How to execute an amplified marketing strategy

Comment

Hand of hispanic man holding megaphone over isolated blue background.
Image Credits: AaronAmat (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

Lindsay Tjepkema

Contributor

Lindsay Tjepkema is the CEO of Casted.

Content marketers today face a constant struggle between keeping up with the volume of content they’re expected to produce and getting creative to produce rich, quality work that deeply impacts their audience.

Content marketing is recognized as a powerful tool, driving higher conversions than traditional marketing. However, the teams creating that content are using an outdated playbook that focuses on serving algorithms before audiences by constantly churning out posts targeting bots over brains.

In an Accenture survey of more than 1,000 marketing executives across the globe, respondents were unanimous: Content overload is a top challenge. And 50% said they currently have more content than they are fully prepared to manage.

The strategies that made content marketing so riveting at its start haven’t evolved to meet the challenges of today’s marketers as they compete for their audience’s attention in a vast landscape of newsletters, podcasts, video series, blogs and social media.

With too much content to create or manage and too little time to measure its success or repurpose what they’ve already created, marketers need a new plan of action that puts creativity before quantity, audience before engine, and sets connection as the top priority. They need an amplified marketing strategy.

What is amplified marketing?

The amplified marketing approach puts captivating conversations at the center of your content strategy. Those conversations — with industry experts, customers, internal thought leaders, influencers and decision-makers — serve as the source material for all your marketing assets, streamlining your content creation, aligning your teams across channels and giving your audience the insights they’re seeking.

Amplified marketing turns to powerful metrics to identify what resonates with an audience and what’s not catching on. By extracting more value from the content they create and assessing its success, marketers can work more efficiently, effectively and creatively.

Help TechCrunch find the best growth marketers for startups.

Provide a recommendation in this quick survey and we’ll share the results with everybody.

Start with a conversation

Amplified marketing starts with a good conversation with someone who knows what they’re talking about on a topic your audience wants to explore. How do you do that? Bring the focus back to the audience.

Consider what questions they need answered, what new ideas they’re missing out on and what subjects excite or inspire them. Instead of developing a list of topics for content marketers to research and write about, put together a list of people who can offer your audience those answers, insights and big ideas.

The conversations can be with a subject matter expert, a leading voice, a provocative change-maker in your industry — someone knowledgeable who has a story and wants to share it. They don’t need to be “known,” but they should have passion and skill and, most importantly, be relevant to your audience.

Instead of painstakingly producing blog post after blog post, passing it on to your audience and hoping something sticks, an amplified marketing strategy fosters a connection between your audience and the expertise they’re seeking, with marketers as the connective tissue.

Your audience has infinite options. They can read, watch and listen to anything in an instant. Amplified marketing asks you to focus on creating value — not just volume — so your audience will notice.

Record the conversation and share it

The conversation can be as formal or informal as you want, but be sure to record it. Using video or audio, capture that chat, interview or panel. Use whatever works for the people involved in the conversation: Zoom, Teams, Skype or just simple gear for an in-person talk.

What you’re capturing might be part of an event; it might be a podcast interview; it might be a webinar you put together. Make it a great conversation by asking unexpected questions, uncovering fresh perspectives and keeping your audience’s interests at the forefront.

How long should it be? It’s like so many teachers have said: as long as it needs to be. The length of the conversation doesn’t matter as long as it piques your audience’s interest. Whether it’s a five-minute chat or an hour-long discussion, you can use it to fuel your content. Just keep it focused on the expert and what they have to offer your audience.

Once you’ve recorded a conversation rich with ideas, insights and flavor — the kind of content your audience wants — share it.

Wring it out across other channels

Too many marketing strategies stop at sharing an interview, podcast, event keynote, panel discussion or webinar once. After the time and care you put into that great conversation, don’t share it once and move on to creating something new. Amplified marketing treats each conversation as a wellspring, capable of generating a collection of videos, audio clips, articles and social media posts.

Wringing out a robust piece of content into a dozen smaller bits that highlight great moments and intersect with other topics makes the job of content marketers easier, saving time and money while making the most of the work you’ve already done. To do all of that, you need tools that support your work by housing those conversations, transcribing them, indexing what you’ve captured and making it easier to create shorter video and audio clips of the most resonant moments.

Then you can share those clips on social media or embed them in blog posts and email marketing. Pull the transcript and use it as the basis of a handful — or a dozen! — newsletters, blog posts, white papers and e-books that link back to the full conversation. Turn your video into a podcast or a series of podcasts.

