A foundational element of Sort in manufacturing is to remove unneeded tools and materials from the workspace. It is not a big leap to see how this can help us identify our ideal customer through Buyer Personas. A Buyer Persona is a representation of your ideal buyer based on actual data. When you sort your ideal buyers into Buyer Personas it allows you to focus on what information that specific persona will need to help then move through the buyers journey. You are removing unneeded information in your marketing that does not apply to them. In marketing, you next want to sort content for specific Buyer Personas. This is referred to as Content Mapping. Maybe this does not apply to you, but I can see myself saving 15 minutes a day by mapping content to buyer personas and the buyer journey. Thats almost 3 days a year in time saved!
HubSpot shares some excellent information in Content Mapping 101.
When it comes to content, one size rarely fits all. To ensure that your company's content is effective at generating and nurturing leads, you must deliver the right content to the right people at the right time. Content mapping is the process of doing just that.
With content mapping, the goal is to target content according to:
Buyer personas are fictional, generalized representations of your ideal customers. They help you understand your customers (and prospective customers) better, and make it easier for you to tailor content to different groups' specific needs, behaviors, and concerns.
The strongest buyer personas are based on market research and insights you gather from your actual customer base (through surveys, interviews, etc.). Depending on your business, you could have as few as one or two personas, or dozens. If you’re just getting started with personas, don’t go crazy! You can always develop more personas later if needed.
The buyer persona you target with your content is just one-half of the content mapping equation. In addition to knowing who someone is, you need to know where they are in the buying cycle (i.e. how close they are to making a purchase). This location in the buying cycle is known as the lifecycle stage.
For our Content Mapping Template, we’re divvying up the buying cycle into three lifecycle stages: Awareness, Consideration, & Decision.
By combining buyer personas with lifecycle stages, you can hone in on specific segments of your audience and tailor content to resonate with each segment.
Source: HubSpot
Everything has a place and everything in its place.
You have created the Buyer Personas. You have mapped the content. Now we need to create a scalable structure. This goes beyond simple file sharing. The end game is to have an easy-to-understand system that does not require digging through the weeds. This requires time and effort to develop the taxonomy and training so everyone knows where and how files are saved. This includes your CMS- Content Management System and your DAM- Digital Asset Management systems.
Here are some very useful tips from an article published by Claravine: Why you need an enterprise marketing taxonomy [and how to build one]
Five signs your organization needs a shared marketing taxonomy
The short answer to the question ‘which organizations need an enterprise-wide marketing taxonomy’ is: any multi-business-unit organization that cares about analyzing the performance of experiences, campaigns, and content or wants to use the full scope of their metadata.
That being said, it may be harder to notice if you’re having taxonomy-related issues internally. Here are five ‘symptoms’ of a taxonomy-deprived enterprise to help you make the diagnosis:
1. When information is out of sync in different systems
When analysts and data scientists attempt to produce competitive analysis or compare how different content is performing, their job becomes very difficult if the data isn’t standardized. When naming and structuring placements, campaigns, assets, or channels varies across platforms, creating reports quickly becomes a ‘comparing apples to oranges’ situation. If this is your experience, it’s a big red flag your organization needs one singular taxonomy across business units so your analytics teams can compare equivalent forms of metadata.
2. When redundant information appears in your data set
This happens when two similar or related systems of records have different schemas. For example, if an organization had a taxonomy for a content management system (CMS) and another taxonomy in its digital asset management (DAM) platform. Those two are closely related and there is an overlap of content (and metadata about that content), but the separate naming system creates a disconnect between the data sets.
3. When your user starts experiencing problems
When you lack a unified taxonomy across marketing systems and business users, your personalization is hindered too. Improper tagging or naming of content can affect the user’s experience: information in the wrong place at the wrong time for the wrong user.
4. When you observe problems with the search experience
Search is often an indicator of a deeper information problem. If you think you need a new search appliance for enterprise search, it might actually be a disconnection in the information layer.
5. When you see downstream issues in Analytics Platforms
For many brands, an early indicator of the need for a standardized taxonomy lives in their analytics platform.
