peg fitzpatrick - how to curate content
Content is an essential part of your social media marketing plan. As a social media marketer, you need to both create original content and curate content from other sources.
Time spent reading niche-related blog articles is important to keep up with industry news. Being a part of the conversation by sharing content with thoughtful comments and questions will help your brand be a sought-after source of knowledge as well. Still, feeding the content monster can take over if you let it.
To help your content curation become less of a chore, let’s look at nine tactics you can use to maintain control and keep fresh.
“Feeding the content monster can take over if you let it.”
Peg Fitzpatrick, Social Media Strategist

1. Find Your Brand

Knowing what to share is the first step in making sure your content is on point. The key aspects of your brand’s content creation should naturally extend to other content that you share to build your content platform.
Your curated content and your originally created content should have the same tone, big ideas and overall fit. Your content platform’s output of original posts, curated content, graphics, Tweets and comments all flow together into what the public sees and judges you on. Yes, it’s important!

2. Stay on Target

I like to call this target the “brand seeds.” Find the three seeds that make up the heart of your social content , and stick to them. For example, if I were working with Sprout Social, my three seeds might be social media, social media management and social customer service.
I would find content that fit these three seeds and add in other content that was related and would be of interest to my followers. Sticking to a narrow focus helps build your area of expertise  and knowledge base.

3. Be Organized

Creating systems for your social media consumption is important. If you don’t have something in place for reading content and finding great content, you’ll waste a lot of time. I like to use Feedly to create folders for the different types of content I create. For each folder, I add RSS feeds to fill the needs of different accounts and sometimes clients.

Sources to Find Content 

  • Feedly: Add RSS feeds into folders for different accounts or topics.
  • Alltop: Create a MyAlltop page to see the blogs that I pull in to review when I curate from this platform. These are some of my go-to sources.
  • Pinterest: This never lets me down for great content when I search.
  • BuzzSumo: You can customize alerts in BuzzSumo by keyword, link, author and domain. I get an email for these each morning and check through on the website occasionally.
buzzsumo curate content screenshot

4. Share Over Time

A rookie mistake is sharing all your content at once  in a huge bunch and then going long stretches without anything else. Don’t do this. Instead, create a steady stream of content that people won’t be overwhelmed with when they are live on social media.
There are many ways to share your content within Sprout on a schedule that you create:
  • Set up your Queue to meet your needs. Mine is set to publish four times a day so that I don’t have to think about an exact schedule. This makes it easy to add posts with one click to the Queue.
  • Use the Compose box to precisely schedule posts at a certain time.
  • Use the Chrome extension to add to your Queue or schedule at a certain time.
sprouts social queue settings screenshot

5. Monitor Your Success

Important social media metrics will be based on your overall social media marketing strategy. This is a bigger conversation that you should have worked into your plan, but the basics are:
  • Growth in follower count
  • Number of +1s, Likes or shares
  • Customer engagement with content
If you notice these things taking a dive, it’s time to rethink your content strategy. Slow and steady may win the race in some industries, but smart marketers are quick and agile. 

6. Cut What Isn’t Working

Sometimes you hit a sweet spot with your content, and everyone loves it! Then the algorithms change. Again.
If your former best type of content is falling flat, it’s time to remove it from the repertoire. Use your metrics to see what’s working, and do more of that. This is common-sense advice that people fail to implement every day.

7. Ask What People Want

In one of my most difficult-to-manage social media communities (read: low-tech industry with many lurkers), I asked what type of content they liked best and wanted to see on the Facebook Page. It was great to get feedback that reinforced what I was already doing and gave me some ideas for future content.
Now I feel more confident that I’m sharing the content they love, and my Page is doing better than ever. I think many communities want to dictate what they want to share, when the goal should be to give people what they want.

8. Keep Your Sources Fresh

I keep my RSS feeds in Sprout and Feedly full of great blogs to read, but if I find myself skipping over blog articles in my feeds, I reassess whether I want to have them in my daily content to skim and read. Cutting them out here means more efficient curating later.
Extra resource: How to Use RSS Feeds in Sprout

9. Maximize Your Content

Be there when you share your content. You are the X factor in your social media content curation.  Managing the brand online with comments, questions and conversation is what ultimately draws people to your content over and over again. The best-laid social media strategy in the world will fail without people to manage the social media listening and interaction.
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