{"id":5288,"date":"2014-07-30T09:17:38","date_gmt":"2014-07-30T13:17:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/meetcontent.com\/?p=5288"},"modified":"2017-04-20T00:27:35","modified_gmt":"2017-04-20T04:27:35","slug":"planning-content-goals-web-stakeholder-interviews","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/meetcontent.com\/blog\/planning-content-goals-web-stakeholder-interviews\/","title":{"rendered":"Planning Content Goals With Web Stakeholder Interviews"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Do you know the purpose of your web content? Let\u2019s buddy up with content stakeholders and set some goals.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

In an earlier post, we talked about using focus groups<\/a> to better understand your web users’ needs. But external web users are not the only type of users we need to understand in order to create valuable and purposeful content.<\/p>\n

To create web content that works, we must also understand our internal web content stakeholders. These are all the people planning for, creating, curating, editing, approving, publishing and maintaining content, among other tasks. These are the subject matter experts who can answer the question, "What purpose does our content serve? Why is it here?"<\/p>\n

Indeed, these content stakeholders \u2014 whether department heads or staff assistants \u2014 are users too, using the website to support their department goals. As web content professionals, we should plan for web content that supports external users’ needs as well as institutional and internal stakeholder goals \u2014 this is the recipe for successful content.<\/p>\n

To create purposeful content that meets web stakeholders\u2019 goals, we need to understand how content supports their work. So let’s ask them!<\/p>\n

The Need for Goal-Driven Content<\/h2>\n

A successful content strategy relies on every page of your website having a clear purpose and defined goals. No clear purpose means no clear value \u2014 and no way to measure success<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

Content goals are often treated as a given: "The purpose of our content is to communicate." Okay, sounds good. But trying to relate these broad objectives to specific results or making informed decisions when planning for content is not easy.<\/p>\n

Among other things, content goals should:<\/p>\n