written by
Dayana Mayfield

Achieving Content Marketing Success with These Top 8 Goals & Objectives

Content Marketing 10 min read

When was the last time you reviewed your content marketing goals or objectives? It’s easy to assume that the main objective is sales and ignore all the rest. But by focusing on the big goal only, you miss the opportunity to achieve smaller goals that also lead to revenue.

While driving email subscribers and demo requests from content is important, there are other goals too, like retaining current customers or building a stand-out brand.

There are so many different content marketing objectives. Explore them all and consider which ones fit your company’s strategy and direction right now.

Table of contents: Top 8 Content Marketing Goals

Because there are so many things you need to communicate with your audience, there is more than one content marketing objective. So, which content marketing objectives should your company prioritize? Check out these top 8 objectives and take your pick.

To inspire you, here’s an overview of goals B2B marketers achieved by using content marketing.

Source: Content Marketing Institute

1. Setup long-term lead generation

SEO is a key reason to make blogging part of your content strategy as you have the chance to retain important rankings and drive meaningful traffic to your website. To do this, you need to release quality, long-form SEO-optimized content frequently and fast.

It’s harder to knock quality off of SERP than to be the first high-quality piece of content. As soon as there are new trends in your industry, you’ll want to be covering them to capture that traffic.

Write long-form content and add multimedia to your posts with images, videos, and quotes. Be sure to update your ranking SEO blog posts every 6-12 months.

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2. Directly impact new customer revenue

If your company is in a space that is doing well right now (remote work technology for example), then this is one of the content marketing objectives you should keep in mind.

You probably want to capitalize on any extra attention you’re getting. Now is not the time for long-ranging SEO plans for very long-tail key phrases that bring in people who are not aware of your solution or the problem it solves.

Now is the time to get the word out about what you do and how it differs from other booming companies.

Check out this example from Loom. They went for the keyphrase “Loom vs Zoom” probably in direct response to the increased search volume for this keyphrase and because of the questions their sales teams and customer services teams are fielding.

Content Marketing Objective example: Loom

What content can you create that will directly impact company revenue? Content marketers often shy away from being salesy, but oftentimes there are content topics that are informative to your audience and help you gain sales all in one.

3. Gain and nurture email subscribers

Alright, so maybe your company is not crushing it right now like Zoom or Loom. Maybe your revenue is struggling, or you’re somewhere in the middle. By gaining more email subscribers and continuing to nurture them, you can keep up a connection with leads for when they are ready to buy from you.

In this email example from Pingboard, we learn about a timely feature to make large remote meetings more personable.

Content Marketing Objective: Pingboard

Collecting and nurturing leads is one of the top content marketing objectives. Here are content types to collect leads:

  • Quizzes
  • Webinars
  • Mini video courses
  • Email courses
  • Ebooks
  • Guides
  • Checklists
  • Freemium plans

To keep nurturing these leads, make sure that you’re delivering value your audience needs, such as real-world advice from people in the same job role or business as them in addition to product updates.

4. Improve customer retention

Retaining customers is one of the content marketing objectives that often goes overlooked in the search for all things new.

Don’t leave your current customer base in the dust by only prioritizing content for new customers. Your current customers need you.

The QuickBooks blog is doing an incredibly good job of being a resource for their current customers. They’ve got content that will help their customers stay in business, which of course in turn means that these customers can keep their paid subscriptions active.

Content Marketing Objectives example: QuickBooks

This is some of the content they’ve covered recently:

  • Business resources during COVID-19 outbreak
  • Navigating food delivery for the first time as a local restaurant
  • Helpful resources on the US’s Payroll Protection Program
  • QuickBooks’ own Small Business Relief Initiative

Even if your company isn’t a place to create an initiative to help your target audience, you can still create resources to make it easy for them to find the help that’s available to them. Even if that help is something simple, like comedic relief.

5. Foster customer loyalty

People love to do business with businesses that make them feel good. Can your company give back right now? How you can align senior leadership and content together to create a campaign that is inspiring and benefits everyone involved?

Edgar is donated 100% of their new sales from April 20 - 24 to the Freelancer Relief Fund, which was started by the Freelancer’s Union to procure funding from government sources and distribute it to freelancers who needed it during the start of the pandemic.

