91% of B2B marketers use content marketing, but only 29% rate theirs as highly effective. The gap comes down to one thing: matching content to buying committee roles across a sales cycle that involves 11 stakeholders and 5-7 content touches per person. This guide covers how to close that gap.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 13 min
B2B content marketing targets buying groups, not individuals. A B2C brand needs to convince one person to click “buy.” A B2B brand needs to convince a CFO that the ROI justifies the spend, a VP of Engineering that the integration won’t break existing systems, an end-user that the tool is actually better than what they currently use, and a procurement team that the vendor meets compliance requirements. Each of these people needs different content.
B2B content marketing is the strategic creation and distribution of content designed to educate, persuade, and enable multiple stakeholders within a target organization to choose your product or service.
The numbers reflect this complexity. B2B deals now involve an average of 11 stakeholders, each consuming 5-7 content assets before engaging with sales, according to AdRoll’s 2026 ABM research. 60% of B2B buyers make their final purchase decisions based on digital content (DemandSage, 2026). And the sales cycle typically runs 3-12 months, meaning your content needs to sustain engagement over time without becoming stale.
61% of B2B marketers are increasing overall spend in 2026, with AI tools leading at 45% of new investment, followed by events and experiential marketing at 33%, and owned media at 32% (Content Marketing Institute, 2026). The companies winning aren’t spending more on everything. They’re investing in the specific content types their buying committees consume at each stage of the decision process.
“B2B content fails when it’s written for a generic ‘decision maker.’ Real B2B content strategy maps every piece to a specific role in the buying committee and a specific stage in their evaluation process. That’s the difference between content that generates pipeline and content that generates pageviews.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Start by mapping every role in your typical buying committee, then create content that addresses each role’s specific concerns. A single blog post won’t persuade five different stakeholders with five different priorities. You need a content portfolio.
| Buying Committee Role | Primary Concern | Best Content Formats | Key Messages |
|---|---|---|---|
| C-Suite (CEO, CFO) | Business impact, ROI | ROI calculators, executive briefs, case studies with revenue data | Revenue growth, cost reduction, competitive advantage |
| VP / Director (functional leader) | Team efficiency, strategic fit | Whitepapers, comparison guides, implementation roadmaps | Workflow improvement, team productivity, integration |
| End Users | Ease of use, daily workflow | Product demos, tutorials, community content | Time saved, feature capabilities, learning curve |
| IT / Security | Integration, compliance, security | Technical docs, security whitepapers, API documentation | SOC 2, GDPR, uptime SLAs, architecture |
| Procurement | Pricing, contract terms, vendor risk | Pricing pages, vendor comparison sheets, compliance docs | Total cost of ownership, contract flexibility, references |
The most effective approach is building “content suites” around each key use case. For example, if you sell a CRM, your “sales team adoption” suite might include: an executive brief on CRM ROI (C-suite), a migration guide (IT), a daily workflow tutorial (end users), and a pricing comparison (procurement). Sales reps can then send the right piece to the right stakeholder at the right time.
Personalization matters here. B2B customers now expect content that speaks directly to their role, industry, and pain points. Generic messaging is out. Content that references a specific industry’s challenges, uses that industry’s terminology, and addresses that industry’s compliance requirements performs significantly better in engagement and conversion metrics.
Sales enablement content is material specifically created to help your sales team close deals faster. It’s not marketing content repurposed for sales. It’s content designed from the ground up to address objections, answer technical questions, and provide proof points that sales reps need during live conversations.
Sales enablement content is any asset designed to help sales teams move a prospect from interest to closed deal, including case studies, battle cards, ROI calculators, and objection-handling guides.
Critical sales enablement content types for B2B:
Case studies with quantified outcomes. “Company X increased revenue by 34% in 6 months” is more convincing than “Company X improved their results.” Name the company (with permission), name the metrics, and include the timeline. Video case studies where the customer speaks directly outperform written versions by 2-3x in engagement.
Battle cards. One-page documents comparing your product against a specific competitor. Include positioning, key differentiators, common objections and responses, and customer win/loss data. Update these quarterly as competitors ship new features.
ROI calculators. Interactive tools that let prospects input their own numbers and see projected returns. These are especially effective for C-suite stakeholders who need to justify the investment internally. A well-built ROI calculator can shorten the evaluation phase by weeks.
