Posicionarnos Content Marketing Curation One Position You Need to Rule Content Marketing [Template]

One Position You Need to Rule Content Marketing [Template]

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By Jodi Harris published

One Position You Need to Rule Content Marketing [Template]

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Back in 2011, Joe Pulizzi was among the first to nail down what the role of a Chief Content Officer should entail. Our industry has come a long way, but with so many brands acquiring media companies or evolving to function as a media company themselves, we thought it would be a good time to revisit this essential position, review its key characteristics, and re-emphasize just why it’s so critical for organizations to have someone to serve as the primary owner of all its content initiatives. 

What’s in a role?

An organization’s content leader can go by many names — including chief content officer, vice president of content strategy, vice president of content marketing, head of content, or even chief storyteller. While the title may vary, the job is more or less the same: The CCO must be able to think and act like a publisher-journalist-marketer hybrid, and must be prepared to lead the strategic development, practical application, and ongoing tactical management of content in all of its many formats across the enterprise.

Whether your business is looking to bring on a new chief content officer from the outside or assign the role to a team member, your CCO needs to have a solid understanding of what’s involved, as well as what your company’s expectations are for his or her success. Use the full job description below to help set the parameters for succeeding in this critical position and ensuring that its requisite responsibilities will continue to be met as your content program evolves.

Job description: Chief content officer

Reporting structure

As the leader of a cross-functional discipline, the chief content officer typically reports to the chief executive officer or chief operating officer (in smaller enterprises), or the chief marketing officer or vice president of marketing (in larger enterprises). Other reporting structures are possible, though, depending on how nimble, sophisticated, or well-entrenched content marketing is within the organization.

Position summary

The CCO oversees all marketing-related content initiatives, both internal and external, across multiple platforms and formats to drive brand awareness, engagement, , retention, and other positive customer behaviors.

Ideally, this individual should have leadership experience in all things related to content — including channel optimization, brand consistency, segmentation and localization, analytics, and meaningful measurement.

In addition, this collaborative position functions across multiple organizational departments — including public relations, communications, marketing, customer service, IT, sales, and human resources. Thus, the CCO should expect to have a hand in defining, governing, and deploying the brand’s story, both from the organization’s perspective and the audience’s interpretation.

Responsibilities

The CCO owns all marketing-related content initiatives (in all forms and formats) that the company undertakes to drive the business forward.

As an executive-level function within the enterprise, the CCO’s primary responsibility is to determine the business model and particular approach to content that will offer the greatest value for the organization. These decisions will factor into just how hands-on a role the CCO will ultimately play while leading the company’s content program, including:

  • Developing and documenting the content marketing strategy. This includes defining the audience personas and content mission, setting clear marketing objectives for content, and understanding how the organization’s content integrates with the rest of its business objectives.
  • Outlining a channel plan. Identifying the primary channels for how the organization will communicate with customers (across digital, social, print, and in-person initiatives). Developing and executing a plan for how the business will tell its story on each appropriate channel (including setting the tone and voice, as well as establishing acceptable operational policies and practices.
  • Establishing standards, systems, best practices, and work flow processes for managing the content marketing life cycle, including requesting, producing, distributing, promoting, measuring, and retiring content. This includes ensuring all content is on-brand; is consistent in terms of style, quality, and tone of voice; and is optimized for search and user experience across all appropriate channels.
  • Collaborating with the company’s senior creative team leaders (e.g., the creative director, brand manager, or chief design officer) and channel owners on all initiatives to identify content needs and opportunities and ensure efficiency and consistency across channels, verticals, and functional departments.
  • Working with the company’s technical/IT team to implement an efficient content management system (CMS), and any other essential tech systems (e.g., marketing automation, email management, social media management).
  • Managing and maintaining all content inventories and matrices, and driving the overall content calendar for the organization.
  • Participating in the hiring and supervision of content/story leaders in all content verticals, as well as in managing the efforts of all other team writers, editors, producers, and content managers.
  • Establishing performance goals and overseeing ongoing measurement protocols to evaluate and optimize content effectiveness. This can include gathering data and handling analytics (or supervising those who do), as well as making recommendations based on performance results.
  • Ensuring a consistent global experience and implementing localization/translation strategies where appropriate.

Success criteria

Ultimately, the success of this position relies on the ability to create a better customer for the organization. Performance expectations should be based on the continual improvement of customer nurturing, converting, and retention through storytelling, as well as by increases in new prospects brought into the enterprise through the consistent development and deployment of content.

Primary criteria for success are customer and employee affinity, measured by lifetime customer value, customer satisfaction, and employee advocacy. Additional criteria for gauging success may include:

  • Positive brand recognition and message consistency across chosen published channels
  • Conversion metrics definition and growth
  • Improvements in positive social media sentiment
  • Positive customer feedback and survey data
  • Creation of new up-sell and cross-sell opportunities through content analysis and application
  • A stronger enterprise-wide focus on driving sales, saving costs, or creating happier customers through content

Experience and education

An effective CCO must be able to balance a customer-first marketing mentality with the story-focused mindset of a publisher, while serving as a team mentor, performance driver, and champion of the overall brand experience with content.

Requisite experience and training includes:

  • 10 to 15 years as a successful leader in multichannel content creation (publishing, journalism, etc.)
  • Superb analytical skills and strong capacity for creating, understanding, and communicating measurement strategies across multiple content initiatives
  • Outstanding communication and interpersonal skills, including proficiency with negotiation and mediation to ensure mutually beneficial outcomes for all stakeholders
  • Thorough knowledge of core marketing principles, as well as brand, product, and service management functions
  • Deep understanding of fluctuating market dynamics

Desirable skills and capabilities

As the CCO operates as the leader of corporate storytelling, he or she must be capable of fully understanding and skillfully addressing customer pain points through the creation and distribution of content. The ability to uphold high-quality standards is critical to the success of this role, as is a working knowledge of content trends, techniques, and best practices.

Skills and traits that are particularly useful include:

  • Proven editorial abilities, including an outstanding command of the English (or primary customer) language, as well as a working knowledge of fundamental marketing principles, practices, and techniques
  • Familiarity with common internet coding languages, such as HTML, XHTML, CSS, Java, web publishing, and Flash
  • Knowledge of working with web analytics tools (Adobe Marketing Cloud, Webtrends, Google Analytics), social media marketing applications (Hootsuite, TweetDeck, etc.), and leading social media monitoring platforms
  • Comfort with speaking about/advocating for content marketing at both internal and external meetings and events, and as part of your organization’s content initiatives (i.e., willing to become a cheerleader for organizational change around content)

Editor’s note: Special thanks to all those who participated in the initial creation of the chief content officer job description, including: Katie McCaskey, Peggy Dorf, Don Hoffman, Wendy Boyce, Sarah Mitchell, Pam Kozelka, Kim Kleeman, Reinier Willems, Joe Pulizzi, DJ Francis, Josh Healan, Christina Pappas, CC Holland, Stallar Lufrano, Lisa Gerber, Kim Gusta, Cindy Lavoie, Jill Nagle, and Ann Handley.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

Author: Jodi Harris

Jodi Harris is the Director of Editorial Content & Curation at Content Marketing Institute. As a content strategy consultant, Jodi helps businesses evaluate their content needs and resources; build infrastructure and operations; and create compelling stories to be delivered across multiple media channels and platforms. Follow Jodi on Twitter at @Joderama.

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