<img src="https://analytics.humanautomation.ai/ha-analytics.php?idsite=6&amp;rec=1" style="border:0;" alt="">
How The Best Company Blogs Use Employee-Generated Content

How The Best Company Blogs Use Employee-Generated Content

Does your team have SMART marketing goals in place? Do you have insight into your marketing ROI to maximize spend? Get in touch with us today for a free consultation!

If you’re a small business leader juggling multiple roles, researching and writing valuable content is probably at the bottom of your to-do list. Or perhaps you’re considering outsourcing content creation, but that often comes with a higher price tag and no guarantee of measurable ROI. But that doesn’t mean you should put blogging and content writing on the backburner. 

In the B2B space, overlooking the value of blogging can put you at a huge disadvantage. In fact, B2B companies that blog see 67% more leads than their non-blogging counterparts. 

Luckily, you don’t have to resort to publishing mediocre content or spending hundreds on a blog post written by someone unfamiliar with your industry. Your team has deep insight into your customers and industry— which means you have a strong content strategy and resources within your own walls. If you want to have one of the best company blogs out there, you need employee-generated content.

Table of Contents

What is Employee-Generated Content?

Employee-generated content is content created by employees, as opposed to outsourced or ghostwritten work. This content can take many forms, including blog posts, social media updates, images and videos. 

Employee-generated content has numerous benefits for businesses. For starters, it helps build brand awareness by giving customers a behind-the-scenes look at what it's like to work at the company. Additionally, employee-generated content can help increase website traffic and leads, improve SEO rankings and establish the business as a thought leader in its industry.  

7 Tips for Starting An Employee Blogging Program

When it comes to creating great content, there are many factors to consider, from finding the right topic to ensuring your writing is engaging and on-brand. 

But not everyone enjoys writing. So how can you acquire engaging, well-written content straight from the experts — without turning the process into a burden?

Here are some real ways we’ve helped clients incentivize content creation among their teams — and even better — extract employee-generated content and launch a strong employee blogging program that fuels conversions.

1. Designate an employee blogging program manager

Ideally, someone from the marketing team should take the reins with your blogging initiative from A to Z. Without a dedicated project manager, your dreams of creating rich content will quickly turn to dust. This person should be in charge of communicating the program details to your team (and following up), collecting and qualifying blog posts, scheduling and publishing, creating and distributing rewards and sharing success stories.

Most importantly, you must understand that this is a time-consuming but highly valuable task. Make sure your liaison has time to dedicate to your company blogging initiative or rearrange priorities, so it doesn't get dwarfed by other responsibilities. 

2. Set up an attractive rewards program

Like the C-suite, your employees probably don’t have much time or energy to commit to projects that stray from their usual scope of work (like blogging). Incentivize them to write by offering rewards to team members who submit blogs that meet your criteria. Take it a step further and up the ante for when they hit key milestones. Here are some example rewards we set up for one client:

  • Reward: $50 Amazon gift card for submitting an approved blog
  • Bonus: $300 Amazon gift card once your blog surpasses 500 hits (or whatever number makes sense for your blog)
  • Double Bonus: $1,000 if you break the current record of 2,100 visitors to one blog post in 3 months. (Again, these numbers could be much higher or lower based on your average traffic numbers). 

3. Help light your employees' creative fire

Your employees are deep in the trenches every day. No one has better insight into your clients and prospects. Help jog their blogging creativity and extract fresh ideas with these questions:

  • What did you help a client with today?
  • What new challenge or problem did a customer recently have?
  • What problem did you run into recently, and how did you solve it?
  • What have you recently read that helped you overcome a common industry problem?
  • What trends are you seeing in the field? How will they affect your industry?

4. Equip your team with some basic blogging guidelines

For those who aren’t natural-born writers, drafting up a blog can feel intimidating. Ease your team’s fears by providing some blogging best practices, and designate a QA person to review and edit posts for spelling and grammar. You may also want to consider drafting a content style guide to keep all contributions on brand.

Read: Content Marketing Tips (For People Who Hate Writing)

Before your team starts writing (or possibly even settles on a topic), provide them with these blogging tips:

Determine Your Audience

  • Start by identifying who the post should speak to. A business owner with a specific need? An IT manager juggling too many responsibilities? Nailing down your audience is the most important step. Thinking from your ideal reader's perspective will help you focus on providing value and make your message stick with the right people. 

Identify Pain Points

  • Now that you understand who you’re writing for, what pain points does this audience have that your blog post is helping them overcome? Try to focus on solving one specific pain point to keep your writing clear and focused. 

Decide on the Goal of Your Blog

  • Effective blogging is helpful (solves a problem), informative (provides new, relevant information) and conversational (uses deliberate language and speaks directly to readers). But it should also be purposeful. What is the key takeaway you want readers to glean from the article?

Highlight Takeaways For Your Readers

Select Target Keywords For SEO

  • Before you begin writing, choose one keyword/phrase to center your post around. This should appear in the headline and a few times throughout your post (without sounding forced). To help choose an effective keyword, go back to your audience and pain points. What phrases or search terms might they use when searching online to solve this particular problem?
    Read: SEO for Bloggers

Once you’ve set the foundation, decide which action your target audience should take after reading the post. If there’s a particular service that aligns with your blog post or even an existing blog post that offers more information, be sure to link back and give readers an opportunity to continue the education process. 

However, your underlying goals should never come at the expense of quality. The primary objectives should be providing new, valuable information and establishing thought leadership.  

5. Don’t forget to promote your blog content

Your team members poured their soul into writing a compelling, value-driven blog post. Don’t let it die a slow, painful death on the web! The biggest way to get traction with blogging is to share it with your social networks and publish it on your LinkedIn page. And, is your team part of any relevant LinkedIn groups that could benefit from the content? Encourage them to share their posts there. Setting up rewards for new visitors and hits can also incentivize them to share their posts. 

Read: The Ultimate Guide to Content Promotion

6. Loop your team into keyword research 

Make your content marketing strategy go further by involving your employees. Are you pushing to increase rankings for a specific keyword this quarter? As you monitor and research keywords, pass along low-hanging fruit for your team to use as blog inspiration and to fuel your marketing campaigns. 

7. Show your employees the value of their efforts

If your team members don't understand the value of blogging, they’ll be hard-pressed to get involved. Did a particular blog post contribute to closing an upsell opportunity? Did an employee blog post pick up some serious SEO steam? Share success stories with your team to show how blogging fuels the sales cycle and the company’s bottom line. (Here are some Blog Metrics to Help You Measure Organic Performance.) It’s important to remember that the ROI of content isn’t instant, so success might not become apparent for months or years down the road.

Human Can Help You Fuel Your Content Strategy

Employee blogging programs are a powerful way to display your team's knowledge, share your brand voice and engage customers and prospects at every stage of the funnel. Your team members should be the ones contributing! 

We've found success employing these tactics with our clients and encourage you to give them a try. If you need help getting your employee-generated content initiative off the ground, learn how Human Marketing's content marketing services can help.

Topics: Content Marketing