ux london applying brand-driven content strategy
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@mbloomstein | #UXLondon 1
© 2013 © 2011
Learn your ABCs: Applying Brand-driven Content Strategy
Margot Bloomstein UX London April 2013 @mbloomstein
@mbloomstein | #UXLondon 2
© 2013
Unless you understand what people are trying to do with your content you cannot know if it’s working or not.” Gerry McGovern
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Your serve. And who are you again?
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What is content strategy?
Planning for the creation, aggregation, delivery, and governance of useful, usable, and appropriate content in an experience.
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Steps along the way…
Message architecture Content audit/inventory Prescriptive content matrix Content model Editorial style guidelines Metadata guidelines Governance guidelines
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Steps along the way…
Message architecture Content audit/inventory Prescriptive content matrix Content model Editorial style guidelines Metadata guidelines Governance guidelines
Deliverables are merely punctuation in the conversation. Don’t let them replace the conversation.
Why content strategy?
Why content strategy?
Because we all want the same thing, but content keeps getting in the way.
@mbloomstein | #UXLondon 10
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Content demands attention
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Because we all want the same thing, but content keeps getting in the way.
(CC) http://www.flickr.com/photos/slworking
Content requires time
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Sustainable content is content you can create—and maintain—without going broke, without lowering quality in ways that make the content suck, and without working employees into nervous breakdowns. Erin Kissane, The Elements of Content Strategy
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Content dredges up politics
©Margot Bloomstein
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to change, empower, support, advocate, teach, simplify, consolidate, remind, inform…
You cannot act in passive voice
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to change, empower, support, advocate, teach, simplify, consolidate, remind, inform… Content demands an owner & ownership.
You cannot act in passive voice
This is your job now.
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©Skillset.org
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First things first.
What do you need to communicate?
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First things first.
Why even…redesign the website, let the CEO start blogging, audit the content, start engaging on Twitter, consolidate the site architecture, add video testimonials, incorporate user reviews, develop new brand guidelines… if you don’t know what you need to communicate?
If you don’t know what you need to communicate, how will you know if you succeed?
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What’s a message architecture?
A hierarchy of communication goals that reflects a common vocabulary.
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A little thing with big impact.
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A little thing with big impact.
How could we prove this is a car not like anything else out there? It’s a small car, but it’s premium. You get a Porsche 911 ride for a fifth of the cost. It’s got history… but in Europe. You need to give people content to give them history.”
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A little thing with big impact.
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Message architecture
Premium technology • Assertive; ready to perform as a driver’s car • Proactive and supportive of spontaneity Classic design • Experienced and savvy Cheekiness • Smart, “punny,” hip • Fun, gleeful
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If these emails are boring you and you don’t mind missing out on all the lip-smackin’ stuff we’ll be sending in the future, simply send a message to owner-unsubscribe@insiders.miniusa.com and include “Unsubscribe” and your favorite fruit in the subject field.
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Message architecture drives the user experience
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Nomenclature Calls to action Instructional content Sentence structure Diction
…in content
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Photographic angles Dark backgrounds Bold headlines Thick stroke weights
…and in design
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…and in the choice of features and content types
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What’s a message architecture?
A hierarchy of communication goals that reflects a common vocabulary.
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What’s a message architecture?
Concrete, shared terminology, not abstract concepts.
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Welcoming, but elite. Selective?
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Accessible, open, and premiere.
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Traditional, but edgy.
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© 2013 ©Warby Parker
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Words are valuable, but meaningless without context and priority. (In a few minutes, we’ll give them context.)
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Why do this?
Words are cheaper than comps.
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Why do this?
Let creative colleagues refine the concept, rather than confirm the purpose.
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How?
• Engage in a tangible, hands-on way • Encourage debate and conversation • Identify points of disagreement • Prevent seagulling • Force prioritization • Encourage ownership & investment
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Cardsorting
• Groups of 7 – 10 • Pick 3 or 4 people to represent the brand • Everyone else: put on your content
strategy hats!
