Marketing & Strategy Innovation

Why Thought Leadership Is Your Most Valuable Asset

by Jon Miller on 16 October, 2009 - 21:02

As a B2B marketer, thought leadership is one of the most valuable assets your brand — or you — can attain.

In down economies, prospects conduct even more research leading up to the purchase. This means B2B marketing professionals must help educate prospects in the early stages of the buying cycle; doing this well can help frame their buying process and establish your brand as a trusted advisor that understands their problems and knows how to solve them. Therefore it's more vital than ever for your organization to be viewed as an industry leader and trusted resource for all key stakeholders: customers, media, analysts, investors and everyone in between.

Unfortunately thought leadership is not as easily quantifiable as other demand generation metrics like revenue, sales or leads. And investing in reputation building may not produce the same short-term, immediate effects of efforts such email marketing campaigns. But cultivating thought leadership can have a significant long-term payoff, as in time it elevates your brand at scale.

What are the qualities that define thought leaders? Thought leaders:

  • Develop relationships with customers, prospects and others by engaging them in non-sales, industry-relevant conversations.
  • Become the go-to source for research, insight and interpretation of the latest news and trends.
  • Gain trust among prospective customers so that when the time finally comes to purchase, customers turn to the thought leader organization.

Try incorporating some of these ideas in your B2B marketing efforts to build your organization's reputation:

  1. Provide original research. Conduct a poll on your website, send out a survey to customers or perform a more in-depth study with the help of a third party. Whatever type of research you conduct, this information can be especially useful for media and industry analysts. And the more often your research is picked up by these sources, the more likely prospects will view you as a trusted source.
  2. Use your company blog to provide insight. Every company is now a media company. And while networks like Twitter are all the buzz, the most flexible and ultimately valuable publishing tool remains a blog. For your blog to succeed at positioning your brand as a thought leader, you need to go beyond simply reporting and reacting. Include insightful commentary and analysis on industry trends, and start threads of original ideas. This will position you as a leader as opposed to a follower.
  3. Be a solution for specific problems. If your finger is on the pulse of your industry, you'll understand clearly what the pain points are for prospects. Taking the time to articulate solutions to timely problems will position you as a trusted source. When you are able to solve specific problems that people in your industry are actively seeking solutions for, you'll be positioned well ahead of competitors.
  4. Join the speaking circuit. From keynote speeches to panel discussions to breakout sessions, opportunities abound to provide insight for potential customers at industry events. Research the types of conferences, meetings and conventions that you prospects are likely to attend, and develop relationships with event organizers.

If you still aren't sold on the value of cultivating thought leadership, consider the indirect result of these measures. Done well, reputation-building efforts can:

  • Provide you with additional quality inbound links to your website
  • Increase higher-quality referral traffic
  • Elevate your brand to become referential

Plus, the more optimized content you produce in the form of whitepapers, blog posts and webinars, the higher your search rankings. What's not to like about that?

Original Post: http://blog.marketo.com/blog/2009/10/why-thought-leadership-is-your-most-valuable-asset.html

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3 comments

Mark Delfeld says:

22 Jan 2010, 17:26

I like your post Jon. I guess all I could add is that I believe your quote "Unfortunately thought leadership is not as easily quantifiable as other demand generation metrics like revenue, sales or leads" could me modified somewhat.

In my experience, any marketing activity, from deep thought leadership content to the most mundane material, can lead a prospect or customer to your site where they can be cookied and lead scored. The key is capturing the referral from the source to identify that it came from a thought leadership activity. This could be done both automatically or manually (loading in an attendee list from an in-person event).

I have a post on this topic on my blog if you are interested. And of course, I have not had time to go through all your great posts, so perhaps this has been covered by you in the past. I look forward to reading more of your posts.

Henry Bruce says:

10 Dec 2009, 18:52

Good post Jon. Most important point is the one about buyer behavior in a down economy being more research oriented. Marketing Sherpa correctly stated the ned of last year that most B2B tech companies already had enough leads in their DB for 2009, but that the focus needed to be on nurturing them through the buying cycle. Unfortunately, most companies missed the boat on prioritizing lead nurturing processes with good TL content. Keep beating that drum.
Henry

Mark allen Roberts says:

27 Oct 2009, 01:46

Great post,

Thought leadership is the true litmus test to whether you are strategic marketing partner, or a "marketing tool" http://tinyurl.com/yb64qyv or worst yet a “smore” …a social media whore http://tinyurl.com/ylgj339 .

By creating thought leadership you start the trust building early in the marketing funnel, long before someone enters your sales pipeline.

If you wait to build trust for the sale funnel you needlessly extend the selling cycle.

Mark Allen Roberts
www.nosmokeandmirrors.com

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