How to Create Buyer-Focused Sales Content That Gets Traction
What makes the difference between a piece
of content that gets no traction, and another that encourages a potential
client to buy?
Frequently, sales content is written as if it's either a sales
brochure or a technical manual—either too pushy or far too clinical. The key,
however, is to ensure the content—both substance and style—fits the buyer's
needs.
That is the crux of all well-performing content: The collateral
you create must fulfill the needs of the buyer, at whatever stage of the buying
journey.
This article will help pinpoint the why and how of creating
excellent buyer-focused content.
Identify audience needs and create content to help
An essential part of Marketing's skill set is the ability to
identify and target relevant audiences and then create content that will reach
them.
Building client personas will help with that process if you use
data to truly grasp both who your ideal buyer is and whom you currently deal
with, and then figuring out where those two align.
The content produced for external audiences should be created
for each individual persona or audience, addressing individual needs, pain
points, and requirements. Internal audiences should get a similar treatment,
but the segregation will be different: Content should be divided by
organizational schema, such as differing sales departments. (More on internal
vs. external later in this article.)
Line up the buying and
sales process
Often sales and
marketing teams approach the sales collateral creation process without thought,
and favor sales insights from only one source to create content, such as one
particular data stream.
However, buyer
feedback and insights are useful when creating sales resources. Businesses
aiming to bring into line sales collateral with client's journeys should draft
the sales process to match the potential routes to purchase.
To do so, use buyer
feedback and site analytics; they will help sales and marketing departments
understand the needs and value requirements of each buyer—how their buyers are
searching for information, and making final choices at each stage of the sales
funnel.
An ideal solution
would be for marketing and sales team leaders to meet to map out the processes
and journeys for buyers' and sales reps' needs, and then find where areas
overlap and intersect and then capitalize on those areas.
Create content for two
separate sales needs
We can pinpoint two
reasons sales content is created—either internal or external—and they often
correspond to sales funnel stages. Internal content helps prepare sales reps
for prospective client interactions; external content is activated during
client-facing sales interactions. The two are not interchangeable.
The sales and
marketing team tasked with identifying sales reps' needs and corresponding
content types should work out the messaging and the preferred medium at each
stage of the buying process—before any content is produced.
Internal Content
The stage your buyer
is at will influence which pieces of content your sales reps may need.
Early-stage buyers
won't need tech-heavy paperwork, so providing product specs to sales people
would be unnecessary at this point. It would be better to focus on content that
shows the benefits and features of your product or service, and to look at how
the mode of information consumption may change depending on the buying stage.
Early-stage buyers
might look for content from a desktop, whereas field reps prefer to have
content accessible via mobile devices when visiting late-stage buyers. That
means images and infographics might be the better fit for a tablet, compared
with wordy e-books or spreadsheets requiring close analysis, which would be
better suited to a desktop screen.
External Content
It's important to
thoroughly understand what particular information buyers are seeking at each
stage of their journey, and how to go about answering their questions
appropriately with relevant content.
Tools that can help
bolster such knowledge include Web and marketing analytics, and sales
enablement and CRM systems. These tools will steer your content creation by
showing gaps in your resources with bounce rates on certain landing pages,
common questions asked, and content with low engagement or traction.
Every piece of
external content should be produced and handed to sales teams with a specific
outcome in mind, which would ideally relate to moving buyers to the next stage
of their journey.
Once existing content
is mapped to these buyer stages, marketing and sales teams should be able to
identify gaps in content or resources and therefore should be able to create
collateral for each specific buying persona or interaction.
What does your buyers'
journey look like?
Depending on the
product or solution that your particular company offers, there are many
potential brand or product discovery journeys that a potential client could
travel.
Understanding the path
your prospects take allows for more focused content, which in turn should be
more effective in closing deals.
Determining the
buyer's journey can be accomplished by various techniques, such as talking to
current customers, analyzing lead sources, using marketing analytics, and
employing a tool such as sales enablement software that will
uncover how opportunities progress and what content they interact with.
Sales enablement
provides functionality within Salesforce so you'll be able to look at the
bigger picture in terms of prospect engagement throughout the full sales
journey. You'll be able to see the content buyers have engaged with, which
content drove initial awareness and every piece of marketing they engaged with
along the way. And you should be able to attribute an ROI to your sales and
marketing collateral. All within one place, the CRM.
Once your team members
have determined what the buyer's journey looks like, the next step is to
uncover what those buyers are asking at each stage. Queries at the start of the
buyer's journey will look very different from those asked in the final stages,
and questions that aren't covered by existing content will require the creation
of pieces that fill those gaps.
Correspondingly to the
need for tailored content, the format of the content should be tailored also.
Top-funnel content and bottom-funnel content have uniquely different purposes,
and so they should be presented in different formats. The form that content
takes can be almost as important as the content itself. Knowing what format to
use—whether whitepapers, infographics, or blog posts—will be informed by your
buyer journey you have already mapped,
The channel through
which the content will be delivered is also a key factor to consider. Depending
on the individual's position within the company and in the buyer's journey,
content could potentially appear through a social media feed, an email
campaign, or a one-on-one interaction with a sales rep. The buyer persona that
you have already built should help you define which channels will be most
pertinent.
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