Amplifying your conversation gets the most out of the value you created while keeping your content aligned so your audience can follow the conversation across channels. It lets your team create an array of content from an authentic, meaningful conversation designed to satisfy your audience’s curiosities instead of the infinite demand of search engine algorithms.

Measure and reflect

Amplified marketing is audience-driven and focused on producing creative, high-quality content. To make that work worthwhile, you have to know whether it’s engaging your audience by measuring what’s succeeding, what could improve and what just isn’t working.

Instead of moving to the next conversation, evaluate how the audience received your content so you can be strategic as you develop the next batch. Taking the time to look at metrics will pay off in the long run by ensuring your brand stays on the pulse of audience interests rather than barreling ahead with content that doesn’t resonate. You’ll avoid pouring time, money and resources into something that’s not working.

But to gain insights from those metrics, they should be easy to access and go beyond vanity metrics to provide actionable data. Consider tracking these brand awareness and demand indicators as you review your content:

  • Audience growth.
  • Traffic growth.
  • Social shares.
  • Social media mentions.
  • Verbal mentions to team members.
  • Traffic to conversation-driven content.
  • Conversions from conversation-driven content.
  • Content’s impact on the buying cycle.
  • Revenue attributed to content.

The insights gleaned from this measurement will help your team build a dynamic road map for your marketing that guides the selections of guests and topics and helps strengthen your brand. Using a platform that relays those metrics quickly and clearly lets teams change tactics midcourse and keep improving their output while refining their focus.

Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.

An amplified marketing strategy is recursive: You’ll repeat the process and be better equipped, more informed and more strategic each time. As you drive your audience interest, you’ll drive revenue.

Once you’ve recorded a great conversation, used it to fuel a host of content and measured that content’s success, don’t stop. Take what you learned and start another conversation. Keep digging for what your audience wants most, finding voices that bring them value and asking questions that no one else is. While you’re looking for the next powerful voice, don’t forget to mine what you’ve already created.

By using tools that allow you to search for keywords and topics, you can quickly uncover related past content ripe for repurposing. Amplify that work by breaking it down into new content. Then keep going.

Equip your teams to excel

Content marketing has asked too much of marketers for too long without the promise of results, serving search engines before audiences. An amplified marketing strategy gives the control back to marketers and brings the focus back to the audience. It starts with a voice that speaks to your audience, captured with audio or video. That conversation fuels smaller nuggets of insight and knowledge that are easy to tease out and distribute across platforms, giving continuity to your content.

By incorporating tools to measure how the content is performing, you can adjust your strategy, giving the audience more of what they like, more of what drives them to your website and more of what enables conversion.

Your teams will align to make more compelling content, more efficiently, with your audience at the heart of their work.

More TechCrunch

Struggling EV startup Fisker has laid off hundreds of employees in a bid to stay alive, as it continues to search for funding, a buyout or prepare for bankruptcy. Workers…

Fisker cuts hundreds of workers in bid to keep EV startup alive

Chinese EV manufacturers face a new challenge in their pursuit of U.S. customers: a new House bill that would limit or ban the introduction of their connected vehicles. The bill,…

Chinese EV makers, and their connected vehicles, targeted by new House bill

With the release of iOS 18 later this year, Apple may again borrow ideas third-party apps. This time it’s Arc that could be among those affected.

Is Apple planning to ‘sherlock’ Arc?

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 will be in San Francisco on October 28–30, and we’re already excited! This is the startup world’s main event, and it’s where you’ll find the knowledge, tools…

Meet Visa, Mercury, Artisan, Golub Capital and more at TC Disrupt 2024

Featured Article

The women in AI making a difference

As a part of a multi-part series, TechCrunch is highlighting women innovators — from academics to policymakers —in the field of AI.

4 hours ago
The women in AI making a difference

Cadillac may seem a bit too traditional to hang its driving cap on EVs. And yet, that hasn’t stopped the GM brand from rolling out — or at least showing…

The Cadillac Optiq EV starts at $54,000 and is designed to hook young hipsters

Ifeel is being offered as part of an employer’s or insurance provider’s healthcare coverage.

Mental health insurance platform ifeel raises a $20 million Series B

Instead of opening the user’s actual browser or a WebView, Custom Tabs let users remain in their app while browsing.

