They say ‘content is king’: and with businesses who effectively use content reporting 4-10 x higher lead rate and 20% increase in sales-ready leads, it’s easy to understand why content marketing has been granted such a regal title. But it’s time-consuming to produce, and a lot of businesses are spending a lot of time producing content that does not lead to a revenue outcome.
In this article, we walk you through;
Most of the time, before becoming a customer, a prospect will travel along the “buyer’s journey”: these are the stages a customer goes through leading up to their purchase.
It's a marketer's job to give a prospective buyer the fuel to move them along the funnel toward a purchase. Statistics show that people get up to 60% of the way through a buying process before they’re ready to talk to anyone about making a purchase.
The internet has made it easier for marketers (and salespeople) to engage customers at the various stages of their journey using content marketing.
In a nutshell, content marketing can produce more traffic, more leads, and more sales.
When you define each stage of your buyers journey, and map content to each stage of your buyers journey, you can move customers to the purchase stage.
Here are content ideas for each stage of the buyers journey;
Top of the Funnel: Awareness
A buyer is looking for high-level educational content to help better understand their problem, ramifications of their problem, and the ways they can solve a problem.
Capture their attention is through optimised, high-value content like
Awareness-stage goals include:
KEEP IN MIND: At the awareness stage, a prospects value as a lead is low: there’s no guarantee that they’ll buy from you. But those who find your content helpful and interesting may journey on to the middle of the funnel.
Content Ideas for the Evaluation Stage
Evaluation is arguably the most critical point in the buyer’s journey because this is where prospective customers start eliminating solutions that aren’t a good fit.
The most effective types of content in the evaluation stage are;
Evaluation-stage goals include:
Content Ideas for the Purchase Stage
Most websites are littered with bottom-of-the-funnel content: calls-to-action for trial offers, demos, downloads, and estimate request buttons -- despite the fact that the majority of their audience isn’t ready to buy initially.
By itself, a bottom-of-the-funnel offer isn’t likely to close a lot of leads into customers. But when a bottom-of-funnel offers appears *after* a lead has been nurtured through awareness and evaluation, you’re combining the compelling nature of that final offer with all the engagement you’ve created leading up to that point. You’re more likely to close and see an increase in conversions.
The most effective types of content in the purchase stage tend to be
Purchase-stage goals include:
Many businesses already have content they can use in the awareness stage: it may be content that already sits within the marketing team in the form of;
Many businesses already have content they can use in the evaluation stage: it may be content that already sits within the sales team in the form of
You can turn these sales tools into content that can better enable customers to evaluate your offering.
Many businesses already have content they can use in the purchase stage: it may be content that already sits within the customer service team in the form of;