Content Strategy
How to build a content strategy that generates qualified pipeline - not just pageviews. The framework, topics, formats, distribution, and measurement that separate content that sells from content that sits.
Most B2B content strategies are publishing strategies in disguise. They answer "what should we publish this month?" instead of "what does our buyer need to believe before they'll choose us, and how do we use content to build that belief?" This guide builds the strategy correctly.
Content serves three strategic functions in B2B marketing:
Every piece of content should serve one of these functions explicitly. Content that doesn't serve one of these functions is not a strategy, it's a content calendar.
Build your content around three tiers based on buyer awareness stage:
Tier 1: Problem-Aware Content (Top of Funnel)
The buyer knows they have a problem but doesn't know your solution exists. Content: guides, frameworks, industry analysis, "how to solve X" articles. Goal: be found by the right people and build enough trust to earn their email or return visit. Keywords: broad informational searches around the problem your solution solves.
Tier 2: Solution-Aware Content (Middle of Funnel)
The buyer is evaluating solutions to their problem. Content: case studies, comparison guides, ROI calculators, webinars, detailed use-case content. Goal: build preference for your approach over alternatives. Keywords: solution category searches, comparison searches, vendor evaluation searches.
Tier 3: Vendor-Aware Content (Bottom of Funnel)
The buyer is evaluating you specifically. Content: pricing pages, implementation guides, customer testimonials, security documentation, proposal templates. Goal: remove objections and make it easy to say yes. Keywords: brand + review, brand + pricing, brand + alternative searches.
Topic selection is where most content strategies go wrong. They choose topics based on keyword volume or editorial interest, not buyer intent. Use this filter for every topic you consider:
Topics that pass all four filters go in the content roadmap. Topics that fail any filter get cut, regardless of search volume.
| Format | Best For | Time Investment | Pipeline Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long-form guide (2,000+ words) | SEO, Tier 1-2 awareness | High | High (6-12 mo) |
| Case study | Tier 2-3, sales enablement | Medium | Very high |
| LinkedIn posts (executive) | Awareness, brand authority | Low | High (compounding) |
| Webinar | Tier 2, lead capture | High | Medium-high |
| Email newsletter | Nurture, list retention | Medium | Medium |
| Video (short-form) | Awareness, social amplification | Medium | Medium (brand) |
The rule of content marketing: spend as much time distributing content as creating it. A great piece of content with no distribution produces nothing. An average piece of content with excellent distribution outperforms it every time.
For every piece of content, build a distribution checklist:
Stop measuring content by pageviews and shares. Measure it by pipeline contribution:
If your CRM isn't capturing content engagement as part of lead history, fix this before building your content measurement system. The data infrastructure has to exist before the reporting can.
In 30 minutes, we'll review your current content program, identify the gaps, and outline a content strategy focused on pipeline - not pageviews. Straight talk, no sales pitch.
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