Build Ecosystems for Your Content

mindmap of content ideas If you’re ready to think of your blog as a business (one of the hot topics over on Third Tribe Marketing), one way to do that is to start thinking of your blog content as the core of a distribution flow. In the little drawing to the left, I’ve put your subject matter at the heart of your system, and then have recommended you look at your blog, other products, education, and partnerships as the four areas you might consider. Note how I’ve moved your blog off to a branch and not to the heart of the drawing. Let’s talk through it.

Your Blog as PART of a System

In the drawing above, I list your blog as part of your content ecosystem. Here’s why I recommend you start thinking this way: because your blog is only one destination and it’s only reaching one channel of a much larger opportunity and demographic. The minute you see your blog as only “a” channel, that’s when you start thinking of other outreach opportunities.

This, by the way, is the logic behind Steve Jobs’s iPad. He didn’t make it for us. He made it for your mom, for the photographers, for people who want a big shiny viewing device for downloaded movies. It’s another way to build a channel for people to buy stuff off the iTunes store.

Now, with that in mind, the easy first step is to strongly highlight the opportunity to get your blog sent to people via email (more people use email than read blogs). That’s the easy opportunity. From there, start asking yourself how else you can build out your content delivery, both offline (print, perhaps, or publish a book) and into new channels online. Then, think about products.

Your Content as Products

Think about the various ways your content can fit into different shapes as a product. For instance, is your content suitable for audio? Have you considered recording and giving away (or selling) an audio version? I’m working up some audio projects for the commuters in our lives, not to mention the fact that Trust Agents and Social Media 101 are both available via audio download.

Can you take some of your projects and turn them into slide decks and make them available to the public? Or look at Brian Solis’s Conversation Prism. That’s a project that’s gotten Brian tens of thousands of placements in presentations over the last few years. Every time I see that wheel come up, it’s a chance for us to go back and check out Brian’s blog.

What other projects can you think up based on your products?

Education: The Power of Events

Online or off, some of what you’ve created would be good for educational opportunities. What could you turn from a few blog posts into a helpful class? You might have to give more thought than what went into the original posts. There’s a gap between “informative” and “educational” sometimes (unless you’re Whitney Hoffman, who writes very thorough posts), and you have to tighten that up.

This might be turned into a live event, like a teaching opportunity. It might turn into online courses. It might turn into a private membership site like Third Tribe. But education is a really good opportunity to spread your content into a new ecosystem. And, if you get really clever, you start wondering if your content might make a good part to someone else’s parts and that it might together form a larger opportunity.

Partnerships

My friend, Matthew Ebel is a professional musician. He creates music, tours, and does all that, but he also offers his services to conference and event producers. Imagine the difference between attending an event, versus attending an event with engaging live music. Matthew can add this to a conference experience. However, as a guy who runs conferences for a living, I’m very unlikely to call up a musician to perform. I would, however, call my event planner and see if she knew someone for the event.

Thus, it benefits Matthew to partner with event planners, so that he can book more gigs at conferences. Make sense?

Partnerships with your content work the same way. There may be part of the story you’re great at and parts that others are better at explaining/providing. For instance, if you’re yet another social media blogger, how much more powerful would your site and content become if you partnered with an SEO professional, a digital marketing professional, and a graphic/interface design specialist. You’d have a killer teaching/educating/selling opportunity for people looking for the larger picture.

See how killer this one step could become?

Ecosystem Thinking

This, to me, is where things get powerful. Once you see your platform as an ecosystem and not the parts, your possibilities to grow and develop more business value. Can you see it? Look beyond your blog as being the core of things. Think of it as an outlet. From there, things get exciting.

What say you?

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  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    Video falls into the blog's assets. It's not something outside of it, unless it is. To me, it's a TYPE of content, not something with its own branch. Make sense?

  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    It's okay to make a website the core. It would also work just fine. I don't see a reason why not. Your other points are really really good, Mark. Thank you for taking the time to share.

  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    Overnight Success was 2009. Kitchen Table Talks was 2010. My content is more like “seasons” of a TV show, or issues of a magazine. I'm working with a pattern in mind.

    The goal is to have some kind of editorial calendar. Your idea and plan is good.

    Your idea about a cluster leading to a product is smart. I did that with the Social Media 100 project, which started as 100 separate blog posts, and will soon be released as a culled and edited Social Media 101 book. (with fewer than 100 posts).

