The book “Launch” by Michael A. Stelzner should serve as required reading for anyone who wants to use content marketing successfully online.
Stelzner, founder of socialmediaexaminer.com – among the most popular social media blogs on the Internet with 80,000 daily e-mail subscribers – explains how exactly to build and attract an audience, starting with nothing.
I received two complimentary copies of his book – one to read and provide an honest review of here – the other to give away. If you want to win the free copy, attend the next Social Media Breakfast Twin Ports in Duluth, Minnesota on July 8.
First, I’ll share the book’s three minor flaws.
1. The amateur-looking cover does not do as good a job of signaling the professional, high-quality content the book includes.
Perhaps it’s just my personal taste though. Let me know in the comments what you think.
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2. Stelzner’s examples primarily focus on online-only businesses that sell information products after attracting large audiences. I whole-heartedly believe that the content strategies Stelzner advocates are relevant to every kind of business attempting to sell online or even offline in many instances, but you could easily assume that is not the case. The book unfortunately does not include examples of traditional small businesses using great content to boost online sales. He does discuss a blog from Proctor & Gamble that produces great content, but most small businesses cannot identify with such a large corporation either.
3. His advice on running surveys lacks any mention of the need to word questions correctly in order to get reliable feedback, not tainted results. I would not conduct a survey as Stelzner describes without at least consulting a statistician or survey expert.
That said, I loved the book, and you should not just read, but use it as a reference book for how excellent content is created and used effectively online.
4.5 Stars
I read the 255-page book on using content to boost your business in just a few hours, and quite honestly did not expect to give it the 4.5-star review out of five that I am giving the book. I’ve been producing content now for 13 years – initially as a journalist and the last several years online for clients – and I try to peruse if not read nearly every online marketing book that touches on social media, along with many traditional marketing books.
Most of the marketing books and online resources I run across tend to repackage the same general concepts in new ways, but “Launch” is a unique marketing book. It is the first one I found that connects the content dots for readers.
Instead of primarily discussing the value of content as a tool as many marketing books do, the author spends the bulk of the book explaining the different kinds of online content, and the steps involved to create it. He employs examples from his own past as a white paper writer and his jaw-dropping success launching socialmediaexaminer.com, which shot to the top of the crowded social media marketing blog pecking order in a matter of months. He definitely has the experience to write about this subject. The book also includes an excellent appendix with plenty of good examples of the content for you to learn from.
Often authors and social media “gurus” do not differentiate between the various kinds of content. Stelzner however, walks you through how-to articles, expert interviews, case studies, and what he calls nuclear fuel – white papers, top 10 contests and micro-events.
Here is a video where he describes different kinds of content that he teaches about in the book.
He also explains in detail the process Social Media Examiner used to go from zero credibility to industry golden boy in less than a year. He explains how he initially created great content that hooked readers, got them on an e-mail list, and eventually prompted them to buy products. That is important, because just one kind of content disconnected from a larger sales funnel can lead to failure. Reading the book inspired me to believe that you could take any blog, and by following the road map Stelzner created, build an audience – assuming the business you are in has a potential web audience.
The book also advises you on the right formula of free, useful content to marketing messages, a consistent bugaboo among many online marketers who are there to make a living, yet also want to provide good value for free for their audiences.
For the marketer who still needs to convince your boss or CEO that content marketing actually works, Stelzner does a wonderful job explaining the psychology behind reciprocity marketing and proof that Social Media Examiner and blogs like Copyblogger are increasingly the typical way to make money online, not exceptions.
Making Connections Critical
Perhaps most importantly Stelzner spends several chapters discussing the process he goes through in reaching out to people within your own industry, and leveraging their skills and talents to help you gain momentum in the online space.
Reaching out to others is one of the most often ignored yet critical aspects to success of any sort. No matter how good your content is, if people do not know about it you might as well not have created it. So I was pleased Stelzner devoted so much time to the concept of why connecting with others online is important, and how exactly you go about pursuing those connections when you are not already a big name in your industry.
Bottom line: You can buy half a dozen books that each will teach you some of the aspects of content creation, or you can buy this book and in a few hours have a clear road map to building a profitable audience online without gimmicks, just hard work that produces results.
Have you read the book? If not, you can learn even more about the book and download a free chapter by heading to the Launch website.










