Is your industrial manufacturing firm lagging behind the curve when it comes to content marketing? If you’re feeling this way and unsure about what to do next, you’re certainly not alone in your industry. Because content marketing is now the go-to approach to attracting, engaging, and retaining a clearly defined audience of prospective buyers, it’s essential to get your process right.
This article outlines seven steps you should take to get a successful content marketing program flowing for your manufacturing business, ultimately helping you bring in more qualified leads you can nurture and convert into customers!
The first step to building a successful content marketing program is to know exactly who you are trying to reach! Despite most B2B manufacturing companies selling in niche industries, many of the same content rules apply. For instance, a one-size-fits-all message doesn’t work. It would be best if you segmented your target audience members before creating content that appeals to them. To whom are you marketing your products? Engineers? Production managers? Technology developers? Each type of buyer wants different things and consumes content in different ways.
What’s more, who is doing the research when looking for your solutions? Your marketing message should resonate with both the searcher and the decision-maker. So it’s essential to understand their needs and incorporate this information into your content collateral, creating different pieces for each influencer in your sales cycle.
Moreover, identifying your target buyer will inform the channels you use to market your products and publish your content. Wherever your audience is “hanging out,” you want to be there, too. Interview some of your top customers (but also be sure to pick the ones who will be most honest with you). Ask them about where they conduct market research and what type of content they’re looking for. What are their challenges – and the business conditions that triggered the search for help? What excites them? What do they like to see on a website? And how would they describe your solution in a few words?
Talk to enough customers, and you’ll start to notice patterns – and use these insights to help you connect with similar prospects!
Read More: How to Build Buyer Personas for an Industrial Marketing Plan
Like everybody else, B2B manufacturing buyers often begin their research process online, typing in specific terms and phrases into search engines like Google. Generating content about topics relevant to your target buyers – and incorporating these terms and phrases into that content – increases your chances of showing up in your buyer’s search engine results.
There are several free keyword planning tools out there that can help you determine what’s being searched for in your market – Google Keyword Planner, Ahrefs, and SEMrush, naming a few. The best keywords are phrases that have a relatively high search volume and relatively low competition. Simply put, competition refers to your chances of ranking for a keyword based on who else is currently ranking for it. Google provides you with this data. Though Google’s search algorithms are constantly evolving, and the weight it places on on-page SEO fluctuates, it will always help if you correctly position keywords to optimize your page for organic search.
Read Now: How to Do Keyword Research
Keep in mind that as B2B manufacturers, the keywords you find may return low (or even insufficient) search volume numbers. However, due to the nature of your industry, the prospects using those keywords are likely more qualified buyers – and sometimes, all it takes is one successful search result!
Start your keyword research process with Google’s Keyword Planner. It’s free if you have a Google account (sign in with your @gmail address). When you dig into the tool, you can forget the “Ad Group Ideas” – that’s the paid part of the application. Pick a few starter terms and click on the ‘Get ideas’ button, select the “keyword ideas” tab, and download these ideas to an Excel spreadsheet. You can sort by monthly search volume or competition and look for optimal combinations. Some of the keywords will be junk, but you’ll likely find many great (and new) ideas that pertain to your business, product, or industry.
Half the content marketing battle is getting started – and the idea of writing pages of new material may be daunting at first. If you think you don’t have much content to work with, you may be surprised. Instruction manuals, sales presentations, FAQs, and other documentation you’ve created as you’ve been selling and servicing customers can be modified and repurposed into resources, white papers, eBooks, blog articles, or infographics. Take the time to tailor content to each stage in the buyer’s journey – for each of your target buyers.
When taking your inventory, establish which types of content can be recycled for prospects at the top of your sales funnel (who perhaps haven’t even heard of your company and want general advice or insights about a particular topic), the middle of the funnel (who are assessing their need for a solution like yours) and the bottom of the funnel (who are looking to buy a solution, potentially from you!).
It’s important to consider how your content will all work together. When you’re just beginning a content marketing program, keep it simple. For each of your target buyer segments, assign one piece of content for each of the three stages. Mapping out what you already have provides you with a bigger picture, enabling you to see the holes you need to fill in with additional new content. This will make your lead nurturing process more fluid, as you’ll have helpful content to offer your prospects as they get closer and closer to decision time.
