SunGard AS
A common marketing tactic is to draw a tenuous link between a product and seasonal or newsworthy events – step forward software company SunGard AS and its campaign describing how to survive a zombie apocalypse.
The zombie-themed content was used to generate awareness among IT professionals for SunGard AS cloud products in the run up to Halloween. It included an ebook on zombie apocalypse survival as well as an infographic.
Both were tied back to SunGard AS’s product offering with a CTA that directed users to a landing page detailing how to improve resilience without breaking the bank.
Overall it achieved a 150% greater clickthrough rate than the company’s other campaigns and delivered a 200% higher click-to-open rate.
Most importantly, the zombie content generated 24 leads.
Logicalis
Logicalis used content centred around thought leadership to help build up its HP sales pipeline among existing contacts.
The marketing department designed six email creatives, an ebook and an eight-page microsite that enabled the telesales team to personalise messages based on a prospect’s participation in the campaign.
Logicalis targeted 2,000 existing and prospective customers, with these results:
- 11% to 15% click-to-open rate for the microsite.
- 100 to 200 unique opens from each email.
- Nearly $8m in closed and new pipeline business.
Zagg
Blogging has been a spectacularly successful marketing tool for Econsultancy, but even we can have problems giving a specific ROI on our endeavours.
However online retailer Zagg’s blog apparently delivers 10% of the site’s traffic and an ROI of 172%.
The mobile device accessory provider publishes 25 to 35 posts each week that are targeted at its tech-savvy audience.
60% of blog traffic comes from new visitors, so it’s an important way of bringing potential customers to the site.
Zagg pays three writers who are tasked with producing content that is shareable, popular, and also promotes its product range. This includes news, how-to articles and entertaining posts.
But the initial investment in hiring staff and building up the blog has clearly paid off.
HCC Medical Insurance Service
Infographics have been overused in recent years, but they’re still an effective medium for content marketing.
HCC Medical Insurance Services (HCCMIS) managed to increase blog traffic and email revenue using an infographic aimed at its travel customers.
The graphic had three sections:
- The anatomy of the adventure traveller.
- An adventure quiz.
- Worldwide bucket list.
The idea was that the content becomes more interesting and shareable if there is an element of interactvity.
Once it was completed the graphic was initially shared with HCCMIS’s list of influencers before being shared more widely across social and via email.
Compared to its normal sales emails the infographic achieved a 96% lift in email revenue, while on Facebook the post that featured the graphic had more than 2,000 interactions compared to an average of 10.
Overall HCCMIS’s blog post featuring the graphic achieved 3.9m views, of which 90% were new visitors.
Fisher Tank
Content marketing can even work for industries that might not appear to be all that sexy, as demonstrated by Fisher Tank, a company that makes giant, above-ground welded steel tanks.
As you can imagine, Fisher Tank’s products have a long sales cycle and it has traditionally relied on cold calling or referrals from existing clients.
However the company altered its approach to include a greater focus on its new website, blog articles, and downloadable content such as a free comparison guide.
Just 12 weeks after launching the new site it achieved the following results, though it’s obviously important to note that not all of this can be directly attributed to content marketing necessarily:
- Web traffic: 119% increase
- Organic search traffic: 70% increase
- Social traffic: 4,800% increase
- Lead conversions: 3,900% increase
- Page one keyword rankings: 600% increase
- Quote requests: 500% increase
- Value of new qualified sales opportunities from content marketing: $3.4m
ShipServ
ShipServ is an online marketplace for the marine industry, connecting suppliers and ship owners around the globe.
Its online offerings include a trading platform, supplier search tool, ordering guide and an ad network.
The problem ShipServ encountered was that its customers weren’t always that tech-savvy so many had issues with the switch to an online marketplace from more traditional purchasing channels.
To remedy this, the company implemented a content marketing strategy in 2008 with an initial budget of $30,000. ShipServ launched a new website, started blogging, published a series of white papers and created a LinkedIn group.
After three months ShipServ had broken even on its investment and achieved the following results:
- Website visitors increased by 59%.
- Contact-to-lead (landing page contact) conversions increased by 150%.
- Lead-to-opportunity conversions increased by 50%.
- Number of sales-ready leads increased by 400%.
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