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Multimedia and Content Strategy

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Multimedia and Content Strategy

  1. 1. MULTIMEDIA & CONTENT STRATEGY TIL DEATH DO US PART Gene Begin / @gbegin / #CASEMMW Senior Director of Integrated Marketing / Babson College
  2. 2. The planning, development, and management of content—written or in other media.* WHAT IS CONTENT STRATEGY? *WikipediaImage Source: Contentini
  3. 3. WE NEED A ___________________ <insert meme> <insert video> <insert flashy new digital thingy>
  4. 4. WE NEED A #%!$%@+#%!$%@+ WAIT, WHAT? NO.
  5. 5. THE BUSINESS OBJECTIVE.
  6. 6. FIRST… OBJECTIVES. THEN… STRATEGIES. LAST… TACTICS. [www.iveybusinessjournal.com]
  7. 7. WHERE DOES CONTENT STRATEGY FIT IN? Institutional Strategy Content Strategy Digital Marketing Marketing Communications Technology Infrastructure
  8. 8. INSTITUTIONAL STRATEGY = CONTENT STRATEGY Content strategy must be hardwired to your institutional strategy
  9. 9. HOW DOES CONTENT STRATEGY HELP • What type of content should we produce? • Who is our target audience? • What stories should we focus on telling? • Where should we host our content? • On which platforms should we share our stories? • How do we prioritize requests when everyone wants a video?
  10. 10. CONTENT GOALS & MEASUREMENT • Build trust, conversation and deepen loyalty with our existing audiences (alumni/student feedback & engagement) • Attract new prospect students, clients and partners (inquiries, applicants, deposits, clients, recruiters) • Generate engagement and/or explore audience pain points and overcome myths and objections (comments/shares) • Illustrate benefits through stories and experiences (views) • Develop new ideas (feedback generated) • Build reputation with search engines(search engine ranks)
  11. 11. WHAT TYPE OF CONTENT SHOULD WE PRODUCE?
  12. 12. 9 MAJOR TYPES OF MULTIMEDIA CONTENT 1. Photography — all social has gone visual 2. Video — YouTube, Vimeo, or Wistia embedded right into a post or shared directly to social media 3. Screenshots — helpful images of your product or workflow 4. Infographics — visual information, either super long and meaty or bite-sized and informative 5. Data visualization — standalone charts and graphs 6. Comics — relevant comic strips or cartoons 7. Memes — popular memes customized to fit the context of your post or update 8. Visual note-taking — casually-designed layout of ideas, typically text-heavy 9. HTML5 Animation — interactive media BufferSocial, May 2014
  13. 13. DEVELOP A CONTENT / ASSET SOURCES LIST SOURCE ASSET TYPE Multimedia HTML5 interactive Animation Magazine Web version Video exclusives Slideshows PR Announcements Research Rankings Alumni businesses Student/programs Athletics News Results Features/Stories Awards Blogs College-created Student-owned Faculty-owned Photography Staged User-generated Stock Videos Event/speaker capture Scripted User-generated Alumni Research Job Promotions Business launches Social Media Conversation Testimonials Customer Service Questions Newsletters Thought Leadership Alumni Students Parents
  14. 14. WHO IS OUR TARGET AUDIENCE?
  15. 15. TARGET AUDIENCE? HIGHER EDUCATION CONSTITUENCY MAP
  16. 16. TARGET EXPERIENCE Post-Experience Impact Current Student Experience Prospective Students/Parents Current Students Faculty/Staff Prospective Employees Working Professionals HR Decision-Makers Recruiters Parents Guidance Counselors Alumni Governance Policy-makers Educators/Academics
  17. 17. HOW DO WE GENERATE AND/OR CURATE IDEAS FOR CONTENT
  18. 18. BUILDING A CONTENT PIPELINE • Mine the events calendar for campus speakers • Collaborate with campus centers and organizations • Partner with the written word content creators (i.e. Magazine)
  19. 19. • Regular Departmental Meetings – e.g. Social Innovation Institute, Center for Women’s Entrepreneurial Leadership, Center for Investments and Finance, Executive Education • Marketing Strategy Meetings – Marketing Council, Social Media Council/Steering Committee, Agency Meeting, Lifecycle Marketing Meeting, Editorial Meeting BUILDING RELATIONSHIPS