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Group 1: You’re a multinational bank with a long history in Europe. To attract a broader and younger audience, you want to change how people view saving. Group 2: You represent a small university known and respected locally—but you want to grow in relevance and attract more applicants, faculty, and funding from around the country and world.
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Group 3: You represent an architecture firm that specializes in historic preservation—but you want clients to turn to you for clever, historically appropriate additions too. Group 4: You represent a pharmaceutical company. After some issues with lab contamination and bad press, you overhauled operations and improved standards—and a new product release is testament to all that.
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Group 5: You lead a restaurant group loved for its family-friendly dining. In one location you’re branching out to attract business people brokering deals over martinis—not milk & juice. Group 6: Your company is a government contractor that specializes in mobile field robotics… and thanks to some re-engineering back home, you’re about to start selling robotic home butlers too.
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Cardsorting
Step one: • Who we are • Who we’re not • Who we’d like to be
Go with your gut for about 20 minutes.
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Cardsorting
Step two: • Who we are Who we’d like to be
Think aspirational. What needs to change? ~15 minutes
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Cardsorting
Step three: • Form groups: what goes together? • Prioritize the goals or groups • Tell the story of those aspirations ~15 minutes
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Why do this?
Gain standards by which to conduct a qualitative audit. (What is “good” anyway?)
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Why do this?
Promote new content types to manifest the message architecture—not just because they’re trendy or feasible.
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So where to from here?
Content audit: measure quality against the aspirational attributes in the message architecture.
Audit time!
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Message architecture Passionate about strategic discovery • Creative, spirited, inspired • Visionary, innovative thought leader and industry leader • Flexible Tactical and hands-on • In the trenches, in touch • Detail-oriented and methodical Pioneering • Groundbreaking, trend-setting • Modern and savvy People-focused and market-driven • Trusted by medical professionals, researchers, and media • Industry news source
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© 2013 Passionate? Creative? Hands-on? Pioneering and modern? Trusted?
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Audit to understand what you have and what you need. Don’t just do it for fun. Before you can start, you need to know why. What are you trying to learn?
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Every tab tracks the same data
Quantitative: • Head count: what do we have? • Is it consistent?
• Are similar content types consistent in size and structure?
• Is there parity of length, level of detail, and tone?
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Every tab tracks the same data
Qualitative: is it any good? • ROT analysis: redundant, outdated, trivial • Current, relevant, and appropriate
to the message architecture • Does it serve the communication goals? • Does it speak to the target audience?
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Each piece of content gets a row
Set up dropdowns to constrain data • Data Data validation List Sources
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What will you learn?
• What do we have? • What are the patterns, elements, & types? • Is it any good? • Do people even like it? (Check analytics!) • What do we need to update? • What do we need to translate? • Where do we need more?
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Where can you go?
• Prescribe new content types • Advocate for more frequent content updates • Promote a new editorial calendar • Reallocate budget across social media channels
@mbloomstein | #UXLondon 71
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Steps along the way…
Message architecture
Content audit/inventory
Prescriptive content matrix
Content model
Editorial style guidelines
Metadata guidelines
Governance guidelines
@mbloomstein | #UXLondon 72
© 2013
Steps along the way…
Message architecture
Content audit/inventory
Prescriptive content matrix
Content model
Editorial style guidelines
Metadata guidelines
Governance guidelines
Gap analysis
@mbloomstein | #UXLondon 73
© 2013
Steps along the way…
Message architecture
Content audit/inventory
Prescriptive content matrix
Content model
Editorial style guidelines
Metadata guidelines
Governance guidelines
Gap analysis
How
@mbloomstein | #UXLondon 74
© 2013
Steps along the way…
Message architecture
Content audit/inventory
Prescriptive content matrix
Content model
Editorial style guidelines
Metadata guidelines
Governance guidelines
Gap analysis
How
By whom & when
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But first things first: What are you trying to communicate? What content do you have and what do you need to do that?
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Thank you!
Margot Bloomstein @mbloomstein margot@appropriateinc.com slideshare.net/mbloomstein amzn.to/CSatWork Title image © Margot Bloomstein. All other images property of their respective owners, used under a Creative Commons license, or copyright as noted.
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