In his book Smartcuts, Shane Snow shares the story of Second City, a school for actors and comedians in Chicago.

As you might expect, the story starts off with a scene where comedians are practicing for an upcoming show, standing on stage, improvising jokes.

What you might not expect is what happens: They bomb. Totally.

Snow explains—in gory detail—the train wreck that happens on stage as comedians drop unfunny, offensive, and just plain bad jokes. No one in the audience laughs; they all hold their collective breath, cringing, hoping for the skit to end.

In case you're wondering, Second City is not just some flophouse for bad comedians. It's one of the world's most famous comedy schools. Steve Carell, Amy Poehler, Tina Fey, and Stephen Colbert cut their teeth there.

So, what happened?

What Snow comes to find out is part of the Second City model that produces such incredible comedic talent: It embraces failure—even encourages it.

Failing at Content

That story about Second City reminded me a lot about what I've learned doing content marketing over the last (ahem) almost 10 years.

Here's a (maybe not-so secret) secret about content marketing: Sometimes you fail. Or, more precisely, sometimes your content fails.

Sometimes, your content crashes—and burns like a fiery wreck. That might mean no one reads your article, it doesn't get shared, or you get bombarded with nasty comments.

But, that's OK.

In fact, it might be for the better. One of the prevailing theories about how to get better at anything is to fail at it—sometimes failing a lot, and hopefully failing as quickly (and silently) as possible.

Such failure is a tenet of "growth hacking," which focuses on experimentation and learning to improve outcomes over time. But it really applies to any kind of marketing.

With the right approach, you can bring a scientific mindset to your content marketing and learn to embrace your failures and use them to improve.

Let's look at how that works.

Step 1: Start With a Goal

The content that you create must begin with a goal in mind. Perhaps (hopefully) you've already defined it in your content marketing strategy.

In the case of comedy students, the goal is simple: Get people to laugh. Read the crowd.

In your case, the goal for each piece of content is probably more numerical in nature: tweets, shares, pageviews, links, something along those lines—or some combination of them.


Source: Curata

This goal will be like the result of an experiment, and each piece of content that you create is a different set of conditions that you're testing. With each iteration, you gather a little bit more data based on the outcome.

Over time, you will learn what works best and be able to use that information to improve the performance of your content. So, even when you fail, you gain knowledge that will help you do better in the future—just like the comedians at Second Story.

Step 2: Test and Iterate

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How to Improve Your Content Marketing by Embracing Failure

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Tyler Hakes

Tyler Hakes is strategy director at Optimist, a content marketing agency that helps startups, SaaS companies, creative agencies, and nonprofits grow through strategic content marketing.

Twitter: @TylerHakes

LinkedIn: Tyler Hakes