As seen on Forbes
By Kathleen Lucente
How many times do you come across business-to-business (B2B) content in any given day? If you were to judge the creativity behind this type of content writing and its business-to-consumer (B2C) counterpart, it would be fair to say marketers seem to have a tougher time nailing down the first.
B2B content is often viewed as unexciting, difficult and a slog of a read that many would rather skip altogether but can’t because they need a piece of information. While no one expects this to be Pulitzer-winning writing, B2B content strategies are so important, and the time to craft compelling stories that provide value to the reader is now.
B2B marketers are tasked with finding clever ways to create compelling content, along with the vehicle to deliver it, without relying on the millions of people who typically comprise consumer markets and the virality of consumer-focused stories on social channels. B2B content is often formulaic, too product-focused or sales-oriented — though not because B2B brands and industries are uninteresting by default.
B2B markets are smaller, have longer sales cycles and typically emphasize partnerships over individual transactions, especially with the software-as-a-service (SaaS) model growing in popularity. B2B has its advantages though: more defined audiences with specific business concerns, less competition for attention and (usually) fewer brand channels to worry about.
Creating content to generate demand among business audiences should be easier than with consumer audiences. However, B2B marketers frequently fall back on the same common marketing tropes — product sheets thinly disguised as case studies, high-level white papers that shouldn’t be white papers, sales pitches masquerading as webinars — to drive engagement and draw business.
Churning out content for the sake of distributing content is futile at best, and lazy, decentralized strategy development won’t drive results. B2B marketing doesn’t have to be boring. When marketers fall into the habit of creating shallow and unimaginative content, they miss out on the perfect opportunity to provide potential new leads and current customers with valuable information that’s easy to read, remember and share.
The amount of content available in every industry, though, means that each piece of content a brand creates has likely already been published somewhere else in a different form. Such a paradox actually makes a better case for building content with a greater focus on stories and people.
While this isn’t the definitive guide to writing for the B2B industry, when creating compelling content to get above the noise, these are a few important tactics to implement to revive your storytelling.

