5 fundamental B2B digital marketing strategies for driving growth
Change language:
And no, setting up a website and inactive social media accounts doesn’t cut it. Now more than ever the importance of deploying digital marketing strategies can’t be underscored.
Brands are gaining substantial visibility, tapping into new market segments, and communicating with prospects using channels the latter preferred.
So, if you’re still testing the waters or doing the bare minimum to keep up with the competition, it’s time to go full throttle. Online marketing isn’t going anywhere, but brands that refuse to embrace the methodology might.
Having said that, there are multiple lead generation strategies touted as worth investing in, making it hard to know where to begin. Let’s tackle some fundamental ones to get you started.
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Work With Data
Today’s customers are masters of self-research preferring to remain anonymous longer in the purchase cycle until they feel ready.
This pretty much leaves vendors at the “mercy” of the buyer. Without analytical data, you have no way of knowing who’s checking your site or content so you can nurture the relationship.
Thanks to analytical data, businesses can study a visitor’s digital body language and glean useful insights about their likes and dislikes. They can use these insights to improve their customer profiles, personalize communication and win over new or repeat customers.
Now, this data can be generated internally, available publicly, or paid for. Before choosing a source, we recommend clarifying what you need the data for.
Is it to increase sales, boost customer loyalty, or improve your knowledge of customer needs? With this covered, you can then determine the best way to source this data.
Further, data-driven marketing allows teams to identify which approaches (channels, content, and times) are more effective.
Rather than deploy multiple activities, you use data analytics to filter the least effective so you can double down on the ones that work. And after that, measure the results.
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Content Marketing
Here’s what most organizations do: determine that they need to create content, delegate the task to one person (perhaps two), and leave it at that. The staff in charge thinks up an idea, writes the blog, circulates it to their teammates for comments, and edits before publishing the post.
This person comes up with another idea or gets one from someone on the team and repeats the process. It’s all very haphazard and hardly the stuff that truly gets the audience’s attention.
For a strategy that’s foundational to attracting leads and boosting growth, jumping in without a clear and expressly documented plan may lead to inefficiency. Worse, you’ll waste manhours on content that doesn’t address the real issues your customers face or bring you closer to attaining your goals.
To maximize your content strategy, you’ll need to
- Identify your target audience
- Determine the questions your content seeks to answer and your overall goal for engaging in content marketing
- Clarify how you intend to differentiate your content from what’s out there
- Agree on content formats and distribution channels
- Put together an editorial calendar with realistic timelines
- Determine how to measure your strategy’s success
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Cold Calling
The 21st Century cold calling tactic isn’t about barging into people’s lives—there are laws that protect the unsuspecting public from that.
But regulations aside, those who want to succeed in this field must understand that effective cold calling isn’t about driving a hard sell.
It’s about building trusting relationships over the phone. Personalising your script so the prospect feels more at ease and opens up to conversing with you.
Here’s how to build trust





