www.richardingram.co.uk/2010/03/get-a-grip-of-your-web-content/
Some tools you’ll use on content strategy projects:
The content inventory
How do you do a content inventory?
Click each link on your site. Document what you find.
Things often tracked in a content inventory:
  • Page ID/number
  • URL
  • Page Title
  • Parent
  • Page Description
  • Components
  • SEO Information (metadata, keywords)
  • Who owns that content.
The audit helps identify:
• Content you have
• Content you need
• Content you should delete
• Content that needs improvement
Another tool:
                   Personas and user data.
                Do you know your audience?
           Do you know what content they want?
        Do you know what content appeals to them?
(This is one of those areas that strongly overlaps with UX.)
Another tool:
Stakeholder interviews
Content strategy requires
communication across an organization.
 Talk to everyone, preferably one-on-
 one, about what they need and want
        from the site’s content.
(I am completely indebted to Richard
   Ingram for the next seven images.
 Who are good partners for content
 strategists to work with? Let’s see.)
Another very important tool:
            QUESTIONS.
(Go with the classics: who, what, when,
       where, why, and how.)
Who’s supplying the content?
 Who is the target audience?
Who’s maintaining the content?
What content do we need?
When will we publish?
Where will we publish content?
(Our site, email, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)
How will all of this get done?
And a big one, especially in discovery:
               WHY?
      Why do we need a blog?
  Why do we need a Twitter feed?
   Why aren’t we using a CMS?
                 Etc.
Another tool:
    Message Architecture
(documents key messages and
      supporting info)
Another tool:
     Editorial Style Guide
      (What’s our tone?
Which dictionary do we consult?
 Do we use the serial comma?)
Another tool:
            Content Matrix
(Detailed inventory of the content you
 have and where it will go. More info
  than the initial audit, but could be
             based on it.)
Another tool:
          Editorial Calendar
 What events drive when we publish?
(Tweet twice a day? Update home page
  on product launches? Respond to
            holidays? Etc.)
Another tool:
              Content Type
 A breakdown of what needs to go on
    any kind of page. Both visible and
invisible content. Accompanies site map
             and wireframes.
There are more tools.
Not every project requires every tool.
Major deliverable:
           The Content Brief
 (Answers the questions. Establishes a
   vision for the content. High-level
recommendations. NOT specific copy.)
Governance!
How content strategy
 plays out over time.
Consultants set up a plan
and get internal teams up
        and running.
They may have recurring
visits for content upkeep.
In-house content
  strategists may have a
harder time getting buy-in,
 but they’re there for the
         long haul.
To keep your content evergreen:
    Use the editorial calendar.
        Use a rolling audit.
Track when content will need to be
       archived or updated.
   Budget time to get that done.
Content strategy is not a quick fix.
   It’s a long process. One reason
  content is valuable is because it’s
messy, and difficult, and requires a lot
              of resources.
Example of a content superhero:
      http://www.criterion.com/

Contrast with:
http://www.somethingweird.com/
http://www.shoutfactorystore.com/
http://www.kino.com/
http://www.wbshop.com/DVD/DVD,default,sc.html
I’m tired of yammering.
I know you’ve got questions. Shoot!
Resources:
 I’ll post a bibliography and links and stuff on my blog:
                      http://scarequot.es
   Come to a meetup with Content Strategy Seattle!
Join the Google Group, or LinkedIn discussion groups.
             Follow smart people on Twitter.
Content strategists are a friendly, helpful group. (I think
                   it’s a job requirement.)
THANK YOU

Don’t forget to fill out the evaluation.

