Before Ryan Holiday was a viral blogger, he was a stellar marketer with always a finger on the pulse of what ‘worked audiences.’ He erected billboards, defaced them, got them set on fire, and then called up journos to cover it - all to show controversy - and people love them controversies and scandals.
Now, you can’t set fire to billboards. Can you?
(P.S.A. Do. Not. Burn. Billboards)
If you’re a Marketer reading this article, your audience hardly ever goes out, so read on!
Closer to the digital billboards - Social Media Hashtags, KPop Stans completely decimated #WhiteoutWednesday, which was a reactionary response to B.L.M.s #BlackoutTuesday.
While Ryan Holiday manufactured controversy to earn coverage in the news, KPop idols leveraged their ‘Stan Army’ of millions to drown out everything else on one social media hashtag - earning coverage in the news!
In Digital Marketing, you can earn coverage via Blogging and advertising.
While both come with distinct pros and cons, a better understanding of what you (or your boss) want from a digital marketing campaign will help you choose the one that yields the best results.
If you’ve used gen-AI to write your blogs or hired content creators that charged the least, this option is not for you.
For those who understand Blogging is like storytelling and are/hired amazing storytellers, you’re already halfway to Bold Blogging nirvana. The three kinds of stories that always worked with the 3M+ HackerNoon Readership are:
Deviating away from company updates and tutorials as content marketing requires getting bold, and if that’s your cup of tea, go for it!
This term usually gets a bad rep, but here’s where you trade money for direct leads. The trick is to drink from the fewest fountains before reaching the Elixir of Life. If Blogging is a Branding campaign, advertising is a Performance Campaign.
If you’re looking for impressions, you pick Programmatic and Social ADs.
But, your safest bet for conversions is advertising on niche platforms.
Strictly from a C.T.R. standpoint, you’ll get the best results by advertising on the niche platform where most of your audience is.
For example, a $5 C.P.M. campaign with a $10,000 budget on Google AD will get you about 2000 clicks, out of which, if you’re lucky, 200 clicks will come from your target audience. For that $10k budget, you’ll get 600 clicks on a niche platform, but about 300 will be from your target audience.
But ironically, in your internal marketing meetings, niche platform advertising will be considered a bold decision.
If you now have a better idea of how you’d like to earn that coverage,