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A Manifesto for Creating Content That Actually Matters

by David Meyer

Last month, we discussed the merits of establishing brand trust – and the perils of failing at this endeavor.

So this month, I’m offering you another honest assessment. Trust me? Here goes.

Your customers are drowning in content.

Every day, they’re bombarded with thousands of posts, emails, and ads. Most blend together into a forgettable digital hum. Why? Because most of it lacks substance.

While marketers obsess over aesthetics and algorithms, customers are starving for value. They don’t need more content – they need better content. Content that solves problems. Content that respects their intelligence. Content that feels human.

Here are five ways to deliver authentic and meaningful content when everyone else is just making noise.

Stop creating. Start solving.

Most content begins with the wrong question: “What should we post this week?”
Instead, ask: “What problems are our customers facing today?”

Every blog, podcast, or social post should directly address a specific customer challenge. Before publishing anything, run it through this three-part filter:

- Does it solve a real problem?
- Does it provide actionable information?
- Would someone pay for this insight?

If you’re not creating solution-centered content, you’re just contributing to the noise.

Replace generic with specific.

Vague advice is worthless advice.

“Improve your social media presence” offers nothing. “Increase Instagram engagement by asking these five specific questions in your Stories” gives someone a path forward.

The more specific your content:

- The more it demonstrates genuine expertise
- The more it shows you understand customer challenges
- The more it builds credibility in your solutions

Get granular. Share exact processes, templates, and frameworks that you use with your best clients.

Eliminate the corporate voice.

Your brand doesn’t have opinions. Your people do.

Stop hiding behind the safety of corporate language. Let real humans with real perspectives share their expertise. The “official company stance” isn’t trustworthy – it’s sanitized.

Encourage team members to:

- Write in first person (“I believe...” not “We believe...”)
- Share personal experiences with challenges and solutions
- Admit what they’re still figuring out
- Take positions on industry debates

Customers trust individuals long before they trust brands.

Document, don’t create.

The most valuable content often already exists within your company.

Record the client call where you solved a difficult problem. Share the internal email where your team debated an industry trend. Turn the last three customer questions into detailed guides.

This approach:
- Captures genuine expertise in action
- Creates content grounded in real customer needs
- Shows rather than tells your capabilities

Your best marketing happens when you’re not “marketing” at all.

Substance is the ultimate differentiator.

In a world where anyone can generate slick content with AI tools, substance becomes your superpower.

The companies winning trust today aren’t focused on looking good. They’re focused on being good – at understanding customer problems, delivering specific solutions, and communicating with clarity and depth.

Next month, I’ll break down how to structure your entire customer journey around trust signals – from first click to final invoice. We’ll explore how every touchpoint can either build or erode belief in your brand.

Because in 2025, the brands with substance are the only ones that will get ahead.

Are you creating content that looks professional, or content that actually helps?

David Meyer is the Chief Marketing Officer at Spoke Marketing. Spoke Marketing (www.spokemarketing.com) provides fully-integrated marketing and sales programs that define and activate the customer buyer journey.

Submitted 3 days ago
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