Google Chrome becomes a ‘picture-in-picture’ app

Sanil Chawla remembers the meetings he had with countless artists in college. Those creatives were looking for one thing: sustainable economic infrastructure that could help them scale rather than drown…

Slingshot raises $2.2 million to provide financial services to artists

A startup called Firefly that’s tackling the thorny and growing issue of cloud asset management with an “infrastructure as code” solution has raised $23 million in funding. That comes on…

Firefly forges on after co-founder murdered by Hamas

Mistral, the French AI startup backed by Microsoft and valued at $6 billion, has released its first generative AI model for coding, dubbed Codestral. Like other code-generating models, Codestral is…

Mistral releases Codestral, its first generative AI model for code

Pinterest announced today that it is evolving its Creator Inclusion Fund to now be called the Pinterest Inclusion Fund. Pinterest teamed up with Shopify’s Build Black and Build Native programs…

Pinterest expands its Creator Fund to allow founders

Alex Taub, a longtime founder with multiple exits under his belt, believes it’s time to disrupt the meme industry. “I have this big thesis that meme tech is going to…

This founder says meme tech is the next big thing

Lux, the startup behind popular pro photography app Halide and others, is venturing into video with its latest app launch. On Wednesday, the company announced Kino, a new video capture app…

Kino is a new iPhone app for videographers from the makers of Halide

DevOps startup Harness has shown itself to be an ambitious company, building a broad platform of services while also dabbling in M&A when it made sense to fill in functionality.…

Harness snags Split.io as it goes all in on feature flags and experiments

Microsoft’s Copilot, a generative AI-powered tool that can generate text as well as answer specific questions, is now available as an in-app chatbot on Telegram, the instant messaging app.  Currently…

Microsoft’s Copilot is now on Telegram

HBO’s new documentary, “MoviePass, MovieCrash,” tells a story that many of us know about: how MoviePass, the subscription-based movie ticketing startup, was a catastrophic failure. After a series of mishaps…

MoviePass co-founders speak their truth in HBO’s new documentary 

The watch features a variety of different 3D games, unlocking more play time the more kids move.

Fitbit’s new kid smartwatch is a little Wiimote, a little Tamagotchi

In the video, a crowd is roaring at a packed summer music festival. As a beat starts playing over the speakers, the performer finally walks onstage: It’s the Joker. Clad…

Discord has become an unlikely center for the generative AI boom

After the Wirecard scandal, Germany’s financial regulator BaFin started to look more closely at young fintech startups that wanted to grow at a rapid pace — it’s better to be…

Germany’s financial regulator ends anti-money laundering cap on N26 signups after $10M fine

Among other things, this includes the ability to trace code from source to binary packages across both platforms, single sign-on support and unified project structures.

JFrog and GitHub team up to closely integrate their source code and binary platforms

The company’s public fund disbursement and e-commerce platform makes accepting school tuition and enabling educational enrichment more accessible. 

Tech startup Odyssey goes on journey to help states implement school choice programs

A new startup called Kinnect aims to help people privately save generational memories, traditions, recipes and more. The company’s app, launched this month, lets people create invite-only spaces where they…

Kinnect’s new app aims to help families record and store generational memories

Spotify has hiked its premium subscription in France by an eye-watering €0.13, in response to a new music-streaming tax.

Spotify hikes subscription price in France by 1.2% to match new music-streaming tax

The European Union has taken the wraps off the structure of the new AI Office, the ecosystem-building and oversight body that’s being established under the bloc’s AI Act. The risk-based…

With the EU AI Act incoming this summer, the bloc lays out its plan for AI governance

Solutions by Text, a company that gives people a way to pay their bills and apply for loans via text messaging, has secured $110 million in new growth funding. Edison…

Bootstrapped for over a decade, this Dallas company just secured $110M to help people pay bills by text

Owners of small- and medium-sized businesses check their bank balances daily to make financial decisions. But it’s entrepreneur Yoseph West’s assertion that there’s typically information and functions missing from bank…

Relay raises $32.2 million to help smaller businesses manage their cash flow

When other firms were investing and raising eye-popping sums, Clean Energy Ventures took a different approach. It appears to be paying off.

How Clean Energy Ventures avoided the pandemic bubble and raised a $305M fund

PwC, the management consulting giant, will become OpenAI’s biggest customer to date, covering 100,000 users.

OpenAI signs 100K PwC workers to ChatGPT’s enterprise tier as PwC becomes its first resale partner

Tech enthusiasts and entrepreneurs, the clock is ticking! With just 72 hours remaining until the early-bird ticket deadline for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, now is the time to secure your spot…

72 hours left of the Disrupt early-bird sale