A content strategy is the plan you create at the beginning of any content project to guide its creation and governance.
If you have existing content but do not have a strategy, it’s time to create one.
Your content strategy should be created before you start writing and continue throughout the content’s life cycle. The strategy is the vision for how and why your content will be created and managed. Your vision may change throughout the project, and that’s ok, your content strategy should be able to adapt to the project’s needs.
All online content created for the B.C. government is required to meet our Web Content Standards.
What content already exists, and do you need something new? To understand if there is a need:
Design research (also known as user research) is a vital and ongoing process. It helps you understand the people using your content and why, when and how they use it. By identifying gaps between what people need and what you offer, you can design more useful content.
Define what successful content means to your team and then develop goals to measure it. This allows you to track when content needs to be created, updated, moved or removed:
Information architecture (IA) focuses on how we organize, structure and label web content. Thoughtfully considering where content lives in the IA helps people understand where they are and how to find what they need. If people can’t find what they need, it doesn’t matter how good the actual content is.
An information architecture can shape:
Determine the content governance and life cycle before you hit publish. This means planning who, how often and how you manage what you publish. This helps reduce clutter on the website by removing duplicate, unneeded and out-of-date content. This in turn helps people find what they need faster.
Remember to:
Once you've created content that meets our Web Content Standards and planned who will maintain this content, you’re ready to hit publish.