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Quad Digital is a content marketing agency. We blend creative, SEO, social and PR to build profitable audiences for brands.
Our content strategies drive engagement and nurture clients' customer relationships from prospect to sale, and on to return purchase.

Quad Digital is a content marketing agency. We blend creative, SEO, social and PR to build profitable audiences for brands.Our content strategies drive engagement and nurture clients' customer relationships from prospect to sale, and on to return purchase.

Profile photo of Yigal Chazan

by Yigal Chazan

A winning formula for company blogs

October 23, 2014 in Blogging , Content , Content Creation

They have the potential to be powerful marketing weapons – retaining customers, acquiring new ones, increasing brand recognition and providing strong material for PR campaigns. So why do so many company blogs struggle to deliver?

While there’s no definitive answer, we at Quad have a pretty good idea of what’s going wrong. At the heart of the problem is a fundamental misconception of what a blog is for. As a journalist, I know the importance of writing for an audience. If you don’t produce stories they want to read, they’ll go elsewhere. And if their interest and tastes change, you have to adapt to cater for them. Read the rest of this entry →

Our mission to remove confusion from content marketing (or how to sober up an astronaut)

July 2, 2014 in Blogging , Content Creation , Content Marketing , Quad

Recently we’ve discussed at some length the confusion that exists around content marketing and what exactly it means. We certainly know what it means to us. I’ve blogged about this before, just as I’ve also blogged about the many companies out there peddling other content marketing solutions and given some advice on how to pick one, which I hope has been useful. Read the rest of this entry →

Why brand strategy drives content marketing

April 22, 2014 in Blogging

Recently we’ve noticed just how ingrained a bottom up strategy led by a desire to drive SEO signals seems to run. Overcoming this is one of the biggest challenges brands face. Many are struggling to come to terms with the fact that digital now is not just a sales channel but a place where brand awareness and engagement can take place to great effect.

Above the line and brand marketers have long known the importance of awareness and engagement. However, they’ve rarely been able to offer the depth of engagement that digital offers; its combination of owned media (websites and social media) with strong awareness campaigns (earned media) is the essence of content marketing and what’s more a consumer can stay in the same place to make a purchase, truly end to end. However many marketers and agencies in this space are only interested in the sale and being in the right place at the right time. That’s fine and works, but how do you grow beyond this?

Until very recently, the need to address search optimization has prevented direct response digital marketers from thinking about real human customers in any real depth. What’s more there’s been a failure to focus their campaigns on really engaging with the people who will buy their products and services, i.e. who they really should be speaking to.

Read the rest of this entry →

Promotion and using influencers to build your audience; the ASA speaks

March 19, 2014 in Blogging , Content , Content Marketing , Editor's Picks , Quad

A key aspect of the work we do at Quad is driving awareness of our clients’ content and brands. After all, we can publish the best content in the world on their websites and promote it on their social but that’s often seen by just a small section of the potential audience.

That’s where our digital communication and promotion arm comes into play. Quad’s team-within-a-team is dedicated to helping our stories reach as wide an audience as possible, so we can engage more people and bring them to our clients’ owned media. Think of them as a mad hybrid of media buyer, planner, PR person and promotional expert working on the myriad digital platforms that exist.

But that’s all marketing speak.

Read the rest of this entry →

Profile photo of Toby Bourne

by Toby Bourne

Five questions that say yes to content marketing

March 18, 2014 in Blogging , Content , SEO

I’ve been taking a good look at Eric Enge’s pieces on Search Engine Watch recently. They make it absolutely clear why content marketing is such a compelling proposition for brands and why older link building practices have become a genuine liability.

Matt Cutts, Google’s head of webspam and the public face of its search quality team – the SEO police if you like – said this recently when asked by Enge what the best link building strategy was:

Make a fantastic website that people love and tell their friends about and link to and want to experience. As a result, your website starts to become stronger and stronger in the rankings.”

The same is true of all your online content.

Read the rest of this entry →

Three content marketing lessons from the 2014 Super Bowl

February 4, 2014 in Blogging , Content , Video

It says a lot about the power of content marketing that the TV spots that run during the Super Bowl are just as popular, and sometimes more popular (especially in the UK) than the game itself. The stakes are high. Brands only get a small amount of time to convey a message about their product. Quality content is paramount.

Hulu, an American-based subscription service, not only hosted the Super Bowl ads but provided a platform for Americans to vote on their favourites. What can the three most popular ads teach us about quality content?

Budweiser Puppy Love

Budweiser – puppy love and the power of cute

They tell actors to never work with children or animals for a reason. But is it possible for businesses to harness the power of cute? On the outside, if someone told you they were going to make a Budweiser advert with a puppy in it, you might roll your eyes and think that it’s a hokey, maybe even cringe-worthy connection. Puppies and beer put together could spell a potential lawsuit. But what this ad proves is that, if done well, even beer companies can work with the cute factor to create something that appeals to wider audiences.

Read the rest of this entry →

Optimising webspace and why you should care about bloggers

January 29, 2014 in Blogging , Content Marketing , PR

In our second post on optimising webspace , we’ll explore earned media and how third party publishers, or bloggers, are a valuable element that can be an aid to your marketing campaign. Before digital marketing , there were two ways to get your brand seen – advertising and PR. The online revolution had given us a third; bloggers. Ignore them at your peril.

Often amateur  – at least at the outset – these writers, critics and reviewers are making careers from what were once hobby blogs. Whether using wit, authority, well-crafted prose or all three, many bloggers have grown their readership to such a level that brands and advertisers having to sit up and take notice. (Click the image below for the full infographic).

