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Guide

How to Write a Case Study That Closes Deals

A step-by-step guide to writing marketing case studies that prove your value with real numbers. Covers client selection, interview questions, the situation-challenge-solution-results structure, design, and distribution.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 13 min

To write a case study, interview a successful client, document their situation before working with you, the specific challenge they faced, the solution you delivered, and the measurable results that followed. The best case studies are 500-1,500 words, lead with the headline result, and include at least three concrete metrics. According to the Content Marketing Institute’s 2025 B2B report, 58% of B2B marketers use case studies, making them the third most popular content format after short articles and video. A case study isn’t a testimonial. Testimonials say “they were great to work with.” Case studies say “they increased our qualified leads by 142% in six months while reducing our cost per acquisition by 34%.” One is a nice quote. The other is proof that changes buying decisions.

“We’ve written over 50 case studies for clients and for our own firm. The ones that actually move pipeline share three traits: a specific headline number, a named challenge the reader recognizes in their own business, and a methodology section that makes the reader think ‘these people know what they’re doing.’ Everything else is decoration.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

What’s in this guide

  1. How do you choose the right client for a case study?
  2. What questions should you ask in a case study interview?
  3. What’s the best structure for a marketing case study?
  4. How do you write a case study that people actually read?
  5. What does good case study design look like?
  6. How should you distribute your case study?
  7. How do you measure the impact of case studies?
  8. Case study template
  9. Pro tips from writing 50+ case studies
  10. What are the biggest case study mistakes?
  11. FAQ

How do you choose the right client for a case study?

Choose a client whose results are specific, impressive, and representative of the kind of work you want to do more of. The best case study client isn’t always the biggest logo. It’s the client whose story will resonate most with the prospects you’re trying to attract. A $50K engagement that tripled a startup’s leads is often more compelling than a $500K enterprise project with vague “improved efficiency” outcomes.
Marketing case study: A documented narrative that examines a specific client engagement, detailing the initial situation, the challenge addressed, the solution delivered, and the measurable business results achieved.
Apply these five selection criteria:
  1. Measurable results. Can the client share specific numbers? Revenue growth, percentage improvements, cost reductions, time savings. If the results are vague (“it went really well”), pick a different client.
  2. Relatable challenge. Does the client’s problem match what your target prospects face? A case study about fixing a niche technical issue won’t resonate with CMOs worried about pipeline growth.
  3. Willingness to participate. The client needs to approve the case study, participate in an interview, and allow you to use their company name. Some won’t. Ask early, not after you’ve drafted the whole thing.
  4. Timeline fit. Results should be at least 3-6 months old so the data is stable. Case studies published too early risk being invalidated if results reverse.
  5. Strategic alignment. Choose clients in industries or use cases you want to grow. If you’re trying to win more SaaS clients, your next case study should feature a SaaS company, not a restaurant.

What questions should you ask in a case study interview?

The case study interview is where you collect the raw material for a compelling story. Most marketers wing this conversation. Don’t. A structured 30-45 minute interview with pre-sent questions will get you better quotes, clearer data, and a stronger narrative than an unstructured chat. Send the questions to the client 48 hours before the call so they can pull the numbers you need. Here’s the interview framework we use at ScaleGrowth.Digital, organized by the four sections of a case study:
Section Questions to Ask What You’re Looking For
Situation What was your business situation before this project? What were your key metrics at that time? What had you already tried? The “before” state with specific numbers
Challenge What was the specific problem you needed to solve? Why was it urgent? What was the cost of not solving it? Emotional stakes and business urgency
Solution What did we do? What was the approach? What made it different from what you’d tried before? Your methodology, process, and differentiation
Results What specific results did you see? Can you share numbers? How long did it take to see results? What’s the business impact now? Hard metrics: revenue, leads, percentages, time saved
Two bonus questions that improve every case study:
  • “What would you tell someone who’s considering working with us?” (This gives you a natural-sounding testimonial quote.)
  • “What surprised you about the process or results?” (Surprises make great story hooks.)
Record the interview with permission. You’ll use exact quotes in the final piece, and memory alone won’t capture the client’s natural phrasing. Otter.ai or similar transcription tools cost $10-15/month and save hours of note-taking.

What’s the best structure for a marketing case study?

The best case study structure is Situation-Challenge-Solution-Results (SCSR). This format works because it mirrors how people naturally tell stories: “Here’s where we were, here’s what was wrong, here’s what we did, here’s what happened.” Every alternative format is a variation of this basic arc. Don’t overthink it. Here’s the structure with approximate word counts:
Section Word Count What to Include
Headline 8-12 words Lead with the result: “How [Company] Increased Revenue by 87% in 6 Months”
Snapshot / Summary Box 50-100 words Company name, industry, key metrics (before/after), timeline
Situation 100-200 words Who is the client? What’s their business? What was the context?
Challenge 100-200 words The specific problem. What was at stake? What had they already tried?
Solution 200-400 words Your approach, methodology, specific actions taken. This is where you show your expertise.
Results 100-200 words Hard numbers. Before and after. Percentage changes. Timeline to results.
Client Quote 30-50 words A direct quote from the client, ideally about the results or the experience
CTA 20-30 words “Want similar results? Talk to us.”
Total length: 500-1,500 words. That’s not a typo. The most effective case studies are short. According to Adobe’s content marketing research, the average B2B buyer spends 5-7 minutes reading a case study. At a reading speed of 200 words per minute, that’s 1,000-1,400 words maximum before they tune out. Start with the results headline, not the backstory. The prospect’s first question is “did it work?” Answer that immediately. The story behind how it worked is secondary.

How do you write a case study that people actually read?

Writing a case study that gets read means writing like a journalist, not a marketer. Lead with the most important information. Use short paragraphs. Let the client’s voice carry the emotional weight through direct quotes. And cut every sentence that doesn’t serve the story. Seven writing rules for case studies that convert:
  1. Lead with the number. “142% increase in qualified leads” is a better opening than “Company X approached us in Q3 2024.” The number hooks attention. The backstory keeps it.
  2. Use the client’s words, not yours. “We were drowning in unqualified leads that wasted our sales team’s time” is more powerful than “The client experienced challenges with lead quality.” Quote the interview.
  3. Show, don’t claim. Instead of writing “we provided excellent service,” show the specific actions: “We audited 4,200 keywords, identified 340 high-intent terms with CPC under $3, and restructured the campaign into 12 tightly themed ad groups.”
  4. Include before and after data. Every metric should have a starting point and an ending point. “Increased to 500 leads/month” means nothing. “Grew from 180 to 500 leads/month” tells a story.
  5. Name the timeline. “Results in 6 months” is essential context. Without a timeline, readers assume results were instant (unrealistic) or took years (unimpressive). Be specific.
  6. Write at a 9th-grade reading level. CEOs and VPs don’t want to decode jargon. Short sentences. Common words. Clear structure. Hemingway Editor or similar tools can help verify readability.
  7. End with a quote that implies future value. The closing client quote should look forward: “We’re now planning to expand into two new markets using the same approach” is better than “We were satisfied with the outcome.”

What does good case study design look like?

Good case study design makes the key numbers impossible to miss. The reader who skims for 30 seconds should walk away with three facts: the company name, the main result, and your methodology. Everything else is for the reader who stays for 5 minutes. Design elements that work:
  • Summary box at the top. A shaded box with company name, industry, challenge (one sentence), result (one sentence), and 3 key metrics. This is the “executive summary” for skimmers.
  • Pull quotes in large text. Take the client’s strongest quote and display it at 24-32px font size. This breaks up the page and highlights the most convincing line.
  • Before/after data callouts. Display key metrics as large-format numbers with arrows: “180 leads/mo. → 500 leads/mo.” These visual comparisons register faster than prose.
  • Branded PDF version. Create a downloadable PDF formatted with your brand colors, logo, and contact information. This is what the prospect forwards to their boss. Make it look professional enough that they’re proud to share it.
  • Screenshots or process visuals. If relevant, include dashboard screenshots (with client permission), process diagrams, or timeline visualizations. Proof beats prose.
Avoid stock photography. A case study with a stock photo of “diverse team in meeting room” signals that the content is generic. Use the client’s actual logo, screenshots of real dashboards (blurred if needed), or skip photos entirely. White space is better than fake imagery.

How should you distribute your case study?

A case study sitting on a “Case Studies” page that nobody visits is a waste of the 10-15 hours it took to produce. Distribution determines whether your case study influences one deal or a hundred. Plan your distribution before you write the first word. The distribution stack, ranked by impact:
  1. Sales team enablement. This is the #1 use case. Build a case study library organized by industry, company size, and use case. Brief your sales team on each new case study so they know which prospect objections it answers. According to a 2024 DemandGen report, 68% of B2B buyers consume case studies during the evaluation phase.
  2. Website placement. Don’t bury case studies under three navigation levels. Feature them on service pages, product pages, and the homepage. Every service page should have at least one relevant case study visible without scrolling.
  3. Email sequences. Add case studies to your nurture sequences at the consideration stage. Subject line: “How [similar company] achieved [result].” Open rates for case study emails average 22-28% (Mailchimp, 2025).
  4. LinkedIn posts. Break the case study into 3-5 LinkedIn posts. Post #1: the headline result. Post #2: the challenge. Post #3: the methodology. Each post links back to the full case study.
  5. Paid retargeting. Show case study ads to website visitors who viewed your service pages but didn’t convert. Facebook and LinkedIn retargeting for case study content typically costs $2-5 CPM because the audience is small and warm.

How do you measure the impact of case studies?

Measure case studies on three levels: content performance (views, time on page, downloads), sales influence (deals where case studies were shared during the sales cycle), and pipeline attribution (revenue from deals that included a case study touchpoint). Key metrics to track:
  • Page views and unique visitors. Baseline awareness metric. Good case study pages get 100-500 organic visits per month from branded and problem-aware search queries.
  • Time on page. If readers stay 3+ minutes, the content is compelling. Under 1 minute suggests the design or headline isn’t working.
  • PDF downloads. Track downloads as a conversion event in GA4. This signals high purchase intent.
  • Sales team usage. Ask reps which case studies they share most. If 80% of your case studies never get sent by sales, they’re not aligned with actual prospect objections.
  • Deal influence. In your CRM, tag deals where a case study was shared or viewed. Over time, you’ll see whether deals with case study touchpoints close at a higher rate or faster velocity.
The ultimate test: does your sales team ask you to write more case studies? If they do, the content is working. If they never mention them, the case studies aren’t aligned with what prospects actually need to see during the sales process.

