B2B tech marketing should help firms to get new clients. But if that’s the goal, how should it work?
It’s a big question – but it’s important to get right, because leads are key to business growth. With that in mind, we’re putting our extensive B2B tech marketing background to work to answer it correctly. Admittedly, there’s a lot of noise out there that can get in the way of good results.
Here’s how we’ve helped B2B tech firms to keep new business coming in:
It’s important to note that these steps should (nearly always) be completed sequentially – so you wouldn’t be able to, for instance, “create impactful content” before “defining the audience”.
With that said, here are the five steps to marketing for B2B tech companies.
Your audience must be clearly defined for your marketing to succeed.
It seems obvious, but poorly-defined audiences are actually all-too-common. For instance, we’ve worked with B2B tech firms who were attempting to speak the language of C-suite executives, but, in reality, were using messaging that would only connect at a mid-management level. Making correct audience distinctions is helpful in shaping nuanced value propositions.
By defining the audience, you can ensure the leads you’ll generate will actually have buying interest.
This starts on a company level. For B2B tech firms, there are generally four potential methods of audience targeting:
With a target in mind, the next step is to hone in on the individual buyer personas that would be involved in the sale.
The range of potential targets is almost limitless – but you’ve got to pick one. For instance, if you’re targeting REITs, you might sell to a portfolio manager. If you’re targeting corporations, you might home in on the C-Suite. While you’ll probably have a pretty good idea of who you’ll typically be dealing with just given the nature of the company, the best way to verify this kind of buyer data will be through research. Do buyer research, even if you have built-in assumptions.
Okay, so you’ve got an audience identified. Now, it’s time to start marketing to them by refining your message.
For B2B tech companies, this is where you start to identify the unique needs your audience faces. If they’re REITs, could you speak to how your work improves portfolio value? If you’re selling to CTOs, could you speak to how your offering will help them communicate tech needs board members?
There are a variety of tools to help you work through marketing message refinement; at New North, we like Hubspot’s Buyer Persona questions, the Storybrand framework, and the Empathy Map. Basically, these are scripted questions or narrative formats that help you to identify pain points and the true value in your service.
No matter what you use, though, the end results should be:
From a high level, defining your audience and refining your message should give you confidence in your strategic direction. The next step is to put it all to use on your website.
We view the website as the hub of your marketing and lead generation efforts. In fact, every other channel – from email to SEO to social media to paid campaigns – should revolve around your website, both in terms of messaging and in terms of driving attention, because the website is the key mechanism in showcasing your B2B tech business to potential clients.
Your website’s goals should be to generate relevant traffic and convert visitors into high-value contacts.
To those ends, your website should have:
This is just the beginning; there are plenty of other things that can be effective on your website. But if you start with these, you’ll be on the right track.
Here’s the reality: if you’re looking for your marketing to serve the purpose of lead generation, paid ad campaigns are the go-to – especially at first.
Years ago, we used to focus primarily on organic lead generation campaigns. We’d prioritize SEO, focus on getting our clients to rank for high-volume keywords relevant to their audience (say, “IT consulting firms in DC”), and dedicate the vast majority of our efforts to making it happen.
The problem is that making organic results happen takes time. SEO is a great method for generating leads, but it’s almost always a long-term play. Same with organic social campaigns. Most companies can’t afford to wait six months for leads; they need them to start flowing quickly.
That’s why paid campaigns are so useful. They’re basically a shortcut to the front of the line when it comes to getting a prospect’s attention. And, if they’re targeted well, paid ads can meet people with a service offering right when they’re looking to fill that need.
The result is high-quality, relevant traffic to the website – which, as we’ve discussed, has hopefully been built to convert those visitors into leads.
I’d recommend getting started with a Google Ads campaign first. The power of Google Ads is that you can reach people literally as they’re searching for your service, which means they’ll be particularly open to buying.
Paid social can be incredibly effective, too. But it’s generally best at entering people into the higher stages of your lead funnel (by facilitating signups to a webinar or content piece, for example, versus dropping them directly into a service consult). Very rarely are the people buying B2B tech services doing it on social.
If a paid campaign is the starter for a lead generation campaign, consistent content is the fuel. There are plenty of directions you can take this, but here’s what we recommend:
Start with the blog. Your B2B tech company’s blog should be the engine for lead generation content on other channels. Use quick excerpts from posts for social content. Create email content based on top performing posts. Build topic clusters that boost SEO results. As you create content here, it’ll naturally spill over into other channels.
Focus on the right social channels, not on every channel. Don’t get overwhelmed by trying to nail Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and a podcast all at once. Start by identifying the channels that’ll be most impactful, and use them to build out success to other channels. In other words, find out where your audience is listening, and speak to them there. For B2B tech firms, I’d recommend LinkedIn first – and you could probably stop there. If you want to go further, I’d recommend Facebook next. If you have a visual product (like architectural services), use Instagram third. I’m not a big believer in Twitter for lead generation, but if you work in a fast-paced industry (news or content generation), it may be of some use.
Do email. Build your list, and put it to use. Email is still one of the best digital marketing channels because it’s cost-effective and highly-targeted. Newsletters can be built from blog content. Nurture campaigns can be used to transition contacts into leads. The world of B2B email marketing is deep – get a fuller picture of it here.
Be consistent. Look, I get it – everyone wants results, fast. But the reality is that almost anything of lasting value takes time to build, and although it may not seem like it, the same thing’s true of digital marketing for B2B tech firms. Don’t give up on content production after a few weeks. Commit to making it happen over time (I’d recommend at least a year), and the results will start to build. That’s not to say that you shouldn’t constantly evaluate whether you’re pursuing the right activities, but it is to say that consistency wins the day, even in a digital world.
If you consistently create impactful content on the right channels, the leads will come.
Hopefully, these five steps have given you a quick-start guide to making your marketing work for lead generation. Remember, this is only one use of marketing – for B2B tech companies, nurture campaigns or reputation management campaigns may be especially useful.