Check out these content marketing trends you’ll want to have on your radar as you strategize for a successful 2023.
A triage of increased consumer demand, search and content convergence, and AI awareness makes 2023 a challenging but opportunistic year for content marketers.
As the demand for content hits an all-time high, quality and helpful content is becoming a number one priority.
This, combined with a meteoric rise in AI-generated content, represents a paradigm shift in how marketers approach content.
Many of the content trends we identified last year still remain vital and have not changed.
For example, the focus on intent and proving value, the fusion of multiple media formats, and the emphasis on the processing and utilization of data as an informer have not changed.
The same applies to the vital art of storytelling and account-based content marketing. However, as content production surges, a lot has changed.
The content marketing market is poised to grow by $584.02 billion during 2023-2027.
2023 represents a new content battleground for content marketers, with billions of pieces published by brands, individuals, and machines.
As a result, ensuring your content is discovered and consumed by its intended audience will be more challenging.
Marketers are competing on a new content battleground where quality meets quantity, and organizations need to compete for consumers’ attention in different ways.
Let’s take a look at 10 content marketing trends in 2023.
For all the talk over the last few years around digital disruption, the reality is that it has already happened. We are now in a period of evolution, meaning content marketers must change mindsets and skill sets.
As more organizations focus on personalization and the user experience, old content strategies must be updated for multiple new digital experiences across critical moments in the customer journey.
With so much online content that addresses the top of the funnel, are marketers missing the mark at the bottom? After all, executives want to see content that converts and helps the sales cycle.
In addition, while marketers experiment with new technologies, are they utilizing their existing ones?
Content creates data. According to the IDC, the Global DataSphere is expected to more than double in size from 2022 to 2026.
Are marketers using what insights they currently have access to or focusing on what is new?
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The introduction of OpenAI and ChatGPT allows marketers to interact with technology in a conversational manner for the first time.
As a result, AI will be infused into content marketing strategies at a scale never witnessed in our lifetime.
ChatGPT reached 100 million monthly active users just two months after launch.
While this is not another ChatGPT post (there is plenty out there!), I believe it is essential to understand how AI has evolved and what it is before you build content and generative AI strategies.
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Recent search engine guidelines such as the Helpful Content Update and Product Review Updates mean marketers need to be more thoughtful about the content they create.
Content needs to be created for the human reader rather than a search engine ranking to stand out from the noise.
As content, search, and SEO strategies fuse, marketers must rethink what they write and how SEO, content, search, and digital teams work together – and with AI.
The introduction of ChatGPT has caused a stir.
Personally, I believe too many marketers are reading and experimenting, offering opinions, and sharing clippings. The worry here is that both SEO professionals and content marketers lose focus on the now.
With over 90% of organizations planning to utilize SEO more this year, it is essential to focus on high-impact strategies and consider how and where AI-generated content fits in.
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Content that lacks purpose will struggle to compete on the search engine results pages (SERPs). To ensure content is discoverable and found online, differentiation is needed.
Marketers need to rethink why they are producing, how, and who for.
They also need to ensure that branded content and messaging are relevant to the intent of their target audience and meet their needs and wants.
Changes to SEO/search algorithms (64%), changes to social media algorithms (53%), and data management/analytics (48%) are among the top concerns for B2C marketers.
As more content goes online, consumers can find it hard to find the information they really want and need. As a result, marketers will need to find new ways to differentiate their content with creativity, new formats, research, and unique approaches.
For example, let’s be honest, at the moment, the internet is awash with articles on AI and ChatGPT. However, I only read 20% from sources I trust, as everyone seems to be an AI expert at the moment.
Content will be being duplicated at scale, and we should expect a rise in spam, content detection, and copywriting technologies very soon!
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Visual content is in demand, from visuals for search experiences and ranking to infographics, images, and charts.
With the explosion of text-based content online produced by humans and machines, visual content marketing can help simplify content. It also offers alternative ways to interact with consumers.
For example, video is the top channel for B2B marketing, and the hot new trend is short-form video. TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts are now some of the most popular media for brands.
Harnessing the power of video SEO can dramatically increase the visibility of your content across search engines. In addition, you can optimize your videos for higher rankings by refining and adjusting specific elements.
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As I mentioned earlier in his article, experiment with new technologies.
With ChatGPT reaching 1 million users in just under two months, marketers are experimenting with AI-generated content at a massive scale.
The best content marketers will learn how to work with AI.
This means understanding limitations and exercising caution while adding their experience to produce and supervise AI content tools set to flood the market.
Only 10% of marketers currently use AI to generate content, but over 58% plan to increase their usage this year. This shows that many marketers are exercising caution while they see:
Undoubtedly, we will see a super-accelerated use of AI, but it’s also vital that experience content marketers drive experimentation and selection and supervises its usage.
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The core fundamentals of good content marketing have not changed. Marketers should not lose focus on that.
In 2023, production and approval processes will need to change. Organizations will need to adapt to the fact that AI is going mainstream. They must adapt processes to accommodate AI to help inform and assist content marketing strategies.
40% of B2B marketers have a documented content marketing strategy; 33% have a process, but it’s not documented, and 27% have no plan.
When anything new, it is natural (and essential) that humans want to experiment. However, marketers also have current goals to achieve, so balance is needed.
Managing time and resources will become necessary to balance the scales. Do not lose focus on what you need to do now while keeping an eye on the future.
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Consistently producing content for content’s sake will not reap the rewards. Instead, quality over quantity will lead to better engagement in 2023.
Too much content can confuse consumers. This is especially true for content with no relevancy, shows no authority, and offers little value.
83% of marketers say focusing on quality rather than quantity of content is better, even if it means posting less often.
If people don’t consume your content, there is no value in creating it in the first place.
Furthermore, people don’t consume media in silos, so it’s important to distribute your content in multiple formats across multiple channels.
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Conversational and generative AI has taken most column and opinion pieces over the last few months. However, the use of AI automation for many other use cases has been on the rise for years.
This includes use cases such as the intelligent automation (IA) of website error detection and automated fixes, curation, distribution, and reporting.
68% of B2B marketers implement automation in their marketing strategy.
In the current content climate, it’s essential to know how generative and conversational AI differs from other AI applications, as per point No. 2 earlier in this article.
AI can be used for various tasks, such as generative applications, image recognition, etc.
Furthermore, intelligent automation takes this capability further by analyzing output from the decision-making process to execute increasingly complex workflows without manual labor.
This goes beyond what standalone generative and conversational AI offers.
When comparing intelligent automation vs. artificial intelligence, one could not exist without the other; they must go hand in hand if businesses want the best results possible.
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AI will not replace humans. Nothing can beat human empathy, judgment, and creativity. If humans and machines work together, it will not replace content marketers’ jobs.
Content marketers’ jobs are not at risk for those who are thoughtfully embracing AI to A (assist) and I (inform).
AI is not ready to make unsupervised decisions.
Success lies in balancing human input, supervision, judgment, and skill.
Expect to see an increased focus on collaboration between humans and machines. AI should aim to augment human capabilities and improve overall content marketing performance.
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The bar is high in the new content marketing battleground; “average” content will no longer do.
We are set to see a content explosion on the web, and only those who create unique, helpful, and differentiated content will stand out and win.
Embracing and utilizing AI is an obvious must, but so is exercising caution and aligning it with human capital.
The link bait headlines titled “AI is here to replace…” is fluff in marketing!
Processes need to change; marketers will adapt, and those who can balance current and future focus will progress professionally and personally.
Tap into these content trends for a more innovative and ultimately successful marketing strategy this year.
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Featured Image: 3rdtimeluckystudio/Shutterstock
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