Mashable’s simple strategies for branded content

For Eric Korsh, it all comes down to making smart people smile

Eric Korsh

Eric Korsh

In the lead up to Marketing Live – The Story Begins, we’ve been learning from the world’s leaders in content marketing and sharing their advice. In this interview conducted by Jerrid Grimm, co-founder of Pressboard, Mashable Studio‘s director Eric Korsh shares how Mashable makes brand partner content extremely shareable.

Grimm: What’s your background and what first attracted you to content?
Korsh: My background began in TV with commercials and music videos, then documentaries and episodic TV. The combined experience of creating TV ads, along with integrating brands into episodic TV and producing content just for the sake of a good story in a variety of formats has allowed for a perfect transition into Mashable Studios.

TimeMachineMashable Studios partnered with Ford to create the Tech Time Machine series

What’s the main reason brands come to Mashable to partner on branded content, instead of creating and distributing the content themselves?
With a dedicated audience of 45 million monthly visitors and a community of 28 million social followers, Mashable has proven to be experts at making content that people want to share at an extremely high rate. We are able to create that content specifically for a community who is incredibly influential and has a large audience across various social platforms. So our content spreads quickly and broadly, and we bring that expertise to a message that we create on behalf of a brand but within the context of the interests of our audience.

Mashable has built a reputation on having the ability to make content extremely shareable. Do you have any tips for creating content that readers are compelled to share?
I have two tips that are really easy to understand and really difficult to follow.

The first is for any evaluator to take their work hat off and put their consumer hat on, and simply evaluate the content or message as any consumer might – “would I share this?” That’s different from “would I read or watch this?” The difference is that this question forces you to dig into the mechanics of sharing, am I willing for people to know that I connected with this content, which helps govern the content itself.

The second tip is to recognize that virality is difficult to achieve. Content and ideas need to be supported through paid promotion. Without it, your investment is unlikely to succeed, regardless of the quality. Data for us is more about what types of emotional responses across different topics resonate most with the Mashable audience and their propensity to share content. This is different across those dimensions, but can be put to work for brands when they have the constitution to allow it.

Screen Shot 2016-08-15 at 10.45.13 AMMashable Studio’s Cars 2025 campaign with Goldman Sachs

Which of the following will have the most profound effect (either negative or positive) on native/branded content in the next 12 months: Facebook’s instant articles, the growth of ad blocking, the FTC’s guidelines on native content disclosure or something else?

The most profound effect will be dependent on brands’ ability to align their messaging across various media platforms. We’re still seeing significant differences between media-funded content creation and purpose-built ads/marketing from agencies. But some brands and agencies are willing and able to take on this hard work, and they are the ones that will have the most impact in the next twelve months.

In 140 characters or less, what is your favourite tip for creating great content?
Make smart people smile.

Add a comment

You must be to comment.

Brands Articles

30 Under 30 is back with a new name, new outlook

No more age limit! The New Establishment brings 30 Under 30 in a new direction, starting with media professionals.

Diageo’s ‘Crown on the House’ brings tasting home

After Johnnie Walker success, Crown Royal gets in-home mentorship

Survey says Starbucks has best holiday cup

Consumers take sides on another front of Canada's coffee war

KitchenAid embraces social for breast cancer campaign

Annual charitable campaign taps influencers and the social web for the first time

Heart & Stroke proclaims a big change

New campaign unveils first brand renovation in 60 years

Best Buy makes you feel like a kid again

The Union-built holiday campaign drops the product shots

Volkswagen bets on tech in crisis recovery

Execs want battery-powered cars, ride-sharing to 'fundamentally change' automaker

Simple strategies for analytics success

Heeding the 80-20 rule, metrics that matter and changing customer behaviors

Why IKEA is playing it up downstairs

Inside the retailer's Market Hall strategy to make more Canadians fans of its designs