Mascola B2B Marketing Blog, B2B Advertising Agency
Tag Archives: content marketing

Why VISUAL Content Marketing is Important for B2B Brands

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As a B2B marketer, you likely realize how effective content marketing is for your brand. (If not, you can read our praise of content marketing in many past articles.) But what you say is not the only important thing. The vehicle you use to deliver it to your audience, the accompanying graphics, and the way you display your information can make or break the success of a piece of content marketing. People are visual creatures by nature; if you can effectively show a message as well as spell it out, you will certainly win over your readers. Visual content marketing can be delivered in may forms, but a few that we show here today can be the most effective.

Infographics

When you have a whole lot of data to present, it can be tough to keep a readers attention – even if it speaks to some pretty amazing accomplishments. Well-crafted visuals are going to help your reader prioritize information, scan more efficiently, and continue to stay engaged. Infographics are a great way to present your information in an easy-to-digest way. And, in the end they’ll help more people to actually read it.

A series of infographics for choosing the right conformal coating application.

A series of infographics Mascola Group created for choosing the right conformal coating application.

Video

If you have an interesting story to tell, most people would rather watch it than read about it. Creating a video is the perfect way to accomplish this. Marketing videos no longer just mean a traditional 30 or 60-second commercial spot, either. They can be the animation of a case study, filming and explaining what makes your production process stand out, or a well-executed interview with a knowledgeable employee showing how you help your customers.

Video Explaining Building Files software Capabilities.

Visuals Within Your Blogs and Printed Collateral

A large part of any successful content marketing campaign are white papers and long format blog articles. Though it may seem I’ve been hinting that your audience no longer reads, this simply isn’t true. Viewers that have shown interest by clicking on your emails, filling out forms, or actively seeking your blog will read it. But to keep them engaged, this content still needs the right window dressing. Any long format piece of content will be far easier to digest with the right support visuals.

Downloadable Rooftop Safety Brochure

Downloadable Rooftop Safety Brochure created by Mascola Group

 

Visual content isn’t technically difficult to produce, but it does take a bit of forethought. There are a myriad of apps available to create your own graphics in house – just keep in mind, everyone is using these cookie-cutter services and your efforts may look generic, off-brand, or worse, amateurish. Visual content marketing is meant to draw your audience in, then lead them where you want them to go. To get the most for your efforts, consider consulting with a professional graphic designer before you begin your next content marketing campaign.

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B2B Monday Myth: A Persona Is the Same Thing As a Target Audience

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personas for B2B brands

The Myth: A Persona Is the Same Thing As a Target Audience

The Truth: A Persona Is Much More Detailed and Personalized

For years, marketers have created “target audiences” for their brand or product. That means they’ve put large groups of people into one category, and labeled them. But today’s digital marketing world has become very personal. Brands now reach out directly to individuals. So, it’s time to take things one step further. If you want to give yourself a clear picture of the audience you’re attracting, you need to craft audience personas.

The difference between the traditionally defined target audience and an audience persona is that a persona is a narrative that describes a very specific type of person. It’s highly detailed and provides enough information that you could actually pick this fictional person, your buyer, out of a group.

Your buyer is a real person, so they should be identified as one. And every last detail you give is a potential clue for how you can most effectively target them. This means constructing a clear picture of your customer – including what will resonate with them both personally and professionally.

Some examples of questions you should answer as you’re writing personas for B2B brands:

  • What is their position? Their day-to-day responsibilities?
  • What are their personal and professional communication methods?
  • What media do they consume? What’s their information source?
  • What is their education background?
  • What challenges face them? How can you help solve them?
  • What do they value? What are their goals?

A traditional target audience might just read “head of marketing at a mid-size company.” But an audience persona will be more like a narrative, encompassing everything there is to know about this marketing head.

