Why is a Documented B2B Content Strategy So Important?
There are two primary reasons. First of all, neuroscience has found that we are more likely to accomplish our goals if we write them down. According to an article on Forbes last year from Mark Murphy, there are a couple of psychological factors driving this:- External storage: When your goals are written down, in a tangible and visible form (whether a physical piece of paper or even a digital document) they are harder to ignore. This is why Post-it Notes exist.
- Encoding: The actual process of writing something down makes it far more ingrained in our memories. This owes to the generation effect, “a phenomenon where information is better remembered if it is generated from one's own mind rather than simply read.”
A Three-Point Checklist for Documenting Your B2B Content Strategy
In the interest of keeping things simple, we’ll flesh this out in high-level fashion. When you cut through all the variables and moving parts, content marketing strategy almost universally nests under three buyer stages: Discovery, Consumption, Action. If our content is going to accomplish anything, it needs to be discovered, it needs to be consumed, and it needs to ultimately drive action (all with the right audiences, of course). Discovery: Who is your target audience and how will they find your content? That first part is arguably the most important in this entire discussion. Who is your audience? What makes them tick? The more specific you can get, the better. When you gain a firm and comprehensive understanding of the people you want to reach — the challenges they’re trying to solve, the questions they’re trying to answer, the channels they tend to use — it can and should guide your entire strategy. This is one foundational area where the documentation process is particularly valuable. Going through the exercise of articulating details about your audience can expose gaps in your knowledge, and force you to challenge existing assumptions. The “Discovery” phase of your content strategy should account for the following:- Who is our buying audience?
- What differentiates the various segments and buyer personas?
- How can we develop an SEO strategy that aligns with their search behavior?
- Which channels do they use?
- Who do they listen to and respect in the industry or niche?
- What topic clusters or editorial themes will dictate our content direction?
- How will our content stand out from competitors?
- Are we optimizing on all fronts for mobile users?
- How will we compel clicks with our headlines, meta descriptions and social messaging?What will be the timing and cadence for publishing?
- What tools and technology will you use to plan, publish, and track your content?
- How will you respond and interact to audience engagement? Whose responsibility?
- Where do organic, paid, and influencers fit in?
- How will we convert our buying audience into customers?
- How will we build and maintain relationships?
- What are our key performance indicators (KPIs)?
- Where do our benchmarks lie?
- How will success ultimately be judged?
- What ongoing steps are in place for conversion optimization?
- How does every piece of the Discovery/Consumption framework above lead into this piece?
Write It Down, Ramp It Up
If you can confidently check all three boxes above, you’ve got yourself a fundamental content marketing strategy that is built for success. There are plenty of extensions and additional elements that come into play, but for the sake of simplicity, this should cover your bases. By documenting all of this, creating external storage and encoding it for your team, you’ll be on your way to full focal alignment, minimizing miscommunications and ambiguities that plague many operations. And if you don’t have time to create that documented B2B content strategy at this moment? Make a note to yourself. Don’t underestimate the power of writing something down. Want more resources from our blog to help solidify your content strategy? Check out these past articles:- What is a Content Marketing Strategy (And Why Do I Need One?), by Caitlin Burgess
- How SEO Can Work With Content Strategy, by Lee Odden
- How to Inform Your Content Strategy Using SEO Insights, by Annie Leuman
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