There are other ways to foster customer loyalty through content as well:

  • Showcase simple ways your company is helping people in your target audience
  • Humanize your brand with fun content that’s full of personality and puts your real-life team front and center
  • Give away special extras such as temporary free or reduced-price access to premium features and services that will help your customers
  • Offer a random drawing gift card or credit for your product or service

Find ways that you can show customers that you’re in this relationship for the long haul and that you care.

6. Build interest groups for retargeting

Not everyone will be able to buy your product or service right when they learn about it. They may not have the funds. It may not be the best time.

One of the best content marketing objectives is to use content to build up an audience interest list and then to remarket to this list over time.

Using Facebook and or Google ads, you can remarket to people who have shown some interest in your content, people who have:

  • Read your blog content
  • Viewed your webinar registration page
  • Watched a certain percentage of your Facebook video ad

Content doesn’t always produce immediate sales. You need to be planning ahead and figuring out ways to grow your audience of interested buyers. Then you can have more people in your retargeting campaigns, which tend to convert at much higher levels than other campaigns because it’s not just cold traffic.

To make sure that you’re creating content to save an audience that’s truly interested in your product or service, you need to be very strategic about what you create.

For example, if you work at an email marketing software company, then you don’t want to create an interesting campaign about social media. Your freebie download or webinar should be as closely related to the value and result of your product as possible. That way, the interest you capture is most likely to convert at some point in the future.

7. Share customer results

In this post from quiz marketing software Interact, we see an awesome result from a power user who was able to generate $100k in revenue from her quiz.

Share customer results through your content, not in a classic case study but more of a “how to repeat this success” style blog post. When you do this, you actually crossover into a whole lot of other content marketing objectives. You can directly gain new subscribers, leads, and customers. You can increase your brand authority as a company that gets results. And you can inspire brand loyalty and increase customer retention because customers who are not yet at that level of success will be excited to double down on your product and use it even more.

However, sharing customer results is an objective that stands all on its own too. You must be communicating the value your customers get from your product, not with your words, but with their own. Do this well and your company will beat the competition’s content out of the water.

8. Increase brand authority

With your content, you can also increase your brand authority. Showcase your brand as the authority in your niche or industry.

There are a lot of different ways that you can pull this off:

  • Use your marketing channels (such as email, social, and blog) to celebrate your positive press coverage in major outlets
  • Co-market with respected influencers and non-competitors in your space to showcase your company as one that has “ins” with the most desirable brands
  • Interview well-known thought leaders in your space and/or invite them as guest collaborators

When you use content to increase your brand authority, you improve the success of all of your other marketing and sales channels. This is something that’s very hard to measure, but the effect is undeniable. With StoryChief we provide our customers with “brand awareness metrics” by automatically gathering all website and social media metrics. This metric is a great and easy way to keep track of your brand authority.

Brand awareness metrics inside StoryChief

Why it’s important to align on content marketing goals

When everyone is on the same page with what content marketing is actually supposed to achieve, your company can experience a lot of benefits.

  • Smoother collaboration - If everyone is in agreement on company objectives, it’ll be easier to collaborate on content. For example, if everyone on the content marketing team believes that one objective should be to retain existing customers, then the team will make sure to approve some ideas that help customers get better results (not just write about product announcements).
  • Employees and ambassadors can share approved content - With a more holistic view of what content marketing can achieve, it’s also easier for employees and other ambassadors to have lots of approved content to share. Especially in the B2B world, employee advocacy is an important strategy that can make sure that your sales team is staying top of mind with active and inactive leads. When you see this as an important objective, you can create content with sales in mind, instead of just focusing on driving more MQLs.
Manage ambassadors and other content promotion strategies with StoryChief
  • More accurate KPI tracking - When your team is aligned on content goals, it’s also easier to set and track your KPIs. You won’t be measuring a narrow view of what content can offer, but will instead be measuring all of the content’s potential. This can help the content marketing team show ROI and advocate for more resources.
  • Overall faster production - Alignment nearly always means faster production. That’s because there will be less disagreement during the briefing and approval stages. Content can move through the cycle faster. And when you couple that team alignment with a content operations platform like StoryChief, then you can release quality content much faster than your competitors.
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  • Higher ROI - Ultimately, when your team is aligned on the company’s objectives for content marketing, it’s easier to make smart decisions, allocate your budget, and achieve real results.

Content marketing is definitely a long-term game, so even as things are changing day to day, don’t forget to prioritize the goals that will hold steady years in the future.

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