Feeling like you’ve spent the entire day brainstorming, with no gold nuggets to show for it? Stop searching inward and look outward at what your audience is searching for online.
There are a few options for mining your readers’ interests for new ideas.
Use the problems, challenges, and goals of your key personas to determine your blog topics. Bring your organization together to create or revise your key personas. Then take each challenge, problem, or goal and plan a blog that directly answers the persona’s questions on that topic. Interviews with people representing your personas can result in very useful blog content and can also build your organization’s relationships with key stakeholders.
Out of your existing blog posts, ebooks, videos, and webinars, which ones have been the most successful? Which ones could use a follow-up, refresh, or expansion? Are there videos, webinars, or conference panel outlines that could be repackaged as individual blog posts or as series of blog posts? Identify the holes in your content, then fill them.
What was hot a week or a month ago is yesterday’s news. Think about what’s trending in your field or community right now. Keep tabs on developing issues and stories. Which trends and areas could you respond to with valuable insights and information? Which ongoing issues have you neglected to cover in the past?
Find a way to pinpoint your supporters’ and donors’ interests. What do they want to know more about? Are they interested in hearing how their donation dollars are spent? Do they want to hear more about what happens behind the scenes? Or do they enjoy success stories from the communities you serve? Use their responses to fuel your next blog series.
This critical component of content marketing takes human behavior into account and combines different aspects of the data that Google makes available. Paid keyword research tools include Google Ads Keyword Planner, HubSpot's SEO tool, and Keywords Everywhere. There are also many free tools available. Once you’ve homed in on relevant keywords, you can break them down further into subtopics for your blog posts.
Small and mid-sized organizations often have tiny marketing teams. You might even be a marketing department of one! When you’re forced to wear several hats throughout the day, it’s easy to get disorganized or distracted.
Here are some ideas to help you remember and organize your topics:
It’s not always easy to create attention-grabbing content. If you’ve managed to crank out content that even you find downright boring, ask yourself: “Is this content valuable to my key personas?”
If your answer is a resounding “yes,” then it’s time to punch it up and make it more exciting.
If your organization and the work you do has a lighter side, inject some personality into your content. It’s easy for a blog to sound stiff and formal. Instead, think of it as a letter to or a conversation between your staff and supporters. Don't shy away from light humor, personal stories, and a semicasual, familiar writing style.
These days, most people read blogs on their phones. Keep your blog reader-friendly with subheadings, bulleted lists, or numbers to break up large blocks of text.
Also, add graphics and infographics to make content more visually appealing.
People look at videos five times longer than static content. If you want to connect your audience with the message and mission of your nonprofit, videos are the way to go. Sprinkle graphics and video content throughout your blog to captivate readers more quickly and easily.
At the end of the day, remember that you’re writing for the human, not the search engine. Your content might not always be polished and perfect, and it doesn’t have to be! A successful nonprofit blog simply needs to be relatable and dynamic for its audience.