From humble beginnings, Peter Robinson’s very funny Popjustice has founded a record label, released branded compilations, held branded tours and broken pop news stories. Charlie Lynne’s film blog Ultra Culture has been hailed the UK’s foremost film blog by reviews aggregator Rotten Tomatoes and hosted the national premiere of Spring Breakers. And Jack Monroe, the budget food blogger behind recipe site A Girl Called Jack has earned worldwide media interest and become the face of Sainsbury’s new ad campaign. How’s that for the power of blogging?

When we worked with specialist travel operator Thompson Lakes and Mountains, we saw an opportunity to feed content to not one but two blog audiences. By creating a guide to the company’s most popular destinations inspired by the maps often found in fantasy novels, we reached travel bloggers and the fans of dramas such as The Hobbit and Game of Thrones. In doing this, we spread word of Thompson Lakes and Mountains across multiple channels.

Next in series on optimising webspace, we’ll discuss the importance of paid media and what piece they are in the overall puzzle and be sure to check out our previous blog in this series on  brand blogging .  f you’d like to discuss with us how you can expand your reach into earned media, get in touch. Talk to Quad

Optimising webspace, the benefits of brand blogging

January 21, 2014 in Blogging , Content , Content Marketing , Quad

We talk a lot about optimising webspace . It’s the practice of going beyond a brand’s site or blog to create an overarching online marketing presence. Any approach that doesn’t encompass every element, from e-commerce to social media, will create an incomplete, confused or broken machine that isn’t ready to take on a well-rounded marketing strategy.

In this series of articles, we’ll break down different parts of webspace, explaining what they mean and why they are important.

Quad Digital Webspace

Owned media has many different aspects and may seem daunting. But it’s also the most accessible and easiest means by which connect to your audience. At the centre of this is your brand’s blog. So what are the benefits of brand blogging?

Why have a blog?

Every client is different. They have different brands, different products, different attitudes and different approaches but most want the same thing: to get their brand known. When they ask if they really need a blog, the answer varies depending on what they are hoping to achieve.

However, a blog can be the heart of a brand’s owned media. It’s the motor that keeps it running. It provides the content that drives individuals back to your website. How can you get involved with social networks, your email databases and other channels without having something to say? For most companies, your website and blog exist to tell the world what you’re about and why they should care. Your site does it on a basic level, but your blog lets you go off on tangents.

What do I blog about?

It’s at this point that some start to worry about what they should blog about especially when, for best SEO results and more, it’s advised you blog at least once a week. While understandable, this anxiety is often misplaced – you’re already an expert in your field so talk about what you do. After all, that’s what your customers are most likely to be interested in.

McDonalds Canada is a great example of this, as can be seen in the fast food giant’s behind-the-scenes feature showing how burgers are photographed, hosted on . By being completely transparent about the dark art of food styling, the brand has taken something it knows intimately and created positive, engaging content that keeps its consumers interested and informed. The video has earned more than 9.5 million views.

When we worked with Formula Wine, we knew we could take their expertise and put a fresh spin on it. Proving that wine can be just as enjoyable an ingredient as it is something to be drunk on its own, we worked with some of the best bars in London to showcase a selection wine-based cocktails, creating recipe cards people could follow at home.

This is just one example of how we’ve used a brand’s existing know-how and worked with others to create useful content . Updating your blog once a week may seem daunting, but you already have the knowledge and expertise to share with your customers. We’re here help bring it out. Talk to Quad on or email us at .

Useful content drives sharing

January 16, 2014 in Blogging , Content Creation , Content Marketing , Infographics

When our clients commission us to create content for them, our first goal is to create something that provides value to the viewer. Last year, IBM demonstrated this idea by creating adverts that doubled as benches in urban areas .

The best approach in content marketing is one that keeps in mind not only the objectives of the brand who wants potential customers to know about them, but also one that takes the viewer into consideration. Sometimes companies are so concerned with ‘viral’ content that they forget what makes content go viral in the first place.

A by Chadwick Martin Bailey found that 72% of the people they polled shared content because they found it interesting or entertaining. But does it really take a genius to sort out that thought-provoking or entertaining (and sometimes both) content motivates people to share? The key then is combining the two.

What’s so successful about IBM’s approach is that they are not only changing the typical interaction that happens between an advert and its viewer, but they’re also providing something of value to the viewer. Sure, it’s just a bench. But it’s enough that it gets individuals interacting with it.

That’s the approach that Quad consistently takes with content. We seek to combine entertaining with thought-provoking or usefulness to create content with value. During our campaign with PropertyWide, we used their expertise to create an engaging infographic that compared the average rent prices in cities across the UK:

Both The Independent and Economic Voice, among many other publishers, found the content useful for their audiences, and the information appealed to multiple audiences from finance blogs like Savvy Scott to student publications like TopUniverse.com.

Experience has taught us that the best rule for creating content that effectively spreads your brand message is to understand what makes people share. Highly effective content marketing involves making either thought-provoking or entertaining content. And if you can combine both, you have the best both worlds.

We’re a London based content marketing agency that can help you optimise your webspace . If you’re interested, get in touch !

Rest in peace, Nelson Mandela

December 6, 2013 in Blogging

In lieu of our normal Best of the Internet post, today we commemorate the passing of a great politician, influential human rights activist and inspirational human being. Rest in peace, Nelson Mandela (1918-2013).

 

Nelson Mandela