MARCH 22, 2024

Welcome to The Tilt, a twice-weekly newsletter for content entrepreneurs.


5 things to do

Data-Drive Your Audience

We often talk about the value of owning your audience data. But what data should you own? What data do you already own? And how will it bring value to your content business? Here are five ways to do it.

1. Collect relevant data:

Asking for as little information as possible when someone subscribes to your content yields the biggest audience. However, asking for more information will help the business better meet the needs and interests of the target audience.

Strike a balance between minimum effort and maximum interrogation by asking a few questions and making them optional to answer. For example, include a dropdown menu on your subscription form to identify the topics they most want to read about. Or if geography is important, ask for their ZIP code, not the mailing address.

Asking but not requiring answers also communicates to the subscriber that you want to serve them well. And, if someone is bothered by the optional questions, they probably weren’t a good fit for your business anyway.

2. Discover how they arrive: When you understand how visitors land on your content, you can double down on the marketing around the biggest prompters.

To learn about your website visitors, turn to Google Analytics 4. Go to the Acquisition report and look under the Traffic Acquisition category. You can see where visitors come from (search, referral, social media, direct) and what pages they visited first.

3. Know what prompts conversions: Data can also tell you what content, pages, CTAs, etc., move the audience through their journey. Investigate what motivates an audience member to become a subscriber and turns a subscriber into a buyer.

Look for your web visitors’ paths in GA4 in the Path Exploration report. You can find it under Explore, select Blank, and then Path Exploration. In your newsletter and blog content, look at the most clicked links.

Caveat: People usually don’t take a direct path to purchase. They can wander, take a break, leave, come back, etc. As you grow your data skills (and the data), you can better understand the multiple touchpoints along the journey that are most likely to get them where you want to go.

4. Review your sales reports: The best way to know what your audience wants to buy is to look at your sales. What did they put into their shopping cart? What did they buy when they gave you their credit card info?

You can also use the data from free content products. What did they download from your site? What webinars did they sign up to attend, and which ones did they actually attend or watch?

5. Segment your audience: Examining all the data will show that your audience is not a singular entity. So, use that knowledge to segment them based on interests (and related desired actions in your business). Develop marketing strategies for each segment (you’ll likely see some overlap), tailoring your content, calls to action, and more to deliver a more personalized experience.

To effectively grow any content business, you need to gather and use your audience data. To do that, you need to have a website with analytics tracking and lots of ways for people to share their information with you. People want to have personal connections to the creators they follow. You can only establish that kind of connection if you understand your audience.

Helpful Resources:


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5 things from the tilt


Supported by:

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5 things to know

Money
  • Big deal: YouTube’s most popular star MrBeast will produce the most massive reality TV game show with Amazon MGM. It’s being called a watershed moment for online content creators in the traditional entertainment industry. [The Washington Post]
    Tilt Take: Jimmy Donaldson, aka MrBeast, long ago surpassed being an online content creator. So, a “watershed moment”? Probably not.
Audiences
  • Download disappointment: Even podcasters who cracked the TikTok code see only a weak connection between its TikTok audience and actual listening. [The Verge]
    Tilt Take: Market where your audience is – and where they’re most likely to do what you want them to do next.
Tech and Tools
  • What’s up?: Threads has made its trending-now feature available to all US users. You can find it on the search page and For You Feed. [Tech Crunch]
    Tilt Take: It could be a helpful topical research tool if your audience engages on Threads.
And Finally
  • AI assist: Research finds 62% of creators say they plan to use generative AI to assist with their businesses over the next year. [Deloitte]
    Tilt Take: Generative AI tools can be a big help in multiple ways, especially for a solo entrepreneur.
  • Domain renewed: Political satirist Andy Borowitz left The New Yorker but is ready to make his brand his own. Since he licensed his content to The New Yorker in 2012, he kept renewing Borowitzreport.com at GoDaddy. “I knew someday I’d be back in charge of my own destiny again,” he said. [The Hollywood Reporter]
    Tilt Take: Andy gets it.


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