This article is contributed by Rob Rose - Vice President of Crownpeak. An effective CMS means a larger number of quality leads can be generated, which typically means more conversions and more revenue.
A quick look at many corporate Web sites finds a surprising amount of low-importance content occupying precious space – and consequently, customer time. The good stuff is supposed to be in there somewhere, but it’s just very hard to find. It should be a no-brainer then, to understand why monetizing content on Web sites seems so difficult; but online marketing dollars are being spent in bigger amounts than ever before, and the complaints about lack of ROI are getting louder.
It’s a bit hard to think that so much of the data and content we create is ineffectual, and just a waste of time. But we do need to keep it around for those rare times when someone wants it. So here’s what we’re up against:
- Creating high-value content
- Making sure it’s easily accessible
- Finding automated ways to ‘promote’ content that may suddenly be in demand
- Tying all this together with online marketing – SEM, SEO, content syndication, Web 2.0 – and ROI
It seems clear that what we need is great content and the right tools (a Content Management System or CMS) to input, manage and publish that content.
The Core: Content – or is it Customers?
There’s not much to say about the importance of quality content that hasn’t already been said. Repetitive, inaccurate, poorly written or out-of-date content can clearly cause long-term damage to the way your organization is perceived in the marketplace as well has how you rank in search engines.
Let’s shift the focus here to the content creators – how do you get the most from them? The key here seems to be synchrony: content creators must work together with marketing teams and higher-level management to ensure that the content generated is based on business imperatives and strategic goals. But is that enough? According to content management guru Gerry McGovern, “The Web changes the very roots of the relationship between the customer and the organization. The customer, not the organization, is dominant on the Web. Thus you must put the customer’s needs at the absolute center of everything you do if you want to be successful.”
Seen in this light, the issue is not just high-value content, but high-value, customer-focused content. In fact, you could possibly say that only customer-focused content is high-value content. This is much harder than it looks. Relating to content, technology and the Web site is much easier – they are tangible things that we can work with, tweak, and re-design at will. Understanding customer needs is a different story altogether.
It’s like a company saying “We have a great new product that will really impress you with its huge array of features. It’s got these bells and those whistles and is amazing value for money as well! It’s been called the best in its category by X analyst and Y research organization. Click here to Buy!” And then they wait for the sales revenue to come pouring in – but it’s only a trickle. Astonished, they go back to the drawing board, assuming there’s something terribly wrong with the product. Another blank; the product seems as good as it can be. So what’s wrong then? If the company had a way to analyze customer behavior on its site, it might then realize that what most customers want to hear is how products solve their problems, not just bristle with every possible gizmo. The content creators and marketers go into another huddle and then come up with “We have this great new product. It helps you address A and B problems while saving money. We’ll even give you a free trial to prove it…” Sure enough, there are more leads and more conversions.
The Right Tools
Once messaging, style, form and objectives are clear, it then becomes just as important to have the right tools to rationalize the process end-to-end. Without an effective way to input, manage and publish content to your site, there’s really no reason to create the content in the first place. So, apart from an understanding of ‘business imperatives’ and ‘strategic goals’, your content creators need:
- A tool or set of tools that allows them to create, manage, publish, reuse and retire content on the Web site and all other online customer touch points – such as landing pages, microsites, mobile content and syndicated content.
- The flexibility to do all of this, including changes to design and templates, both for business users in non-technical environments as well as more technical developers.
- A way to streamline workflows and set up approval processes so that all content goes through the appropriate channels before appearing in front of a customer.
- The freedom to quickly adapt, change or repurpose content without worrying about creating brand inconsistencies, design gaffes and other site problems.
- Simple ways to ensure that content is search engine-friendly; making keyword inclusions, Meta tagging, search friendly links and title pages easy to work with.
- A way to integrate Web analytics with the content tools, so content creators and marketers can continuously refine campaigns based on customer behavior. With the data from analytics, they can also ensure that your customers are easily getting relevant and need-specific content.
Ergo, they need a good Content Management System (CMS).
