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Writer's pictureFahad H

Tech Marketers Think Outside the Buyer’s Journey [New Research]


Are technology marketers moving away from creating content for the buyer’s journey?

The CMI research team found ourselves asking this question as we analyzed the data from our eighth annual content marketing survey. Here’s the finding that got us talking:


Compared with the previous year, more technology marketers say they’re focused on creating the right content for the right person at the right time – but fewer report they’re crafting content for specific points on the buyer’s journey.

Hmmm.

More on that in a moment, but first consider that technology marketers are achieving increased content marketing success. Thirty-one percent of technology marketers report that their organization’s overall content marketing approach is extremely or very successful – that’s up seven percentage points from the previous year, when 24% reported high success.31% of tech marketers say their #contentmarketing is extremely or very successful. @CMIContent #research Click To Tweet

In addition, another 50% of technology marketers this year report “moderate” success.

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And, like the previous year, nearly 70% say their organization’s overall approach to content marketing is “much/somewhat more successful” compared with one year ago.

As you can see in the report, Technology Content Marketing 2018: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America, sponsored by IDG Communications, Inc., most respondents attribute increased success to getting better with content creation and developing or adjusting strategy – the same top factors cited in the previous year.

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Since CMI began conducting annual content marketing research in 2010, technology marketers have reported more use of content marketing as well as the highest levels of content marketing effectiveness or success. They’ve often “done more” of everything – experimented with more types of content marketing, become among the first to document their content marketing strategy and use social media platforms to distribute content, etc. – thus, we consider tech marketers “early adopters.”

Therefore, when we see notable shifts in their replies to our annual content marketing survey, we think carefully about what those responses might indicate. This time, three areas caught our attention.

More emphasis on targeted, relevant, well-timed content

Top performers among tech marketers held steady year-over-year, with 78% reporting they always or frequently prioritize providing the right content to the right person at the right time. However, the total group had a big jump, with 63% reporting they do this (vs. 49% the previous year).78% top tech marketers say they prioritize providing right content to right person at right time. @CMIContent Click To Tweet

Robert Rose, CMI’s chief strategy advisor and head of consulting engagements, said these findings “seem to reflect something I’m seeing among clients, which is a focus on ‘personalization’ and ‘targeting’ and ‘real-time’ usage of data to optimize experiences. And there is definitely a learning curve involved.”

What it means to you:

Getting the right content to the right person at the right time requires a deep understanding of your audience. Solid buyer personas certainly play a role. But personas, while a convenient shorthand, are neither a one-and-done proposition nor the final word on understanding audience needs.

And, as Robert points out, they use data and technology to deliver the content when it’s needed most.

That brings us to the somewhat surprising finding about the buyer’s journey.


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Less emphasis on crafting content for the buyer’s journey

In our recent research on B2B North America marketers, we found that B2B marketers in general reported a decrease in “always/frequently crafting content for specific points in the buyer’s journey” (53% in 2017 vs. 41% in 2018).

We see this year-over-year drop in focus on crafting content for the buyer’s journey for technology marketers, too, especially among top performers and those who say they’re the least successful:

  1. Top-performing technology marketers: In 2017, 81% of top performers said they always or frequently craft content for points on the buyers’ journey. In 2018, only 67% answered that way.

  2. Least successful technology marketers: While 39% said they focused on the buyers’ journey in 2017, only 24% said they did in 2018Fewer tech marketers focus on the buyer's journey in 2018 than did last year. @CMIContent #research Click To Tweet

  3. All technology marketers: In 2017, 60% said they always or frequently focused on creating content for the buyer’s journey. That dropped to 50% in 2018.

What it means to you:

Why do B2B marketers in general (and tech marketers specifically) seem to be paying less attention to the buyer’s journey when crafting content? For one thing, there isn’t just one version of the buyer’s journey. Some say it has three phases, while others identify five or more. It can vary depending on the nature of your products and services – and the buying process that prospects/customers follow is never linear anyway.

Robert offers this insight to explain why more marketers say they focus on creating the right content for the right person at the right time, yet fewer report crafting content specifically for the buyer’s journey: “It could be a semantical difference to some degree, but rather than the ‘old-school’ development of content for the buyer’s journey, we’re seeing a focus on dynamically serving up content in the audience’s time – no matter what stage they happen to be in.

“We’re also seeing a general maturing of the market and a shift to ‘other’ types of content programs like account-based marketing.”We're seeing a maturing of the market & shift to other types of #content programs like ABM. @robert_rose Click To Tweet

Is your company moving to new models like ABM and/or tiring of the “craft content for the buyer’s journey” approach? If so, let us know in the comments section why, how, and where you’re shifting your approach.


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More leadership support

Leadership support increased year-over-year across the board for technology marketers, no matter their reported level of overall content marketing success:

  1. The percentage of all technology marketers surveyed who agree their leadership team gives them ample time to produce content marketing results increased from 51% to 66%.

  2. Among the top-performing technology marketers in the group, the percentage increased from 81% to 88%.

  3. Even the least successful technology marketers reported an increase in leadership support (20% to 40%).

What it means to you:

How much is ample time? That depends on many factors including the targeted audience, the level of “content saturation” in the subject area (i.e., how much content on the subject exists), the quality of the content, the accuracy and timing of distribution, and more.

If you’re among the technology marketers who are not getting ample time to produce results, see these resources: Looking for Content Strategy Buy-In? Don’t Rely on the Same Old Arguments and 7 Ways to Stop Flailing with Your Content Marketing in 2017.

Conclusion

We’d love to hear whether your company is moving toward new models of creating relevant content, how and where to target it, and when.

Wouldn’t it be interesting if the marketers given ample time to produce results are among those who are trying new things? How excellent would it be if leadership gave ample time for its teams to learn new procedures that over the long run produce better results? If that’s your situation, let us know. If not, let us know that, too.

The full Technology Content Marketing 2018: Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends-North America report offers a big-picture glimpse into how marketers at tech companies approach content marketing. See how top performers do things differently than their peers, how much budget they spend on content marketing, how well content projects flow throughout the organization from concept through completion, and more.


Want more insight? Join us for a one-day Technology Industry Lab at Content Marketing World on Sept. 7. And come earlier in the week for Content Marketing World. Register today using code BLOG100 to save $100.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

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