Content marketing is a vital component of any B2B marketing strategy.
Savvy marketers devote time and money to developing various types of
content, including white papers, webinars, tweets and blogs, which
appeal to and engage their audiences. But are marketers getting the most
out of their content?
Not all content is created equal, so it’s up to you to determine what will deliver the most ROI. And, while each piece serves as a way to engage with a potential lead, content ROI is maximized when it is used at the optimal stage of the buyer’s journey. White papers, for example, support sales in that they provide helpful and in-depth information on a product or service to a prospect conducting initial research. They are often gated, requiring that prospects enter their name and contact information in order to access the material. This helps move prospects down the sales funnel and allows marketers to capture information they can ultimately pass on to their sales departments.
However, while helpful, using content to obtain customer contact information only scratches the surface. Content that provides a deeper level of engagement with the customer and then allows marketers to monitor exactly how the customer engaged provides more value to marketers than a simple name and email address.
Webcasts are a great example of this. Attendees have multiple ways to engage with your brand during a webcast, and after the event you can get detailed information on how long audience members were engaged, what questions they posed in a Q&A, what documents they downloaded and what content they shared. The interactive nature of webcasts allows organizations to obtain more data and, as a result, paint a more detailed, clearer picture of their audience, obtaining a deeper understanding of their interests, what motivates them, and how they interacted with your content. This information then enables accurate ranking of sales leads and lets you follow up in a much more personalized manner based on how interested prospects are and where they are in the buying cycle.
How you distribute different forms of content depends on its type and intended audience. But what’s most important is that you take a strategic approach when building content and understand where each piece fits within that strategy. At ON24 we let four principles guide our strategy – analytics, consistency, recycling and timing.
Not all content is created equal, so it’s up to you to determine what will deliver the most ROI. And, while each piece serves as a way to engage with a potential lead, content ROI is maximized when it is used at the optimal stage of the buyer’s journey. White papers, for example, support sales in that they provide helpful and in-depth information on a product or service to a prospect conducting initial research. They are often gated, requiring that prospects enter their name and contact information in order to access the material. This helps move prospects down the sales funnel and allows marketers to capture information they can ultimately pass on to their sales departments.
However, while helpful, using content to obtain customer contact information only scratches the surface. Content that provides a deeper level of engagement with the customer and then allows marketers to monitor exactly how the customer engaged provides more value to marketers than a simple name and email address.
Webcasts are a great example of this. Attendees have multiple ways to engage with your brand during a webcast, and after the event you can get detailed information on how long audience members were engaged, what questions they posed in a Q&A, what documents they downloaded and what content they shared. The interactive nature of webcasts allows organizations to obtain more data and, as a result, paint a more detailed, clearer picture of their audience, obtaining a deeper understanding of their interests, what motivates them, and how they interacted with your content. This information then enables accurate ranking of sales leads and lets you follow up in a much more personalized manner based on how interested prospects are and where they are in the buying cycle.
How you distribute different forms of content depends on its type and intended audience. But what’s most important is that you take a strategic approach when building content and understand where each piece fits within that strategy. At ON24 we let four principles guide our strategy – analytics, consistency, recycling and timing.
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