Sunday, October 20, 2019
How CoSchedule Uses Marketing Collaboration Software
How Uses Marketing Collaboration Software The content marketers at get asked a lot about how we really manage our projects and work together to create our content. So I was humbled when a guest blogger of ours recentlyà shared a bit about his experience working with our marketing team: The amount of preparation done for a post and the superb coordination of their team members taught us a lot on improving our own process. Meeting their high expectations are quite tough, but we are truly honored to have the opportunity to learn from among the best in the business! Since itself is a marketing collaboration software that takes the form of an editorial calendar, I guess it makes sense that youd like to know how ourà process actually works. I can tell you from experience that the tool is different than normal collaboration software because its designed by marketers to help marketers do what they do better than ever. How Creates Better Content With Marketing Collaboration SoftwareAnd because of that,à we see ourselves- the marketing team here at - as role models for the planning and process behind successful content marketing and social media. So I thought youd find ità interesting to get a behind-the-scenes peek into how weà exactly: Plan less contentà that creates bigger results. Use our own tool to collaborateà super efficiently. Developed a processà thatà helped us generate 852,506 page views and 7,375 email subscribers just last month. Sound like fun? Judging by theà cheers Im hearing in my head,à I thought so. :) 1. Start By Scheduling A Contentà Planning Meeting Even for a tech company, its nice to get together as a team to collaborate on solving a problem in person. For us, this is one of the best ways for the entire team toà come up with creative ideas that will help us reach our 10x growth goals. You see, asà the content marketing lead, it would be easy for me to come up with every content marketingà idea all by myself and tell the team to execute them. But there is a lot more value whenà the team develops thoseà ideas because they take ownership in the entire blogs success- not just their own content. Build a culture focused on growth. #blogging #teamworkAnd aà content planning meeting is a perfect setting for the kind of team collaboration that builds a culture focused on growth. Heres why: I know the kinds of content we publish that produce big results. So a content planning meeting is a way for me to teach the team about those details so they incorporate them into their own ideas and content creation. Every person on the team comes to the table with diverse backgrounds and ideas. This exercise is a great way to sift through everyones thoughts equally while evaluatingà every idea according to our audiences preferences. That helps us choose to create really good content while consistently reminding our team of who our audience is and what they expect from content. Its a fun exercise that gets all of us up and away from our computer screens for a bit while connecting with each other. And when you have fun while you work, it feels less like work and more like something you love to do. This is how we do it: The 20-Minute Brainstorm Frenzy Some say theres nothing worse than group brainstorming if youre looking for innovative ideas. Then again, brainstorming by yourself willà only give you ideas limited to your own background. So the firstà phase of our content planning meeting focuses first on individual contributions to eliminate groupthink. And its super easy: Give everyone on the team a stack of Post-It notes. Ask everyone to write down as many thoughts as they can without holding anything back. Set a timer for 20 minutes (I often use my phone for this). Go. At this point, its just fun to see the team writing down tons of ideas, working super fast, and wracking their brains for the ultimate best ideas. Theres usually coffee (lots of coffee), laughs, and then dead silence asà they get serious about finding better ideas that will really make a difference. The 40-Minute Gradingà Process By this point, we probably have close to- if not more than- 100 or so ideas. The truth? We wouldnt publish 90% of them because theyre just notà quite right for our audience. And thats just fine because its during this grading process that the teamà chooses which contentà to publish and which ideas toà toss. Allow your team to choose which #contentideas to publish and which to toss. #contentmarketingHeres how we do it: Each personà posts all of their Post-It notes on a wall. Thenà on a marker board next to the notes, I write 1 | 2 | 3 , which is our grading scale for the ideas. An idea is a 3 if its the best thing ever, while a 1 is not so good. To grade the ideas, I ask the team a couple simple questions: Isà this a topic our readers would be deeply interested in learning more about?à How similar is this to our other top content? An idea is a 3 if we answerà definitively, yes, this isà something our audience would find uniquely valuable that is better than anything else they could find on the Internet for this topic. An idea is a 2 ifà the ideaà doesnt fit the qualification of a 3. An idea is a 1 ifà its not something we think our audience would look to us to publish. It could still be a good guest post idea. Then we read off each idea one by one while everyà team member grades the topic from 1 to 3. From there, we simply post the ideasà below theà correspondingà numbers on theà marker board. Heres the outcome from a planning meeting with a bunch of 3 content ideas. A Mistake I Made That You Can Avoid: Until recently, Id have the team shout off their answers: Thats a 3, definitely! I agree, 3. Uh, yeah, lets go with 3 on that. I noticed that once the first person spat off their answer, the rest of the team was very likely to say the exact same answer. I found out later this happenedà because ofà social conformity, a psychological principle thatà was discovered decades ago: So The Takeaway Is This: When you do this exercise, read off the ideas, then have each individual write down their grade ofà 1, 2, or 3à on a new Post-It note. Have them show their individual notes all at the same time for each idea, then categorize the idea as a collective 1, 2, or 3.After this process,à we only explore the best ideas- those graded as 3- for contentà that well actually publish. 2. Add That Content To Your Editorial Calendar Where the planning meeting sets the collaborative tone, the editorial calendar in is where the software helps us actually plan and create the content as a team. The planning meeting sets the tone and the editorial calendar helps youà plan content #bloggingFirst, we vet the best ideas for keywords, further narrowing our scope of potential content we willà create. Recommended Reading:à How To Make An SEO Content Strategy That Will Improve Your #1ââ¬â3 Results By 248% Then, we add the ideasà onto the calendar,à naming the blog posts by their keywords and assigning them to their author. We consistently publish two posts every week on Mondays and Wednesdays. Heres why. Once all of the new blog posts are on the calendar, its easy to see which authors might have a bit too much on their plates in a given week. From there, we simplyà drag and drop blog posts around until we feel 100% satisfied that the publishing schedule is realistically doable for every person on the team. Asking a content marketer to write two robust posts for a single week isnt very realistic for us. So these posts could flip-flop to make this a doable content schedule. Then we use comments to add in any notes from the planning meeting- including the original idea- so the author has a clear idea of whereà to start with a blog outline. We use comments in to communicate the main idea from the planning meeting. This way, we leave lots of creative room to use the keyword in the blog post title while still covering the original idea we thought would be successful. 