Modular Content – Creative Repurposing for Content Marketing

There are many content types and�tactics for content marketing. Each has it’s place. Each offers unique benefits.

Creating�original content on an ongoing basis�can be a challenge, so most marketers practice the fine art of content repurposing.

For example, you could take a long eBook and turn it into 4 blog posts, leverage for a newsletter and excerpt it in an article submitted to an industry publication. Or you could take a speech heavy video and transcribe the text into a blog post, using screen shots for the images. You could also modify content for different target audiences, which is a form of repurposing that is more about personalization than just getting extra mileage out of your content. After creating your “reimagined” content, the common next step is to deconstruct it into micro-content for social sharing.

Most of the repurposing of content that marketers are practicing is about deconstructing content into smaller pieces. A modular approach helps make this a smooth process – square pegs into square holes, so to speak. But have you ever thought of taking the opposite approach?

Here’s what I mean and what I’m now testing.

With a modular approach to content marketing planning, you can identify key themes and other elements within a template. Working with pre-defined key concepts as building blocks (mapped to your content plan and customer segments) ensures you’re covering what needs to be covered and it makes repurposing and personalization that much easier.

It’s not so different from creating a baseline content object that will be localized and personalized for different target audiences in different regions.

With normal content repurposing,�you go from a collection of ideas in a larger content object and then break that collection down into smaller ideas, remix and reimagine them to create other smaller content objects. �What I’m suggesting is that you try the reverse.

With the right planning, you could take micro-content like statistics, quotes, tips and examples used as individual social network shares, then compile them according to themes, like industry, into a larger content object: blog post, report, eBook or presentation.

I think the easiest thing to do would be to collect 25�or so statistics on a topic of interest to your target audience and then schedule social shares of those stats over time. Do the same with 25�quotes and 25�short, practical tips. That’s 75�social shares over whatever�period of time you decide that serve as a layer of your social curation. Then do�daily shares and interactions based on what’s happening now.

I have no doubt that the idea of creating a template and working with modular content and scheduled social messages is breaking somebody’s rules. But the reality is, it’s practical, useful to readers and doable. You can also iterate and improve with very little risk, since it’s micro-content.

Why would it make sense to evolve micro-content into something larger? �Here are a few reasons:

1. Publishing micro-content over time is like planting a seed amongst your community that this is information relevant to how you want to be known.�Establishing attention and credibility through that content is prep for the larger content objects to be published.

2. Micro-content is highly sharable and if you’re consistent about publishing useful nuggets of information, you’ll grow the audience you need to make a bigger splash with the larger content object.

3. Publishing short format content, especially on the social web, will provide you with data. Views, shares, engagement, links and with a URL shortening service, basic demographics. That data can then be used to influence how the individual component parts are assembled in the larger content object. The tips with the most shares and engagement are included in the eBook or blog post and those with low engagement are not.

4. �Curation of micro-content is easy, provides useful information to your target audience and can fit within a social content workflow designed to roll up to a larger content project.

5. Micro-content to big content is SEO friendly – Taking variations on a theme and compiling them into a larger content object is basically like optimizing that content for search visibility.

Repurposing content in this way means more than piecing together random facts and tips. Micr0-content would sserve as building blocks, or modules, to create a larger story that’s meaningful to the audience you’re targeting.

I think planning micro-content out to work with your social content and curation could evolve new content creation opportunities, especially if you�add community engagement and crowdsourcing to the mix.��It’s search and social friendly, plus you’re able to build up affinity for the thing you want to be known for before launching a big content project.

How are you repurposing content for marketing?�Have you tried reversing the process and building up a larger content piece from individual data points that were already published?

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