Source: Claravine
Plain and simple, this means housekeeping. This may not apply to you, but I have seen the "misc" file become the garbage can. The system you put in place with Set In Order will require maintenance. Seriously, it requires work. I recently heard a pitch from a startup that is looking to build the framework to allow AI and machine learning do this for you, but until they launch you will need to do it yourself. There are many cloud-based options for file storage. Google Drive, Dropbox, One Drive, Sharepoint, and HubSpot offer options for small businesses. The problem is you can quickly sort through thousands of files.
You need to have a digital asset management strategy. Brandfolder offers some useful information on What Is Digital Asset Management (DAM)?
Digital Asset Management (DAM) is a central source of truth that allows organizations to easily store, organize, find, manage, distribute, and analyze their digital content.
Source: Brandfolder
Some additional ideas are mentioned in Best Practices for Using the HubSpot File Manager.
Oftentimes, the benefits of file and asset management are overlooked, yet keeping your content organized will save you time by making your content easy to find. Not only will it save you time, it will improve the workflow of your organization’s activities. When marketers on your team are looking for specific assets to include in a new offer or your design staff is building out new site pages, having easily navigable folders enables these tasks.
It’s important to place your files into easily identifiable folders with a structure that makes sense to your employees. While HubSpot’s File Manager allows you to search for a file across all folders without the need to look in the folder your originally placed it in, relying on search to find files creates issues as your organization grows and you need to quickly find a file. It’s important to remember that consistency in your structure will alleviate time lost to poor asset management.
By keeping in mind your organization’s workflow, you can design a system that increases productivity. The first step in your file management is to use a pyramid structure and consider the high-level categories that house all your subfolders. A common mistake in building out a folder structure is using too much granularity, rather than starting out simple. Depending on your organization’s needs and size, you will needed a different number of tiers of folders.
Source: HubSpot
Here are 10 Tips to Better Organize Google Drive from The Work At Home Wife.
Fundamentally, standardization means your employees have an established, time-tested process.
Standardization can decrease ambiguity and guesswork, guarantee quality, boost productivity, and increase employee morale.
Some benefits of standardization are as follows:
Source: Process
When a customer interacts with your brand via a web application, you always want them to have an experience that’s intuitive as well as recognizably “you.” Users want applications that look and behave in a way that they are accustomed to, and they will come to love brands that do so in a visually consistent way.
Sites like Facebook and Medium are masters of simple consistency that’s immediately recognizable. When you see the buttons like, comment, and share, you immediately recognize Facebook. When you see the simple clap icon, your mind is immediately drawn to Medium.
So organizations must strive for a user experience that’s fast and convenient regardless of where they interact with your brand, which builds brand equity. But even more than consistent functionality, these experiences should have a consistent look and feel across different devices, channels, and applications.
When you couple ease of use with a distinct look that defines your brand, you're able to turn casual users into all out fans.
Maintaining a standardized experience is always difficult, especially in larger organizations. When your enterprise has multiple teams of UX designers and developers across many applications, each with their own user interface and consumer experience, it can become extremely difficult to ensure that these experiences are harmonized across every application and channel. But the organizations that excel here often are the ones that gain a considerable competitive edge.
Here are 3 key steps in developing a standardized modern user experience across your enterprise.
Source: How To Standardize UX Across Your Organization
Sunday is a sustainable day for my personal workspace. I set things back for the next week. No, my desk does not magically declutter itself.
The use of routine audits is very helpful. We all know that links never mysteriously break on websites and content never has to be updated, right?
Some of my favorite tools include:
Google Search Console
Google Analytics
Ubersuggest
Page Speed Insights
Mobile Friendly Test
Screaming Frog
Content Audit
You can quickly see how you are ranking in search and Average CTR lets you know if your content is resonating with your ideal customer.
The coverage tool shows issues with your website and you can see if they fixes you made worked.
Screaming Frog is my personal favorite comprehensive tool for Technical SEO. We use the paid version and configure it with Google Analytics, Google Search Console and Page Speed Insights. Nobody likes getting that 404 error Page Not Found. You can quickly see any broken links and correct them. If you find that little gremlin that is always breaking links on websites please don't feed them!