Why does the "value first, sale second" mindset work?
Think about it: what do you do before buying something? You search Google, watch a YouTube video, read someone else's experience. Being right in the middle of that research process is a far stronger position than running an ad. Because at that moment, someone who already knows and trusts you is making the decision.
What does content marketing look like in practice?
- Blog posts and articles — content like '5 tax details to know before invoicing' that delivers direct value to the reader
- Videos and short clips — content showing use cases, not just product features
- Email newsletter — a regular, low-pressure communication channel with your customer
- Guides and templates — downloadable materials with concrete usefulness (e.g. 'Google Ads budget planning template')
- Social media content — thought-provoking, shareable short notes; not direct sales
- Q&A pages like this knowledge base — content that meets customers during their research phase
What is the difference between content marketing and advertising?
Advertising stops when you stop paying. When the ad budget runs out, so does the traffic. Content, on the other hand, accumulates over time: a blog post you wrote a year ago might still be bringing in visitors today. In the short term, ads produce faster results; in the long term, content becomes a more durable and lower-cost source of customers. The two are not rivals — they complement each other.
How does it connect to SEO?
Content marketing and SEO are nearly inseparable. The path to appearing at the top of Google search results runs through genuinely useful content that answers people's questions. When a potential customer searches 'how to choose an accounting program,' a blog post that honestly answers that question puts you right in front of them — without paid advertising.
Where should you start as a small business?
- List the 5 questions your customers ask most often — these are your first content topics
- Answer each question honestly and in plain language; do not try to sell
- Publish these on your website and share them on social media
- Be consistent: two quality pieces per month beat ten weak ones per week
- Track which content drives traffic with GA4; do more of what works
