Content Marketing Is Ineffective?
courtesy of Chartbeat

Content marketing is ineffective! At least that’s the tweet that prompted my visit to a PRNewser post. Notice the URL touts the finding:

How effective is content marketing: Not very

Many of you are likely disturbed by this — after all, you’ve been spending nearly $2 billion a year (collectively) on content marketing, up over 13% year over year. If content marketing is ineffective, you’ve just wasted billions of dollars and a lot of time.

Despite its sensational headline, the post doesn’t deliver — an overused tactic that might easily backfire by decreasing reputation and the effectiveness of future content marketing efforts.

When reading the post, which was a total waste of 10 minutes of my time, you find the article only addresses the effectiveness of SPONSORED content. I’ve never been a fan of using sponsored content for just the reasons identified in the article — sponsored content seems a little spammy and not trustworthy.

Of course, using this as the title isn’t quite as sexy as hinting that the content marketing we’ve all done, especially since changes to Google’s algorithm that basically mandate content marketing if you want to show up in search, doesn’t work. Is content marketing a total fail? Yikes!

So, what are sponsored posts?

Also called native advertising, sponsored content involves paid stories and videos usually posted on high-traffic news sites, like Buzzfeed. But, ask marketing professionals and internet users to define sponsored posts and you get a lot of different answers from the definition above (fewer than 50% of users agree with this definition) to sponsored tweets to various kinds of content.

Often, the content isn’t even written by the company sponsoring the post, according to the Chartbeat study.

Regardless of how you define it, users DON’T like it — sponsored content. In the chart above, you see only 24% of readers scroll through sponsored content, versus 71% who scroll through “normal” content produced on websites.

In fact, users like normal content — both in terms of their engagement, sentiment about the brand creating the content, and buying behavior.

Content Marketing Is Ineffective?