As I meet with brands and agencies, I still come across people who are
totally unfamiliar with the term “content marketing.” And as I begin to explain
it, they often respond, “Oh, brands publishing content? You mean social media
marketing.”
Indeed, content marketing heavily involves social media. And, of
course, in social media, marketers use content to get their messages across.
But although there is plenty of overlap between content marketing and social
media marketing, they are actually two distinct entities, with different focal
points, goals, and processes. To help clear the confusion, let’s look at the
major ways in which they differ:
Center of gravity
In social media marketing, the center of gravity — the focus of the
marketing activity — is located within the social networks themselves. When
marketers operate social media campaigns, they are operating inside of
Facebook, inside of Twitter, inside of Google+, etc. As they produce content,
they place it inside of these networks.
In contrast, the center of gravity for content marketing is a brand
website — whether it be a branded URL like AmericanExpress.com or a microsite
for a brand’s specific product, like Amex’s Open Forum. Social networks are
vital to the success of content marketing efforts, but here, Facebook, Twitter,
and Google+ are used primarily as a distributor of links back to the content on
the brand’s website — not as containers of the content itself.
Types of content
In social media marketing, content is built to fit the context of the
chosen social platform: short messages in the 140 characters range for Twitter;
contests, quizzes, and games for Facebook, etc. Here, brands model their
behavior after that of the individuals using the social networks.
On the other hand, in content marketing, the context of websites
permits much longer forms of content. Brands can publish blog posts, videos,
infographics, and eBooks, just to name a few formats. Here, brands model their
behavior after that of media publishers.
Objectives
While both social media marketing and content marketing can be used for
a multitude of purposes, social media marketing generally tends to focus on two
main objectives. First, it is used for brand awareness — generating activity
and discussion around the brand. Secondly, it is used for customer retention/
satisfaction — brands can use social channels as an open forum for direct
dialogues with customers, often around issues or questions that consumers have.
In contrast, content marketing’s website-based center of gravity
enables it to focus more on demand generation. As quality content brings
prospects to a brand’s site, brands can develop a relationship with the
prospects and nurture them towards a lead conversion or purchase.
Evolution of online marketing
While I don’t know the ratio of brands that practice social media
marketing compared to those that practice content marketing, I’d imagine it has
to be somewhere around one thousand to one. Social media marketing is
top-of-mind for most every marketing department, while content marketing is a
(relatively) new term, and a new practice for many.
Yet, I think of the two strategies less as two isolated options and
more as interrelated parts of marketing’s ongoing evolution. The internet has
unleashed a revolutionary ability for every brand to communicate directly with
its customers — without the need for a media industry intermediary.
Social media marketing is the natural first step in this process:
Access to users is direct (users spend tons of time on social networks), and
content is generally formatted into shorter chunks, which makes the publishing
process relatively easy.
But as brands become more familiar with their new role as publisher,
the natural progression will be to move toward content marketing. Yes, the bar
here is higher: In content marketing, brands must produce longer-form,
higher-quality content and build audiences on their own site — they must become
true media publishers. But the rewards and results are, arguably, more
powerful. Brands can engage more deeply with their customers through content
marketing efforts. And by driving consumers to its own website, the brand has a
greater opportunity to gain leads and move them down the conversion funnel.
As we all pioneer this new strategy of content marketing, a shared
definition of what we do relative to approaches like social media marketing is
invaluable. So now your turn: In the comments, feel free to discuss your
thoughts. Is this a definition you would use to distinguish the two
disciplines? What’s missing?
This post was originally published here: Content
Marketing vs. Social Media Marketing: What’s the Difference?
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