A couple of weeks ago, we shared results from the
2012 Digital Content Marketing Survey research report from Brandpoint and CMI.
Brody Dorland asked for a breakdown of how agencies and brands differ when it comes to outsourcing. To address this great question, we broke down the survey questions and compared the responses from agencies to those from brands. Here’s what we found.
Agencies are using a greater variety of tactics
Agencies have a higher rate of adoption for almost all content marketing tactics (except eNewsletters and press releases). Some notable differences:
97% of agencies use social content compared to 88% of brands.
87% of agencies use blogging compared to 69% of brands.
79% of agencies use video compared to 68% of brands.
58% of agencies use images/infographics compared to 48% of brands.
53% of agencies use digital white papers/eBooks compared to 42% of brands.
Both groups rate content marketing effectiveness similarly
For the most part, agencies and brands agree on how effective content marketing tactics are. Two differences:
62% of agencies see good results from blogging vs. 48% of brands.
41% of brands see good results from eNewsletters vs. 29% of agencies.
Agencies are planning to increase their rate of outsourcing
Currently, brands are more likely to outsource all content types except for mobile and advertorials.
However, the gap between the rate at which agencies and brands outsource is closing. Whereas 64% of agencies and 71% of brands are currently outsourcing at least one content type, 70% of agencies and 71% of brands are planning to outsource at least one content type in the next 12 months.
Agencies and brands value similar attributes of content providers
For the most part, brands and agencies favor the same attributes when evaluating the services of a content provider. Yet, brands consider professional-level writing to be a more important attribute than agencies do (52% vs 44%). Brands also place greater value on hiring someone whose personality fits within the organization’s culture (28% vs. 15%).
Which of these results do you find most interesting?
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