The Good CMS and Better Online Marketing
Without getting into too much detail, it’s clear that a good CMS must address each of those above needs comprehensively. In your search for the right solution for your needs (not just the most technologically advanced or feature-rich), you’re sure to come up against the choice of going with a traditional installed system, an open-source program, or a hosted (Software-as-a-Service or SaaS) model. This is a separate story in itself, and you can find more information on choosing the right CMS in our whitepaper - “Which CMS is Right for Me?” – downloadable from the CrownPeak Infocenter.
Getting to the marketing aspect, there are several things the CMS can help you with:
• Brand Consistency: Single-sourcing and central control ensures that customer-facing content is consistent and appealing, no matter the number of collaborators
• Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Search Engine Marketing (SEM): 51% of people click on the first result on a search page. Good content has to be found! The CMS can enforce W3C compliant code, create ‘crawlable’ site maps, eliminate broken links, reduce code clutter, create effective title tags and Metadata tags, and avoid content duplication. Even with paid placements, content hygiene will ensure your site ranks higher.
- Banners and AdWords: The CMS can help streamline your targeted banner placements and pay-per-click advertising. What’s more, analytics will enable you to hone campaigns on-the-go, increasing effectiveness.
- Campaign Management: The path from getting a customer’s attention to making a sale requires superlative co-ordination between online touch points. The CMS can help easily create, publish and track landing pages and microsites, and automatically ‘promote’ the more effective pages for better visibility. It should also help synchronize other channels such as email, direct mail, SMS, and more – all without mangling your company’s key message and brand guidelines.
Content Syndication: The right CMS should allow an open syndication strategy, enabling a phenomenal increase in reach through the use of formats like RSS and Atom.
- Web 2.0: Technorati reports that over 1.6 million blog posts are made every day. To keep pace with this staggering volume of user-generated content requires a re-think about dealing with your audience. The CMS can help here with more dynamic structuring of content, supporting ‘placeless’ assets with rich tagging and query-based navigation. The CMS can also ensure maintenance of good URLs, which means social bookmarking sites such as Del.icio.us and StumbleUpon will have easier access. With a flexible content data model, you can also support public participation in the publishing workflow, and voting/rating systems as well.
ROI
With an optimized Web presence, you are likely to see much more traffic – to all your online touch points. The combination of high-value (customer-centric, lest we forget) content and an effective CMS means a larger number of quality leads can be generated, which typically means more conversions and more revenue. Also, tracking these leads and responding in appropriate ways can now become much simpler; your marketers have the tools to manage the entire process, providing need-specific information to customers at the right time.
The icing on the cake would be a CMS that allows you do all of this without having to manage the technology itself. This is where the SaaS model comes into its own: you have the freedom to focus on core competencies – and conversions – while the vendor manages, maintains, and upgrades the CMS.
ConclusionTechnology, no matter how advanced, can only provide tools, techniques and approaches to achieving a goal. At the center, we still need to develop a high degree of sensitivity to customer needs; and hone our own competencies in responding to those needs – both in terms of our products and in terms of our communication. Once we’ve got the core sorted, working with a cutting-edge, easy-to-use technology solution just makes for a winning combination.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A
- Enterprise Content Management Seeks to Manage Information
- Subscription Management Software: Better Management Of Member Accounts
- Add Windows Explorer Integration to Document Management Software, Content Management Software and Virtual Drives Using Namespace Extensions
- Managing the Content Transformation Workflow
- Managing Web Content Management
- Sales Management: How to Manage Independent, Tech-savvy New Millennial & Help Them Sell Effectively
- Reputation Management LLC - Reputation Management
- Increase Content Appeal With Content Management System




Web Hosting Albuquerque: It’s Easy to Find the Albuquerque Web Hosting Your Business Needs
By: Vikram kuamr | 03/01/2010These days, it has become increasingly important for all businesses to have an online presence as it provides them the global reach that no offline marketing can offer them.
Improve Your Business with an Albuquerque Web Designer: Thomas Garcia Studio
By: Vikram kuamr | 03/01/2010If you have your own business or if you are considering starting one of your own, you should have a look at the various options for creating an online presence.
Important Web Design Tips to Remember in 2010
By: Benjamin Marc | 03/01/2010This article contains web design tip to remember in 2010.
Web design costing explained
By: Bill | 02/01/2010With Web Design, the costs can be prohibitive to the small or hobby business. Most people trying to arrange for a first website to be built are confused by the price differences from company to company. Often, what at first seems too cheap to be true ends up being just that when you add the functions which make the website more than just an online advert. I'll try to break down the basics of what's involved in website design.
