9 Steps To Creating Engaging Content [INFOGRAPHIC]
You must have a plan in place that helps you to regularly produce quality content for your marketing.
But how?
There is a simple, proven path that anyone can follow to create terrific content… every time. Here is your no hype, follow-it-and-it-works guide to creating excellent content.
[Girl writing image via Shutterstock]
The no hype, buzzword-free guide to creating good content for your business
First, check out this handy, at-a-glance infographic. Share it, pin it, tweet it… even save it and embed on your own blog!
Then scroll below for a text based explanation of the 9-Step guide…
1. Think about what you know
They say, “Write what you know.” Sometimes, they’re right.
What do you know about? What do you like to talk about? What do people seem to like to hear you talk about?
Now, make a list of the things you know about, the things people seem to want to hear about, the topics you’re interested in (and that matter to your business) and that you get excited about.
Hey, look, someone just put a list of interesting topics in front of you that you’d be good at writing about, and that will help your profile and business.
2. Find good sources
Who produces good content and good data about the items on your list? Find the websites, blogs, books and other material that contain the best writing and reporting about your topics.
Did you notice they’re now your topics? Yes, take ownership. You’re now invested in them, and that means you need to learn everything you can. Find the sources you need to track, and collect them together. Keep adding new sources and pruning the less valuable ones.
Now all you need to do is…
3. Read
Read every day. Read the good stuff, a lot of it. Read within your topics, by the sources that matter.
You’re seeing what good content looks like, and you’re seeing what people have already talked about. You’re also staying up to date on the topics that matter.
Take some time to read the bad stuff, too. Ask yourself, “What makes it bad?” Think about how it could be better. How would you have done it? What’s missing? What makes the good stuff so good?
Now you’re not just consuming content — you’re analyzing it and understanding what makes it work, or not. This is how you get good at creating good content. It’s also how to generate ideas.
4. Save things
Remember when you read that one piece and you realized what it was missing, or it sparked a related idea that went unexplored? Did you save it, file it away in a proper place with your notes?
That’s what writers do.
They read things and save them and jot down ideas and questions.
You must set up a system. You must save the things that matter, and annotate them. Add your thoughts. Keep notes and ideas.
5. Hold an editorial meeting
Here’s what an editorial meeting looks like: People come together and bring things they read and saved and jotted down. They begin sentences with, “What if…” and “Wouldn’t it be interesting if” and “I’m interested in…”
Grab a few colleagues, tell them to bring in a few good things they read recently and one or two topics they’re interested in. Now talk about this stuff.
Talk about the things you read and what they made you think about. Make strange connections. Take someone’s idea and help make it better. Then think of a headline for what you come up with. Now go write something to back up that headline.
Repeat this weekly, and start reviewing the stuff you created and whether it worked or not, and why.
6. Give yourself deadlines
Deadlines provide focus and motivation.
To make them really work, don’t keep deadlines yourself. Make them public, on an editorial calendar. That other people have access to.
Hold yourself to your deadline. Get other people to hold you to them. Hold other people to theirs.
When someone misses a deadline, go into their office, close the door and smash something against the wall. Get a mad dog crazy look in your eyes and scream a bunch of unintelligible things punctuated by the word DEADLINE.
Okay, maybe don’t do that. People might write about it. It could be good content, but it’s not the kind we want.
7. Write
Writing is a natural extension of the reading, the ideation, the discussions and refining of your ideas. Now you have everything you need to write something. Sit down, get started. Don’t censor yourself too much in the early stages.
Quote from sources, and link back to them. Credit other people for good ideas, as that doesn’t diminish yours.
Add your take, your value to what’s been gathered. Have an angle. Share an anecdote that helps illustrate your point. If you have personal experience, share it. (No boasting, though.)
Three things to keep in mind:
- Being clear and/or useful is better than trying to be funny and/or outrageous. Easier, too.
- Don’t use words you don’t understand.
- Don’t waste the words you understand by using them carelessly.
8. Get edited
Those people in the editorial meeting? One of them is going to be your editor. Tell them to help you follow the above advice. Tell them to be ruthless in the name of ensuring what you’ve written is clear and has a point. Tell them to be generous with praise. We all like that. But they also need to tell you what doesn’t work.
Argue a bit when you disagree, but always focus on what best serves the reader, rather than your ego.
9. Repeat
Good content takes practice. Keep following the process, keep reading and saving and sharing ideas and writing them. You’ll get better.
People will compliment you on your progress. Say thank you and get back to work on your next good piece of content.