  20. 20. PROCESS?!
  21. 21. TAKING REQUESTS AND CONCEPT IDEAS
  22. 22. DEVELOP A CYCLICAL CONTENT PROCESS 1. Audit - Be that politician across campus 2. Assess - Quality, type and channel 3. Prioritize - Institutional strategy and goals 4. Build - 6 month plan 5. Develop – Creative production, curation and re-imagination After 3 or 6 months, check in and start audit cycle again
  23. 23. CONTINUE TO BUILD & DEVELOP PROCESS • Content Calendar – Interests/categories – Regular topics/columns – Gap identification (new content) – Publishing schedule • Curate • Re-imagine • Create • Socialize • Measure
  24. 24. Content Calendar Institutional Priorities March April May June July August Redefining Eship “Pursuing a Passion” World Stage Social Innovation Andrew Zimmern Education/ Curriculum New Entre. Leader CLTP 15th Anniversary Babson Insight GLDE Living E-ship (Student- focused) Shark Tank MCFE Founder’s Day Lemon. Day Boston Defining Entrepreneurship Defining Entrepreneurship
  25. 25. LEVERAGING CONVERGED MEDIA OWNED MEDIA = website(s), multimedia, newsletters, SEO, social media accounts, campus environment EARNED MEDIA = PR, word of mouth, social sharing PAID MEDIA = traditional advertising, display advertising, paid search, event sponsorship, content advertising Assets created are pushed through the paid channels but also owned channels in ways that drive the earned media and thus extending reach
  26. 26. HIGHER EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY MARKETING
  27. 27. THE IMPORTANCE OF ADVOCACY MARKETING https://gaggleamp.com/blog/employee-advocacy-infographic Assets created are pushed through the paid channels but also owned channels in ways that drive the earned media fueling this reach
  28. 28. NEARLY HALF OF ALL INTERNET USERS HAVE REPOSTED A PHOTO OR VIDEO THEY HAVE FOUND ONLINE http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2013/Photos-and-videos.aspx
  29. 29. From infographic by Matter’s Studio-C
  30. 30. WORD OF MOUTH IS YOUR MOST POWERFUL FORM OF MARKETING • Social media = word of mouth reinvented • Use Your Advocates – Passionate About the Brand • Use Your Network and Their Networks • Share with 10 people, they’ll share with 10 people, who will share with 10 people, etc.
  31. 31. STORYTELLING
  32. 32. INSPIRATION FROM OTHER INDUSTRIES
  33. 33. FOCUS ON THE FARMER “Even the most technical subject has to have a human story behind it. We’ve been able to convince the management that the content shouldn’t be about John Deere equipment.” David Jones Publication Manager John Deere NOT THE EQUIPMENT
  34. 34. BUILDING A PROUD COMMUNITY WITH GOOGLE MY BUSINESS
  35. 35. THE CAUSE NOT THE COLLEGE Storytelling
  36. 36.  Small, private business college 14 miles west of Boston  #1 in entrepreneurship for 22 and 18 consecutive years  Approximately 2000 undergraduate and 1300 graduate students, representing more than 74 countries  Undergraduate program (top 25 in business)  Graduate program - MBA and MS degrees (top 50 in business)  Executive education program (top 10 U.S. and top 20 in the world for custom programs Increase brand awareness, engagement, and adoption for Babson, the educator for Entrepreneurship of All Kinds®. BABSON COLLEGE
  37. 37. THE ENTREPRENEURS: A TRUE BABSON STORY
  38. 38. ACTION.BABSON.EDU
  39. 39. EARNED MEDIA
  40. 40. MAKE THEM THINK DIFFERENTLY ABOUT MULTIMEDIA Objective Before Tactic Process Never Hurt Anyone Advocacy Marketing The Cause Not the College
  41. 41. BE A CHANGE MANAGER “To do disruptive innovation, you have to be willing to be misunderstood for a very long time.” - Jeff Bezos, Chairman and CEO of Amazon.com
  42. 42. THANK YOU! #CASEMMW WWW.SLIDESHARE.COM/GBEGIN GENE BEGIN / @GBEGIN SENIOR DIRECTOR OF INTEGRATED MARKETING / BABSON COLLEGE

Editor's Notes

  • http://youtu.be/V2f-MZ2HRHQ
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