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Why you need an evergreen content strategy

Evergreen content can drive traffic to your website and build awareness over a longer period of time. It’s the best way to gain the best return from an investment in content.

In a nutshell, evergreen content is that which does not date too quickly and retains relevance to an audience over time.

As a result, it will send traffic and leads to your site over a longer period.

In this post, which draws on our 100+ Content Marketing Tips report, I’ll look at what evergreen content is, how to produce it, and how it can deliver results over time.

What is evergreen content?

Evergreen content is that which is still interesting and relevant weeks, months or even years after its initial publish date. It doesn’t date like news, and the value is that it can deliver traffic, leads, social shares and can occupy valuable search positions for a prolonged period of time.

This is what we aim for with the majority of posts we produce a Econsultancy. Having previously experimented with more news related content, we have found that evergreen posts that deliver real value to readers are the ones that work for us.

The best examples are aligned with our audience as well as our paid content and other services.

This is a strategy which has worked well for us and has delivered growth in traffic and revenues over the last five years.

Examples of evergreen content

To show you what I mean by evergreen content, here are two examples from our blog.

The first example is a post we published about web dashboards on June 2, 2013. It did well at the time, with just over 5,000 pageviews on that day.

However, as you can see, after the initial spikes, the traffic to this post did not drop off altogether. We tweeted the post on July 1 from our main Twitter account, which created the second spike you see.

Since then, as the Google Analytics data shows, traffic to this post has been steady, with between 5,000 and 10,000 pageviews per week over the course of 12 months.

This article on Google Analytics dashboards is another such example.

It’s an article which is relevant to our audience, as well as being a useful time-saving resource. These factors have helped to give it that extra longevity.

Having achieved just over 15,000 pageviews in the first week after publishing, it has amassed more than 130,000 views over the last 12 months.

As we are targeting the kinds of digital marketing professionals, many with a keen interest in analytics, this has proved to be very valuable traffic for us. Indeed, we can see a number of transactions from visitors who arrived at this and similar content. 

This to me is the essence of evergreen content. While we could have published several shorter (and more disposable) articles in the the time spent creating and compiling the Google dashboards article, the effort was rewarded over a longer term.  

Evergreen content and search rankings

Evergreen content is also a great strategy for improving search rankings. A piece of news will often do well in Google while it’s topical, but will fade thereafter.

A more useful article will attract the kinds of links and engagement metrics that Google is looking for, and can perform well in the search engines over a longer period of time. It’s a virtuous circle too, as higher rankings means more visits, which leads to more links, and so on.  

The two examples I’ve used here both occupy some valuable search positions. The web dashboards article is the top organic result for ‘web dashboards’ and related terms, and is as prominent as many of the paid positions. 

Likewise, the analytics article is beaten only to Google’s own results. You can also see that we’ve repeated the trick with other related posts.

These are valuable search positions for us, they help to keep a flow of traffic coming into the site on these terms, and save us spending money on PPC to achieve the same positions.

What makes a piece of content evergreen?

There are a number of factors, and here are some of the most important:

The key ingredients of an evergreen content strategy

Evergreen formats and ideas

There is no magic formula for producing posts with a longer shelf life, but these are some of the formats that have worked well for us.

In summary

Evergreen content isn’t all about producing content for the sake of it, just to match content to goals etc. 

Instead, it’s about ensuring that the articles you spend time producing are useful to your audience, and that the work that goes into them pays off. 

If you produce some great content then it deserves an audience. So give it the best chance to succeed by making sure you get the basics right. 

If your article, video or infographic gathers traffic over time, garners plenty of social shares, stays in the SERPs long term, and the engagement metrics look good, then you’ve produced something that was worthwhile. 

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