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'Content' overboardThe advent of the internet and smartphones has democratised production, publishing and broadcasting. Anyone with access to both of these can now have a public voice and build an audience by creating 'content'. ![]() Image credit: weerapat wattanapichayakul - 123RF.com. But pundits, commentators, media houses and agencies have done the entire world a great disservice by constantly referring to the sum of it all, as "digital content." It only takes one quick look at your Facebook timeline to see the swamp that news, gossip, popular opinion, adverts, PR and entertainment has become. Investing blindly in contentOur languages and our words influence how we construe the world around us. ‘Content’ brings every act of creation to an equal base level. Obama's speech at Nelson Mandela's funeral and a tweet from Donald Trump are both counted as ‘content’. Investigative journalism and a populist opinion piece without foundation, are ‘content. Game of Thrones and a Happy Friday post from KFC are ‘content’. A user manual for your alarm clock in 47 languages and a customer's angry post about your warranty conditions, are also ‘content’. ‘Content’, is a fitting meta description but so is ‘stuff’ or ‘crap’. Everything can be construed as stuff and right now my social timelines are full of crap. I wonder how Picasso, Mozart or Shakespeare would have felt if their work had been remembered by history as ‘content’. In any case, I'm pretty sure, they didn't set out to produce ‘content’. Media suffers because of ‘content’. Democratic societies suffer because of ‘content’. And, so do marketers and businesses that are investing blindly in ‘content’. Businesses need to stop asking their agencies to vomit useless branded content all over the internet. Rather, they need to think about creating truly valuable pieces and experiences that benefit existing and potential customers or society at large. "Happy Friday" doesn't quite cut it. Content marketing‘Content marketing’ was initially used to describe a new way of thinking for businesses. It was an opportunity for businesses to now communicate directly with customers and prospects, without being constrained by an intermediary and its prescribed formats. It was an opportunity for businesses to invite creators, collaborate and broadcast without the need for a media intermediary. It was an opportunity for businesses to harness the creativity of their own employees, turn them into ambassadors or industry thought leaders without the permanent need for agencies. Instead, agencies climbed on the bandwagon and sold ‘content’ as a different colour of polish on advertising, and most marketers simply paid them to take control of this for them as well. Instead of being an opportunity, it was just another channel now taken care of. Phew! Check! As someone with a media and production background, now running a digital agency, nothing irks me more than being asked for ‘content’ or a content strategy’. If you don't know what you want to talk about, why do you need one? Yet, it's something we list on our credentials and sell because it's what clients ask for specifically. So here are my suggestions to fix this situation and improve everyone's lives:
Taking full advantages of the promises of ‘content marketing’ means going beyond ‘content’ and harnessing the creativity within your organisation, while breaking down the manufactured walls between you and your customers or prospects. It's an amazing, exciting opportunity that can help with your reputation, sales and culture. About pierre cassutoHumanz is one of the world's fastest growing AI companies focused on empowering valuable creators and the marketers that work with them. Each day, Humanz analyzes hundreds of millions of social media profiles and content pieces as well as transaction data from online merchants, to generate better benchmarks and predictions for social commerce ROI, while also improving transparency, motivation and access for creators and marketers. View my profile and articles... |