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SVC workshop: Content Strategy for the Web

  • 1. Content Strategy for the Web A workshop for the School of Visual Concepts April 27, 2011 Your host: James Callan james@scarequot.es http://scarequot.es Twitter: @scarequotes
  • 2. If you’re going to tweet about the class, please use the hashtag #svccs
  • 3. (This workshop stands on the blog posts and books of giants.)
  • 4. New technology can be interesting without content.
  • 5. But novelty wears off. Technology alone isn’t enough. Enter content. Content can tell a story ... (Casablanca)
  • 6. (Note: People still like to see cool tricks with new technology. That has its place.)
  • 7. But uniting technology with good content can do boffo business and get good reviews.
  • 8. Cool. But how does this relate to content strategy for the web?
  • 9. People don’t visit your site for a great user experience.
  • 10. People don’t visit your site to see amazing design.
  • 11. They come for the content.
  • 12. (Note: UX, design, technology, and the other elements of your website are important, too. This isn’t a contest.)
  • 13. Content is a business asset. It has value. It brings you customers, wins you fans, builds you an audiences, and earns you money.
  • 14. Content helps define you. Let’s look at three sites with a similar purpose and explore how content distinguishes them. http://www.youtube.com/ http://vimeo.com/ http://www.ted.com/
  • 15. So you should get it right. Enter content strategy.
  • 16. So ... what is content strategy?
  • 17. Back up a step ... what is content?
  • 18. “In the web industry, anything that conveys meaningful information to humans is called ‘content.’” Erin Kissane, content strategist The Elements of Content Strategy
  • 19. tweets images illustrations ads e-books words error messages photos audio slideshows interface copy podcasts Facebook posts blog posts comments cartoons video white papers infographics Flickr streams
  • 21. “Content strategy is to copywriting as information architecture is to design.” Rachel Lovinger, content strategy director http://www.boxesandarrows.com/view/content-strategy-the
  • 22. “Like a gentleman in a finely crafted suit who wants to burp you the alphabet, even if your website looks nice, no one will stick around to hear what you have to say if you don’t craft something compelling.” Jason Santa Maria, graphic designer http://jasonsantamaria.com/articles/the-elements- of-content-strategy/
  • 23. “I am a firm believer that content strategy is communication design.” Nicole Jones, content strategist http://swellcontent.tumblr.com/post/4072864686/ demystifying-content-strategy-part-i-the-term
  • 24. “Content strategy is the moment when you realise that you need to do some more thinking. If you think about all the complexities associated with planning and creating and governing and editing content, they raise all these questions that most organisations aren’t really very well placed to answer.” Jonathan Kahn, web dev and content strategy advocate http://lucidplot.com/2011/02/03/content-strategy- ux-lightning/
  • 25. “You are all in publishing!” Jeffrey Zeldman, king of the web http://www.zeldman.com/2011/03/15/web-design-is-publishing/
  • 26. “Content strategy for the web is about bringing editorial skill and methods into website planning. In order to create good content, you need a plan for how you’re going to get it and keep it coming.” Elizabeth McGuane, writer/editor/content strategist http://mappedblog.com/2010/10/04/fear-loathing- and-content-strategy/
  • 27. That’s a broad range of answers. Content strategy is a broad field. Practitioners tend to specialize.
  • 28.
  • 29. Is content strategy part of UX?
  • 30. Yes. (You can’t create a great user experience around bad content.) But ...
  • 31. It’s not only user experience.
  • 32. It’s marketing. And data modeling. And social media. And content management. And information architecture. And content development. And other stuff.
  • 33. It’s not any one of these. But it touches all of them. And different content strategists have different emphases.
  • 34. The definition we’re working from:
  • 35. “Content strategy plans for the creation, publication, and governance of useful, usable content.” Kristina Halvorson, Content Strategy for the Web
  • 37. Publication: How are you getting your content to users?
  • 38. Governance: When do you add, update, and archive content?
  • 39. Useful: How does this content benefit you? How does it benefit your user?
  • 40. Usable: Can people find, consume, and act on your content?
  • 41. What makes good content?
  • 42. Before we talk about how to evaluate quality, let’s look at some example sites and talk about whether or not we think they offer good content. http://www.kickstarter.com/ http://seattle.craigslist.org/ http://www.tumblr.com/ http://www.today.com/ http://www.medscape.com/ (Thanks to everyone who took the survey and suggested sites.)
