Content Marketing imperative grows in face of Industry & Customer event cancellations

With major trade shows, industry gatherings and customer events cancelled around the world, digital marketing content must play an even bigger role in demand generation. Yet, many marketing organizations lack the necessary capabilities and processes to keep pace with a growing content marketing imperative, according to new strategic report from the CMO Council.

Digital marketing will need to pick up the slack, according to Donovan Neale-May, executive director of CMO Council and author of the new strategic brief, “Making Content Marketing Convert.”

“Marketers must act quickly and decisively to increase the impact, scope, reach and return of their content marketing investments in 2020,” Neale-May said. “Our research also shows there is a critical need for marketing organizations to bring more discipline and strategic thinking to content specification, delivery and analytics.”

Developed in partnership with NetLine, a leader in targeted B2B content syndication and sales funnel acceleration, the report provides valuable insights into the problems marketing organizations face in elevating the business impact of content development, distribution and lead conversion. It also provides a concise set best practices, along with a self-assessment check list for lead performance improvement.

Among CMO Council research insights that underscore the problems and shortcomings in current content marketing initiatives:

  •     Only 12 percent of marketers believe their content marketing programs targets the right audiences with relevant and persuasive content.
  •     Only 21 percent say they are sufficiently partnered with their sales counterparts in developing and measuring demand generation programs.
  •     Most view their content marketing process as ad hoc, decentralized and driven by internal stakeholder, rather than customer, interests.
  •     While 88 percent of business buyers say online content impacts vendor selection, just nine percent think of vendors as trusted sources of content.

 

Skip to content