For a lot of people, the best part of going to Whole Foods Market is the samples. Visit a store at the most sample-optimized time and you can practically get an entire four course meal for free.What does this have to do with content promotion? Everything.
When promoting content, marketers already give their audience a little sample of what to expect. However, is that enough to ensure that people feel satisfied with their sample and are ready hit that form submit button to commit to the new relationship?
Learn the new way of thinking about content promotion by looking at how marketers are currently sampling their content, ways to improve those techniques and how to balance enticing your audience without giving away all the value.
You may have never viewed your current content promotion efforts as similar to offering samples; but that’s exactly what you’re doing. Before a conversion can happen, customers take a bite here and a nibble there that hints at what your content will “taste” like.
Here are a few of the types of samples that marketers currently offer their audience:
If every time you went to Whole Foods they only offered the same samples, you would probably stop getting excited about your next grocery visit. Offering the same samples over and over again can get boring, redundant and predictable.
Granted, you can normally count on a few staples (fresh guacamole, juicy pineapple and hand-squeezed lemonade–the traditional crowd favorites) to provide consistency. However, the excitement comes from trying the unknown!
This should also apply to your content promotion. Landing pages and email may be traditional, but they’re also effective. Here are a few ways to spice up a standard email (just like upgrading from regular lemonade to hand-squeezed strawberry lemonade) and keep your promotion exciting:
The difficulty of sampling is finding the right balance of how much to let them try before they buy. If I know I can eat a whole meal of samples, what’s the point of purchasing something? They key, then, is to make the sample so good that they have to have more.
As marketers, we need to be the experts at understanding when and how to implement various sampling techniques appropriately.
It’s clear there is an overlap between how grocery stores promote their goods and how marketers promote their content. Landing pages, emails and native advertising are great tools; however, the same mix of channels and messaging can bore your audience.
Mix it up by implementing some of these ideas to enhance your customers’ experience. While experimenting with new sampling techniques, be sure to balance the sample with the content piece. Don’t give away the whole store, but give them enough to chew on.
Not sure where to start with content promotion in general? Download Relevance’s Quick Guide to Content Promotion: