| Great content gets you like 95% of the way File this away next to "A good product is 95% of marketing" and other patently untrue things engineers like to believe. Quality content and linkable content, for example, are not coextensive sets. You could write the world's best guide ever to cross-stitching school uniforms (did I just make that up?) and you'd get less links than DHH gets for not cursing during a Rails keynote. If you're doing SEO and you haven't figured out that linking behavior is very different in different audiences, I'm as worried for your future as I would be for a salesman who was doing high-touch enterprise software sales for rooms full of third graders. There are also easy ways to shoot your great content foot off, and I really wish I could pull in examples from clients here. Hypothetical example: suppose a YC-style company is founded by a noted industry expert who has a great personal brand. They produce a ten-page guide to a particular new technology their startup uses. The guide is, far and away, the best quickstart guide on the Internet with regards to that technology. Q: Their startup benefits from this a) a lot, b) a little, c) virtually not at all? A: I don't know. Where did you post it? Q2: Come again? A: Like, physically, on which page does that best-in-class guide exist? Q3: Oh, our Posterous / Github account / etc. A: facepalm |
If it markets itself as bug-ridden excrement piled on refuse- Well then! you're hosed next time your customer goes looking for a solution.