It’s getting harder out there for B2B sales and marketing teams.
Harder to generate leads, drive conversations and convert prospects.
But it doesn’t feel harder for everyone. You know the companies we’re talking about; the ones that seem to grab a lot of attention and engagement with every post, publication and prompt.
And even though you might be doing the same things in the same places, you’re not seeing the same results.
So, what gives?
Winning over buyers starts with brand marketing.
When your team is facing pressure to meet certain goals, it’s easy to focus on the most pressing objectives: push sales - hit targets - drive growth.
But where does that leave your brand?
Your brand is what builds familiarity, trust and credibility with your ideal customers—even before they’re ready to buy.
A strong, recognizable brand helps you own the conversation with your target audience, making it easier for your sales and marketing team to convert prospects into customers when the time is right.
Shifting your brand from static to sales driver.
Identify your ideal audience.
Start by evaluating your past and current customers, looking at their industry, size, challenges and needs and the types of deals that have been the most successful. The goal is to identify the common traits that define your most valuable customers.
By understanding these patterns, you can narrow in on the target audience whose needs align with your solutions, allowing your team to better position your brand to meet their goals.
Build a brand tailored to your buyers.
To connect with your buyers, you need to understand their objectives, the problems that get in their way and the solutions they’re looking for.
Dive deep into their communities—conduct surveys and interviews, pay attention to what they interact with online and where—so you can learn what’s most important to them.
Once you know what matters to your buyers, align your brand messaging to reflect how your product or service helps them achieve those goals. This builds trust and positions your brand as partner capable of solving their most pressing problems.
Distribute your unique brand perspective.
For your brand to be effective, it has to be consistent—and visible.
Which means you need to communicate your message not just on your website but also across your social media, email campaigns and other relevant channels.
Focus on being a hub of customer-centric content while being wary of adding more noise to an oversaturated thought leadership space.
Are there questions your audience is asking that no one is answering? Are there industry- or market-specific topics your company has insight into?
Every piece of content you create should reinforce your brand’s story and highlight how you uniquely address your buyers’ needs.