Data centers may have an excellent, competitively-priced service with a gifted team of content creators. Still, marketing efforts will fall flat if they cannot connect with the right audience.
In many instances, the HIPPO is to blame.
HIPPO is an acronym for the ‘Highest Paid Person’s Opinion.' It refers to the tendency for the opinions of higher-paid employees to prevail when important decisions are made. It also describes how some companies rely on executive instincts and hunches instead of data during decision-making.
While HIPPOs are important when it comes to managing projects and keeping team members on track, it is a mistake to make content creation and dissemination decisions based on the loudest and/or highest-paid voice in the room. Although HIPPOS can contribute excellent ideas, content strategies ultimately must be based on quantifiable data.
To ensure content is valuable and relevant to the target audience, data center developers must know exactly who these consumers are. Buyer personas are invaluable in this respect.
They make it easier to determine the center’s clients, their goals, challenges, and pain points, and how to create content that would appeal to them.
Once the buyer’s needs and interests are known, it is time to create content they will want to read and share. The creation strategy needs to lay out the content production process from start to finish and how it relates back to the center’s wider business goals.
The latter is extremely important because every blog post, webinar, and other content item must support the company’s growth objectives.
To attract the right market, content creators must keep two things in mind:
Potential buyers will always pay attention to content items that speak in a familiar tone, share timely and valuable advice, and answer their questions about the product or service. Acquiring the insights needed to produce these broadcasts will take more than a single HIPPO’s direction. It also requires:
Remember: buyers do not submit their contact information, register for a webinar, or make a purchase when developers want them to; they take action when they are ready.
They also won’t read the newest white paper, tip sheet, or blog post just because it is newly published or it was created under a HIPPO’s direction. The right person and content need to meet at the right time. Data-driven knowledge can make this possible.
While the HIPPO’s input may be important in the content creation process, data center developers should not rely on it exclusively. Platforms and processes must be in place to collect content ideas from potential customers and turn them into valuable assets. Ultimately, the best ideas must prevail, not the biggest paycheck or loudest voice.
What does your Data Center do to attract the right audience? Let us know in the comments below.