How to conduct an actionable content audit in 2018 | Brafton


Hoe u een bruikbare inhoudscontrole uitvoert in 2018

27 februari 2018
  • Bij contentmarketing sterven oude gewoonten hard.

    (Normaal voegen we hier een "Die Hard" .Gif hier in, maar laten we verder gaan.)

    Een inhoudsaudit is het perfecte hulpmiddel om genoemde gewoonten te doorbreken.

    Zijn uw prestatiestatistieken op geconverteerde bestemmingspagina's plat? Organische resultaten in zoekresultaten genereren dezelfde klikfrequentie? Kan een Featured Snippet niet winnen om je leven te redden?

    Wel, het is duidelijk dat het tijd is om dingen op te schudden.

    Het uitvoeren van een goed georganiseerde inhoudsaudit met het doel specifieke meeteenheden te verbeteren, werpt licht op waar uw inhoud te wensen overlaat en hoe deze kan worden verbeterd.

    Spoiler alert: Content audits zijn vaak tijdrovend.

    Maar de uitbetaling ligt aan het einde van de reis, waarin u al uw bevindingen kunt doorlopen naar uw volgende marketingcampagne.

    Er is geen beter gevoel dan te weten dat elke asset die je maakt wordt ondersteund door harde data, dat je een concrete blauwdruk hebt voor succes dat voor je ligt.

    En dat is wat een inhoudsaudit u biedt.

    Wat is een inhoudsaudit?

    A content audit is a systematic health check of your content, its performance, its strengths and its weaknesses.

    Content audits can be comprehensive in scope (mining a year or more of inventory) or condensed into asset-specific, short-term investigations.

    In practice, content audits should dictate subsequent content strategies, making them the frontline resource for making business decisions.

    Quick terms to know

    In researching the content audit process and determining a model that can be adapted to your purposes, you’ll likely come across references to a few important terms.

    Let’s clear those up now:

    • Content inventory: A complete list of all content on a website organized by URLs, content type and page hierarchy, often housed in a spreadsheet.
    • Content strategy: The development, publication and management of content to support marketing and business goals.
    • Content audit template: A formatted, structured guide to organizing and presenting content audit results.
    • Site audit: An in-depth analysis of all factors related to a website, not just on-page content.
    • Competitive content audit: A report on how one site’s content compares to that of competitors’.

    OK, now that’s out of the way.

    How often should you conduct a content audit?

    Content audits are completely customizable.

    Personalize an audit to map to your short- or long-term needs, which can range quite dramatically.

    For starters, marketers should conduct audits, at minimum, once a year. These annual examinations tend to be more comprehensive and time-intensive, and the results can be more conclusive and actionable.

    On the other end of the spectrum, it’s not uncommon for audits to be ad hoc or focused specifically on a given campaign. You can easily run an audit of your top five best-performing pages in a matter of minutes, if that’s all the information you need at the moment.

    Defining the parameters and goals of your content strategy governs how often a content audit may need to take place.

    Yes, social media should be included in your audit

    Because user behavior signals factor prominently into search engine algorithms, a strong social media presence with high engagement can influence the larger value of your website content.

    So it’s not enough to simply conduct a website content audit and believe you have true visibility into your brand’s total search performance. You also need to review the types of posts you publish on each social channel, the level of user engagement you receive and the conversations your content generates outside the parameters of your domain. Here’s a quick snapshot of our social performance last year using BuzzSumo:

     

    Utilizing the analytics platforms of LinkedIn, YouTube, Twitter and other social outlets, a social content audit should consider:

    • Referral traffic.
    • Audience demographics.
    • Interactions (shares, likes, comments, etc.).
    • Reach.
    • Impressions.
    • Links.
    • Engagement.

    Tools like Sprout Social, Buffer and Hootsuite can aggregate disparate data from each social channel into one convenient dashboard. Then, by pairing the results of your social audit with findings from Google Analytics, you obtain a more complete picture of your content’s value to your bottom line.

    The content audit process: Actionable steps to follow

    To ensure you’re creating content of the highest quality, think of audits as an optimization tool.

    Tagging structure not making sense to web crawlers? Content not deep enough to offer more than just surface-level value? Unsure whether you need more images or videos within your copy?

    A content audit can answer these questions, empowering you to optimize your marketing assets following a step-by-step guide.

    Here’s how today’s top marketers are framing their content audits:

    Define your audit goals, time frame and content type

    Step one of any task should be to define the framework of what is to be acted upon and how success will be measured.

    For a large-scale audit, it’s likely you’ll want to look at a quarter or year’s worth of data pertaining to all types of content.

    Smaller audits may home in on just blog posts spanning Q2 2017, with the goal to optimize high-conversion pages to attract even more leads.

    Segment by desktop and mobile versions of content

    As a matter of data-gathering, it’s important all stakeholders are clear on the content metrics they’re viewing. Distinguish between desktop and mobile metrics, as there will likely by significant variation in the two.

    At Brafton, the vast majority of our clients’ site traffic comes from desktop, and desktop UX and content best practices differ from their mobile counterparts. Thus, we would likely want to first run an audit on desktop versions of content.

    Create a spreadsheet to catalog all crawlable – not just indexable – content

    A content audit template is a perfect solution for some of the more tedious aspects of data entry. With a spreadsheet that’s appropriately organized and labeled, you can transfer information into a living document that can be updated and used for future purposes.

    Depending on the nature of your audit, you may find it useful to categorize just indexable content, versus content that’s both crawlable and indexable.

    Some web pages are not designed to be indexed, yet they have content or intent behind them regardless of whether they appear in SERPs. Web crawlers can still find these pages, and during an audit, you may uncover elements of your crawled (but unindexed) pages that can be more concise or clear.

