Content should be designed to create and refine audience interest and trust. Increased audience interest and trust is essential to building your business. In fact, content that answers questions and provides valuable insights is especially helpful. A quick Google search offers a lot of resources on how to develop engaging content, but once you’ve created this engaging information, are people even aware it exists? Your content will not reach much of an audience if it isn’t promoted. As with content creation, promotion should be an ongoing process. Consider following the old 80/20 rule: Spend 20 percent of the time creating content and the other 80 percent promoting it.
From another perspective, pay per click (PPC) advertising campaigns may draw a lot of traffic, but those short ads cannot demonstrate much credibility. Most visitors who come to your website through PPC, or other paid promotional efforts, leave with their next click.
That is why it is important the visitor traffic you are paying for is met with engaging content. This is the content advertising connection. Your keywords, ads, and landing pages should tell a cohesive and engaging story. That content needs to be informative and actionable enough that people immediately want to give you their contact information. Those visitors will stay longer, learn more about your offer, and might even become customers.
Content advertising, an important part of the marketing mix, combines content marketing and PPC campaigns. By the end of this post, you’ll have a better understanding of how you can combine the two approaches to amplify your marketing into a beautiful synergy of visibility engagement that ultimately results in more sales.
Here are a few actionable content advertising tactics for amplifying your PPC and content marketing results:
Not only is PPC a fast path to driving traffic, but it also works especially well for any gated content, such as e-books and white papers. In addition, any content that is seasonal, trending, or timely should also be promoted with PPC. Make sure any content promoted is gated so PPC performance is more transparent. This audience can then be nurtured through your conversion funnel with follow-up workflows.
One thing your content and PPC campaigns have in common is keywords.
When your content ranks for keywords in the organic search results, be sure to also create PPC ads for the same keywords. This helps in a few ways, including:
Leverage your PPC keyword data and ad copy performance to discover keywords that drive the highest traffic and revenue in the following ways:
If you are creating content, be sure to share it across your social media profiles. Then, promote the best-performing piece using:
For B2B industries, consider ads in LinkedIn Sponsored Updates, which is similar to Facebook Boost Post ads. Caution: These can be significantly expensive, so use them only for proven, extremely successful content. You can also try “Sponsored Content ads”, which provide decent targeting for titles, company size, and general business demographics. Either way, be sure to test regularly for areas of opportunity.
In most businesses, marketing efforts such as SEO, content marketing, and paid media are managed separately, rarely sharing successes or failures. By integrating these efforts through combining content marketing into PPC campaigns, you leverage each department’s strengths, increase your brand’s visibility, and gather more conversions overall.
Content marketing produces a long-term improvement in website traffic. To measure success, be sure to track the average time spent on each page, the total amount of pages viewed per user, and bounce rates. If your overall website traffic improves, but the engagement rates do not, this probably means your campaigns are driving traffic, but the content itself needs an overhaul.