Content audits are a useful way to keep track of your content, including blog posts, social media posts, events, and web pages, and report on how they impact audiences. They can be a good way to identify underperforming content and allow you to focus your efforts on content to convert.
A content audit is also a great planning resource and roadmap for future content creation for your school or college.
Identify your goals
When you start a content audit it helps to know what it is that you are trying to accomplish.
A content audit identifies content that engages your target audience and can include SEO and conversion rate information. Before you begin, consider what you are hoping to achieve, some examples:
Gather your content
Decide which content you are going to audit: blog posts, publications, key information pages (such as Admissions information), virtual tours or videos - just some examples.
Then collect the URLs of the pages you have chosen to audit.
Categorise your content
Once you know what content you will be auditing, you need to categorise these in a spreadsheet. Some categories you may want to include are content type, topic, author, publication date, format and target buyer persona.
Another important category is metrics, which can provide more information for your analysis later. Google Analytics can provide metrics of your choice - this may be page views, time spent on page or bounce rate.
It may start to look something like this:
Analyse your data
Now, it's time to look at your data to get a good measure of the state of your content. Here are some things to take note of:
Create a list of action points
You now know what to focus on based on the analysis and can go from there. Think about the posts to delete, update, re-write, or re-structure.
To organise these action items, add one last column to the spreadsheet — one that's close to the front so you can keep tabs on it. This column will let you know the action to take on a specific URL. Are you going to keep, update, delete, or re-write that blog post or page?
If you plan on ranking by priority or including a timeline for this audit, now would be the time to include that, as well. To make a priority timeline that fits in best with your content audit, think back to your goals and which items make sense to execute first.
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Ready to get started on your content audit?Download our free template spreadsheet which includes:
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