Creating Digital Environments Around Content
Thursday, June 10, 2010 at 6:29PM
Janice McCallum

Last week, I moderated a panel session at the American Business Media (ABM) Boston regional program on the topic of content marketing.  Larry Weber, the PR and marketing strategy guru, kicked off the morning with an inspiring talk about how marketing communications and advertising agencies are changing and how that will impact the future of publishing.  Quotable outtakes included:

“Marketers have to be content creators.”

“Content first, then transactions.”

“The Web is becoming more mobile, more emotive, more experiential.”

Weber set the stage perfectly for our panel that followed: How Content Marketing is Shifting the Role of Publishers. In the changing landscape he described [1], all marketers are becoming publishers, and the content they produce creates new opportunities for publishers to aggregate information. Our panel of three digital publishing leaders provided great examples of how to this can be done.  For most B2B publishers, the ultimate goal of their digital environment (or community) is to bring together the buyers and sellers in their market segment to inform buying decisions and facilitate transactions.  The markets represented on the panel ranged from medical products, non-alcoholic beverages, commercial marine professionals, integrative practitioners , to even brides-to-be.

Some key recommendations for creating digital environments from our session:

The many other ideas presented and discussed in the Q&A reflected two mindsets. 1) New media tools are to be feared because they turn marketers into competitors; or 2) content produced by marketers creates new opportunities for publishers to aggregate and add value. However, this session underscored that, instead of fearing and resisting new technologies, publishers should seize the day and use them to improve relationships with customers, suppliers, advertisers, and sponsors.

Note, although this post is written for a general B2B audience, the pharmaceutical sector where pharma-sponsored content is growing at the expense of pharma advertising, would make an excellent case study on how content marketing is affecting publishers.

[1] See Roger Wilson’s summary of the ABM event  for additional perspectives on the program. 

I would like to thank the panelists who participated in the session: Melissa Chang, President, Pure Incubation; John Craven, President, BevNet.com; and Brian Randall, VP, e-media, Diversified Business Communications. 

Article originally appeared on Health Content Advisors (http://www.healthcontentadvisors.com/).
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