Enterprise Content Strategy
eBook - ePub

Enterprise Content Strategy

Kevin Nichols

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  1. 160 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

Enterprise Content Strategy

Kevin Nichols

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About This Book

Kevin P. Nichols' Enterprise Content Strategy: A Project Guide outlines best practices for conducting and executing content strategy projects. His book is a step-by-step guide to building an enterprise content strategy for your organization.

Enterprise Content Strategy draws on Kevin Nichols' experience managing one of the largest and most successful global content strategy teams to provide an insider's look at how to build an enterprise content strategy.

Full of definitions, questions you need to ask, checklists, and guidelines, this book focuses not on the what or why, but on the how.

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Information

Publisher
XML Press
Year
2015
ISBN
9781492002123
Edition
1
Enterprise
Content Strategy
A Project Guide
Kevin P. Nichols
XML Press and The Content Wrangler logos

Foreword

Just a few short years ago, content strategy was new and nebulous. People had heard the term, liked the idea, but there wasn’t a lot of in-depth information on what it was, why do it, how to convince management, and how to get guidance on what to do. And although content strategy is now an accepted best practice and people understand what it is and why they need to do it, the how remains a challenge.
Enterprise Content Strategy: A Project Guide does an excellent job of answering the how.
Kevin draws on his years of practical experience developing content strategies, and in particular, he draws on his experience building, managing, and guiding one of the world’s largest content strategy teams. He lives and breathes content strategy with some of the largest brands in the world. His experience educating and preparing his team on how to create an effective content strategy shines through in this book.
He has distilled his knowledge into a practical, hands-on book that is jam-packed full of definitions, questions you need to ask, checklists, and guidelines. He focuses not on the what or why, but on the how.
That’s not to say that Enterprise Content Strategy: A Project Guide doesn’t provide concepts. Kevin includes definitions at the beginning of each chapter to ensure that your understanding of the terminology is in alignment with the book, and he clearly explains some of the thornier concepts, such as responsive vs. adaptive design and multichannel vs. omnichannel. He adds examples that make the distinctions crystal clear.
Content strategy is typically focused on a single area, such as marketing, and on one or two channels, such as desktop web and mobile, but content strategy can extend further into a company’s reach. It can extend into social media (Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, etc.), into print (catalog, brochure), and frequently into video and podcasts. It can also extend into other channels, such as broadcast and radio. Enterprise content strategy addresses content strategy through the customer continuum, ranging from pre-sales to sales to product support, and it extends across many audiences, both internal and external. This book helps you to understand that big picture and the needs of the whole while focusing on the specifics of good content strategy.
But have no fear, even if you aren’t responsible for an enterprise content strategy, but rather on a more focused content strategy, this book is also for you. The best practices and steps involved in enterprise content strategy are the same for any content strategy, just on a larger scale.
This book will become one of your most influential resources, bookmarked and highlighted on every page!
Ann Rockley
President,
The Rockley Group, Inc.

Preface

Content – websites, films, images, books, videos, articles 
 content of any kind – can improve people’s lives. Content can transform a brand or an organization. For starters, of course, the content has to be good by the appropriate standards. You can find resources galore on how to create good content. This book is not one of those resources.
What about the behind-the-scenes mechanisms and insights required to deliver a company’s content at the right times and in the right ways? What about the complex, robust processes required to define, design, implement, and support that content? What about all the conversations and decisions that go into giving customers and potential customers business-enhancing ways to engage with all that content?
In short, what about enterprise content strategy?
That’s where this book comes in.
Content strategy may not seem as sexy or intriguing as the content itself. I have heard some professionals in the digital industry – copywriters, creative directors, interaction designers – call content strategy boring. I’ve heard marketing directors say, “We don’t need content strategy. We just need good content.” It took me years to understand why they felt this way: their concern lay with content in its final form. I finally realized that when I work with these professionals, I need to connect the dots between content as a deliverable (in its final state) and the strategy behind that deliverable.
I wrote the first version of this book in 2007 as a checklist of best practices for anyone interested in content strategy. My friend Alexa O’Brien spent hours helping me fashion that list into something useful. I intended to publish the list on my website, but I never did. In 2010 at Sapient, I updated the list with the help of two peers, Julie Christie and Laura Lerner, who reworked the entire narrative. Again, work and excuses got the best of me, and nothing was published. Later, another friend, Rebecca Schneider, reviewed many iterations and provided feedback. Last year, when Scott Abel invited me to write a book, I sent him the manuscript. He and Ann Rockley encouraged me to develop it into a book. Laura Creekmore then suggested that I restructure the best practices into a project guide.
You are now reading the culmination of all those efforts.
This book is prescriptive. I drive right into the how-to with little preamble. I set out to create something succinct and practical, a peek into what I’ve learned during my many years of doing this kind of work.
The term enterprise in my title may seem to imply that I’m addressing only companies above a certain size. Not so. This book is for anyone who wants to understand and reap the business benefits of content strategy.
This book follows in a tradition created by other authors, most notably Ann Rockley, whose definitive guide, Managing Enterprise Content: A Unified Content Strategy[Rockley, 2012], is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand this topic. Ann’s work has inspired me throughout my career. Many principles outlined here owe their existence to her longstanding contributions to this field. Countless other authors and practitioners have also taught me along the way. In writing this book, I add my voice to the voices of many who have shared what they know about the strategic side of this exciting business. May you find something here that enables you and your teams to produce effective, relevant, timely content that helps your enterprise – whatever it may be – flourish.

Chapter 1. Definitions and Approach to Enterprise Content Strategy

Within the digital and interactive world, content strategists continue to discuss how to define content strategy. Even the term content has many definitions. In this chapter, you will learn how to define content, what enterprise content strategy is, a recommended approach for building an enterprise content strategy framework, and when to engage an enterprise content strategist. I also discuss several ways to approach a project.
This chapter also covers the role of omnichannel and omnichannel implications for content strategy, particularly enterprise content strategy.

1.1. What does content mean?

In 2013, Rebecca Schneider[1] and I came up with this definition:
Content: any information that someone records.
Period. Within this definition, many things qualify as content:
  • A YouTube video featuring mountain goats scaling a vertical mountain cliff (yes, those goats can do that)
  • One of the few existing audio recordings of Virginia Woolf discussing the concept of words
  • Hieroglyphics from ancient Egypt showcasing Queen Nefertiti
  • Cave paintings of reindeer from the Neolithic era in Lascaux (which scholars recently concluded to be the works of women, not men, calling into question that whole hunters-as-male thing)
  • Omar Khayyam’s RubĂĄiyĂĄt written in the 11th century
  • Édouard-LĂ©on Scott de Martinville’s first recorded sound (nearly ten seconds of a woman singing “Au Clair de la Lune”)
  • Fritz Lang’s film, Metropolis
  • A book review in the New York Times
  • Any type of interactive experience, such as the United Nations website
  • The latest real...

Table of contents