Case study template you can use right now

Here’s the exact template structure we use at ScaleGrowth.Digital. Copy this into a Google Doc and fill in the brackets. The entire case study should take 4-6 hours to produce: 1 hour for the interview, 1-2 hours for writing, 1 hour for design, and 1 hour for review and approval.
HEADLINE: How [Company Name] [Achieved Specific Result] in [Timeframe] SNAPSHOT BOX:
  • Company: [Name, industry, size]
  • Challenge: [One sentence]
  • Solution: [One sentence]
  • Result: [Key metric #1] | [Key metric #2] | [Key metric #3]
  • Timeline: [Duration]
SITUATION (100-200 words): [Client background. Industry context. What their business looked like before the engagement.] CHALLENGE (100-200 words): [The specific problem. What was at stake. What they’d already tried. Why it was urgent.] SOLUTION (200-400 words): [Your approach. The strategy. Key tactics. What you specifically did, step by step.] RESULTS (100-200 words): [Before vs. after metrics. Percentage improvements. Revenue impact. Timeline to results.] CLIENT QUOTE: “[Direct quote from the client about results or experience]” – [Name], [Title], [Company] CTA: Want similar results for your business? Talk to our team.

Pro tips from writing 50+ case studies

These come from writing case studies for clients across SaaS, ecommerce, professional services, and healthcare at ScaleGrowth.Digital.
  • Write the headline first. If you can’t write a compelling headline, the case study isn’t ready. The headline forces you to identify the single most impressive result. If there isn’t one, go back and get better data from the client.
  • Get approval on the draft, not just the final. Send the client a draft with a 5-business-day review window. Legal and PR reviews at large companies can take 2-4 weeks. Build this into your timeline.
  • Create a “case study request” process. Build a standard email your account managers send to clients at the 6-month mark. Include what’s involved (30-minute call, review of draft, approval). The biggest barrier to case studies is simply not asking.
  • Anonymize if needed, but named is 3x more valuable. An anonymized case study (“A mid-size SaaS company”) is 3x less convincing than a named one (“Acme Corp”). If the client won’t allow naming, consider whether the anonymized version is still worth producing.
  • Repurpose into 5+ content pieces. One case study can become: a website page, a PDF download, 3-5 social posts, an email in your nurture sequence, a slide in your sales deck, and a data point in your proposals. Plan repurposing before you write.

What are the biggest case study mistakes?

These are the errors that turn a potentially deal-closing asset into a forgettable page that nobody shares.
  1. No specific numbers. “We significantly improved their results” means nothing. “We increased organic traffic from 12,000 to 34,000 monthly sessions in 8 months” means everything. If you don’t have numbers, the case study isn’t ready to publish.
  2. Making it about you, not the client. The client is the hero. You’re the guide. Case studies that read like “we’re so brilliant” instead of “here’s how the client succeeded” feel self-congratulatory. Use “they/the client” more than “we.”
  3. Burying the result. If the reader has to scroll past 800 words of backstory to find the outcome, you’ve lost them. Lead with the result in the headline, repeat it in the summary box, and support it in the body.
  4. Writing too long. 3,000-word case studies feel like white papers. Keep it under 1,500 words. If you have more to say, create a long-form version as a downloadable PDF and keep the web page tight.
  5. Not updating old case studies. A case study from 2021 with outdated screenshots and references to deprecated tools undermines credibility. Review and refresh case studies annually. Update results if the client can share newer data.
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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a marketing case study be?

A marketing case study should be 500-1,500 words for the web version. The average B2B buyer spends 5-7 minutes reading a case study, so anything over 1,500 words risks losing attention. If you have deeper content, create a downloadable PDF version that can run longer.

How many case studies does a company need?

Most companies benefit from 3-5 strong case studies per core service or industry vertical. Quality matters far more than quantity. Three well-written case studies with specific numbers and named clients will outperform 20 vague, anonymized case studies every time.

What if the client won’t share specific numbers?

Use percentage improvements instead of absolute numbers. “Increased revenue by 47%” is still compelling even if the client won’t share the dollar amount. You can also use ranges (“reduced costs by 20-30%”) or qualitative framing with directional data (“doubled their sales team’s pipeline”).

How do you get clients to agree to a case study?

Ask at the moment of highest satisfaction, typically right after delivering strong results. Make the process easy: 30-minute interview, they review the draft, and they approve the final version. Offer value in return, such as featuring them on your homepage, co-promoting the case study to your audience, or providing a backlink from your site.

Should case studies be gated or ungated?

Keep the web version ungated for SEO and easy sharing. Offer a designed PDF download that can be gated behind an email capture. The web version drives organic traffic and sales enablement. The PDF captures leads who want a polished version to share with their team.

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