Implementation and onboarding guides. Prospects who are worried about migration and adoption need to see the step-by-step plan. Publishing your onboarding process openly signals confidence and removes a common objection before sales even has to address it.
Account-based marketing creates unified goals, shared account plans, and collaborative outreach between sales and marketing. Companies with strong sales-marketing alignment report 24% faster revenue growth and fewer missed opportunities (Directive, 2026).
Account-based marketing has shifted from a tactical experiment to a foundational B2B growth strategy. In 2026, the question isn’t whether to invest in ABM but how to scale it, according to Directive Consulting’s 2026 ABM research. Content is what makes ABM work because you can’t personalize outreach without personalized content.
ABM content operates on three tiers:
One-to-many (programmatic ABM). Industry-specific content targeting segments of 100-500 accounts. Create landing pages, blog posts, and ads customized by industry vertical. “Project management for healthcare” or “CRM for financial services” pages serve this tier. 91% of B2B tech marketers now use intent data to prioritize accounts and build target lists (AdRoll, 2026).
One-to-few (ABM lite). Content for clusters of 10-50 accounts with similar profiles. Custom webinars, roundtable events, and curated content hubs for specific buyer segments. A webinar titled “How mid-market fintech companies are reducing customer churn” targets a narrow enough audience to feel personalized while remaining scalable.
One-to-one (strategic ABM). Custom content for your top 5-20 target accounts. Personalized presentations, custom ROI analyses, and tailored research reports. This is expensive but justified when deal sizes exceed $100K. Teams acting on intent spikes within 24 hours see a 29% lift in opportunity creation compared to slower responders.
Adopting ABM can boost average annual contract value by 171% and increase marketing-sourced revenue by 200%. The content investment is significant, but the returns scale with deal size. For enterprise B2B, ABM content is where the highest ROI sits.
Short-form video is now the most-used content format and the highest ROI channel for B2B marketers, with 104% more marketers naming it their most valuable channel in 2025 compared to 2024, per HubSpot’s 2026 research. But video alone isn’t enough. B2B requires a mix of formats because different stakeholders consume content differently.
Whitepapers and research reports. 86% of marketers plan to increase research budgets in 2026 (Content Marketing Institute). Those publishing original data report 64% higher conversion rates and 61% stronger organic traffic. A whitepaper with genuine primary research is one of the few content formats that gets shared internally within buying committees.
Case studies. The single most requested content type by B2B buyers in the evaluation stage. Write them as stories with a clear problem, approach, and quantified result. Include the customer’s industry, company size, and specific challenge so prospects can self-identify.
Webinars. Events and experiential marketing received 33% of new B2B marketing investment in 2026. Webinars serve dual purposes: live events generate pipeline, and recorded versions become evergreen content. The best-performing webinars focus on a specific problem and feature a customer alongside your team, not a product demo disguised as education.
Long-form blog content and guides. Blog posts still rank among the top five content formats B2B marketers plan to invest in for 2026. The difference between high-performing and low-performing B2B blogs is depth. Posts backed by proprietary data, original analysis, or practitioner experience outperform generic informational content by a wide margin.
Podcasts and audio content. B2B podcasts work particularly well for reaching senior leaders who consume content during commutes and travel. They’re also effective for building thought leadership when your team interviews customers and industry experts.
LinkedIn is the primary distribution channel for B2B content, and in 2026, the platform increasingly rewards original, personal content over corporate marketing posts. Creator and influencer budgets in B2B are up significantly, with LinkedIn’s own research showing that thought leadership from individuals drives more engagement than brand pages.
Founder and executive content. Posts from founders and senior leaders consistently get 3-5x more engagement than company page posts. The most effective format: share a real business decision, the reasoning behind it, and the outcome. Vulnerability and specificity beat polished corporate messaging.
Employee advocacy. Enable your team to share company content from their personal profiles. Provide them with pre-written hooks they can customize, not mandatory copy-paste posts. Authenticity matters. 10 employees sharing a post naturally reaches more people than one company page post with paid amplification.
Native document posts (carousels). PDF carousels generate some of the highest engagement rates on LinkedIn. Repurpose key sections of your whitepapers, research reports, or guides into 8-12 slide carousels. Each slide should deliver one standalone insight.
LinkedIn newsletters. LinkedIn’s newsletter feature gives you a subscriber base on the platform itself. New subscribers get a notification for every issue. For B2B brands building thought leadership, this is one of the lowest-friction ways to build an owned audience.
