{"id":960953,"date":"2020-04-15T18:21:15","date_gmt":"2020-04-16T01:21:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/komarketing.com\/?p=44519"},"modified":"2020-04-15T21:24:46","modified_gmt":"2020-04-16T04:24:46","slug":"how-to-adapt-b2b-digital-marketing-to-the-buyer-journey-in-2020","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/customerthink.com\/how-to-adapt-b2b-digital-marketing-to-the-buyer-journey-in-2020\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Adapt B2B Digital Marketing to the Buyer Journey in 2020"},"content":{"rendered":"
Understanding how a B2B buyer\u2019s journey naturally progresses is key to designing a digital marketing program<\/a> that works in any economic climate. When we do this with our clients, it allows us to see their marketing as a whole, rather than looking at isolated marketing tactics and getting overly focused on minor issues.<\/p>\n Once we understand what\u2019s already working for a client, we can then apply an informed strategy to amplify their successes. Occasionally, we may also recommend that a client step back from a few marketing tactics that might not be working well enough.<\/p>\n Given how quickly and completely the business environment has changed lately, now is an especially good time to think about the larger context of our marketing. It\u2019s a good time to assess what our prospects and customers see as they interact with us. So if you find yourself with a little extra downtime right now, it\u2019s a good time to ask:<\/p>\n A solid understanding of how prospects see a vendor\u2019s business and their marketing (which can be very different than what the vendor sees) can make marketing budgets vastly more effective. It can help marketers know what to focus on in a time of uncertainty and upheaval.<\/p>\n Fortunately, there\u2019s quite a lot of research available to help us see how B2B buyers are navigating<\/a> their purchase process. Many things have changed in the last few years.<\/p>\n We\u2019ve all heard different statistics about how much of the buyer\u2019s journey happens before the company is ever contacted. But it\u2019s such a seismic change that it still bears repeating.<\/p>\n It\u2019s also a trend that continues to accelerate. Research from Gartner<\/a> has revealed that not only does most of the buyers\u2019 journey happen before the company is ever contacted; only 17% of the cumulative time a buyer puts into making a purchase will be spent meeting with potential suppliers. That\u2019s all of the potential suppliers, a buyer will assess, too, not just the one solution they ultimately purchase.<\/p>\n Per 2019 research from Gartner, \u201cWhen buyers are comparing multiple suppliers\u201a the amount of time spent with any one sales rep may be only 5% or 6%.\u201d<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Clearly, with this minimal level of human-to-human interaction, B2B marketers need to step forward to support the buyer\u2019s journey as much as they can. Accessible, personalized content that meets buyers\u2019 needs is a good start, but that content must also be tailored<\/a> for different personas, and for the different team members who typically decide which solution to purchase.<\/p>\n While we may refer to \u201cthe buyers\u2019 journey\u201d frequently, let\u2019s remember B2B purchases are usually a decision made by a group. This has several consequences:<\/p>\n Research from Sirius Decisions<\/a> suggests that \u201cbuying by committee\u201d and \u201cconsensus\u201d has only become more common in the last few years. The chart below illustrates that in 2017, 41% of B2B buying scenarios could be categorized as \u201cindependent.\u201d In 2019, only 34% could be.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n So most purchases are made by committee. But how big is the typical buying committee? The same Gartner research cited above indicates that \u201cThe typical buying group for a complex B2B solution involves six to 10 decision makers\u201a each armed with four or five pieces of information they\u2019ve gathered independently and must deconflict with the group.\u201d <\/p>\n Internet users have almost universally shifted over to mobile devices in the last few years, and B2B buyers are no exception. As this excerpt from net solutions\u2019 The State of B2B Ecommerce in 2020<\/a> infographic shows, 91% of buyers\u2019 searches are done through a mobile device now.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The B2B buyer\u2019s journey also continues through mobile devices all the way to purchase. Any email communications marketers send, of course, are also largely read on mobile devices, and while lead nurturing may not be exclusively done through email, much of it is.<\/p>\n Content consumption, as well, is also increasingly mobile. As outlined in DemandGen\u2019s 2020 Content Preferences Study<\/a>, \u201ccontent preferences have shifted to a higher preference in mobile-optimized content over the past 12 months\u201d with 44% of the respondents surveyed answering the question, \u201cHow have your B2B content consumption habits changed over the past year?\u201d with \u201cI prefer mobile-optimized content to access on my smartphone or tablet.\u201d<\/p>\n Finally, while it might seem like having a mobile website is something agencies and marketing experts have been recommending for years, there are still some companies who have not yet made their websites mobile-friendly. The 2020 CMO Survey<\/a> reported that 14.5% of CMOs say \u201clack of a mobile-friendly website\u201d is still hindering their mobile marketing efforts.