Loved this great insight on Sun Zsu’s ancient proverb “Your strength will eventually become your weakness.” Amen Sun!
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Loved this great insight on Sun Zsu’s ancient proverb “Your strength will eventually become your weakness.” Amen Sun!
via
It may be the lynchpin of B2B marketing, but the competition for the inbox is more competitive than ever. It’s clear that the “batch and blast” approaches of the past no longer work.
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I’ve long argued that Buyer Personas are THE basic building block of B2B marketing today.
But Jim Burns of Avitage told me that companies he talks to claim “We know our buyers.” But do they really?
I’ve experienced this too, Jim. In fact, a small software company in Florida simply called a meeting and discussed personas. Sorry, those are not personas.
A bit of digging reveals that, while many executives may think they know buyers, they lack the deep insights needed for real buyer personas.
Please note that standardized buyer personas work regardless of industry. Take the same list of questions to a financial services market, a retail market, an accounting market, etc.
What companies need to do is develop a standard written template for buyer personas. This written template should contain all the questions that the company will ask for standard buyer personas.
To come up wish a list of questions for the written template, let’s look to the great post by Barbra Gago of LeftBrain Marketing for the Content Marketing Institute, entitled 20 Ways Buyers Consume Content.
I suggest you design headings and group your questions along these lines:
Questions to ask:
How to find this info:
Knowing the right questions to ask is key, but getting the answers can be a bit more tricky. The easiest way to get a real sense of how your buyers are leveraging content through these channels is to talk to them:
I am currently working on a project where I need to get into the minds of engineers. I am reaching out specifically to engineers who are active in their communities online. Because they are already engaged within the community, many of them have been very open to a 15-20 minute call. This has been extremely helpful not just to get the information, but also to affirm assumptions that I have made.
Questions to ask:
How to find this info:
Your web analytics can be the easiest way to determine what content your buyers are interested in and what formats they prefer. Take a look at what topics are the most popular on your site (e.g., blog posts or product pages) and cross-reference the format in which that content is presented.
Talking to your sales team can also shed some insight on the kinds of content they need for themselves as well as for any decision makers at the client site.
Questions to ask:
How to find this info:
Knowing how much information your buyers want to receive – and how they want to receive it – is difficult to discover unless you have some conversations.
Providing an RSS feed on your blog or website sheds insight into how often buyers are actively engaging with the new content you provide, but this is not the only metric to track. There are a lot of other places these people are getting their information. Consider talking to owners of other popular sites that your buyers are visiting regularly, or examining community engagement. Evaluate how often people are commenting or posting new content to community sites.
Questions to ask:
“If more companies listened to (Find New Customers) a lot more would be sold.” Dan McDade, Pointclear.