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How to Generate Unlimited Story Ideas

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From social selling to new opportunities with mobile advertising, every marketing organization now has a cornucopia of channels through which to work its magic.

Yet, different channels and opportunities demand different skills, and the effort needed to coordinate all the necessary components and team members is immense. It can be confusing at best, unproductive at worst.

Let's take a simple example: an infographic.

You've compiled the information and applied beautiful design. Now what? You probably have 10 different channels to send it through. Should one person own every channel and strategy for promotion? I mean, it's just a simple infographic, right?

The answer is "no," and here's why.

Your content marketer who created the infographic may not know the ins and outs of expertly targeting social media to drive traffic to the infographic. Your social media maven may not understand why including a link in your email campaign to the infographic is critical to nurturing certain leads. And you might think that blasting the infographic out to a list of media contacts will get the it reposted by top bloggers, but you wouldn't be nearly as successful in securing media coverage as your PR teammate would.

It wasn't always this hard, was it?

More choices and more disciplines mean more room for confusion. But don't worry. Drawing lines in the marketing sand is not as tedious as it sounds.

Here's how Marketing, PR, and Content can work together across four main areas—the PESO model (paid, earned, shared, and owned media)—as well as where they diverge and how to assign responsibilities where they make the most sense.

Paid Media

Paid media has always sat in marketing's wheelhouse. But what about social media advertising or sponsored content? How about syndicating content or sponsoring an influencer's blog?

This is where the lines can get blurry. Generally, it's still best for marketing to own anything where the placement is paid—even syndicated and sponsored. But here's how PR and content can weigh in for bigger success:

  • Run your content syndication list past the content team to find out which posts are already getting the most engagement through the site. While you're talking to them, get their feedback on those "alternate headlines."
  • Share your social media ads with the PR team so they can come up with some complementary social posts that can be published at the same time the ads run.
  • If PR has a general idea of when an article (contributed or feature) on the company will run, to reinforce the message you could tee up display ads that complement the article that same week. (This coordination may be hard to pull off. PR is at the mercy of editors and articles often get pushed back, so try not to get frustrated if things don't sync up. It's not PR's fault.)

Earned Media

Media relations efforts—trying to get mentioned in an article or securing an interview with a media outlet—is pure public relations. The PR team should have experience building and harnessing relationships with influencers, bloggers, and media contacts, so let them handle those efforts.

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Blurred Lines: When Marketing, PR, and Content Overlap

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Aly Saxe

Aly Saxe is CEO of Iris PR, a cloud-based SaaS platform designed by PR pros for PR pros.

LinkedIn: Aly Saxe