The Tilt team ventured out from behind our screens into the real world at Content Marketing World 2024 in San Diego. Now, we’re bringing you some of the lessons and tips we learned from the expert speakers, including some Tilt Publishing authors, to help grow your content business.
So here are the highlights heard and observed by Tilt Publishing’s Laura Kozak, Kristen Moxley, and Marc Maxhimer:
We all thought R. Ethan Braden, vice president, chief marketing and communications, at Texas A&M, rocked his keynote with wise counsel. (Marc even went up to him later to tell Ethan he definitely has a book inside him.)
He outlined the four principles that matter to a brand. Follow them, and you will give your content business focus and gravitas:
Great brands stand for something and someone. That means you must be OK with attracting – and repelling – audience members. What and who do you stand for?
Great brands offer outcomes, not just features. People don’t just buy a drill; they buy it for its outcome (hole drilled for a hung shelf to display photos, which makes a spouse happy.) What outcome do you make possible?
Great brands realize it’s about feelings, not facts. Envy, respect, fear, nostalgia, etc. What feelings do you want your content to convey?
Great brands tell great stories. You should tell incredible stories that win your audience’s hearts and minds.
With the big-picture conversation done, we turned to the breakout presentations for some more helpful advice.
Motivate the win: People don’t like to lose. Instead of spelling out all the benefits of you and your content product, tell them what they would lose if they didn’t buy from you, says Nancy Harhut, author of Using Behavioral Science in Marketing. She suggests some of these calls to action, such as “Order today or pay more” and “Mistakes to avoid.” Also, instead of giving them a discount, give them a credit on their account with an expiration date.
Know the intent: Your intent is to grow a business, but what is your audience’s intent? Why would they buy from you? Josh Baez and David Fortino of Netline say intent data lets you understand a customer’s psychology. Explore their search queries, past engagements, content consumed, confirmed projects, etc. With that knowledge, you can better answer their question, “What’s in it for me?”
Wear the audience’s shoes: View your brand’s experience from the audience's perspective, not what looks good on paper, says Wayne Partello, co-founder and CEO of Cuento Marketing. What do they get when they interact with your brand? Is it easy to access the webinar? Is the chat helpful? What will they experience at the event?
Get off script: Successful videos deliver authenticity when they seem less scripted. Reading a script requires looking down, and that engages viewers less than if the person is talking directly to them. That’s the advice from A. Lee Judge, co-founder of Content Monsta and upcoming Tilt Publishing author. Lee says viewers value genuine, timely content.
Use AI for content that doesn’t suck: John Battistini and Carolyn Albee of BOL Agency advocate for testing generative AI prompts and tweaking them to refine the results. Give the tools the proper context, such as “You are an entrepreneur who is writing for this target audience to get them to subscribe to this newsletter…” Among their other tips:
Ask it to write at an eighth-grade reading level. That will generate a better response than telling it to be conversational.
Tell it to change up a sentence or headline structure.
Specify words not to use.
Prep for an AI assist:Jenny Magic, Tilt Publishing author of Change Fatigue:
Flip Teams From Burnout to Buy-In, reminded us that new tech doesn’t solve old problems. Instead, AI magnifies gaps. Given its ability to process large volumes of data to find patterns and deliver insights, you must first ensure your content is ready to be learned. To do that, remove redundant, outdated, and trivial content.
Flip the funnel: Instead of marketing first to build awareness, do it to cultivate customer loyalty, says Heather Rudúlph of Stoke and Katherine White of AARP. By considering customer loyalty as the first touch point, you can capitalize on the power of word-of-mouth marketing.
Don’t buy the hype: John Greely of Navu offers this great line when considering tech for your content business: “The best tool is the one you’re most comfortable using.”
– Laura Kozak, Kristen Moxley, Marc Maxhimer
If you could offer your content entrepreneur peers a piece of advice, what would it be? Reply to this email or send a note to Ann.
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Create your opportunities: From almost her first day as an office manager at a magazine, Erika started freelance writing to grow her skills. Her stints at full-time jobs over the next 10-plus years gave her the expertise to launch her multiple content businesses.
Experiment: Erikasets aside four hours weekly to work on her passion projects, including her gluten-free lifestyle blog, and step outside her comfort zone to try something new.
See work as a profit center: In her full-time days, Erika monetized her employer’s newsletter and websites. She sees content as a profit center. You must think about how content can drive business goals, not just fill space.
Know a content creator who’s going full tilt? DM us. Or email tilt@thetilt.com.
Content Entrepreneur Expo returns to Cleveland – August 2025!
Content Entrepreneur Expo – is August 24-26, 2025, at the Cleveland Convention Center. CEX is the one event to help content entrepreneurs build an audience, drive revenue, and learn better content operations. Registration opens later this month, so stayed tuned!
Job bump: Google searches for “creator economy jobs” are up 130% year over year. Open roles at creator economy companies jumped 11.5% between the second and third quarters of 2024. [Creator Economy Jobs] Tilt Take:Interestingly, the research finds the number of fully remote job openings in the creator economy declined by 21.3% in the third quarter. Is it a signal that the creator economy is transforming into a traditional corporate environment?
Audiences
Get-together boost: YouTube’s new community features allow creators AND subscribers to start threads and build connections. [YouTube Liaison] Tilt Take:An interconnected audience is much stronger than one that just watches.
Tech and Tools
Learning time: TikTok’s updated its TikTok Academy to help creators understand the plethora of promotional options on the platform. [Social Media Today] Tilt Take:Even if you aren’t on TikTok, these lessons can help you better understand if it’s a place your brand should be.
And Finally
Spot on: The recent partnership of Spotter, which provides services and software to digital creators, and Amazon expands the platforms for Spotter’s creators, including Amazon MGM Studios, Prime Video, Twitch, Amazon Live, and its retail and merchandising channel. [Hello Partner] Tilt Take:As Hello Partner explains, this partnership is a growing trend to focus on creator success on multiple platforms. Yes, a single, third-party platform isn’t the best way to build a long-term sustainable business.
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