Calgary Web Designing Solutions and web design company
By: Gerry | 02/01/2010Nowadays almost anything can be sold online. Thus, it is not enough to simply have a website. In order to be taken seriously you need a professional site. Competitors are countless, and you want to stand out of the crowds, don't you?
Building Traffic with Effective Website Construction
By: John Mahoney | 02/01/2010Website construction is a very important job that demands understanding of the human psychology and knowledge about the needs and demands of the target audience of the website that s/he is designing
The Dos and Don'ts of Website Design
By: John Mahoney | 02/01/2010Website design has become one of the mot important aspects of advertising these days, the reason behind this being the gaining significance of the virtual marketplace. According to the latest statistics, almost 12.5% people in the entire world use the Internet to find what they are looking for, and this is a pretty respectable figure. However, with the rising competition online, effective website design can be challenging to the designers and webmasters engaging in the activity.
For the Best in Website Design Albuquerque: Thomas Garcia Studio
By: Vikram kuamr | 02/01/2010A website is a huge advantage for any business. It helps to increase public awareness of your business and can also build sales.
Does Your Web Site Have a Content Management Problem?
By: Bob Rose | 01/10/2008 | SoftwareAt the end of the 90s, research forecasts of online retail sales were aiming for a modest $15 billion by the end of 2003.
High-value Content - and a Good Cms - Make the Real Marketing Difference
By: Bob Rose | 19/09/2008 | Web DesignA quick look at many corporate Web sites finds a surprising amount of low-importance content occupying precious space – and consequently, customer time. The good stuff is supposed to be in there somewhere, but it’s just very hard to find.
Selling Content in the ‘free’ World (and How Your Cms Can Help!)
By: Bob Rose | 22/07/2008 | Web DesignWhoever said “the best things in life are free” was probably not thinking about content. Then, along comes the ‘big bang’ of information technology and its progeny – the constantly unfolding (and largely ‘free’) online universe, to drastically rearrange our perceptions of value. Suddenly, the very same dollar one ungrudgingly parts with to pick up the daily news on the sidewalk is a deterrent online.
Beware the Quick Fix! Using Technology to Transform Your Web Site
By: Bob Rose | 08/07/2008 | Web DesignIt is now recognized fact that Web sites can play a crucial role in the growth and transformation of a business. No sales call or marketing brochure is complete without the ubiquitous URL. And no conventional marketing or sales effort can reach target segments in the way that a Web site can. Going online, however, is not exactly a piece of cake. Even the best-run Web sites have problems.
Getting to the Point and Getting it Right (with a Cms)
By: Bob Rose | 18/06/2008 | Web DesignThe new era of information exchange is complex but its possibilities are bright and exciting. Shifting markets put enormous pressure on firms to create a seamless and holistic approach to customer interactions. Online consumers are not always hard pressed for time; yet surfing habits indicate they have very little time to waste.
Cms Can Raise Marketing and it Synergy for SEO Success
By: Bob Rose | 03/06/2008 | Web DesignOptimizing a company’s Web site for search engines such as Google and Yahoo!, is a critical task for marketing professionals. However, while Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is becoming increasingly important, the Webmaster and his army of technical personnel often fail to connect with the vision of the marketers.
Hosted Cms and the University: a Winning Solution
By: Bob Rose | 19/05/2008 | Web DesignIn an era where digital content continues to grow at an exponential rate, organizations of all shapes and sizes struggle to manage and create content. Much like large corporations, Web sites play a vital role in the marketing and communications strategies of higher education institutions. As college and university Web sites grow more complex, it is crucial to have a site that is properly managed, easy to navigate, and powered by flexible, mature content management technology.
Cms – When Do You Really Need It?
By: Bob Rose | 05/05/2008 | Web DesignMarketers today make a strong case for a content management system (CMS), extolling its virtues in no uncertain terms. But it probably makes sense to take a step back and think: does your organization really need an advanced CMS? If your current in-house team is effectively managing your Website, can you justify a CMS investment to your management team? But at the same time, can your existing solution scale quickly enough to handle expected and unexpected growth?