As social media practitioners we’re always
trying to find sources of great information… breaking news, industry trends,
research, expert insight, public opinion… the list goes on. We’re so busy
following trends and reading what others are saying that we often forget to dig in our own back yard for the content that’s been written for other
purposes.
Articles and Annual Reports
Photo courtesy of flickr.com by Josh Kenzer |
If you’re working in a large company the
communications responsibilities are probably divided between different departments:
PR & Marketing, Corporate Communications, Community Relations, Investor
Relations or a combination of sorts. Social Media then works in lock step with all
of these departments as a possible communications tool to reach specific target
audiences.
Freelancers or practitioners in smaller
organizations will be juggling it all so it’s even more important to find
efficient ways to re-package what’s already been written. The salient
information (or key messages) will be the same with some minor adjustments
depending on the vehicle used to carry the message and perhaps the target
audience. You’ll adjust the language, deal with the word count, align with
communications objectives and fire away!
The variety of delivery methods is endless
and you’ll make your choices depending on where your audience lurks. It’s all
about capturing eyeballs, then engaging, entertaining and building loyalty and
trust. Of course, goals will vary depending on the tool being used but trust is
critical no matter what. In order to build that trust the information shared
needs to be consistent.
So, if you’re in a bigger company, make
friends with anyone who is responsible for writing copy. If it’s all on you,
scour your files for the great material you’ve already written… no need to reinvent
the wheel.
Here are a few ABCs of rearranging your
words for maximum mileage:
Scan through features articles that have
run in magazines that have featured your company or quoted your CEO or other
senior leadership. Pull the quotes and create tweets and link to the article.
It’s the same with the annual report. There’s typically a message from the CEO that
could be broken down into bite sized Tweets, there are statistics that could
make great LinkedIn status updates (as long as it’s been a good year) and maybe
pull a few projections or future goals to highlight on the company Facebook
page, with a link to a PDF of the annual report for anyone who wants to delve into
more detail.
Books, Blogs and Bling
If anyone in your organization is blogging
(preferably the CEO), gather the blogs from the past year and create an eBook
(and a print version if time and budget allows). Think about the audience,
create a clever theme and title, use it as a give away, bring it to conferences
and conventions, sell it on Amazon, do a book signing, go on media tour, do a
virtual book tour…
You’re probably getting the picture now. Us
old-timers used to call it integrated marketing! Each individual blog could
also be broken down into at least 10 Tweets that then link to the blog where
the Tweet originated.
Website copy is also a great source for
blog topics and bling. Maybe the copywriter for the website came up with a
great catch phrase that could be re-purposed for some bling (t-shirts, thumb drives
or iPad covers).
Catalogues, Cards and Collateral
I know, old-fashioned, thing of the past
but they do still exist online on company websites. Take a few of the glamor
shots (hopefully the marketing department has done a professional product
shoot) and post them on your Facebook page (images have the highest click rate
of any type of post on FB) and, of course, on Pinterest, with a link to the
full catalogue. The FB message can also be Tweeted but when you craft the
message, focus on the product benefit to the reader, not just ‘hey look at my
product!’
Remember those pithy taglines your website
copywriter created? Why not use them in a presentation or on a billboard. Heck,
why not create an eCard for the holidays? And, don’t forget to Tweet it too!
The real secret to re-purposing content is
to know what content is being written. Simple, right? All content producers
should get together regularly to share, brainstorm and repurpose so everyone
stays on message, aligns with communications objectives and keeps all feet
firmly on the ground, not in mouth.
Comments
Happy reading!
Anne