  • 43. “Good content” is a relative term. You need to define “good” before you can fully evaluate your content.
  • 44. What are your goals? What is your content supposed to achieve for you?
  • 45. “There’s really only one central principle of good content: it should be appropriate for your business, for your users, and for its context. Appropriate in its method of delivery, in its style and structure, and above all in its substance.” Erin Kissane, content strategist The Elements of Content Strategy
  • 46. Good content is: • Appropriate • Useful • User-centered • Clear • Consistent • Concise • Supported Erin Kissane again. Seriously, read her book.
  • 47. How do you know if your content is good? Inventory and audit.
  • 48. Content strategy analysis, in a nutshell: 1. What content do we have? 2. What content do we need? 3. Create or curate what’s missing.
  • 51. Some tools you’ll use on content strategy projects:
  • 53. How do you do a content inventory? Click each link on your site. Document what you find.
  • 54. Things often tracked in a content inventory: • Page ID/number • URL • Page Title • Parent • Page Description • Components • SEO Information (metadata, keywords) • Who owns that content.
  • 55. The audit helps identify: • Content you have • Content you need • Content you should delete • Content that needs improvement
  • 56. Another tool: Personas and user data. Do you know your audience? Do you know what content they want? Do you know what content appeals to them? (This is one of those areas that strongly overlaps with UX.)
  • 58. Content strategy requires communication across an organization. Talk to everyone, preferably one-on- one, about what they need and want from the site’s content.
  • 59. (I am completely indebted to Richard Ingram for the next seven images. Who are good partners for content strategists to work with? Let’s see.)
  • 60.
  • 61.
  • 62.
  • 63.
  • 64.
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 67. Another very important tool: QUESTIONS. (Go with the classics: who, what, when, where, why, and how.)
  • 68. Who’s supplying the content? Who is the target audience? Who’s maintaining the content?
  • 69. What content do we need?
  • 70. When will we publish?
  • 71. Where will we publish content? (Our site, email, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)
  • 72. How will all of this get done?
  • 73. And a big one, especially in discovery: WHY? Why do we need a blog? Why do we need a Twitter feed? Why aren’t we using a CMS? Etc.
  • 74. Another tool: Message Architecture (documents key messages and supporting info)
  • 75. Another tool: Editorial Style Guide (What’s our tone? Which dictionary do we consult? Do we use the serial comma?)
  • 76. Another tool: Content Matrix (Detailed inventory of the content you have and where it will go. More info than the initial audit, but could be based on it.)
  • 77. Another tool: Editorial Calendar What events drive when we publish? (Tweet twice a day? Update home page on product launches? Respond to holidays? Etc.)
  • 78. Another tool: Content Type A breakdown of what needs to go on any kind of page. Both visible and invisible content. Accompanies site map and wireframes.
  • 79. There are more tools. Not every project requires every tool.
  • 80. Major deliverable: The Content Brief (Answers the questions. Establishes a vision for the content. High-level recommendations. NOT specific copy.)
  • 81. Governance! How content strategy plays out over time.
  • 82. Consultants set up a plan and get internal teams up and running. They may have recurring visits for content upkeep.
  • 83. In-house content strategists may have a harder time getting buy-in, but they’re there for the long haul.
  • 84. To keep your content evergreen: Use the editorial calendar. Use a rolling audit. Track when content will need to be archived or updated. Budget time to get that done.
  • 85. Content strategy is not a quick fix. It’s a long process. One reason content is valuable is because it’s messy, and difficult, and requires a lot of resources.
  • 86. Example of a content superhero: http://www.criterion.com/ Contrast with: http://www.somethingweird.com/ http://www.shoutfactorystore.com/ http://www.kino.com/ http://www.wbshop.com/DVD/DVD,default,sc.html
  • 87. I’m tired of yammering. I know you’ve got questions. Shoot!
  • 88. Resources: I’ll post a bibliography and links and stuff on my blog: http://scarequot.es Come to a meetup with Content Strategy Seattle! Join the Google Group, or LinkedIn discussion groups. Follow smart people on Twitter. Content strategists are a friendly, helpful group. (I think it’s a job requirement.)
  • 89. THANK YOU Don’t forget to fill out the evaluation.

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