    I then recorded the audiobook. I'll do slide decks. This will all lead to business. See the thread?

  • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

    The Three E's are Everything. : )

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  • http://www.jtrigsby.com jtrigsby

    Yes, absolutely I do! I'm starting to have the feeling you get when you've been staring at a puzzle for 2 or 3 days and all of a sudden you start “seeing” the puzzle! Its pretty awesome, thanks!

  • David Siteman Garland

    Chris-

    1. I think many people forget that blogging is a beginning/a hub and not an end. Meaning because of blogging, all kinds of good things can happen if you position yourself well.

    2. It was funny that during our interview this past year, you talked about all the great things blogging has lead to and that has been an inspiration.

    3. We are in a world now in 2010 and beyond that favors collaboration not competition. If you bring that into your blog, you will be in good shape.

  • albrocious

    It is not preaching, I can use the information with clients. What kind of content, it is amazing how many do not know what to write. Not just blog entries but straight content as well.

  • stevencwilson

    Makes perfect sense but had not figured it out myself – thanks for laying it out so clearly. Can't emphasize enough the need for having great partners who can enable you to play to your strengths. Thanks!

  • http://mydarabell.com/ Dara Bell

    You have the gift of the gab Mr Brogan.

  • http://www.prguyonline.com/ Sean Horrigan

    Right on brother. I tell my clients that the content they create has a long life line.

    While your content may start out as a blog post, it can be translated into a podcast, vlog, speaking gig,webinar, or SlideShare presentation. It can be uploaded to your press room, posted on your Facebook profile and shared on Twitter. Long live the content.

  • http://www.joegagliardi.com/ Joe Gagliardi

    Great article Chris.. I had a lot of these ideas in my head but you really crystallized it here for me.

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  • http://www.darealya.com/ Yael Rozencwajg

    This is a good way for conceptualizing/thinking/building business from a simple platform such as a blog: developing a blog is also developing a good healthy ecosystem and even more building a new sane tribe.
    Thank you so much Chris.

  • Elizabeth

    Once more you shine a bright light in a dark age – thank you oh mighty one :)

  • http://progressforge.com/ Mark Mathson

    Good insight Chris, I appreciate your unique take on this.

    Thinking out of the box, and taking the blinders off is key; and I thank you for reminding us of that.

  • rickfriesen

    Yes! We are dealing with this issue right now in our high-end, lifestyle homes industry (Log and Timber homes).

    Example: we have in house design services but one of our major partners (and source of referral leads) is outside architects… It is proving tough to figure where to draw the line.

    The point, I think, is to have SOMETHING though… Reach out in some way, educate on something. And do so for all of your buyer personas. Or to put it another way, your “industries served”. This chart over at HubSpot discusses this topic — http://bit.ly/cEpL6O.

    One thing Jeffrey Gitomer says. Give people a reason why doing business with you is good for them. Specifically in these 3 areas — increased: profitability, productivity and morale.

    It is what we are trying to do anyway, ymmv. -Rick

  • http://twitter.com/mckra1g mckra1g

    :)

  • http://www.dotjenna.com/ dotJenna

    This is a great article and very helpful to organize the thoughts I was already leading to. Now I'm just one step closer. The dilemma is in content creation. My head is teaming with more ideas than I can count, but it's difficult to determine what to do next. As a small business owner, I need cash flow. Writing content all day doesn't bring immediate revenue, however, in the long run the content produced is worth much more. I'm struggling to find time, and to get it all down onto slides, Power Points, videos and blog posts. God bless.

    dotJenna

  • gowerstone

    Chris
    I run a company that helps other businesses succeed. Focusing on those business owners, I've been writing a blog, linking to relevant articles on Facebook & Twitter and working with partners to fill the gaps in my knowledge and services. Reading the post helps me understand why I thought these were the right things to do and brings some focus to my activities, the ah ha moment. Thanks

  • http://www.stopdev.com/ Ray

    Great stuff. There are several pieces/factors to a successful blog…especially from a business standpoint. I think partnering is key. How do you establish meaningful partnerships though if you're new and trying to gain credibility and momentum?