Let’s take James Smith, for example:

James Smith is 41 years old and the head of global marketing at mid-size insurance company. He is a “decision maker” who works above a team of about 25 marketing professionals in the Hartford, CT office. His main responsibilities include overseeing the development of new marketing initiatives and coordinating these efforts with the company’s overall business plan. James has the most say within the communications division of the company, but he still struggles to prove the worth and ROI of marketing to the top executives of the company. His top challenges include optimizing the work of the marketing team under a small budget and gaining approval up the ladder for new initiatives.

At the beginning of every day, James reads the New York Times, and sometimes browses through Forbes and the Wall Street Journal. He also reads several trade publications, like AdWeek and Direct Marketing News, in his free time. His goal is to prove the marketing team’s value by having the ability to quantify and measure leads for the sales team. He is most frustrated by stagnating sales productivity and work that is not measurable, and he is most motivated by recognition from executives and his peers. James also spends several hours a week maintaining his personal Twitter account, where he often engages with industry content. 

There are an endless number of benefits that come from writing several of these personas. A target audience description can only generalize, and therefore deliver the same generic content to varying types of people. In comparison, a audience personas can identify opportunities for personalized content and solutions.

Putting a face to different audience segments conveys to your buyers that you’re tailoring specifically to them. Personas can determine how your content is written, what kinds of images should be used, and where advertisements and media should be placed.

The biggest benefit from taking the time to write personas for B2B brands? When you learn your audience inside and out, sales will naturally follow.

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5 B2B Instagram Marketing Campaigns That Are Nailing It – And How You Can Too

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B2B Instagram Marketing Campaigns

Instagram usually isn’t a first priority for B2B marketing and sales teams – and it’s easy to see why. In a platform teeming with rich visual content, it seems a playing field best suited for B2C brands. Set that skepticism aside, because as we like to remind you, there’s still a human behind your leads, and B2B Instagram marketing campaigns can be incredibly compelling.

To get the ball rolling, think about how you view your B2B brand itself. When you start to view your brand (as well as your buyer personas) as a unique group of people with individual stories, backgrounds, and interests, you can craft a visual message that resonates. And that opens the door for a whole lot of visual opportunity and engagement.

Check Out These B2B Instagram Marketing Campaigns for Inspiration:

1.  Maersk Line – Shipping Containers. Angle: Aspiration

maerskline instagram

 

Who would have thought a shipping container company could get 64k+ followers? Maersk uses striking travel photos and ship imagery to resonate a narrative of world interconnectedness and communication – that they “move more than cargo.”

2. MailChimp – Email Marketing Service. Angle: Artsy, Irreverent, Anything But Boring.

mailchimp

This small business email marketing service could be a snooze fest. But a well-timed podcast advertisement tapped them into where they wanted to be, and an Instagram sensation was born. As one of their comments reads: “Your campaigns are [thumbs up]. I would use Mailchimp just because it’s fun and artsy.” And that says it all.

3. Fedex – Global Shipping. Angle: Affinity

Fedex
Fedex is already a household name, so the focus here is instead on sustaining brand affinity. Sending cargo never seemed so lofty or fun – and we see how Fedex is always there, rain or shine, in all corners of this beautiful planet.

4. Adobe – Software. Angle: Product Showcase

adobe
This one is a no-brainer. With a product that lends itself to visual design, Adobe can really stretch its content legs – and it does. They emphasize their product capability with a striking display of visuals that inspire designers of all levels to give their products a go.

5. HP – Technology. Angle: Cutting Edge

HP

HP is another brand that doesn’t need to put much effort into brand recognition. Instead, their approach is a cutting edge image. From virtual reality at Coachella, to gorgeously curated product shots, to technology that’s as fashionable as the models holding them, it’s clear HP lives on the edge of what’s hot now – and what’s next.

The time is ripe for your B2B brand to get on board with Instagram, but we advise you to move fast – early adopters have a much easier go at grabbing attention because the space isn’t crowded… yet. Need help developing an Instagram strategy? Drop us a line – we can help you with that.

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