3. Define Yourà Content Process Our content developmentà processà is ever-changing, and we just gave it a major overhaul recently to: Add a couple moreà tasks into our process to make sure nothing falls through the cracks. Clearly define what done means for each task to keep everyone accountable for their responsibilities. Track how soon we should start working through blog posts to hit every deadline, every time. There were lots of benefits for us to getà organized in this way, so we started very simply by asking ourselves: What are all the steps we need to do to publish a blog post? We brainstormed all of the steps, thenà simply put them in chronological orderà the best that we could to help us know what to do fromà beginning to end. Oneà collaboration software toolà we use all the time as a team is Evernote because no matter where anyone is- or if theyre online or offline- they have access to the information they need to do their work. And, it just so happens, Evernote integrates really nicely into . Anyway, this is what that process looked like as we worked through it in its rough format using Evernote: Heres a rough look at our first pass at the steps we needed to do to write and publish our content. From there, we had enoughà information to understand which stepsà we could group together into a cleaner, condensed workflow. And when we did that, it was easy to understand who on the team would be the best fit to complete those tasks according to their individual interests and skills. We refined the steps in the workflow and created notes in Evernote to define what done means for each task. The only thing left to do was to define when we should complete eachà task to work far enough ahead to nail every deadline and assign it. This simple exerciseà gave us exactly what we needed to build theà task template we manage using for all new blog posts we write. It gave usà a solid definition of what to do for each task. Before anyone who is accountable for a task marks it as complete in , they would first ask themselves if they truly completed the task according to the definition of done. Assign tasks and due dates to everyone on your team with task templates in . Now we know to start writing our blog posts a month before they publish to make sure we have several posts 100% ready to publish on the calendar at any time. We know content that is complete and published is white, and we can see which content is complete by not yet published because its yellow and labeled 100% ready to rock. Since weve done this, we pay more attention to the details that make a difference toward our goals, everyone understands their roles toà knowà exactlyà what to do, and we work more efficiently while producing better content. 4.à Create The Content According To Your Workflow Ill be the first to say that ourà workflow- or the task template we built in - looked magical. If we could seriously create content that way with every task checked off on time and in that specific order, wed be crushing it. But that wasnt always the case. Especially as we got started with theà new process becauseà we had to take a little time to learn. rocksà a task-based workflow that helps the team keep each other accountable. #bloggingAnd that was OK because our editorial calendar had our back. Let me explain. Traditional workflow and project management tools operate in phases. When someone does step 1, then someone else can do step 2. We all know that doesntà work 100% of the time. So rocksà a task-based workflow that helps the team keep each other accountable for hitting deadlines. Let me explain how this happens: emails you the day before you have a task due on the calendar and you can see a dashboard of the tasks youre responsible for completing today and into the future. So everyone knows what they need to do. When you get into the officeà in the morning and you see that the person before you hasnt gotten through their work, you can chat with them about the game plan for the day to get back on track. You can communicate with everyone who has a task assigned to them in aà specific piece of contentà right in with a comment.à That way, everyone can see the progress the team is making on the project. Whenà you can move on to complete your task- even if the task one step beforeà isnt quite done- you can still do that and check it off your to-do list. Thats a lot of power for team collaboration. And while being behind is a rarity, this sort of communication may be necessary at first when youre implementing a brand new process with your team. We use the dashboard in to track a daily to-do list and collaborate with improved team communication. No more endless emails! Here are a few lessons I learned along the way that you may find useful: Help your team moderate themselves more than you intervening into their process. The moreà they define the process, the more theyll stick to it. Dont expect perfection because its unachievable. Demand excellence and make that the expectation. When you set an expectation, make it a standard and stick to it. The second your team sees your standards are flexible is the moment those are justà guidelines. What Do You Want In Yourà Marketing Collaboration Software? I like to joke a lot that Im a content marketer whoà uses content marketing to market a content marketing tool. While thats funny, its absolutely true. And I wouldnt be able to love what I do if I didnt believe the team behind à tries harder than anyone else to give marketers like us exactly what we need to boost ourà efficiency. Naturally, the content marketing team at gravitates toward an editorial calendar as our preferred marketing collaboration software. as a tool helps us collaborate, communicate, create, and promote our content super efficiently. Get your 14-day free trial of to: Get more organized than ever: With a little thought into your blog publishing schedule, workflow, andà social media promotion, will help youà shave hours off your to-do list. Find time to create more effective content: You tell us a lot that youre too busy to even find time to create content. Let manage the mechanics behindà team collaboration and social media promotion so you can use that time to create even better content. Manage a happier marketing team: Forget endless emails, miscommunication, and missed steps in your workflow. is a marketing tool designed by marketers to eliminate the inefficiencies that hold you back fromà publishing awesome content. I hope youll join us. And, as always, let me know what you think when you get started with . ;)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.