The B2B Marketing Playbook PDF
The B2B Marketing Playbook PDF
The B2B Marketing Playbook PDF
Closed-Loop Strategy
is a game changer
Plus
Plan, Create, Distribute, and Optimize
CONTENT
INDEX
INDEX
Click on title to jump
to Desired Section
Plan 16
» » Budget for Content: Assessing Cost in the System. . ..............................16
* Technology.......................................................................... 17
* Channels.. ............................................................................ 19
* Additional Resources........................................................... 19
» » Crowdsource Ideas:
Getting Real Insights from the Right People. . .................................................................................... 28
» » Build Timelines:
From Big Picture to the Details. . ..................................................................................................................................31
Create 36
» » Map the Process:
Identifying Key Tasks and Roles. . ............................................................................................................................... 38
» » Build Workflows:
Planning Your Content Types . . ........................................................................................................................................40
» » Gain Visibility:
Establishing Insight into the Content Production Cycle . . ............................................ 42
» » Work Cross-Functionally:
Collaborating across Teams without Chaos. . .................................................................................... 43
* Establish an Internal Communications System.. .................... 44
* Integrate Technologies for a More Efficient Workflow.......... 44
Distribute 48
» » Creating a Closed-Loop Channel Strategy.................................................. 48
* Maximize Your Internal Channels......................................... 49
* Avoid Internal Content Chaos:
Build a Central Content Repository.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
» » Traditional PR Is Dead:
Make a Splash with Influencers. . ............................................................................................................................... 51
* Leverage Channel Partners.................................................. 51
» » Coordinate Technology:
Distributing the Right Content through the Right Channels. ..................................52
• Email.. ................................................................................. 53
* Segmentation and Targeted Messaging. . ............................... 53
* A/B Testing.......................................................................... 53
• Blog.................................................................................... 54
• Paid Advertising................................................................... 54
Optimize 61
» » Measure Results:
Reporting on the Pillars of B2B Content Metrics.................................................................... 62
• Internal Reach:
How Your Team Uses and Shares Content. . .......................................................................................................... 63
• External Reach:
Performance across Channels. ......................................................................................................................................................................64
• Conversions:
Content’s Impact on Leads and Revenue. . ............................................................................................................. 65
• Production:
Finding and Clearing Inefficiencies. . ............................................................................................................................... 68
* Average Production Time..................................................... 68
* Average On-Time Delivery Rate............................................ 68
* Bottlenecks and Challenges in Workflows............................ 68
* Content Coverage Gaps. . ...................................................... 68
» » Incorporate Findings:
Closing the Loop between Metrics and Strategy. . ........................................................................71
THE B2B
MARKETING
PLAYBOOK
A whole different game
[B]
ut the tactics that win It’s not that there aren’t any similarities
differ depending on your between B2B and B2C: the focus on
environment, allies, creating, delivering, and tracking
competition, the rules of the game, and buyer-centric content—the lifeblood of
the tools at your disposal. modern marketing—and the adoption of
tools that support the content lifecycle
The same is true in marketing—
have evolved in both types of marketing
particularly when comparing B2B and
alike.
B2C.
But with B2B marketing, where the
Across roles and functions—product
stakes are high, the buying cycle long,
marketing, demand generation, field
and the decision makers many, the
marketing, digital and web, content, or
teams with a winning strategy are those
communications—B2B marketers face
that successfully address the complex
distinct challenges.
processes and outcomes of the B2B
content lifecycle and buyer’s journey.
[I]
n B2C marketing, the process for
managing the content lifecycle
is built around driving a single
consumer to buy a product or service.
The marketer’s job: engage and move
that consumer to an immediate, impulse
purchase.
In this game, the B2C content strategy
might look something like this:
The goals and tools of B2C strategy are brand affinity, repeat
sales, social advocacy, and a lower price tag.
But B2B marketing is a whole different ballgame.
Budget Holder
Content Goals Content Goals Content Goals Content Goals Content Goals Content Goals
Thought Leadership Lead Acquisition Lead Qualification Equip Sales Team Confirm Value Onboard
Engagement Lead Qualification Lead Flow Build Consensus Define Next Steps Ensure Success
Content Types Content Types Content Types Content Types Content Types Content Types
Blog Posts Whitepapers Emails Brochures Onboarding Materials Blog Posts
Infographics eBooks Case Studies Fact Sheets Presentations Infographics
Educational Videos Webinar Video Testimonials Demo Videos Emails Educational Videos
Online Ads Landing Pages Presentations Online Ads
Press Releases Events Press Releases
“The upshot of every Every role within marketing has its own tools, content
marketing team being types, and channels to manage, each responsible for
different aspects of the content and buyer lifecycle.
a de facto publisher Without a strategy in place for coordinating all of
is colloquially known these pieces, seeing the big picture of your marketing
as ‘content chaos’—a impact is almost impossible. Not to mention, ad
hoc content creation across departments leads
scenario of overlapping, to duplicate, off-brand, or unnecessary content.
invisible, and underused That’s why 65% of content goes unused in B2B
brand assets and organizations, representing a massive cost center
directly located within marketing.
collaterals.”
—The Forrester Wave™:
Content Marketing Platforms,
Q3 2015
Awareness
Prospects &
Customers
Purchase Comparison
Consideration
[B]
2B organizations need to
get a “one team-same
team” mentality among
their departments and create aligned
processes around organization-wide
goals. They have to understand content
needs, how to efficiently meet them,
and how to measure the results. This is
the only way to build a truly closed-loop
strategy.
Activating all internal stakeholders—
from Product and Field Marketing
to Demand Gen and Sales—requires
enabling teams with the right tools and
providing transparency into the content
process. Without strategic alignment
and involvement across departments,
B2B organizations are missing a critical
piece in their narrative, and can’t
effectively meet content needs for every
stage of the buyer’s journey.
Closed-Loop Strategy:
The Four Steps to Success Content
Strategy
Personas
Insight-Based
Planning
Content Campaigns
Scoring
INSIGHTS PLAN
Digital
Distribute CREATE
Execution
Distribution
01
“Teamwork is the ability to work together toward
a common vision. The ability to direct individual
accomplishments toward organizational objectives.
It is the fuel that allows common people to attain
uncommon results.”
— Andrew Carnegie
[B]
udget planning for B2B marketing teams can
be tricky at best. It’s difficult to know where
to allocate funds for a winning strategy,
including technology to purchase, resources to bring
on board, and tactics to implement. It can feel like
playing a heated game of darts while blindfolded; you
take your best guess, but ultimately, you’re throwing
blind.
Start by aligning budget with your content goals. If
your budget isn’t tied to clear marketing objectives,
reporting on marketing ROI will likely end in
headaches and finger-pointing.
Once these core platforms are in place, And the product marketer needs to
identify the gaps that prevent you from sync with tools that gather, analyze,
planning, executing, and measuring and distribute customer feedback and
success efficiently. data. Event management or localization
support might factor into a product
For example, digital marketers need marketer’s technology purchases as
tools to push and track ROI on content well.
through paid channels like SEM and
retargeting ads. Likewise, they need Technologies should fit your marketing
to provide insight into the status of strategy and support collaboration
search engine optimization (SEO) and across teams—but make sure they
opportunities to drive more traffic. integrate and that you’ve defined
consistent governance fields across
Demand generation marketers might each, giving you consistent data for
look to technologies to test and monitor analysis and optimization.
conversions across contact forms and
landing pages.
[W]
inning B2B marketing strategies are built CONTENT IS
upon cross-functional, collaborative efforts ANYTHING BUT A
across marketing teams and departments.
SOLO ACT.”
Here are the major stakeholders that should weighin
on your strategy.
1 2 3
Product Marketing Field Marketing Marketing and Sales
Product marketers are Field marketing fosters Operations
your go-to teammates key relationships with This may be represented
for all things product- customers and prospects by one person or several,
and market-related. By on the local and regional but you want to be sure
digging into customer levels, driving strategies that your automated
data and market research, to close new business emails, landing pages,
working closely with and support retention of tracking URLs, and other
product teams, and target accounts. The field channels associated with
identifying opportunities marketer understands the each campaign work
for your company to value of personalization, together seamlessly.
address market needs, collaboration, and face This ensures an easy flow
these marketers know time with customers and from one buyer stage to
the true value of your prospects, often running another, driving a lead
company’s solution in integrated marketing further into the sales
the marketplace. Their campaigns and supporting funnel. Make sure that
insights are crucial to sales in key markets and the appropriate sales reps
B2B success, and they regions. know about an upcoming
often serve as the bridge campaign in advance,
between marketing and equip them with
and sales, delivering the targeted messaging
key content that helps and content they need
sales reps prove value to to convert leads into
prospects and shorten the customers.
sales cycle.
4 5 6
Demand Generation Digital and SEO Social/PR/AR
Whether it’s paid ads or To grow your organic Your community
blog posts, the players online reach, select managers and public/
responsible for driving strategic keywords that analyst relations teams
leads through the entire are relevant and popular are the mouthpiece of
funnel have to be looped to your target audience. your company. They
into your marketing This should be deployed are responsible for
content strategy. They across your owned web getting analysts and
have insight into the properties, including your personas to quickly
types of content that websites, blogs, and understand who you are,
draw people further into social channels. Include what pain points you
the buyer’s journey at whoever is responsible solve, and why you are
every stage, and they for your SEO early in your the best solution in your
can provide data-backed campaigns. Every asset industry. They can roll
insights into what content that will be distributed a content campaign into
to produce for each digitally should be press coverage around a
campaign. optimized for search, be it product launch or other
a blog post, landing page, correspondence that will
or case study. Don’t let have a wider reach than
your marketing content your content alone can.
fly under the radar Trust us, you want these
because you didn’t add folks looped into your
keywords from the start. content strategy.
[T]
he secret to successful contribution to it.
marketing content isn’t “create Below is an example of the buyer’s
more, faster.” If you’re not journey aligned with a closed-loop
producing relevant, persona-based marketing-sales-support funnel. Use
content that captivates potential buyers this as your template, and incorporate
at every stage of the buyer’s journey, your own sales stages and goals into
you’re wasting your time and resources. your strategy. Take note that the
This is a consistent challenge for definitions you agree upon should be
B2B marketers across functions and used across the company. This ensures
industries. SiriusDecisions found that alignment on the specific pain points
65% of B2B content goes unused addressed as well as the content
because content isn’t strategically objectives for each stage—which
mapped to buyer interests and topics means teams across the organization
they care about. will see value in and use this content
more effectively.
To have a truly closed-loop marketing
approach, marketing, sales, and
support teams all need to have a stake 65% OF B2B CONTENT
in the revenue goals of your company. Used Content GOES UNUSED
Therefore, each of these departments
and the teams within them must be
aligned across the buyer’s journey,
equipped with relevant and valuable
content at every single stage, and have
a stake in your company’s revenue goals.
Definitions Matter
The first step toward tackling this
65%
challenge is to get agreement across
the company about each of the
stages in your buyer’s journey. Many
companies struggle with departments
defining these stages differently,
particularly among sales and marketing.
The result is confusing messaging, UNUsed Content
Customer success
End users are identified,
Implement Onboarding manager, customer
onboarding begins
success marketing
Customer success
Renewal / Repeat Customer success/
marketing, customer
Customer account manager
Renewal or upsell success manager,
upsells new product or
account reps, product
feature
marketing
Product
Demand gen, Sales, product Sales, Customer
marketing,
Marcom, marketing ops, marketing, customer support,
Team digital, social field marketing,
sales
product mgmt, support, customer
consulting,
sales consulting consulting marketing
sales
Referral
Opens, click- Content usage, Content Downloads,
traffic, social Registration,
Key throughs, downloads, usage, opens,
shares, downloads,
downloads, opens, downloads, content
Metrics channel new leads, lead
conversion conversion revenue usage, online
engagement, attribution
attribution attribution attribution engagement
downloads
[U]
nlike B2C sales, B2B marketers have to address
several personas within a single sale. Each
persona has unique information needs, goals,
and concerns related to the purchase, and often join
the decision-making process at different stages. B2B
marketers are responsible for creating content that
addresses the pain points of each of these buyers, at
every stage of the buying cycle.
3. Your Customers
Input from internal staff is highly valuable when mapping out your personas, but
perhaps the most insightful interviews are with your actual customers. By directly
engaging the people who represent your personas, you can confirm or shift your
marketing strategies to better address their needs and anticipate—then automate
the delivery of—the content they need at every stage of the customer lifecycle.
Don’t only interview decision makers or end users; talk to everyone involved in the
purchasing process.
These interviews provide a company-wide view into your customers and prospects,
helping you create marketing content that’s driven by the actual needs of your
personas.
This process informs every part of marketing. It helps product marketers align
specific features or packages to the pain points of personas, and support that
story with examples or case studies from successful customers. Field marketing
can evaluate the topics and strategies for engaging prospects in conversations
and events that validate their needs, building relationships on trust and support.
Marketers focused on demand generation can make decisions on the content
they need to deliver earlier in the sales cycle to engage buyers and strategically
introduce your company’s solution through nurture tracks and on-demand content.
[I]
n the financial services Second, you have to work your
industry, building trust is inside game—networking across
key, albeit challenging. the company to understand how
those goals manifest themselves
In fact, 76% of financial services from product to product, persona to
professionals believe content persona, and then applying those
marketing is the most effective learnings to content development.
method to regain trust in this
industry. Third, you have to
76% OF FINANCIAL SERVICES think of content as
Equipped with this PROFESSIONALS BELIEVE a continuum and
knowledge, Dun take responsibility
& Bradstreet, a CONTENT MARKETING IS THE
for integration
Kapost customer, MOST EFFECTIVE METHOD and consistency of
fully immersed TO REGAIN TRUST IN THIS storylines from top-
themselves in of-funnel (really
a collaborative, INDUSTRY.
emotional, broader-
detailed persona reaching stories) to end-of-funnel
development process to clearly (promotional stuff that tells why
define and drive their marketing your products and services are
content strategy. better than the guy’s down the
“We (now) have clear, concise use street).
cases that map our customer pain And fourth, you have to learn
points to the data-driven products to respond to the feedback that
and services Dun & Bradstreet matters most: sure, your boss and
offers,” says Brad Young, the global key business stakeholders, but
content strategy leader for the more important the feedback you
company. get from the data.
To build this data-based marketing True success is in aligning
engine driven by content, Young your approach to the mission
suggests the following four steps: of the company and delivering
“First, you have to actually know experiences that drive that home.”
what the goals of the company are. Read the full story.
Crowdsource Ideas:
Getting Real Insights from the Right People
[I]
t probably Marketing should The only way to establish
goes without not be the only team a high-functioning,
saying that B2B carrying the ideation integrated marketing
marketers have a lot of responsibilities for your content operation
responsibilities. The company. In fact, almost is through cross-
constant demand for 70% of marketers want departmental buy-in
original content ideas to to be able to crowdsource that’s bolstered by
create valuable, persona- ideas more easily from executive support. Getting
driven content can leave internal employees. Your your team involved and
a marketer feeling wrung internal subject matter excited about content
out like a towel that’s experts, sales reps, and promotes collaboration,
been hung out to dry. In customer service teams which spotlights what
fact, 99% of marketers are brimming with content your company
say a constant stream of buyer-centric ideas; needs to create in order
ideas is crucial to effective they just need to be to close deals and keep
content marketing, but mined, appropriately and customers happy. It
only 50% of marketers frequently. provides insight and
believe they have enough access into marketing
ideas to fuel their content initiatives, ultimately
operations. resulting in a better buyer
experience.
[T]
hink it takes an enterprise- Once these ideas move to production,
sized marketing department efficient processes are key to staying
for content to make a on track and on time. Kelley set
significant impact? up workflows for each step in the
content creation process, ensuring
Think again. that every stakeholder is given a task
and deadline. “I can see where I am in
In the case of Datavail, Kelley Bjella
production with everything and which
and Megan Isherwood blow that myth
personas I’m hitting well and not
out of the water. With a focused,
others, or channels I’m hitting or not
data-driven strategy in place, the
hitting often enough,” Kelley said.
content managed by their small—but
“So it helps us fill in those gaps.”
mighty—team now contributes to 75%
of Datavail’s monthly revenue. Between more consistent idea
generation and a streamlined process
The team implemented monthly
for managing content execution,
roundtables with Datavail’s subject
Kelley now successfully runs three
matter experts, mining content ideas
times the amount of campaigns that
in a formal, systematic setting. The
she used to, managing 37 active
meetings function like question-
campaigns in only seven months.
and-answer sessions, and ideas are
immediately pulled into Kapost. Read the full story.
[W]
hen it comes to B2B marketing Launching new content,
campaign planning, your
messaging, or products into
rallying cheer should be
“communicate, communicate, and the world isn’t an ad hoc,
communicate some more!” siloed act.
Launching new content, messaging,
or products into the world isn’t an ad
hoc, siloed act. A seamless, successful
marketing campaign is the end result
of department-wide visibility into
timelines and responsibilities, in
addition to streamlined workflows.
Here’s the step-by-step timeline that
we use at Kapost.
#
1
Content Champs
[B]
uilding out And while it might sound
timelines up counterintuitive, early
front prevents planning makes your
a strategy from taking team more agile and
a reactive, ad hoc responsive when time-
approach, and keeps sensitive, high-priority
marketers from falling content does need to be
into a state of content produced. By staying
chaos. By planning your organized and scheduled
campaign piece by piece, in advance, you give
identifying owners early, your team more room
and scheduling fixed to innovate, test, and
meetings beforehand, you respond quickly to the
set yourself up to have constantly changing and
more room to improve shifting world of B2B
and iterate on future marketing.
campaign rollouts.
You and your significant other Then the CEO abruptly shifts
bae are excited to be eating gears with a request that
at a new Mexican restaurant doesn’t align with your plans.
“Planned that you’ve heard great things
about. At last! We are here! Requests that come out of
marketing Best table in the place! left field are annoying and
distressing and demoralizing.
strategy” But then when you try to And when it happens
doesn’t order the pea guac (it sounds
weird—but just go with it),
regularly, it derails any
sense of shared purpose or
mean the waiter informs you that teamwork.
the menu has been changed
that your overnight from Mexican to And worst of all, your
programs will be less
marketing Chinese.
effective, because your team
lacks No guac. Not even any salsa. doesn’t feel ownership of
the process—including the
spontaneity” But how about some bok
choy? It’s a vegetable, right?
critical outcome.
02
“Combining deep customer insights with deep
discipline for execution is critical. And rare.”
— Matt Heinz,
President, Heinz Marketing Inc.
[B]
udgets have been drawn up, personas and sales
stages have been mapped, and ideas have
been curated. You have all the tools you need
to execute on a killer marketing content strategy. But
when the pressure’s on—can you walk the talk?
The content creation stage is often where marketing
teams find themselves feeling overstretched and
drowning in content chaos—often because they don’t
have the right processes in place to automate their
efforts.
Managing the overall content production process can
get so complicated that it was cited as a top challenge
for B2B marketers in 2015. Inefficiencies in content
production processes cost midsize-to-large companies
a whopping $958 million each year.
$958
COST OF
INEFFICIENCIES IN
CONTENT PROCESS
FOR MIDSIZE-TO-
MILLION
LARGE COMPANIES
62%
[L]
ack of process is the most
common opponent to content
productivity, eating up time
and frustrating even the strongest
teams. Without the right processes in
place to fuel content creation, assets
are constantly stalled in the production
After establishing a process to
phase, with no real insight as to why. manage their asset production,
And process has a real impact on USGBC saw a 79% improvement in
performance. While only 45% of production time.
average-performing companies use
workflows or templates to streamline Manual production management
the production of similar content assets, eats up valuable time and resources,
80% of marketing top-performers stifling opportunities. When the U.S.
implement these steps into their Green Building Council (USGBC)
content processes, creating a solid initiated their content operation,
foundation for meeting and exceeding their marketing team was overwhelmed
their revenue goals. with how much content they needed to
create, and had no process in place to
manage it. After establishing a process
to manage their asset production,
80%
USGBC cut down their review time from
seven days to 12 hours, and saw a 79%
improvement in production time.
Having a documented content
production process in place streamlines
workflows and unites efforts across
Of top-performing companies utilize campaigns, asset types, and even
templates to streamline content internal teams, allowing marketers
production. to focus on creating high-quality,
targeted content to meet their goals,
whether that means generating revenue,
driving more marketing qualified leads,
reducing churn, or supporting sales.
So, what’s your first move?
[E]
veryone in your specific people organizes Chaos ensues when there
organization is a everyone’s place within are too many variables/
content creator. a workflow, which can players and not enough
From marketing to sales help teams immediately clarity around how
to customer success, your identify “who’s up next” something needs to be
internal stakeholders all in the queue. completed. When roles
have skin in the game. and responsibilities
Ambiguity in roles and For example, when are transparent and
responsibilities within a initiating the content assignments are
team structure can quickly type “landing page,” the consistent, workflows
leave marketers and other demand generation team are streamlined and less
stakeholders wondering, will likely own creating time is spent managing
“Who’s on first?” when the email within your production cycles.
they should be rounding organization’s email
second base. automation system. The beauty of consistency
However, they probably is faster execution on
To map people to the aren’t responsible for valuable content that
process, decide who’s writing the copy or impacts your business.
responsible for what, and creating images for the
keep it consistent across page.
content types. Assigning
responsibilities to
Build Workflows:
Planning Your Content Types
[N]
ot all content types are created Example of a blog post workflow:
equal. Each content type has
its own nuances to consider 1. Identify SEO keywords
and steps to follow. To cover all the 2. Assign asset to author
bases, list out every type of asset your
organization creates (or plans to create). 3. Submit copy
Some examples include: 4. Add image
» » eBook 5. Complete SEO
» » Whitepaper 6. Edit/review
» » ● W ebinar 7. Final approval
» » ● P roduct sheet 8. Publish
» » ● W orkbook 9. Schedule social
» » ● B log post 10. Evaluate metrics
» » ● I nfographic
» » ● L anding page
Revisit your established workflows
» » ● E mail annually and take a magnifying glass to
Next, list out every task to be completed the process.
for each asset before it can go into
Where are there bottlenecks? Are
completion status. Be as detailed as
there steps that need to be added
possible.
or eliminated? Workflows do not
necessarily have to be set in stone. Try
testing a few strategies and see what
works best for your team—don’t be
afraid to fine-tune.
WORKFLOWS
DO NOT
NECESSARILY
HAVE TO BE
SET IN STONE.
[M]
eeting task deadlines is where be consistent in the amount of time
marketers struggle most in it takes to complete. When 72% of
the production process—yet marketers say they consistently miss
deadlines are one of the best indicators their content creation deadlines,
of efficiency. Deadlines help marketers that’s telling evidence that either:
stay on track, measure their progress, (a) processes are inefficient or (b)
and identify bottlenecks. deadlines are unrealistic.
However, deadlines are not arbitrary Establish the Framework for
dates set simply to motivate us. Smart
deadlines take into consideration the
Accountability
average production time per content Many hands make light work—until one
type—preferably with some wiggle of the hands forgets, or didn’t get the
room. They provide framework for memo.
accountability, and they align with
Just as there are many steps involved
broader corporate goals.
in creating a single piece of content,
typically there are many stakeholders
Identify the Average Production
responsible for different tasks in the
Process for a Content Type workflow. When you assign a deadline
Understanding how long it to individual tasks, it
takes to produce a single keeps all stakeholders
type of content is the
72% of marketers accountable for their piece.
first step in setting smart say they consistently This also eliminates the
deadlines. It gives marketers miss their content need for excessive email
clarity on how long it should
take to complete all the
creation deadlines. correspondence, which
quickly burns time and kills
required steps, and it sets efficiency.
realistic expectations. Underestimating
the time it takes to complete an asset By communicating deadlines from
can quickly lead to burnout among your start to finish before beginning a
teams, resulting in sub-par content project, your team starts off with clear
quality. expectations and eliminates surprises.
[A]
initiatives to build your deadline
framework, you not only establish a s mentioned before, content
clear purpose and alignment that you creation often requires input
can measure and track; you create a from many different players
richer experience for your audience all across departments and marketing
around. teams. One of the greatest “confusion
factors” in content execution stems
For example, if an executive goal is to from not having visibility on the
sell more of a product package that status of a specific piece of content.
the product team is about to release, Likewise, not having a broader view of
marketing can create campaigns around all deadlines across a project, from start
that release, taking all the stakeholders’ to finish and across every stakeholder,
needs into account. Marketing may keeps a content strategy from being
produce an eBook and derivative assets successful—and puts it at great risk for
to drive traffic and lead volume, but failure.
they can also tailor those assets to serve
the needs of sales and customer success Using a central calendar system gives
teams. all internal stakeholders visibility into
the content production process and also
When marketing aligns its goals with gives marketers insight into what else is
broader organizational objectives and happening within the organization.
initiatives, content becomes strategic
and mission critical, rather than ad hoc Using a content calendar cross-
and reactive. The result? Your content functionally enables teams to
consumers are delivered a consistent collaborate easier and align goals and
and complete brand narrative. initiatives across teams.
Work Cross-Functionally:
Collaborating across Teams without Chaos
Charles Darwin once said, “In the long For example, when multinational
history of humankind, those who learned computer tech company Lenovo realized
to collaborate and improvise most there was no visibility into their content
effectively have prevailed.” operation and internal teams were
being siloed, they knew they had a big
Just like we, as humans, have learned problem. Not only was lack of visibility
to work together toward greater slowing down their production cycles,
innovation, creating marketing it was also causing ad hoc content
content is a creation, which
concerted effort
“We had four to five static Excel sheets often results
that transcends
a single team. per segment with hyperlinks to content. in off-brand
messaging
Marketers may We didn’t have any history, including and redundant
create the majority
which campaign it was part of, how it efforts. To solve
of content, but the problem,
they rely on the was produced, or the measurement on
they invested
expertise of their the back end. We had no visibility into in streamlining
internal teams to
any of it.” their content
garner relevant marketing
information, gain —Steve Barnard, Lenovo program across
access to key departments,
customers, ideate, effectively
and, often, get final approval. doubling their asset production over two
As a marketer, you need to leverage your years.
internal teams as subject matter experts Which leaves us with the burning
to build an authentic and credible question, how do you manage content
voice for the brand. Successful content across teams efficiently?
creation depends on gathering all of that
knowledge from internal contributors 81% of marketers struggle
without letting it get lost in the shuffle.
Because when it’s hard to collaborate, with collaboration and
it simply doesn’t happen. And it’s a coordination between
prevalent issue, too. In fact, 81% of content production
marketers struggle with collaboration
and coordination between content resources.
production resources.
Establish an Internal
Communications System
First and foremost, identify how and
where you’re communicating with all
your teams. Content creation can be
seriously stagnated when internal teams
don’t know where to find it. Establish a
singular location where content will live
throughout its entire production cycle,
and give all stakeholders access to it.
[W]
hat’s the result of After building a complete content
establishing a content operation that addressed the
production workflow needs for structure, deadlines, and
that’s aligned across a marketing accountability, Pat saw a dramatic
organization? shift in the way he and his team
were working, communicating, and
A beautifully executed pillar collaborating together.
campaign that launches on time and
yields triple the leads and quadruple “We created double the number
the revenue. of assets for the pillar campaign
than we had for the previous two
When Pat Oldenburg campaigns combined,”
became the Senior Pat said.
Manager of Content “We created double the
Marketing at Five9, number of assets for the The substantial growth
everyone was creating in content production
content—and it was a pillar campaign than we also yielded substantial
mess. had for the previous two growth in lead
“A lot of people campaigns combined” volume and revenue.
After implementing
in marketing were processes and
creating content in workflows that enabled persona-
one form or another. PR was making specific content, Pat’s team
content for media pitches and press produced three times the number
releases. Product marketing was of leads and four times the amount
creating data sheets and whitepapers of revenue over their previous two
for our product. But nobody was campaigns.
creating anything that was buyer-
centric content,” Pat said. “We’ve heard anecdotally from our
sales folks that after this campaign
Facing growing expectations for they’ve had some of the best
demand generation and lead growth, conversations with prospects that
Pat needed a process that would they they’ve ever had,” he said.
enable him to create buyer-centric
content at volume and collaborate Read the full story.
with all of his key players.
[T]
o simply say marketers publish a lot of content An editorial style guide
is an understatement. A study by the Content should include:
Marketing Institute found that nearly half of
all marketers are publishing new content weekly. And » » ● Y our company’s
to get it all done, marketers across functions rely on a mission and tagline
wide range of sources to create it. » » ● A preferred word list
for the company (for
That’s a lot of different Ensure the Right Style – example: do you use
voices and styles—not
to mention words—
Building a Style Guide “email,” or “e-mail”?)
Put SEO into Your Process To incorporate SEO into the content
production process, marketers need to
Optimizing content for organic search do three things:
is critical to its success, yet it’s an area
that often leaves marketers scratching 1. Include it as a key task in your
their heads, unsure of how to tackle content workflows. SEO should be part
the elusive search engine. Only 52% of of the content creation process, not an
marketing organizations are aligning afterthought.
SEO to their content, while the other 2. Write meta titles and descriptions.
39% are falling behind, hidden on page It’s an extra step, but it comes with big
three of Google search results.
payoffs.
By incorporating SEO directly into the 3. Be keyword-aware vs. keyword-
content production process, marketers driven. Keyword research is essential to
can stress less about whether their
SEO. However, relevant, quality content
content is optimized for search, because
will always trump content that is jam-
it’s included in the production process.
packed with keywords. The point of
marketing content is to serve the needs
of your audience and drive impact.
Poorly chosen, keyword-heavy content
doesn’t support that ultimate goal
03
“Your content strategy starts with your story. We
need to write or articulate our story, and then share it
across the organization to get everyone on the same
page, literally. It’s crazy hard to construct a content
strategy when we have no story as scaffolding.”
—Ann Handley,
Author, Everybody Writes;
Chief Content Officer, MarketingProfs
[B]
uilding a closed-loop channel strategy isn’t an
easy undertaking, but the rewards are sweet.
By amplifying content through your sales,
customer support, influencers, partners, and digital
channels, you gain an unbeatable advantage over your
competition. The following section highlights the
major channels to consider in your distribution plan.
Ah, can’t you hear the roaring crowd and cheers of
victory already?
91% 65%
Traditional PR Is Dead:
It’s important to
Make a Splash with Influencers remember to build a
While social sharing, paid ads, and organic traffic sound public relations
are critical to getting leads into your pipeline, it’s strategy. But modern
important to remember to build a sound public
relations strategy. But modern marketers know that marketers know that
PR as we knew it in the 90s no longer exists. PR for the PR as we knew it in the
modern marketer is all about engaging influencers in 90s no longer exists.
your space.
Start by researching what media outlets, Once that relationship is built, you can
analysts, and influencers are covering reach out to them with requests and
your industry already: who are the major story ideas that would interest that
mouthpieces in your space? particular outlet, and your influencers
will become engaged and enthusiastic
Form relationships with the most channel partners for your company.
impactful and relevant influencers
among your target personas. If you have
few or no media relationships already Leverage Channel Partners
established, start off by researching Leveraging your channel partners is
individual reporters covering specific the difference between a first-base hit
beats relevant to your company. and a home run, and strong channel
partnerships guarantee a more robust
Once you’ve identified key contacts,
reach for your content.
reach out to them directly and introduce
yourself as an expert on an industry- By maximizing your partner
related topic, and offer to help them relationships, you:
with any stories they’re working on.
For media outlets, make sure you’re not 1. Gain access to large, new networks
giving them a hard pitch quite yet. You that will distribute your content and
need to establish yourself as an expert increase your brand awareness
and a value-add for other related articles
2. Gain a partnership that resells
first. For influencers, invite them to
your product in the marketplace
guest post to your company’s blog, or
request their permission to quote them via their existing channels and
from a book they’ve authored. The key is networks, maximizing your reach and
to form a trusted relationship. increasing your revenue opportunities
Coordinate Technology:
Distributing the Right Content
through the Right Channels
“Content fuels not only the top of funnel, but also
accelerates pipeline throughout our sales cycle.”
—Doug Sechrist, Vice President of Demand Marketing, Five9
[F]
or even the savviest, most experienced marketers,
integrating and coordinating your matrix of marketing
technologies can be the stuff of nightmares.
You’ve got marketing automation, CRM, CMS, and social
media channels. How do you get them to all play nice with
each other to create a winning strategy that moves a lead
seamlessly and intuitively through your sales pipeline?
Let’s start by breaking down the major digital channels
you’ll likely use to distribute your B2B content, and what
to coordinate for a truly integrated B2B marketing content
strategy.
Email
There are so many tools for email out there, how does one even choose?
The key here is integration. Integrate your email campaigns with
your chosen marketing automation tool, CRM, and marketing content
platform. By aligning email campaigns with the right technology, you can
get more accurate insight into which emails work or fall flat among the
different segments of your database.
Likewise, make sure your automation system integrates with your CRM
platform. Otherwise, you risk your contacts getting lost and disorganized
as they transition from one system into another, costing your team
valuable data about a lead’s activity, and ultimately, the revenue-based
impact your content has on closed deals.
Here are some things to consider when rolling out your email campaigns.
Along with your company blog, a key top-of-funnel channel is social media.
However, it often gets a bad rap for not driving people deeper into the funnel.
But a sound social strategy that’s aligned with your overall marketing goals can be
a killer revenue generator for your company, driving mass amounts of eyes (and
future leads) to your landing pages. But you need a sound strategy to optimize this
channel.
Here are some key things to consider when building out your social strategy.
[T]
hink of your website as your B2B marketing hub, the
mechanism for converting anonymous visitors to B2B marketers
qualified leads and eventually paying customers. invest $10-$20
Building a website optimized for content conversion is a billion annually
major undertaking and investment, but it’s worth it. Your in mid-funnel
website shouldn’t be a static entity serving as nothing more technology like
than a digital brochure. It has to be interactive, delighting email marketing
those who visit with high-quality content that drives the and marketing
right people to become leads and pushes them further into automation, but
the sales funnel. 75% of marketers
[who’ve invested]
How do you maximize your website to become a conversion
say the #1 reason
machine? Here are some key aspects of your website to
that marketing
consider focusing on.
automation
fails is the lack
of content and
processes.
Dynamic content.
It takes a hefty investment to personalize your website
to your personas, but the result is powerful. Picture
this: a company sells software to healthcare providers,
and they target administrative heads as well as clinical
practitioners. The pain points and value props for
these two types of B2B buyers are very different.
04
More than half of the average annual marketing budget is
dedicated to content
[M]
arketing budgets are growing. Now more than
ever, marketers are feeling the pressure
to prove, and quantify, the value of their
operations. With B2B firms in North America spending
over $5.2 billion a year on content creation efforts
alone—that’s 55% of overall marketing budgets—top-
level executives want to see the impact.
Yet, 50% of B2B enterprise marketers say measuring
content effectiveness is a challenge.
So, what gives?
Content must be tied to revenue to show real value.
This means marketers need metrics that give them
insight into how content drives quantifiable impact
on business goals. Optimizing content for ROI means
digging deeper than top-of-funnel reach metrics to
measure how content influences a prospect’s decision
to buy.
Measure Results:
Reporting on the Pillars
of B2B Content Metrics
[M]
arketing content has become a major priority
Without insight for B2B marketers; more time is being spent
into performance creating and managing content, and bigger
at every stage budget dollars are being allocated to it.
of the purchase B2B marketers create content for a complex matrix of
process, buyer personas and sales stages that—when working
marketers can’t efficiently—reach the target audience every time.
prove that their But top-of-funnel metrics don’t tell the full story.
strategic content Without insight into performance at every stage of
initiatives the purchase process, marketers can’t prove that their
contribute to strategic content initiatives contribute to revenue.
revenue.
To measure the full impact of content driving the right
engagement, converting buyers at every stage of the
funnel, and supporting internal teams to close new
business more quickly, B2B marketers have to track
performance at every stage of the content and buyer
lifecycle.
External Reach:
Performance across Channels
Tracking types and number of engagements is part of external
reach metrics, but marketers must also look at how content
creates engagement across channels, and which tools were
used to spark valuable action.
Insights that delve into the how, when, and where of content
engagement give marketers a full picture of how content
performs at different stages and through different channels.
These insights explain where our target audience goes to find
relevant content, and how they react to it depending on who
they are and where they are in the buying process.
Conversions:
Content’s Impact on Leads and Revenue
Tying content to revenue is one of the But how do you do it?
greatest challenges modern marketers To determine a content score for any
face. Using a content scoring model, type of content, you first need to
marketers can determine the value evaluate a buyer’s movement through
and role of their content throughout each stage of the sales funnel, and the
all stages of the sales funnel. Content content consumed during that stage.
conversion metrics provide invaluable Divide the number of conversions by the
insights into marketing content number of content pieces consumed,
effectiveness, pulling results at various broken down into asset categories.
stages of the buyer’s journey and
identifying opportunities to optimize for Including content conversions in your
greater results. dashboard yields the best insights into
how well your content is ultimately
performing. Attaching numeric value to
content assets not only makes it easier
to compare the performance of specific
assets at various stages of the funnel;
it also gives you concrete evidence that
shows how your content is working.
[A]
t Vertafore, Guy » » ● W hat is our content conversion
Weismantel’s primary goal rate for leads, opportunities, and
is to activate their audience revenue?
with relevant content, validate wins,
and optimize for future success. But » » ● W hat changes need to be made
to feed a hungry sales pipeline and to our strategy or budget to reflect
prove the impact of their efforts, Guy what the data is telling us?
needed data-backed evidence to know To find out, Guy implemented
what was working, and what failed. a closed-loop reporting system
“Marketing at large has matured that tied actual revenue to his
beyond a ‘spray and see what sticks’ buyer persona-informed content
approach,” Guy says. And in order development.
to report on his content operation, By tracking content performance
he needed the answers to burning throughout its lifecycle and tying it
questions: to specific buyer personas and sales
» » ● W hat content is resonating the stages, Guy was able to easily—and
most? accurately—determine which content
was effective and which was not,
» » ● W hich marketing channel is enabling him to hold his marketing
delivering the best results? team accountable for their impact on
revenue.
» » ● W here are we strong and where
are we weak [in our content
production] by buyer persona and
product line?
Production:
Finding and Clearing Inefficiencies
Time wasted is money spent. Inefficiencies in the content production process cost
businesses money—and it’s often the most ignored area in content measurement.
Content is the product of content marketing, and marketers need to know how
long it takes to get that product to market, find and eliminate bottlenecks in the
process, and identify content coverage gaps. It starts with these four areas of
measurement.
Content Bottlenecks /
Coverage Challenges in
»» Number MAp Workflow »» Average
of assets in number of days to
production by complete workflow
persona and sales task
stage »» Measured by days
and percentage of time
delivered late
»» Reported per asset
[U]
nderstanding how your content is performing across
its entire lifecycle not only tells you where your high
performers are; it also lets you know how you’re
reaching your goals. To do this, set up a content measurement
dashboard.
A content measurement dashboard Remember, success is not singular.
should include the metrics examined Your content helps your sales and
above, mainly: customer success teams close deals and
generate more revenue. Being able to
» » The health of the content measure how marketing content—from
production cycle product spec sheets to case studies to
» » Internal and external content whitepapers to nurture tracks—supports
engagement the broader organization and helps
» » Conversions and content score other teams meet their goals. Metrics
showing your content’s ROI will increase
With a consistent dashboard that tracks buy-in for an integrated marketing
performance month over month, quarter content strategy and company-wide
over quarter, and year over year, B2B collaboration.
marketers can take important steps
toward benchmarking success and
sharing quantifiable results with the
broader marketing organization and
team.
[W]
ith 29 unique content
types and 23 multi-
channel campaigns under
their belt, it’s safe to say content is
at the heart of LinkedIn’s marketing Incorporate Findings:
operations.
Closing the Loop between
After having great success with the
rollout of their first campaigns, the Metrics and Strategy
[T]
marketing team at LinkedIn needed
he final step is to take your
to scale their content operation.
findings and results and
LinkedIn uses an analytics incorporate them back into your
dashboard to find out which assets planning stages for content creation.
are working and which aren’t. Using This is the key to optimization. By
attribution modeling, or “content measuring the right metrics, you’ll be
scoring,” LinkedIn is able to able to make more strategic decisions
pinpoint assets and campaigns that across the content lifecycle.
worked in order to optimize content
For example, if you find that customers
for future campaigns, ultimately
who watch a video testimonial are
resulting in stronger ROI.
purchasing two times faster than
average, ramp up video testimonial
production to address all your personas
and decision makers. Or, if you notice
that customers who learn about your
company through Facebook ads convert
to qualified leads only .0008% of the
time, invest your dollars elsewhere.
Optimization should always feed back
into your overarching go-to-market
strategy—and with the data to back up
your decisions, you’ll be able to execute
even more quickly, with the support you
need from across the organization