Now you know the truth about good content: it creates tremendous value for your community and can help grow your business, too!
Did you enjoy these tips? What would you add? What are your favorite sources of content. Please add your comments below. We love to hear from our readers.
About the author: Craig Silverman is Director of Content for Spundge, a platform that helps professionals and organizations discover, curate and create engaging content. He is the author of two award-winning non-fiction books, and his writing has appeared in The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, The Globe And Mail, Toronto Star, Harvard’s Nieman Reports, and Columbia Journalism Review.
[NOTE from Mari: I am a huge fan of Spundge and use it daily for my own social media and that of my clients!]
Thanks for your presentation, awesome. Great work and idea sharing here!!
Thank you!
I really like the “have an editorial meeting idea.” I’d make it even broader and say just have a meeting. Some of our best content comes from a team meeting or a casual discussion in the office.
Exactly. The idea is that having a focused time to share ideas and discuss what matters can result in great content ideas. The key is to have that content mindset in place so that you think to translate the good stuff into good content.
Thank you Mari. We love your infographic so much we have embedded it in our own blog. Invaluable advice to overcome writer’s block.
Lovely that you shared it!
Craig,
I agree with others – your added comments about the infographic are a great idea. While I am attracted to the visual, your elaborations were helpful. In fact, each of these steps could serve as a blog on their own.
#4 – Would you mind sharing your thoughts on ways you save information? I am constantly saving – but have not devised a system where I can find it easily. I use Chrome bookmarks, Google Docs, and apps like Evernote, Add this or Delicious. I’d like to simplify and keep track of things better so I can then carry them to the next step in your outline. What are your thoughts? Hey – this could end up being a blog post for me. I appreciate your help.
Vickie
Hi Vickie,
Thank you for your comment and question. Regarding #4, I have suffered from the same problem — it requires so many tools and apps to gather and save the best info, and organize it properly. I also want to be able to share it easily with team members.
Please forgive me for mentioning our company, but to be completely honest we built Spundge in part to solve this problem. I personally was using Delicious, Google Alerts, Evernote, Google Reader etc. to find and save items.
So we built Spundge to do the core act of reading/discovering/saving/organizing in one place. We also added content creation tools and collaboration to offer the full workflow for marketers and content creators — but the starting point was a smart place to save and organize things.
So, of course, that’s what I use now. I know other people have their own workflow and tools and am always interested in hearing what they keep in their toolbox. I hope this helps, and that you forgive me for mentioning our product! It’s honestly what I use now.
This was great and #6 (set deadlines) as simple as it sounds really works.
I agree — setting deadlines and hold yourself and others to them can be powerful.
I fully agree with the 9 steps. Great visual checklist. BUT what small business has time? This reinforces though my efforts to build marketing apprentices to extract and manage this from time starved business owners! http://www.gforceacceleration.com/apprentices
I love this article. I am an aspiring blogger/writer and I need pointers to get things going. Many thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Great to hear it’s useful!
Great work and idea sharing here. Thanks for your presentation, awesome!!
Cheers!
Craig, I’m curious about one aspect of #7 — when/how do you determine whether you’re going to write an information-centric editorial or a character-centric story?
Do you look for pointers during the later steps of the process, or do you decide in the beginning that you’re going to develop a narrative for a particular topic?
I’m not trained as a journalist, so I’m curious about how professionals address this aspect of storyline development. Thanking you in advance for your response.
Thanks for the great question, David. For me, I find that the process of reviewing what you’ve been saving, and then talking about it with colleagues helps shape your angle/narrative. The material usually guides your approach and focus.
Often you’ll see a connection between a few items and realize you can tie it together into something. Or a discussion about a topic yields an approach you didn’t think of right away.
However, I’d also note that it’s also to look at your content and try to make sure you have a good mix of different approaches. So there’s nothing wrong with deciding your focus ahead of time — but just make sure you have the material to support it. If not, it won’t deliver what you had hoped.
One last thing: the steps leading up to #7 are all about helping stimulate ideas, and providing you with the material and authority to produce something of value. So work the system and you’ll see that the best approach with often reveal itself!
Most people just post an infographic & they’re done! Thanks for going above & beyond by breaking down each point. I definitely found this blog post very valuable!
Great to hear, Tamarray!
I agree, great example of how taking the time to explain your infographic can add much clarity. Thanks for taking the time to break it down like this Craig!
That’s also great to hear, Kirsten. Thank you for taking the time to say so.