has shown that businesses that blog get 67% more leads, and are 13x
more likely to enjoy positive ROI, than businesses that don’t blog.
It’s 2015, and it’s been established beyond disputation that blogging, effectively, will always yield positive ROI for businesses.
However, does that mean starting a blog will automatically fix your content strategy and yield a positive ROI? No.
Without the right strategy, your blogging efforts is just a time sink and another waste of time and/or money.
The type of content you publish on your blog is a core part of your blogging strategy, and a solid blogging strategy can’t do without the following three content types; each content type is accompanies with personal examples to demonstrate their effectiveness.
In my experience, every instance of a resource article I’ve published on my blog has resulted in at least 10,000% more views, sometimes 30,000% more views, than the average article (that’s not an error).
On my new blog where the average article barely gets 100 views, a resource article I published went on to get over 20,000 views in its first year.
On another blog, a series of resource articles I published went on to average 100,000 views, with the first article getting as much as 200,000 views in a span of 3 years.
I wrote a full case study about this on the blog, and you can read the case study through the link below:
Resource articles work because blogs are oversaturated with the same recycled content; opinions, tips and lists.
There are at least 300 million blogs today according to Wikipedia, and when it comes to getting tips, lists and opinion, there’s an abundance of that. However, very few blogs give people practical resources that they can use right away.
Instead of just giving tips, resource articles offer actual resources; so instead of saying “here’s what you have to do to get X results”, you’ll say “use X to achieve certain result”; with X listed in your article so readers can make use of it.
As a result, people will bookmark your content, tell their friends, link to it on their blogs, share it on their favorite forums and come back to it regularly.
This was proven by research by serpIQ, carefully analyzed by ; the data revealed that, on average, the top 10 results in Google have at least 2,000 words, with the longer content usually ranking higher.
A revealed similar findings, showing from an analysis of 500 articles on their blog that longer content indeed gets more links, traffic and social shares.
This instantly shows why ultimate guides are very good for traffic and conversions.
On , the most profitable article I’ve ever written is an, an article that has been viewed over 20,000 times to date and that has been responsible for mid-five figures in freelance writing income for me.
Ultimate guides are authoritative by nature, and the fact that they usually include visuals, lots of examples, sometimes multimedia, and lots of details ensure people bookmark, share and link to them.
If your aim is to get leads, traffic or authoritative links to your blog, ultimate guides are one sure way to do that.
Unlike resource articles and ultimate guides, case studies might not necessarily generate extraordinary traffic compared to the average article, but they serve an entirely different purpose; increasing positive perception in the mind of your readers about your ability to deliver.
At the end of the day, the purpose of your blog is to generate more leads for your business and ultimately increase your revenue; traffic alone won’t do this.
It’s easy to track traffic and conversions, but it can be difficult to track positive perception in the mind of your readers; besides directly leading to increased conversions, case studies are also powerful for increasing your perception in the mind of your users and letting them value your brand more.
I’ve noticed case studies to be most effective in closing client deals for me, and helping overcome objections potential clients may have; if they are having doubts about my services, I just point them to a case study.
Bamidele Onibalusi is an content marketer and successful blogger. He blogs at , and he’s been featured in Forbes, Huffington Post and Digital Journal amongst others. He’s also a freelance writer who helps brands take charge of their content strategy.
Need help getting more traffic to your website and growing your online revenues? Then my Online Profits training program is right for you.
It’s 2015, and it’s been established beyond disputation that blogging, effectively, will always yield positive ROI for businesses.
However, does that mean starting a blog will automatically fix your content strategy and yield a positive ROI? No.
Without the right strategy, your blogging efforts is just a time sink and another waste of time and/or money.
The type of content you publish on your blog is a core part of your blogging strategy, and a solid blogging strategy can’t do without the following three content types; each content type is accompanies with personal examples to demonstrate their effectiveness.
- The “Resource” Article
In my experience, every instance of a resource article I’ve published on my blog has resulted in at least 10,000% more views, sometimes 30,000% more views, than the average article (that’s not an error).
On my new blog where the average article barely gets 100 views, a resource article I published went on to get over 20,000 views in its first year.
On another blog, a series of resource articles I published went on to average 100,000 views, with the first article getting as much as 200,000 views in a span of 3 years.
I wrote a full case study about this on the blog, and you can read the case study through the link below:
Resource articles work because blogs are oversaturated with the same recycled content; opinions, tips and lists.
There are at least 300 million blogs today according to Wikipedia, and when it comes to getting tips, lists and opinion, there’s an abundance of that. However, very few blogs give people practical resources that they can use right away.
Instead of just giving tips, resource articles offer actual resources; so instead of saying “here’s what you have to do to get X results”, you’ll say “use X to achieve certain result”; with X listed in your article so readers can make use of it.
As a result, people will bookmark your content, tell their friends, link to it on their blogs, share it on their favorite forums and come back to it regularly.
- Ultimate Guides
This was proven by research by serpIQ, carefully analyzed by ; the data revealed that, on average, the top 10 results in Google have at least 2,000 words, with the longer content usually ranking higher.
A revealed similar findings, showing from an analysis of 500 articles on their blog that longer content indeed gets more links, traffic and social shares.
This instantly shows why ultimate guides are very good for traffic and conversions.
On , the most profitable article I’ve ever written is an, an article that has been viewed over 20,000 times to date and that has been responsible for mid-five figures in freelance writing income for me.
Ultimate guides are authoritative by nature, and the fact that they usually include visuals, lots of examples, sometimes multimedia, and lots of details ensure people bookmark, share and link to them.
If your aim is to get leads, traffic or authoritative links to your blog, ultimate guides are one sure way to do that.
- Case Studies
Unlike resource articles and ultimate guides, case studies might not necessarily generate extraordinary traffic compared to the average article, but they serve an entirely different purpose; increasing positive perception in the mind of your readers about your ability to deliver.
At the end of the day, the purpose of your blog is to generate more leads for your business and ultimately increase your revenue; traffic alone won’t do this.
It’s easy to track traffic and conversions, but it can be difficult to track positive perception in the mind of your readers; besides directly leading to increased conversions, case studies are also powerful for increasing your perception in the mind of your users and letting them value your brand more.
I’ve noticed case studies to be most effective in closing client deals for me, and helping overcome objections potential clients may have; if they are having doubts about my services, I just point them to a case study.
Which of The Three Content Types is Your Blog Missing?
The above are three powerful content types every business that blog should be implementing; ensure they are included as a core part of your content marketing strategy, and you’d be surprised to see how powerful they can be.Bamidele Onibalusi is an content marketer and successful blogger. He blogs at , and he’s been featured in Forbes, Huffington Post and Digital Journal amongst others. He’s also a freelance writer who helps brands take charge of their content strategy.
Need help getting more traffic to your website and growing your online revenues? Then my Online Profits training program is right for you.
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