Your content strategy can take on many forms. Writing long-form content is a tactic that certain industries depend on.
What is long-form content and does it work? At Bramework our business is to know blogging and what works best. We believe that there are many strategies that will help grow you or your agency and they all surround content.
We’re going to take a deep dive into writing longer content, the power of extra words and how to optimize this for lead conversion. If you are looking at taking a different approach to your content, keep reading.
Long-Form Content and it’s Benefits
Let’s first find out what long-form content is and how it can benefit us.
According to core dna, long-form content is between a short story (under 7,500 words) and a novelette (under 17,500 words) in length. In the content marketing world for your website, this is any content that is over 2,000 words. There are many benefits to writing longer articles.
Check out this word count chart detailing the correlation for ranking in Google from HubSpot:
Here are some benefits of writing long-form content:
- It improve the search engine rankings for your content or blog
- It increases the reader to engage and also helps time on page for SEO
- It increases the engagement and more social shares
- It builds authority for your brand or agency
- It gives you the ability to link out more which creates more partnerships and referral relationships
- It gives you the ability to provide more educational content to your audience which builds trust
- It offers more backlink opportunities to build trust in the search engines
- It leaves more room for engaging CTAs, which lead to more conversions
- It gives you the ability to create more repurposed content for future posts
- It encourages more conversations and commentary on your blog
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Long-form Content Examples
There are many types of long-form content that can provide various benefits. It’s important that you know all the different types so you can choose the best one that suits your industry.
As an agency owner or a freelancer, these types of long-form content take time and dedication to complete. Here are some examples of long-form content that may benefit you:
- Case study – a professional write up of a happy client, showcasing the struggle and solution your brand provided.
- White paper – a longform blog article that serves an in-depth resource or solution.
- E-Book – a gated downloadable piece of content that typically solves a long-term problem or is a step-by-step guide.
- Definitive guide – a downloadable resource for a tutorial or walkthrough to a solution.
- Annual year in review – a blog article or newsletter that you post annually, showcasing your brand’s growth and challenges.
- Roundups and reviews – lists of referral partners or resources you use and can review for your audience.
- Brochures or datasheets – these can come in the form of slide decks, one-pagers or infographics, to help your audience understand your services or products.
The important question to take away from this list is this: which one of these pieces of long-form content will generate the most leads for my brand?
We are going to go through each long-form content example and show you what they are along with how you can use them to better your brand. There are some tips and tricks we’ve learned that may help you as well.
Here we go!
Case Study
Case studies are a great style of long-form content that can really drive the needle.
It’s important to understand what to include in your case study, how to present it and the format to follow in order to increase organic reach. But first, let’s define it.
A case study is a research method involving an up-close, in-depth, and detailed examination of a particular case or customer. The goal is to show the problem and solution in the study.
A case study is an excellent way to showcase your work with a “proof is in the pudding” strategy. There is nothing quite like showing the result of your work from a successful partnership. The length of a case study can be from 500-1,500 words. Our advice would be to tell the story that works for both you and your case study participant.
HubSpot put together a few great posts on their own case studies including how the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame grew their audience by 81%.
Here’s a great example of a fun case study by VennGage:
Creating even one case study can increase your lead conversion by 12-15%, if it’s done correctly.
As promised, we have put together the flow and format of a case study for you to follow easily. Use any tool you’d like to create a visually stunning case study, just be sure it’s branded and personalized. Here’s a quick sequence to follow when crafting the perfect case study:
- The Customer Bio: A short description of the customer and their company.
- The Struggle: The customer and their company struggle that requires your help.
- The Attempt: The steps the customer took to solve the problem without success.
- The Connection: The connection between yourself and the company.
- The Solution: The product or service you will integrate to solve their problem.
- The Quote: A branded or personalized quote from the company on how the solution you provided helped them.
- The Results: Detail how your product or service helped the company and how your partnership still grows with the company.
PRO TIP: Use the Bramework app when creating your case study to find out the top questions people are asking about case studies.
White Paper
A white paper is an in-depth report about a topic and the issues around it. Its purpose is to educate readers and help them to understand and solve a problem. It serves as an example of a long-form piece of content that brings value to your audience.
Typically, the purpose of a white paper is to influence the decision-making processes of current and prospective customers by offering them both sides of the equation, unbiased.
Step 1: Do your research! Your first step when creating a white paper would be to check out the Bramework blog builder and ask the top questions of what people would like to know. You can also use the keyword analyzer to see how it ranks in the search engines, along with volume and competitive rank.
Step 2: Format properly. You can use a tool like the Bramework blog builder to create a document flow. You will want to highlight both sides of the problem with proper citations, references and historical data. Always have a beginning, middle and end. Conclude with both sides of the story!
Step 3: Share it! Be sure to edit it properly and when it’s time to share, do it with pride. You’ve produced a beautiful piece of long-form content, this should be displayed everywhere your brand lives.
Here is a sample of a white paper from Google that highlights Google Cloud Platform security. Notice how it has topics and subtopic headers outlined evenly, no images and internal/external links embedded. Google knows best!
E-Book
Everyone loves a good ebook! We a big fans of ebooks and all the value it brings your audience here at Bramework!
An ebook is a piece of long-form content presented in a format that allows it to be read on a computer or handheld device. The purpose of an ebook can range from educational content like tutorials to fan fiction. It is a great opportunity to incorporate gated content like a CTA in your blog.
An ebook is considered a larger project and may take up to a month to complete. You’ll want to include relevant facts, tools and tutorials so the reader really gets answers.
Here is the Bramework ebook we created just for you!
Here are a few tips on writing your ebook that can help speed up the process:
- Use ebook tools to help like Canva, Bramework Blog Builder or Google Drive
- Format the ebook with a table of contents
- Draft the ebook like a blog
- Offer insightful, educational and non-bias advice in the ebook
- Include a CTA (call to action)
- Link to influencers and partners
- Get a second pair of eyes on your ebook as you edit
- Follow up after it’s downloaded
- Track the data
- Repeat quarterly if you can
Definitive Guide
You’ve heard of the definitive guides out there…they are supposed to be the all-encompassing guide to everything needed to learn that one topic.
It’s important to know your sources when you are creating a definitive guide. You must be the expert on that topic when creating these long-form pieces of content.
Some rules to writing a definitive guide are:
- Have a purpose
- Choose your keywords
- Check the competition
- Target your audience
- Include statistics like case studies and white papers
- Create actionable links and CTAs
- Format and create visual graphics
- Share on your social platforms and website
Here is a great example of an ultimate guide brought to you by the team at Bramework: