by MGB2B
The Myth: Research Is Overrated
The Truth: Research Is More Important Now than Ever
Is B2B research necessary? The answer is a resounding “yes.” The needs and perceptions of your audiences are constantly evolving. If you want to create content that resonates with your audience, you need solid research. Research isn’t a one-time thing. It needs to be continuously updated to keep up with changing market demand. What research can do is help you create engaging content, generate leads, and grow your company. While it may be expensive and sometimes time-consuming, the information you can gain is invaluable. And as social platforms allow you to hyper-target with more accuracy, research becomes even more important, allowing you to deliver the right message to exactly the right prospect.
Here Are 4 of the Most Important Things That Research Can Tell You:
- Who Your Audience Is and Where they Consume Information. The first thing you should focus your research on is understanding your audience. And you may find some surprises. Today, nearly half of B2B researchers are millennials. This shift has taken place in the last few years and has completely changed buyer behavior. If you don’t know exactly who your audience is, you won’t be able to create content that interests them. When researching your audience find out who they are, what the want from you, where they get their information, and any pain points that they may have on the job. Understanding your audience and where they get information will help you determine the best way to spend your dollars and what to say to your audience when you do. Knowing the right places to share content will engage your audience and generate leads.
- What Your Competitors Are Doing. If you don’t know what’s happening with competitors, you will inevitably fall behind. Look into prices and quality of their products, their online presence, and the kind of content they’re sharing. Having an idea of what your competition is doing will also help pinpoint what makes you different. Your company needs a unique brand positioning that separates you from the competition. In essence, competitive research helps you define your brand. When you survey prospects, you can also find out which brands they prefer and why. This will show you where you fit into the competitive set, and help you figure out where you want to go.
- What the Purchasing Process Is Like. Unlike B2C, B2B buyers very rarely make impulse purchases. Buyers spend a good amount of time comparing prices, quality, and suppliers before making a decision. As the purchasing process gets more and more complex, it’s important to help simplify it for buyers. In order to do that, you need to do some research. Understanding the buyer’s path to purchase will help you fix any issues or challenges they face along the way. It’s also important to know what variables influence buyers at which point in the sale funnel. Is it price? Convenience? Quality? Knowing this information is crucial to guiding buyers through the process and improving customer experience.
- How People Perceive Your Brand. Public opinion is one of the biggest influencers of brand perception. Many companies think they know how customers feel about their brand, but it might not always be the reality. There are a couple of simple ways to research how customers feel about your brand. One way is by monitoring what people are saying about you on social media. There are tons of social media listening tools that can help you track your social media presence. Customer surveys can be even more helpful when measuring brand perception as you can ask questions about specific areas you are interested in.
Research gives you the information and data you need to connect with your audience and position your brand as a strong competitor. If you want to keep up with the changes happening in your field and in the industries you sell to, your company needs to conduct in-depth research on a regular basis. It can make the difference between lagging behind and rising to the top.
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by MGB2B
Your brand has many needs: developing products that meet the needs of your clients, keeping your clients happy and satisfied with your offerings, maintaining a steady workflow between your marketing and sales teams, staying one step ahead of the competition… the list goes on and on. So when it comes time to develop content like white papers, blogs, bulletins, newsletters, and more, it’s no wonder that task can often fall by the wayside. Your brand’s own content can sometimes take a backseat to the hundreds of other priorities you and your team manage on a day-to-day basis.
You Should Know Two Things About Your Struggle with Content:
- It’s okay!
- There’s a way to create new content to distribute to your audience without actually creating new content.
You Might Be Thinking… “That Makes No Sense.” But Hear Us Out:
By taking existing long-form content you’ve created, like white papers, tech bulletins, or published studies and turning them into shorter, eye-catching, digestible content like blogs, infographics, and videos, you’re still creating new content without putting in as many man-hours that the former requires.
Writing something like a white paper takes a significant amount of time, research, and understanding of the subject. Your audience appreciates these types of content, but in an age where “content is king” and attention spans seem to shrink by the day, sometimes they don’t always reach the audience they should. By taking your extensive white paper and breaking it down section by section, you’re providing your audience with the same content, just in a form they haven’t seen yet. So you might capture the attention of someone who doesn’t have the time or patience to read a full white paper. As an added bonus, when you create these types of content and post them on your website and various social channels, you can link back to the longer-form content (and require an information capture to reveal it), so you’re accomplishing two goals with one post.
So How Do You Evaluate B2B Content for Repurposing?
Choosing the kind of content you want to turn into social-friendly posts is the biggest challenge you might face. When starting out, you’ll want to evaluate your library for two things. The first being, ease of digestion. What we mean when we say that is: how complicated is the message we’re trying to get across, and how difficult will it be to convey that in an infographic, video, or blog? The second thing to evaluate is time. How long will it take us to turn this white paper into something we can get out to the masses?
If you need to hold multiple brainstorming sessions, followed by multiple rounds of development, followed by multiple rounds of edits, it might be best to leave that content as-is. If you have something that you already know can be broken down easily (and quickly!), start there. As time goes on, you can hone your skills, and eventually tackle those harder-to-understand pieces. But for now, start slow, and be sure you’re crafting messages that will resonate with your audience.
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by MGB2B
The Myth: LinkedIn Is Just for New Hires
The Truth: LinkedIn Can Generate Leads and Position Your Brand as a Thought Leader
LinkedIn’s abilities go far past finding new hires, and B2B brands should begin to use it more effectively. What you may not know is that LinkedIn can help generate leads and position your brand as a thought leader within your industry. According to the Content Marketing Institute, 97% of B2B marketers use LinkedIn for content marketing. LinkedIn has proven itself to be more than a networking platform, especially for B2B marketers. Visitors aren’t only looking for job listings. In fact, most of them are looking at content to help them improve at their jobs. So if you want to be a step ahead of competitors, LinkedIn is a good place to start.
Here Are 3 Ways B2B Brands Can Use LinkedIn More Effectively:
- Be Active in Industry Groups. LinkedIn is a great platform to target people and companies based on industry. It allows your company to connect with people who have similar interests. This makes finding people who might be interested in your product easier. LinkedIn offers a variety of groups and ranks them based on activity. Find a relevant and active group to join and get involved with others. Joining an active group is ideal because more people will interact with your posts. It’s important to be active in the groups that you join. Being a part of groups that are relevant to your industry will help your company form relationships that can transform into leads and customers.
- Become a Thought Leader. Thought leadership is a valuable asset because it gives your brand authority within your industry. If you’re a thought leader, people will be more likely to trust your company and the information you share. Most people will base their first impression on of your company profile, so make sure that it’s engaging and reflects your brand’s unique qualities. Develop a memorable headline that shows people why they should want to do business with you. Get involved in existing conversations and start some of your own. Share relevant and valuable information. And most important – create some of your own. Creating content and sharing it on LinkedIn not only allows you to establish your brand as a thought leader, but also drives users to your website.
- Generate Leads with Sponsored Content. In 2017 LinkedIn introduced a feature called Lead Gen Forms. When used with the platform’s Sponsored Content program, the quality of leads and ease of capturing them increases tremendously. Personal information is pre-filled because it comes from the member’s LinkedIn Profile, so the data is reliable. Plus, Lead Gen Forms make it easy to track and calculate your ROI. LinkedIn makes advertising to the right prospects simple, accurate, and highly targeted.
B2B Marketers often overlook how useful LinkedIn can be to their brand. Just being on LinkedIn is important, but when used correctly, it can open up a wealth of opportunities. With over 500 million members to interact and engage with, generating highly qualified leads might be easier than you think.
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