<\/p>\n Most marketers are committed to understanding their customers and prospects. We want to know how they see our offerings and our messaging. We might also do well to consider how B2B buyers view their jobs. And, increasingly, B2B buyers see their jobs as challenging.<\/p>\n As Gartner explains,<\/p>\n \u201c\u2026 the set of options and solutions buying groups can consider is expanding as new technologies, products, suppliers and services emerge. <\/p>\n Simply making purchasing easier might help our buyers out a lot. This would include other trends we\u2019ve mentioned here, such as making information more mobile-friendly, enabling easier B2B online purchases, and giving B2B buyers personalized, timely information so they can continue their deliberation process until (or if) they are ready to reach out to Sales for help.<\/p>\n Support after the purchase could ease new customers\u2019 challenges, too. So marketers may also want to prioritize customer success and customer service, or, at least, work to coordinate with those departments.<\/p>\n B2B buyers are inundated with information, and savvy enough to know that much of the information they\u2019re given is biased. As a consequence of this, they are increasingly turning to each other as a reliable source of information.<\/p>\n Fortunately for them, there are plenty of options. Review sites, in particular, are an important part of the content buyers consume as they access different options. Because of this, B2B marketers need to view review sites and reviews as a marketing channel. This is how our customers are finding us and learning about our products.<\/p>\n As I wrote earlier this month<\/a>, independent ratings and reviews are key to building relationships with customers. They are important both generating a new customer and in keeping that customer long-term.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Company and product reviews often come up alongside branded search terms, which raises the issue of another channel to monitor: what\u2019s appearing in search results<\/a> for your branded terms. Some of this you can control, some you can\u2019t, but we need to be aware of what people see when they query our company name.<\/p>\n Peer-to-peer information can also take the form of case studies<\/a> and testimonials. These are high-value pieces of content every B2B marketer should use throughout the different touchpoints of the buyers\u2019 journey. KoMarketing\u2019s website employs testimonials on most pages of the site, and we\u2019ve found our customer stories, aka case studies, to be particularly effective in late-stage decision-making.<\/p>\n Peer-to-peer content isn\u2019t limited to case studies and testimonials, either. 39% of B2B buyers said \u201cI get more of my content through social networks or peer recommendations\u201d when asked \u201cHow have your B2B content consumption habits changed over the past year?\u201d in DemandGen\u2019s 2020 Content Preferences Study.<\/p>\n B2B ecommerce<\/a> is an under-recognized force in marketing, but that\u2019s been changing in recent years, and it should continue to change. Frost & Sullivan predicts<\/a> that B2B e-commerce will actually outgrow the B2C market by 2025.<\/p>\n Even now, 93% of B2B buyers search online before buying a product (also per Frost & Sullivan), and the same percentage of B2B buyers prefer to complete their purchases online once they\u2019ve decided to buy.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n This once again forces B2B marketers to step up to how modern buying has shifted, this time towards automation. A human Sales contact was once the defacto order-taker. Now, customers often prefer to place orders themselves, either by mobile device or desktop, via a company website or an app.<\/p>\n We\u2019ve all seen many visual representations of the B2B buyer\u2019s journey<\/a>. Many look like this:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n While these are useful illustrations (and are specifically designed to distill parts of the buyers\u2019 journey down into their most essential), they do leave out a key aspect of the buyers\u2019 journey: Complexity. This is especially true when we step back from the single buyer\u2019s journey and think about all the different ways all of our different types of buyers purchase.<\/p>\n The buyers\u2019 journey, simply put, is not linear. It is something more like this:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Any company that attempts to map the different paths their buyers take from first touch all the way to repeat buyer will be familiar with this. Any B2B marketer who has planned a lead nurturing sequence in a detailed way will also be familiar with how complex buyer paths can be. The buyer\u2019s journey of today is in fact so complex that some have referred to it as a maze<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n\n
By the time a buyer contacts a Salesperson, their journey is largely complete.<\/h2>\n
B2B purchases are often made by committee or by consensus.<\/h2>\n
\n
Not too surprisingly, buying committees or \u201cgroups\u201d tend to be larger or smaller across enterprises. SiriusDecisions breaks out B2B buying purchase size and committees like this:<\/p>\nThe B2B buyer\u2019s journey is increasingly done through mobile devices.<\/h2>\n
The B2B buyer\u2019s journey is challenging.<\/h2>\n
\n
These dynamics make it increasingly difficult for customers to make purchases. In fact, more than three-quarters of the customers Gartner surveyed described their purchase as very complex or difficult.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\nThe B2B buyer relies heavily on peer-to-peer information.<\/h2>\n
Ecommerce has become the norm.<\/h2>\n
The B2B buyer\u2019s journey is not linear.<\/h2>\n