Content That Connects Theme to Character
“It might seem like nonfiction writers get off easy when it comes to developing characters; we don’t have to create them from whole cloth…the people we’re writing about already exist,” everand.com remarks..True, but when it comes to creating content for online marketing, what I’ve found is that, while the “characters” certainly exist, readers too often have never been properly introduced to them!
In one of the very earliest books I read on content creation, Creating Buzz With Blogs, Ted Demopoulos posited that content creates buzz when people feel as if they know you, because “people like to do business with people they know”. In other words, content needs to provide valuable information to readers, but that content needs to introduce the people who are providing the products and services being marketed.
Scott Greggory of Forbes calls it “highlighting your humanity to help your brand stand out”. “If your company sells a certain brand of tires, cell phones, or frozen pizza, you are literally no different from every other establishment that sells the same item,” Greggory says. What differentiates your company and builds loyalty is only a more human experience.
Writer’s Digest contributor Sharon Short uses the Wizard of Oz as an example:
What’s the story really about? Finding value and joy in home and family. But that’s hardly memorable enough to entice a book purchase, Stone admits. It’s the characters – Dorothy herself, Scarecrow, the Tin Man, the Cowardly Lion, the Wicked Witch of West, Aunt Em, who connect with and impact readers.
There are many aspects to be considered in creating online marketing content, including offering how-to tips, emphasizing unique aspects of the product or service being offered, opinion pieces on industry issues, and offering “startling statistics” to emphasize the scope of the problem you’re offering to help solve.
At Say It For You, we know that, when searchers find your post or article, they already have an interest in (and probably some core knowledge about) your subject. To move them to the next step, you need to “prove your case”, demonstrating that you know a lot about the problem you’re proposing to solve, and that you and your staff have the experience, training, and degrees needed to solve that problem. You might even “get into the weeds” by offering specific recommendations.
But, as an integral part of “brand positioning”, highlight the “characters” in the story, we remind business owners and professional practitioners, those people who have been — and who will be — delivering on that brand. In marketing content, it’s vital to connect theme to character.
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