As healthcare marketing begins to embrace content marketing and social media, one of the biggest challenges is letting go of the impression that your website is at the center of the web. In preparing a post on how healthcare marketers measure success of content marketing, a pattern emerged, where success was being measured by how many hits the content brought back to the website. While this is ultimately where you’d like to get your content seen, it’s a misplaced goal and you can be even more effective if you shift your perspective.
[caption id="" align="alignleft" width="284" caption="The Ptolemaic Web"]
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Back in the second century Ptolemy, published authoritative works that put the earth in the center of the universe, with everything else revolving around earth in perfect concentric circles. Applying the perspective that your site is at the center of the web, you get a Ptolemaic Web similar to the one illustrated here. In a Ptolemaic view of the web, the focus is on your site and doing whatever it takes to get the traffic there. Micro sites get developed to focus on special events or topics, a premium is placed on understanding what your competition’s site is presenting and making sure your site is leading in capability and “cool” factor, and you’re always looking for ways to get industry press or news sites to link back to your website.
The weakness in the Ptolemaic Web, is it’s distance from the user. Yes you’ve built great interactivity into your site – evaluation programs, self assessments, maybe even a PHR interface, and once you have the user registered, you are pretty sure you’ve got them. But here’s the challenge – how do users find your content? SEO? SEM? Should I post on Facebook, tweet on twitter? Drop a video on YouTube, Vimeo?
As it turns out, on the 4ooth anniversary of his telescope, Galileo may have the answer. He confirmed the earth wasn’t the center of the universe.
That’s right – the earth isn’t at the center, and the order of things isn’t so neat that everything is orbiting in perfect circles – things that are close one day may be far away on another. So how does this apply to content marketing and social media?
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="The Galilean Web"]
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Your site, is not at the the center.
Content marketing success is a measure of the value of the content (and by extension your brand), the goal is to make your site a destination, not drive click-throughs.
I know it’s subtle, but a visual of the Galilean Web may help. In the Galilean Web, each user represents a separate and unique “web solar system”, with their launch point being at the center. Users may have multiple “web solar systems” for each activity on the web – like searching for related health information. In the example here, search is at the center, with other relevant destinations like blogs, Facebook, YouTube, and networking sites serving as resources. Social media and communication tools are on a separate orbit, identifying other potential destinations.
Where’s your site? It’s that dot in the corner. You’re not in their system – they’re searching for information and content and your site isn’t showing up because there is competing content in multiple locations on the web, and these aggregation sites are more relevant to users and search engines.
So how do you get into this user’s web solar system?
Content.
Place your content where you know your users are. Not just in one place – get it out there!
Context.
Make it relevant, assure its quality, and update it frequently, and they will reward you by becoming frequent consumers of your content – shifting their social media orbit to be closer to your site. Over time, they may even make your site a destination in their solar system. Shift your focus from counting click-throughs to observing how the content is consumed. Adjust what you’re publishing based on the feedback you’re getting. You are going to benefit by being seen as a valuable contributor to their information needs.
It’s important to note, they may never visit your site – but it doesn’t matter if they’ve become your brand advocate and choose to get their healthcare services from you because of your content.
At the end of the day, isn’t that your objective?

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