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Content Marketing Strategy: Storytelling vs Search (SEO) | Cooler Insights

Storytelling is the new buzzword in content marketing circles. And for good reason too, given how important stories are in the art and science of marketing persuasion.

But how do we reconcile storytelling with Search Engine Optimization (SEO)—the technique of using targeted content to attract organic search engine traffic?

In my years of writing and producing online content for websites, social media pages, video channels, and emails, I discovered that the best content strategy involves using BOTH SEO and storytelling to optimize your results.

Before you can do this, however, you need to understand the differences between the two. You need to also learn how you can employ them in tandem.

In this article, you will discover the following aspects of both content strategies:

What is Storytelling?

Storytelling describes the activity of writing, producing or sharing stories.

Most stories have a setting where the story occurs, a hero (or protagonist), a mentor (or helper), conflicts and challenges, a climax, a way to resolve the conflict, and a happy ending. These elements are assembled into a plot or narrative format—from the simple three-act structure to the more complex Hero’s Journey by Joseph Campbell.

Stories can exist in virtually any media:

Examples of Storytelling in Content Marketing

In the context of Content Marketing, stories are normally used to strengthen the emotional connection between a brand and its audience. Studies have shown that stories can be up to 22 times more memorable than plain facts alone.

By influencing the right brain of your prospects, stories can also be powerful viral marketing agents. This is why they are hot favourites among content marketers who seek to grow brand awareness and generate leads online.

Often, stories are the preferred forms of content on social media channels like Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube and Pinterest. They help to attract attention from fresh audiences, and help your brand to extend its reach.

GoPro is an example of a brand which took storytelling to new heights. It was founded in 2002 by Nick Woodman—a surfer, skier and motorsports enthusiast in search of a better way to film himself and his friends surfing. What started with a 35mm camera and a wrist strap made from old wetsuits and plastic scraps has grown into an international company that sold over 26 million GoPro cameras in more than 100 countries.

Have a look at how its founder became a billionaire in this Forbes video.

What is Search Engine Optimization (SEO)?

If storytelling seeks to satisfy the heart, search would seek to satisfy the curious mind. Or perhaps the rational part of the brain seeking answers to a specific problem.

Defined as the process of “getting traffic from free, organic, editorial or natural search results on search engines,” Search Engine Optimization (SEO) primarily functions based on the principle of providing the best answer to a search query on Google (or other search engines).

The practice of SEO normally involves a series of processes to optimize the following:

Examples of SEO in Content Marketing

SEO is one of the key strategies in content marketing—often SEO-experts often need to work with content strategists to produce content that is not only optimized for search engines, but fit for human consumption.

This is important as one of the major ranking factors for pages is the length of time spent on a page. Poorly crafted content that does not get read or watched to the end tends to rank poorly relative to those which has better content stickiness.

HubSpot is a company that does very well on search engines for digital marketing terms. Try typing in search terms like “content marketing,” “Instagram marketing,” or “social media marketing,” and you’ll likely see a page from HubSpot that is indexed on page one of Google’s Search Engine Results Page (SERP).

Courtesy of HubSpot

How Storytelling and SEO Compares

While both storytelling and SEO type content may both sit on your website, there are some differences between the two. Let us first look at the pros and cons of storytelling, followed by the pros and cons of SEO-type content.

Pros and Cons of Storytelling

Advantages of Storytelling

Disadvantages of Storytelling

Pros and Cons of SEO-friendly Content

Advantages of SEO-friendly Content

Disadvantages of SEO-friendly Content

How Storytelling and SEO can work together

As storytelling tends to sit more on social media platforms while search-friendly content tend to reside on your website, the two content strategies can work in unison to nudge your prospect along your digital marketing funnel.

Here’s one way to line them all up as your audiences “graduate” from being a viewer or visitor all the way to becoming a customer and possibly a brand advocate.

Here’s how storytelling and SEO-friendly content can be used:

In the fast moving world of content marketing, top brands know that you need both storytelling and SEO-friendly content to win the battle for your customer’s hearts and minds.

By learning about both storytelling and SEO-friendly content strategies, you’ll be better placed to craft the right types of content on the right platforms to move your audience to action.

Are there other differences between the two that we should consider? I’d love to read your thoughts!

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