What do you want your web content to do?
Web content is a pretty wide-ranging field, encompassing everything from on-site text and blog posts to whitepapers and videos. With so many practical outputs to be considered as part of a content strategy, the first question needs to be: what do I want my web content to do?
Unless you’re in it just for the laughs, this should be a business goal of some variety – although sometimes those goals will be delivered indirectly (i.e. raising your social media profile can lead to new sales enquiries, improved customer service etc…)
With that in mind, I decided to pick out 7 business goals that web content can help you achieve – and a brief note about how you might go about each. It’s not a complete list by any means but these 7 points do cover a lot of ground.
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Get Found Online (SEO)
Search engines love great content – for two reasons. The first is pretty obvious – the text on your website can be indexed by search engines, so if it’s written with your keywords in mind, you’ll perform better in the rankings. But search engines also love lots of inbound links, and great content gives people something to link to: like cool videos, informative articles and useful resources.
Try: Text is still the number one choice for SEO. Use blog posts to keep it fresh and target your key search terms.
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Fuel a Social Media Strategy
Social media is based on conversations – and conversations need to be about something. That something could be what you had for lunch but if you want to use social media for business then that something should be in some way business related. Creating great content provides that topic of conversation.
Try: Again, fresh content in the form of blog posts is a good idea – remember strong titles and sharable formats (like lists).
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Attract New Prospects
There are quite a few websites out there. More than anyone could possibly visit in a lifetime. So to compete you need to give people reasons to visit your website rather than someone else’s (i.e. the competition). Education and entertainment both work well, so by creating informative and interesting content you give people reasons to visit your website and take the first step in becoming customers. And if you consistently produce good content you give them reasons to come back and start forming a relationship with you and your brand.
Try: Consider what kinds of information will make your prospects’ lives easier. Use a combination of simple formats (whitepapers, articles, detailed FAQs) alongside formats that allow for a little more entertainment value (infographics, video tutorials, audio interviews).
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Demonstrate Your Expertise
Increasingly expertise is the competitive advantage that businesses are looking for – but finding ways to let your prospects know how smart you are is the tricky bit. Web content can play a big part in this process and give you the opportunity to put your smarts in front of the people who matter.
Try: People absorb information in different ways – deliver your content in a variety of formats and you stand a better chance of getting through.
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Differentiate Your Business
Expertise can be a competitive advantage – but you still need to attract attention and set your business apart in order to get people to listen to you in the first place. So while most businesses continue producing standard websites which focus on design over content, putting content first can help you create a distinctive web presence, communicate your USP (see below) and show off a little personality.
Try: Be the first to try new media formats. Re-purposing text content into multimedia formats can give it a new lease of life.
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Communicate More Effectively
Getting your point across can be hard enough at the best of times so picking the right communications tools can give you a massive head start. Some ideas are best communicated in text but others come across better visually, in motion, aurally, in diagrams or from a third party perspective. Using all the content tools in your arsenal can make a big difference to how well you communicate with your prospects, customers and the world at large.
Try: Pick formats on the basis of how well they communicate your ideas. If something would benefit from a visual example, use video or diagrams. If it’s better coming from someone else, use outside experts or case studies as content sources.
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Create New Revenue Streams
And content can even be profitable in its own right. People will – and do – pay for online content all the time. Online training courses in particular are huge business, as are subscription-based membership resources, niche online publications and downloadable information products.
Try: Don’t be afraid to experiment with new business models online. If they are well-planned the investment needn’t be huge and you can often partner with others to deliver the concept. Online magazines, membership programs and elearning are all within the grasp of even the smallest organisations.
The great news is that even at this stage, if you’re considering how to best use web content for your business, you’re still way ahead of the game and have the chance to achieve considerable competitive advantage.
But it’s not going to stay that way for long.

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Hi there,
Nice concise piece. Not being an SEO expert, what in your view is the best way to achieve ‘in-bound links..? Also, I’ve never had a ‘concise’ definition of them either.
Hi Shiela
Although I’d have to say I’m no SEO expert either, an inbound link is simply another website which links to your site.
There are lots of ways that this might happen (and a lot that goes into determining how valuable that link is) BUT to my mind the best way to encourage inbound links is to create great content that people want to share with others. That could be an interesting article, a valuable information resource, an entertaining video or anything else of value.
Again, the value of a link is determined by all sorts of fancy algorithms and whatnot but a few general points:
- Every site has a ranking in Google’s eyes – when Site A links to Site B Google sees that as a vote from A for B. The more highly ranked Site A is, the more that will benefit Site B’s ranking.
- The value of a link is usually inversely proportional to how difficult it is to get (i.e. if you can create it yourself by adding your business to a directory, it’s likely to be of little value in terms of SEO)
- The text that makes up the link (anchor text) matters – so a link that says ‘graphic design’ would be more useful to your business than one that says ‘click here’
- Many sites set links that you can create yourself as ‘no follow’ which means none of the ranking ‘juice’ is passed from one ot the other – posts in forums and social media sites, directory listings, comments on blogs are all usually set this way to deter spammers
All that being said, links are not just for SEO – they’re also for people. A link that’s popular on Twitter might give me no SEO benefit but could drive lots of traffic.
Hope that helps a little.