  • http://hallublin.blogspot.com Hal Lublin

    Again, a really smart, insightful post. The partnership section in particular struck a chord with me. We all have affiliate relationships or preferred vendors of one sort or another. Why not combine your efforts to provide maximum value? So simple, and yet, as with many simple things, the leap to the web is not always the quickest one.

  • http://twitter.com/Wordful Charles Bohannan

    I appreciate this, Chris. I'm trying to wrap my mind around building a publishing company from scratch, and the ecosystem helps me untether from purely-linear (one-dimensional) content of my blog.

    One thing I could do is offer content to bloggers who want to focus more on the integrity of their content and less on monetizing it, which would ideally lead to a book deal.

  • jeffrutowski

    Chris, This post helped crystallize a mind map that I was working on. I had been thinking that my blog was the focal point, the foundation from which I would create and promote products and services. But, it's the content. The content is what grows and is what products are created from–not the blog. Duh. Thanks for clearing my mind.

  • bradfriedman

    Taking a look at my blog as an ecosystem has given me a whole new perspective on what I am doing, my goals, and the reality of where I am in the blogosphere. I also thought your comments about partnering were excellent, though I haven't found many people who were willing to partner. Many people are very territorial.

  • bradfriedman

    Interesting thought. Thinking of my blog as an ecosystem provides a very different perspective on what I'm doing and my goals. I also enjoyed your comments on partnering, but have found this difficult. People seem to be quite territorial.

  • ScottyWalker

    Chris, concur and great article. Tobias's comment below is exactly what I would write.
    Tobias, all the best with your cook up.
    /r Scotty

  • orchardcottages

    Its this gap between being educative and being informative that we have found so difficult to narrow.

  • http://www.brendanschneider.com Brendan Schneider

    Chris,
    Long time reader, first time comment. I enjoyed the post and continue to reference your work. I do have a question though; with my focus being independent schools what do you think is the “sweet-spot” in terms of mnimum number of other channels (e.g. Blog, Twitter, Facebook, etc…) to achieve the results or effect you discuss?
    Thanks,
    Brendan

  • http://cfagbata.com cfagbata

    I feel privileged to be one of the people reading this because I have overtime laid too much emphasis on my blog neglecting other channels. Now there is a fresh insight especially with the fact than I can turn my content into a product of some sort. Thanks Chris!

  • http://www.riverwoodwriter.com/ RiverwoodWriter

    Once again you've made my brain go Shift-Click and it's in a higher gear…very cool. You've tapped a gusher with this post, Chris.

  • edalexander

    The mark of any experience is its ability to transform thinking. Thanks yet again, Chris!

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  • TaylorEllwood

    What you're talking about here is what I think of as developing power partners in your network, people who offer complementary services to what you offer, but don't do exactly what you do and need someone to refer to. I recommend readers check out who's got Your back and Never Eat alone by Keith Ferrazzi for information on how to develop these kinds of networks. I know they've helped me.

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    I don’t blog so in some respects i’m not qualified to answer your question. But my perspective is that a blog is for writing about important ideas that are worthy of the permanence that a blog stands for…twitter is for quick interactions and updates that don’t require much perspective…and amplify is in the middle for sharing and discussing those things that interest us but don’t necessarily rise to the level of requiring a full blog post.

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  • http://www.willfranco.com/ Will Franco

    I am big on system, especially ecosystems. To help me stay focused and understand what I do, I created a big visual/flow chart of my social presence>>

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    Partnerships with your content work the same way. There may be part of the story you’re great at and parts that others are better at explaining/providing. For instance, if you’re yet another social media blogger, how much more powerful would your site and content become if you partnered with an SEO professional, a digital marketing professional, and a graphic/interface design specialist. You’d have a killer teaching/educating/selling opportunity for people looking for the larger picture.

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    What you're talking about here is what I think of as developing power partners in your network, people who offer complementary services to what you offer, but don't do exactly what you do and need someone to refer to. I recommend readers check out who's got Your back and Never Eat alone by Keith Ferrazzi for information on how to develop these kinds of networks. I know they've helped me.

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    I don’t blog so in some respects i’m not qualified to answer your question. But my perspective is that a blog is for writing about important ideas that are worthy of the permanence that a blog stands for…twitter is for quick interactions and updates that don’t require much perspective…and amplify is in the middle for sharing and discussing those things that interest us but don’t necessarily rise to the level of requiring a full blog post.

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