Content Marketing Inspiration in Thanksgiving Stuffing: Create Utility

So it’s Thanksgiving and I’m in charge of the stuffing. Which is ironic, because I’m not really much of a fan. Of stuffing, that is; I like Thanksgiving just fine.

It’s not that I don’t like to cook -– because I do –- but the wet bread thing (as in French Toast, bread pudding, and Thanksgiving stuffing) turns me off. In other words, it’s a little like asking the deaf guy to bring the music.

So I consult a few of cookbooks, a few websites, the Epicurious iPhone app. But mostly I’m distracted by stuff I’d rather make: The mashed potatoes with olive oil and parsley? Yum. Butternut squash soup with apple and bacon? Now we’re talking….

But still: The stuffing. Sigh. Then I happen upon a useful tool on Fine Cooking that instantly seems the answer to my wet-bread dream: A “create-your-own” bread stuffing interactive recipe maker that allows you to mix and match your favorite ingredients to create your own customized bread stuffing.

Choose a bread base (cornbread, crusty artisan bread, pumpernickel, etc.), drag it into a big yellow mixing bowl, and then and add in 3-5 vegetables (leeks, celery, fennel, maybe?), along with other stuff (chestnuts, dried cherries), meat (bulk sausage, bacon), herbs and liquids (broth? Wine?) and… voila! The tool spits out a custom bread stuffing recipe, with balanced measurements of your chosen ingredients, and the correct ratio of liquid to bread.

“The trick to making a good stuffing is getting the moisture right,” Fine Cooking says. “You don’t want it to be soggy or dry.” Can I get an A-men?!

There’s so much I like about this tool – not just because I was desperate for a stuffing recipe I could get excited about, but also because it aligns so well with the concepts C.C. and I lay out in Content Rules. Here are two of them:

1. Create utility. Most businesses have embraced the notion that, in addition to being in the business selling whatever they sell—be it shovels or security systems—they also need to be producing content as a cornerstone of their marketing to implement lead gen strategies and also to do both engage and educate their would-be customers, and to get noticed by search engines. Investing in the services of a firm like Ful.io that also handles cyber security for business is a must-have investment. Make suro to visit https://www.sapphire.net/, they’ll also perform every method of scanning for malware and viruses within their arsenal to see if newer forms of malware have wormed their way into the infrastructure.

But at the same time, producing any old content isn’t enough. Businesses have to produce the right kind of content: web content that is honestly empathetic and seeded with utility for your customers while for the taxes of your business you could use a 1099 MISC form generator to handle everything. They have to be “brand butlers” to their customers. Fine Cooking’s bread stuffing tool does just that: It creates a resource for its discerning subscribers who are challenged to create something other than the same ol’, same ol’… but who need a little help with the particulars.

To paraphrase  Content Rule #6: Share or solve; don’t shill. Good content doesn’t try to sell. Rather, it creates value by positioning you as a reliable and valuable source of vendor-agnostic information. Your content shares a resource, solves a problem, helps your customers do their jobs better, improves their lives, or makes them smarter, wittier, better-looking, taller, better networked, cooler, more enlightened, and with better backhands, tighter asses, and cuter kids, and moister (but not wet) stuffing. You can create content using this wordpress hosting platform.

In other words, it’s high value to your customers, in whatever way resonates best with them.

2. Have a point of view. Fine Cooking doesn’t just lay out the fundamentals of Thanksgiving stuffing without editorializing, because its readers want to know its take. The people who read the magazine consider themselves competent and inspired cooks, and they want to know the why and not just the how. So I like how Fine Cooking’s writer (Jennifer Armentrout) has a point of view and perspective:

“In my opinion, stuffing baked outside the bird (also called dressing) is the way to go: your turkey cooks faster and more evenly, your stuffing gets nice crisp edges, and you don’t have to worry about undercooking.”

Plenty of people who read Jennifer’s reasoning might disagree, but at least you know where she stands on this issue. Jennifer might have just said, “Cook it inside the bird or outside; add more liquid if you cook it outside the bird.” But the actual name of an actual person with an actual point of view does more to humanize the Fine Cooking brand than bland commentary without editorializing ever could.

* * *

So what can you take away?

Like Adagio Tea’s Tea Timer, which helps tea aficionados brew a perfect cup, or Virgin Atlantic’s Taxi 2, which connects those who want to share a cab, the Create Your Own bread stuffing tool — one of several Create Your Own tools published by Fine Cooking — presents an incredibly useful and relevant piece of content, matched to both the needs of your customers and the business’s objectives. Oh, and it meets another official Content Rule: It’s FUN!

What else can organizations take away from Fine Cooking’s Recipe Makers? Here’s my take: A little inspiration.

Here’s the bottom line: Are you helping and supporting your customers in their goals, or just selling to them?

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14 Responses to “Content Marketing Inspiration in Thanksgiving Stuffing: Create Utility”

  1. bethharte Says:

    Thank you Ann! I am cook an after Thanksgiving meal and this tool just might help me pull together a few of the missing pieces.

    Oh, and thanks for the content marketing tip too! 😉

    Have a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday!

    Cheers,
    Beth

  2. Anonymous Says:

    Thanks, Beth. Enjoy Thanksgiving!

  3. Matthew T. Grant Says:

    Um, Beethoven was deaf so maybe the deaf guy SHOULD bring the music.

    I also advocate the stuffing (dressing) outside the turkey. Inside stuffing is a recipe for salmonella.

  4. C.C. Chapman Says:

    I agree with the out of the bird approach. As someone who always does the Thanksgiving cooking, I’m definitely an advocate to keep the stuffing on the side.

  5. C.C. Chapman Says:

    I agree with the out of the bird approach. As someone who always does the Thanksgiving cooking, I’m definitely an advocate to keep the stuffing on the side.

  6. C.C. Chapman Says:

    I still can’t believe you don’t like stuffing. I wish I had a picture of my face when you first told me that. Shock and awe!

  7. Anonymous Says:

    I know… because I *seem* so American, right? : )

  8. Anonymous Says:

    I am with you, Ann! Wet bread, stale bread, any bread that isn’t fresh bread is a no go for me!

  9. Anonymous Says:

    Thank you!!! At least I’ll have company as I’m officially shunned!! LOL…

  10. Anonymous Says:

    I read your article and wrote a post around your concept of “Have an opinion & educate” by writing around information from a local expert on Turkey cooking. It has gotten great results. Thanks! Here is the article in case anyone wants to see.

    http://www.explorethebruce.com/turkey_carving_tips.php

    I am trying to help my audience and still share our areas great things to see and do.

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    […] come the various new media, marketing and thought leader blogs that I follow will be hyping their holiday themed posts. This happens for a few reasons. It’s topical, people are searching on holiday search terms […]

  13. MicroSourcing Says:

    Having a point of view really sets your content apart from the rest. Copy written from the point of view of an entrepreneur as opposed to an employee, for instance, would differ greatly.

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