ClickZ Image Displaying Content Audit Mapped to Content MatrixLast week, I shared what a content matrix is and explained its purpose in a content marketing program.

This week, I will share how to develop a content matrix to support a buyer persona focused B2B content marketing strategy and use it as a tool to ensure that content creators are focused on producing content that will impact the buying process.

A Step-By-Step Guide to Developing a Content Matrix:

1. Choose a suitable buyer persona framework to understand the different motivations, needs, and goals that each buyer has during their journey. If you haven’t created a B2B buyer persona framework for your target audience, you should start by reading my 3-part series on how to effectively build and use a B2B buyer persona framework.

2. Map out each buyer persona’s journey within the target segment, identify the key events that take place in that journey, and uncover the information needed for a buyer to move to the next phase of his/her journey. To get this information, you will want to do some buyer insights research. Sometimes enough information will be disclosed while doing buyer persona research to get by without launching a separate research project.

3. Pinpoint the content mediums that best reach your buyers at each phase of their journey and determine which content types will make best use of your team’s human and capital resources.

4. Import and map this information in an Excel spreadsheet, with the stages in the buyer journey on the horizontal axis and the buyer personas on the vertical axis. This will be sufficient for the early development of a content matrix, but as your organization becomes more targeted with your content you will likely want to add a second vertical axis for “type of content” or “content focal point.” This will depend on the complexity of the sale. In more complex sales, there may be multiple pieces of information required to progress a buyer from one stage to the next. In those cases, you may think about developing one or more pieces of content to address each of these factors. However, this post will focus on walking you through developing a basic content matrix. The content matrix should follow the layout shown below.

Once a piece of content is completed, the overview should be converted to a short one-to-two line summary that can be recycled in buyer and marketing communications with the target buyer at that stage of their journey. This statement should also state the value proposition that it focuses on, or the key piece of information it is meant to educate a buyer on to help them get through their journey.

5. Identify the approach used for each piece of content. That approach can drastically impact the way content resonates with a buyer. In the education and awareness stages of the buyer journey, provocative and engaging content will typically make the largest impact. This can come in the form of engaging and attention grabbing content intended to stick out on the Internet and in a target buyer’s inbox, or through content that helps buyers identify and self-diagnose problems. In the later stages of the buying process the content will need to have more of a focus on justifying value of the solution and establishing the differentiation between solutions. This will be determined by the needs of each buyer to get through each phase of their buying process.

6. Look at the conversion rates in your team’s marketing funnel and perform a content audit to determine what content the team currently has on hand, and determine if the content can be spruced up or altered to meet the requirements of any of the quadrants in the content matrix. These article variations will generally be the highest impact pieces relative to the effort they require. Sometimes, content can be personalized to fit the needs of multiple buyers or slightly altered to satisfy needs in different buyer stages. You do not want to force content to fit into specific stages or target certain buyers, however. The personalization and targeting makes a huge impact on the effectiveness of each piece of content.

7. Talk to the heads of the sales and marketing to identify their most important content support needs. You should use this information in conjunction with the marketing and sales funnel conversion rates to identify content that has the potential for the greatest impact and return on the team’s content creation investments.

8. Create a content production version and go-to-market team version of the content matrix. The production version of the matrix will map out future content production and needs to map back to the team’s content calendar. The go-to-market version of the content matrix will map out the current content assets that the company has for each segment, which helps the marketing team identify the best pieces of content to share with buyers in different phases of their buyer journey.

Now you know how to design a content matrix and use it how to prioritize your content creation efforts.

Next week, I will describe what a content audit is and explain its role in a B2B buyer persona focused content marketing strategy.

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