When visitors come to your website, what exactly are you feeding them? Have you ever stopped to think about it? Is your copy like a greasy burger and fries that you didnt put much thought into picking up, or more like a lovingly prepared home cooked Sunday supper with all of the trimmings?
Why the food comparison? Well, its actually quite logical. Your web copy provides your visitors with the information that they need to decide whether or not they want to purchase your goods or services. So in essence, your copy is food for their buying decision. The question is, do they leave your website properly satiated or will they find themselves hungry for something more substantial mere moments later?
The best way to ensure that your content provides readers with the information that they need to pick up that phone or submit your online form is to supply your cooks (aka your writers) with fresh, nutrient-dense ingredients. Truly nutritious content should have your fingerprints all over it. It should be redolent with your unique brand voice, toothsome with hearty information, and it should linger in their minds like a fine wine on the palate. If you want to convince them and convert them it is essential to offer something more than fast food copy.
As a kid my favorite game was to play Lego and build, deconstruct and rebuild stuff (spaceships mostly: I'm a geek...). As a father, I've been fascinated to see that construction game becoming my kids' favorite too and see what they came out with in terms of new ideas to build.
Are you thinking of your content as modular with lego-type building blocks?
Leed Odden says you should because you'll then be able to turn mico-content into eBooks and then blog posts, newsletters, etc... And vice versa.
Rebecca Lieb of the Altimeter group came out with the turkey leftover analogy to explain how you could turn epic content such as an ebook or a white paper into many other pieces of content with only marginal additional work. It's interesting to complement that with the opposite approach and plan your micro-content so that it can fit into something bigger.
As Lee Odden points out, content curation plays an important role if you want to pursue this strategy: "Curation of micro-content is easy, provides useful information to your target audience".
And because of the many benefits he describes with social and SEO, by assembling your Lego content blocks into an awesome content spaceship, you might realize that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.