4. Who do customers want to hear from?
This question is important because each buyer persona you target might be interested in hearing from a different voice from your company. If that’s the case, each of these voices needs to be amplified in your content.
For example, you might need someone who can speak to a customer’s business problems and a different person who can parse their technical concerns. Further, if you have several different types of customers, you may need a diverse team of writers who can speak to the needs of each buyer persona.
It’s especially important to ask several different types of customers which authors they want to hear from. Ask your customers, ask your competitors’ customers, ask the customers you wish you had.
5. What tone resonates best with your customers?
This part can be tricky to figure out, but it can lead to a big uplift in your content efforts if you get it right.
Some audiences like to be given the bad news first. Others need a bit of sunshine before you lay it all on. Some prefer an emotional connection. Others won’t be convinced unless they’re immediately presented with compelling numbers.
Is there a theme in the articles your customers are willing to forward and share? Do they have a funny headline, warn of a hidden danger, applaud an innovation? Your content will be more effective if you figure it out.
6. Do customers like your competitors’ content?
If so, perhaps you should consider emulating some of what they’re doing.
To find out whether competitors’ content is resonating, ask customers for examples of relevant content marketing that they can remember off the top of their heads.
You can also use tools to investigate. For example, BuzzSumo is a great tool that can compare shares between two different domains. You can see the competitor content that got the most shares and whether it is outperforming yours.
Also, it’s important to examine competitor content the way a customer would. Visit their site. Sign up for their newsletter. Follow their social accounts. Then see what trends appear. Is their content targeting a certain type of buyer persona to the exclusion of others? Is there a certain type of brand message that predominates? What level of variety do you see in their content overall? How often do they publish content?
7. What communities do customers frequent?
Every industry has niche sites where the thought leaders hang out and the rest of the industry sits in the stands to listen.
For example, Inbound.org is a great site to pick up insights on content marketing. Sites like Quora, StackExchange, various LinkedIn groups, or Reddit, are also helpful for understanding what’s driving interest or traffic in certain fields.
It’s also smart to figure out the popular conferences and in-person events in your area of focus. If you’re not sure what associations to target, you can look at websites like the Directory of Associations or the American Society of Association Executives for a handy list. Learning which communities are popular with customers clues you into where you should be making your content visible.
8. What are the best and worst pieces of content that customers remember?
Ask them to forward them to you. Then you can examine what business and educational value that content provided. Pay attention to how it was packaged and how that influenced customer opinions.
Market research can answer these questions for you.
Winston Churchill once said, “However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results.”
This is especially true of content marketing.
If you have a content marketing strategy but you don’t know if it’s delivering new customers and sales, it’s time to start asking the hard questions that only a well-targeted market research study can provide.