I woke up this morning to a deluge on Twitter of things
vaguely related to Halloween. Once I’d got over the photo of a pumpkin carved
to look like Yoda, (and retweeted it, obviously) I noticed a couple of
scary-themed tweets from some more serious-minded companies like Mintel,
Penguin and Salter Baxter. The latter, a corporate reporting agency, announced
it planned to tweet scary sustainability facts throughout the day.
Really? you might
say. And yes, this kind of thing only works if it’s done properly. But it did
remind me of a conversation the previous week: a big B2B brand, the kind that
tends to make money rather than headlines, who announced to me, “we know we need to say more but we just
don’t have very much news”.
On the one level, their comment was right – few people want
to read about deals signed between companies in a specialist field. On another
level they were totally wrong – they have a lot to say, because what this
company does has a direct impact on most people’s lives. They just need to find
the right format to say it – and the right hook to get people reading.
This company is not alone. Lots of companies have things to
say on themes that people find interesting, without necessarily having
ready-made news hooks like an acquisition, a brand new product or an event.
There are ways to get round this, and PR professionals have
been working some of the formulae for years. But in the era of social media and
webzines, even B2B brands, have an opportunity to engage with customers, suppliers
and other stakeholders directly, on specific subjects that interest them. Take
data security, which has become extremely newsworthy as a result of the NSA
debacle, and Adobe’s embarrassing admission that as many as 38 million of its customer accounts may have been hacked. Traditionally unglamorous IT companies
can use the spike in interest to promote their own views in an engaging way,
direct existing customers towards white papers, feature the issue in a webzine…
This is not to say you can create news where there is none.
Tweets, blogposts and articles must remain relevant to their audience. But
thinking in terms of themes rather than one-off events provides a solid foundation
for a content strategy- and has the additional advantage of encouraging brands
to focus on the core story rather than disparate events.
Of course if you got this far, you will have spotted the
trick. I used the Halloween hook to get you to read about content strategies.
However, as you’ve got this far, here’s a reward. That pumpkin carved to look like Yoda.
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