Rather than talking endlessly about their brand, the organization demonstrates unique value with content: web pages, blog posts, landing pages, social media posts, and case studies that exhibit expertise in their field.
Today, your most powerful marketing collateral is no longer sleek sales sheets, but content that helps people make smart purchasing decisions. Marketing collateral has to be:
It also has to meet your ideal constituent at his or her current phase of the buyer’s journey.
So where do you start? Use a marketing collateral checklist, and focus your resources on the collateral that will get you the most return on your investment and that will ultimately help you achieve your goals.
Let’s look at six ways to build the nonprofit marketing collateral you need today, then consider how two brands used these strategies to generate more leads.
A powerful mission statement is aspirational and drives an organization forward. People are attracted to organizations that are driven by meaning and consideration for the broader world; it's not just about products and services.
The mission statement is the number one marketing asset. It is a statement that is short in length, but long on vision. If your organization isn’t clear about its mission, customers and other stakeholders won’t be either.
An ideal buyer persona is a detailed profile of your ideal constituent or supporter. It gets you in their shoes, so you can be in touch with the challenges and thinking that bring them into the buyer's journey.
Personas are created based on real data about existing constituents and include demographics, attitudes, concerns, goals, motivations, and behavioral patterns.
By understanding your ideal constituent, you can align marketing strategies to achieve your goals. By staying current with your ideal personas, you can turn new constituents into long‑term relationships as well.
According to the Content Marketing Institute, content marketing generates three times more leads than paid search—and we've seen this over and over with our clients.
A content strategy is a plan that guides future content development. It is based on careful planning that starts with your mission statement, your organization's goals, and your buyer personas. A content strategy will rely heavily on the main topics that bring constituentss to your organization.
Here’s what you need to develop a strong content marketing strategy:
Your content strategy should be the main focus of your search engine optimization strategy. Tracking the performance of content helps you understand what topics perform well in terms of drawing traffic and converting visitors into leads, and leads into supporters.
According to a study compiled by HubSpot, using videos on landing pages will increase conversions by 86%.
Video marketing provides content in a highly shareable format that generates traffic and maximizes search on video search engines such as YouTube. Video is also a great way to drive traffic to other content or areas of your site and generate leads.
Video doesn’t have to be high‑tech or high‑cost to earn viewers. In the human‑centric marketing of today, trust and authority are gained by being authentic and helpful in a straightforward manner.
Email marketing continues to be a key touchpoint to maintaining contact with your leads as well as customers. If done correctly, email is an effective relationship‑building tool and can have a positive, direct influence on revenue.
Types of email marketing assets include monthly content or informational newsletters, automated email nurturing sequences that are tailored to different contacts, and sales, automated lead nurturing sequences that allow marketers to be more efficient and consistent with an email marketing strategy, and e‑commerce product and abandoned cart emails.
To build trust with your contacts, your email strategy needs to be 100% permission‑based. Emails should be tailored to each persona and/or phase of the buyer’s journey. A/B testing can help you refine email marketing assets. Periodically test different days, times, subject lines, and other formats to land on the variation with the most opens, clicks, and engagement.
Did you know that organizations with over 1,000 Twitter followers had over 6 times more traffic, and 5 times more leads, than those with 1 to 25 followers? Facebook had a similarly striking correlation.
Expanding your organization’s social media reach is a powerful way to attract more leads. If you’re skeptical of social media, remember organizations show 4 to 6.5 times more leads after gaining at least 1,000 Twitter and Facebook followers.
Combining these strategies turns your website into a lead‑generating machine while also saving money on ad spend. Here are two stories to learn from:
This wireless communication provider suffered from a lack of traffic and leads from organic search and social media. Yodelpop enacted a simple and effective content, design, and social media strategy in partnership with the client. In the the first two years, we focused on:
In the first two years, Yodelpop helped this client increase leads by 55% (year one) and 90% (year two) from organic traffic and social media.
To meet growing membership goals, this professional association needed a way to not only increase traffic but also convert visitors to its popular industry website into leads to be nurtured. In the first year, we focused on:
In year one, Yodelpop helped this professional association increase leads generated by 57%.
In addition to building a mission statement, outlining buyer personas, creating helpful content, adding video to your website, building relationships through email, and building your social media following, keep an eye on your competition.
What are they doing? What’s working for them, and what isn’t?
You may be in an industry where case studies or ebooks are particularly compelling to your prospects. Or maybe your customers interact many times a day on social media.
Just remember to combine the inbound marketing plan strategies that will work best for your brand and get you a return on your investment.