Last year, David Meerman Scott and I had a discussion on his great blog about one of the core issues that we both run into. It's the question of whether to gate our eBooks behind a submission form or not. This is something I've struggled with both internally in my own work at AIIM and externally as we provide content sponsorships to our trade members.
In other words, is it better to put up a registration form around content in order to acquire leads, or is it better to leave content as open as possible in order to facilitate viral marketing and distribution?
David’s point – which I tend to agree with – is that organizations lose a large multiple of readers – perhaps as high as 50x – when we put up registration forms that scare readers away. In our case, back in 2009, we came to the conclusion that the multiple could be as high as 16x.
So let me update my discussion with David with a few new stats to hopefully shed a bit of light on the “registration form or no registration form” question in terms of my own experiences.
I am still convinced that open access is best for content like e-books.
Since David’s original post was published, we have published four additional e-books, plus a second edition of the original. Over the most recent 6-month period, the e-books have had more views (9,719) than almost every other piece of pure content on our core web site.
When I started my "8 things" project, I really didn’t have much in mind other than bringing some fresh content into my blog through expert guest commentary. That, in turn, has generated a mini-cottage industry for me.
We published our first e-book in October 2009 based on the blog content.
This has led to 4 additional e-books since then.
The landing pages for the e-books are used as jumping-off places for other revenue-generating products and content.
We have repurposed the original individual blog postings onto the main AIIM web site as individual pages, and they are generating robust traffic on their own.
We used the same model as the framework for a series of in-person seminars we do around the country – 8 things blog posts by sponsors, followed by a complimentary keynote and individual sponsor presentations, culminating in a special 8 things e-book for seminar attendees.
Even if you are already a registered user, requiring a log-in cuts views.
Two of our most valuable pieces of free content are our webinars and research studies. I took a look at 3 of each for purposes of my analysis. For our purposes here, I am focused on data from the six-month period from 8/1/2010 through 1/31/2011.
Webinars
Research Reports
In the case of the above content, most of the views are likely coming from those already registered on the site, but not necessarily logged in. This content has a registration gate because it is sponsored, and we provide leads back to the sponsoring company.
This is a hard mindset to get companies to change. I am convinced that for many companies, viral visibility through AIIM’s various capabilities would be a far better objective for this content. But if the marketing people paying the bills on the back end are measured by hard leads, getting rid of gates on this type of content is a hard thing to do. Even if, in many instances, the gates are counter-productive.
The next phase for us is the integration of our social tools with our back-end processes.
As a non-profit with limited resources, we’ve been aggressively guerilla marketers via social tools. In addition to our blog and e-book presence, here are a few of the other things we are involved in (just a sample, not an exhaustive list).
Our core LinkedIn group (AIIM Global Community of Information Professionals) has 12,472 members. We have additional groups for association events and activities.
And these doubters have a point. It certainly would be great to know exactly who has viewed our Slideshare presentations. But I am convinced that the sheer volume of exposure we have gotten on Slideshare is worth the risk. Together, our presentations have gotten 250,131 views. Not too shabby for a somewhat esoteric topic like content management.
We have a variety of Facebook presences, as well as an extensive Twitter presence. Plus, my latest pet project, my Facebook group, “E-mail sucks. It’s Time to Move On."
We’ve launched a set of four open communities with an extensive network of Expert Bloggers on topics such as SharePoint, E2.0, Capture and Image, and Electronic Records Management.
So all that is well and good. But what comes next?
The key thing in all of this is to move to the next stage, where these tools are integrated and leveraged off of each other. Right now, most of this is a manual labor of love set of unlinked processes. Right now, we tend to measure inputs too much (# of tweets, # of blog posts, # of links).
The marketer of the future will be the person that can restructure traditional processes and link together the front social end of customer engagement with the company web site with socially-aware back-end CRM systems with back-end fulfillment and tracking systems. And do so in as automated a fashion as possible.