Marketing Strategy
How to build a B2B marketing strategy that actually produces revenue - from ICP definition through channel selection, budget allocation, and performance measurement.
Most B2B marketing strategies fail before they're executed. They fail because they're built around activities - content calendars, ad budgets, event schedules - instead of around a theory of how marketing converts strangers into revenue. This guide builds the strategy correctly, from first principles.
A B2B marketing strategy is the set of deliberate decisions that answer five questions:
Notice that "run more LinkedIn ads" and "publish more content" are not strategy answers. They're tactics. Tactics belong inside a strategy. They're not a substitute for one.
Every other strategy decision depends on ICP clarity. The tighter your ICP, the more efficient your marketing. Define it across three dimensions:
Firmographic
Psychographic
Situational
The situational dimension is where most ICP definitions stop being useful. "Mid-market SaaS CMO" is a job description. "Mid-market SaaS CMO at a company that just raised Series B with a board mandate to hit 3x ARR in 18 months and no documented GTM playbook" is a buying trigger. Market to the trigger, not the title.
Your positioning answers: why should this specific ICP choose us over all available alternatives? The answer must be specific enough to resonate with your ICP and different enough from competitors to be worth saying. "Better quality" and "great service" are not positioning. They're filler.
Build your messaging hierarchy in three levels:
Channel selection is where strategy decisions become budget decisions. The right channels for your business depend on three variables: where your ICP spends attention, your sales motion (PLG vs. high-touch enterprise), and your budget.
The most common channel strategy mistake: spreading budget evenly across 8 channels instead of fully funding 2-3. You need enough investment in each channel to actually test it properly. Thin spend across many channels produces thin results from all of them and no learnings from any.
For most $1M-$20M B2B companies, the right primary channel stack is:
Define what a lead is before you start generating them. Most B2B companies have a marketing-sales alignment problem disguised as a lead quality problem. Marketing counts MQLs. Sales says they're all garbage. Nobody defined the criteria together.
Build a lead scoring model with sales buy-in:
Set MQL threshold: the minimum score at which sales agrees prospects are worth calling. Review and recalibrate quarterly based on MQL-to-SQL conversion data.
Marketing generates pipeline. Sales closes it. When these two functions aren't aligned, you get two common failure modes: marketing generates volume that sales ignores, or sales cherry-picks leads and blames marketing for the rest. Both waste money.
Alignment requires a written Service Level Agreement (SLA) between marketing and sales covering:
For most B2B companies at $1M-$20M revenue, marketing budget should be 10-15% of revenue. How you allocate it matters more than the total number.
| Category | % of Budget | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| Demand Generation | 40-50% | Paid media, content production, SEO, events |
| People | 30-40% | Internal team, fractional CMO, contractors |
| Technology | 10-15% | CRM, MAP, analytics, SEO tools, intent data |
| Brand and Creative | 5-10% | Design, video, photography, brand assets |
Marketing measurement must connect to revenue, not just activity. Build a dashboard with three tiers:
Strategy isn't built once and forgotten. Build it on an annual cycle with quarterly reviews:
In 30 minutes, we'll review your current marketing situation, identify the strategic gaps, and outline what a revenue-producing marketing strategy would look like for your business. No pitch - just a straight strategic conversation.
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