For most businesses, holidays bring in revenue – and a lot of it. In the United States, total retail spend during the 2021 holiday season was $1.221 trillion, according to Insider Intelligence.
Aside from holidays, seasonality influences select industries – where specific times of the year are more popular than others. The fitness, healthcare and ecommerce spaces are just a few industries with seasons.
If you work in an industry where seasonality is a big factor, then your brand needs to participate. Otherwise, you could be losing out on significant revenue opportunities.
In this article, you’ll learn why seasonal content is important and get tips to help plan your seasonal content strategy for the year.
Seasonal content focuses on topics, trends and events that happen at the same time of year. This type of content should embody the lifestyle of your brand and the industry you’re in.
For example, suppose you’re a health insurance provider. In that case, it’s essential to present helpful content during the annual enrollment period (AEP) as it’s the time of year when an individual already enrolled in a program can change their plan, or someone turning 65 can pick a plan.
Another example is ecommerce. Marketers can develop content for plenty of holidays, such as Amazon Prime Day, Labor Day, Black Friday, and so on.
If your industry has seasons, this can help you plan your content calendar ahead and give you time to develop and implement. Doing so helps your seasonal content to get indexed in search engines and shared in newsletters. You can also create promotions around these times of year.
It’s important to understand the difference between evergreen content and seasonal content.
Evergreen content is more of a long-term play and is mostly always useful, no matter what time of year. One evergreen topic could be “What you should know about peanut allergies.” It does not matter what time of year you would promote that, as people who suffer from peanut allergies suffer all year round.
A more seasonal content topic could be “What you should know about the flu in 2022,” where you can speak about the flu season in that particular year, symptoms and any other important information about a specific strain of the flu.
Seasonal content is more of an immediate need that can go viral, or create quick engagement within social media, while evergreen helps for the long game. Both can be updated, which we will talk about later.
When seasonal content is done properly, it can attract new people to your brand, increase engagement and push them into your workflows or sales cycle.
Seasonal content shows that your brand is also relevant and staying current. Not having seasonal content, especially when your industry can leverage it, might imply your brand is stale or irrelevant.
There are many benefits to having seasonal content as a part of your overall marketing strategy, including:
Seasonal content also comes with some challenges:
Here are a few tips to determine seasonal content topics to work on.
You can also take advantage of existing seasonal content pieces. While it's not evergreen, seasonal content on an indexed older page can easily be updated and reused to give your brand a lift.
Here are some tips:
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