Read More: Historical Content Optimization Strategy: How to Increase Traffic by 90%
Asking these folks a few basic questions will help you generate new content ideas. Plus, you’ll potentially receive more material to add to your inventory. Have your sales reps encountered a lot of the same inquiries during calls with prospects? Did your customer service team help resolve a particular issue for a client? These stories can be converted into blog posts that showcase your organization’s industry expertise, as well as your company’s values and personality.
One quick way to produce a noteworthy blog post is to publish a Q&A session with one of your team members that address a hot-button industry topic. Come up with 7 or 8 questions and talk through them with the subject matter expert, transcribe the interview, tighten it up, and BOOM. There’s your next article!
Content Marketing Institute reports that 45% of the most effective manufacturing content marketers have a documented content marketing mission statement to support their strategy. In this statement, you’ll want to articulate your own company goals from content marketing. Still, it’s just as important (if not more so) to create a mission statement reflective of what you want your prospects and customers to get out of the content.
All content you produce should align with your mission. The core of your content marketing mission as a B2B industrial manufacturer should be about which problems you solve for your target buyers and the type of content you will deliver to help your buyers solve them. Solve, don’t sell! It’s critical to know what you are looking to achieve with your content marketing efforts and state it clearly to guide your plan and process.
According to CMI’s content expert Joe Pulizzi, your mission statement should cover:
Though you’re just starting, it’s essential to keep business objectives top-of-mind and establish some benchmarks and KPIs to help you measure your success once your content marketing program is up and running! Some examples of goals could include driving more traffic to your website, increasing brand awareness, generating sales qualified leads, converting those leads into customers, and improving overall customer retention.
Read More: Research-Backed: Content Marketing Tips for ManufacturingAudiences researching industrial manufacturing solutions want the facts from a trusted, credible resource. The best content will provide valuable data, testimonials, certification badges, and seals to back it up. To tie your content together, make sure each piece you craft is accompanied by a next step, as well as a Call-to-Action. Your audience should have a straightforward, actionable takeaway from each piece of content. And once they’re finished reading/watching/listening, introduce them to the next piece of content that will guide them along your sales funnel.
Pro Tip: Not everyone is cut out to be a writer. Even with a strategic mind and an eye for analytics, the best marketers in the manufacturing field may need to recruit a freelance technical copywriter to help produce meatier pieces that strike a balance between informative and entertaining content. For more on marketing to engineers and other industrial manufacturers, visit the article Marketing to Engineers [6 Copywriting Do’s & Don’ts].
It’s not enough to publish your content on your website. The promotion step is essential. Organic search is only one way your prospects can find you – and when you’re new to the world of content marketing, you can’t solely rely on “being Googled” to be found. Where are the members of your target audience finding information and reading their industry news? On which social channels are they most active?
Promote your excellent content through social media and paid advertising, in a company newsletter, via print or offline promotion, through traditional online banner ads, on your partners’ websites, and via content curation tools. You can also try pitching an article to an industry publication, providing an inventive angle to the editor accompanied by the reasons why their audience should be reading the content right now, as opposed to down the road.
To make your content work hard for you, you’ll need to identify the best social channels to promote it. When in doubt, LinkedIn Advertising is an excellent paid option for B2B manufacturers that offers excellent targeting options so you can get your content in front of the buyers you want to reach.
Now that you have seven straightforward steps to follow, you can start more effectively leveraging content marketing as a tool for your manufacturing business.
Producing content may seem like a lot of work, but we hope this article helps you simplify and streamline the process – as it’s well worth the time you put in. Though B2B manufacturing buyers are certainly a busy group of people, they still want to make the best purchasing decisions for their company. They often make those decisions by consuming your content, learning about your expertise, and developing a relationship with your business.
Are you an industrial manufacturer looking to outsource your B2B Marketing? We’ve got plenty of experience in the industrial manufacturing world to share, and we’re always happy to help! Please reach out to our team if you have any questions about getting the content marketing ball rolling. For more on choosing the right partner, visit the article "How to Identify & Choose the Best Manufacturing Marketing Agency".