    Conversely, a more common, succinct audit focuses just on content that is actually indexed by Google, as there are clear marketing metrics attached to these pages’ performance.

    Gather all sitemaps and URLs and organize by category hierarchy

    All content you review should correspond to a designated URL, which will be the primary way you classify and organize your audit. By the way, the URLs you put in your spreadsheet should be live hyperlinks, if possible. This allows you to quickly open each page as you need, rather than inserting URLs manually into a search bar later on.

    From there, you need a tiered system of URLs, whether by product category or by existing sitemap structure. Most audits rely on some form of page labeling that catalogs the relationship between parent and child pages.

    Here’s a snapshot of landing pages we’re working on and how they’re organized to show corresponding information:

    Filter out (or hide) pages that may not be immediately relevant to your audit goals

    For the sake of efficiency, hide rows and columns in your spreadsheet that may not be of immediate use, as pages that take up space in your audit template will merely cause unnecessary visual stress.

    You can also filter individual columns and rows in Excel or Google Sheets, among others, to create a measurement scale that’s easy to follow.

    Run the audit with the tool(s) of your choice

    So how do you extract all this data? Where does it come from?

    Many site audit tools apply here. Think Screaming Frog, Raven Tools and SEMrush. Web-crawling tools compile all your available URLs into a report and highlight errors and associated metrics.

    SEMrush’s crawler allows you to filter by domain sections taken from your XML sitemap, as seen below:

     

    Google Analytics and Search Console also have pertinent value, as they already have your domain- and page-level metrics on hand.

    Input content-specific metrics from your audit into corresponding cells in your spreadsheet

    The metrics from which you intend to derive patterns are, for the most part, up to you.

    However, a content audit traditionally looks at, among others, core performance metrics, such as:

    • Traffic by channel.
    • Click-through rate.
    • Engagement.
    • Sessions.
    • Pageviews.
    • Conversions.
    • Time on page.
    • Keyword rankings.

    More sophisticated audits may delve into:

    • Time of publication.
    • Content length.
    • Total shares by network.
    • Total search presence.
    • Metadata.
    • Asset diversity.

    You must then export these figures into your spreadsheet.

    Repeat this process for a small group of core competitors

    You can’t evaluate or optimize your content in a vacuum, as all content is relative.

    You won’t have analytics access to your primary, secondary or tertiary competitors, but you can still use tools like Searchmetrics, SEMrush and MarketMuse to compare page-by-page performance metrics and link profiles.

    This process allows you to identify content gaps, search opportunities and investment priorities.

    Format all findings into a competitive content matrix

    Grouping the key findings that stand out to you into a matrix provides a visualization of how your content stacks up against competitors.

    Some cases involve a more subjective analysis, as including thoughts on competitors’ UX and branding are important to note but not necessarily rooted in hard data.

    Here’s an example of a competitive scorecard Brafton often uses:

     

    And here’s an example of how detailed you can break out comparisons however you like:

     

    As you can see, a content audit that’s formatted to prompt actionable next steps is paramount. It enables team members from other departments to quickly grasp the strengths and weaknesses of the company, as well as the business’s perceived online market position.

    Identify content performance gaps and opportunities

    Based upon the metrics in your audit and the takeaways from your competitor content scorecard, determine what works and what doesn’t.

    Where are you losing out to competitors? Is your social presence subpar? Can you ramp up investment into content creation to overtake your regional competitor in search?

    We often reach the conclusion of an audit finding that we’re totally whiffing on specific long-tail keywords, or that with a quick optimization of metadata, we can jump from position 12 to position three in SERPs.

    Here’s a content brief we used for an article this year. We optimized an older post by auditing it from top to bottom and then revamping it to hit on these major topics.

     

    Launch your next content marketing strategy

    The information gleaned from the content audit process requires a bit of analysis and brainstorming.

    If there are certain trends you see, can you build a content strategy to capitalize on them? If the metrics go against your current content strategy, can you tweak your approach to content creation or maybe expand into other asset types, like eBooks, webinars and video testimonials?

    These questions should form the initial structure of your next marketing campaign, helping you launch a more targeted, effective strategy with the fewest amount of resources as possible.

    Content audit tools to make your life easier

    We’ve mentioned several content audit tools already, and you’re going to need them. Several of them.

    Here’s a quick rundown of options out there on the market:

    • Screaming Frog
    • Raven Tools
    • Google Analytics
    • Google Search Console
    • MarketMuse
    • SEMrush
    • Searchmetrics
    • BuzzSumo
    • XML Sitemap Generator
    • Nibbler
    • Moz Crawl Test
    • Site Analyzer
    • Seoptimer
    • Ahrefs
    • Optimizely

    High-quality content has never been easier to create. Be it something as large as a 3,000-word blog post or as tiny as a 320-character meta description, your content strategy should be nimble enough for your team to quickly audit every asset, optimize it for an immediate boost in organic ranking and fine-tune it in the future as algorithms change.

    OK, fine. Here’s a “Die Hard" .gif.

    Michael O'Neill

    Mike O'Neill is schrijver, redacteur en contentmanager in Chicago. Wanneer hij de redactionele inhoud van Brafton niet goed in de gaten houdt, doet hij auditie om de volgende Ken Burns-documentaire te vertellen. Alle modekreten zijn van hemzelf.
    Avatar
    Start the discussion…


    Log in with
    or sign up with Disqus
    ?

    Disqus is a discussion network

    • Disqus never moderates or censors. The rules on this community are its own.
    • Don't be a jerk or do anything illegal. Everything is easier that way.

    Read full terms and conditions

    Be the first to comment.

      Diepgaande contentmarketing

      Sumo
      Focus Retriever