One thing that doesn’t work: posting links to your blog with a one-line description. LinkedIn deprioritizes external links in the algorithm. Instead, share the key insight in the post itself, then add the link in the comments or as a “read more” callout.
B2B sales cycles of 6-12 months require content that stays relevant and builds trust over time. You can’t rely on a single touchpoint to convert a prospect. You need a nurture sequence that delivers increasing value as the prospect moves through their decision process.
Email nurture sequences. Build stage-specific email campaigns that deliver the right content based on where the prospect is in their journey. Early stage: educational content and industry insights. Mid stage: case studies, comparison guides, and webinar invitations. Late stage: ROI calculators, implementation guides, and customer references. Segment by role and industry for maximum relevance.
Content hubs and resource centers. Create organized collections of content around specific topics or use cases. When a prospect visits your “Financial Services” content hub, they should find everything relevant to their industry in one place: case studies, guides, compliance information, and product documentation. This keeps them on your site and demonstrates depth of expertise.
Retargeting with content. Use content-based retargeting to re-engage website visitors with progressively deeper content. Someone who read a blog post gets retargeted with a relevant webinar. A webinar attendee gets retargeted with a case study. A case study reader gets retargeted with a demo offer. Each step deepens engagement without being pushy.
Quarterly refreshes. Long sales cycles mean prospects may revisit your content months after their first touch. If your comparison guide is 8 months out of date, you’ve lost credibility. Refresh your highest-traffic pages quarterly with updated data, new customer logos, and current feature information.
These five patterns account for most B2B content underperformance:
1. Creating for one persona instead of the buying committee. Writing everything for the “marketing director” ignores the CFO, the IT lead, and the end users who all have veto power. Map content to roles, not just personas.
2. Prioritizing volume over strategy. 74% of marketers who improved performance did so by refining their strategy, not by producing more content (CMI, 2026). Ten well-researched, role-targeted pieces outperform 50 generic blog posts. Every time.
3. Investing in tools over people. Human resources (salaries, training, development) sits last at 9% of B2B marketing investment, while organizations pour money into more technology platforms (Content Marketing Institute, 2026). Tools don’t create strategy. People do.
4. Ignoring distribution. Publishing a whitepaper without a distribution plan is like printing a book and leaving it in a warehouse. Every content piece needs an email promotion plan, a LinkedIn strategy, a paid amplification budget, and a sales enablement pathway.
5. Measuring vanity metrics. Page views and social shares don’t pay the bills. Track content-influenced pipeline, deal velocity for content-engaged prospects vs. non-engaged, and content-attributed revenue. 95% of B2B marketers say their organizations use AI, but only 39% see better performance (CMI, 2026). Technology without measurement is just spending.
Funnel-mapped content strategy, product-led content, and comparison page tactics for software companies.
Compliance-first content strategy, educational content, and YMYL E-E-A-T requirements for finance brands.
Free multi-channel content calendar with workflow tracking and publishing schedule.
B2B content targets buying committees of 11+ stakeholders with different priorities, operates on 3-12 month sales cycles, and must address technical, financial, and operational concerns simultaneously. B2C content targets individuals making faster, often emotional decisions. B2B content must be useful to multiple roles within the same organization.
Short-form video is the highest ROI format overall, but B2B requires a mix. Original research reports drive 64% higher conversions and 61% stronger organic traffic. Case studies remain the most-requested format during the evaluation stage. The best-performing B2B teams use 4-6 formats tailored to different buying committee roles.
61% of B2B marketers are increasing content spend in 2026. A typical mid-market B2B company allocates 25-30% of its marketing budget to content. For companies with $1-10M in revenue, that usually means $10,000-$30,000/month across content creation, distribution, and tools. The investment should scale with your average deal size and sales cycle length.
ABM aligns content with specific target accounts. It operates on three tiers: one-to-many (industry content for 100-500 accounts), one-to-few (custom webinars for 10-50 accounts), and one-to-one (personalized content for top 5-20 accounts). ABM can boost average annual contract value by 171% and increase marketing-sourced revenue by 200%.
Track content-influenced pipeline (deals where prospects engaged with content before entering the pipeline), deal velocity (do content-engaged prospects close faster?), and content-attributed revenue using multi-touch attribution in your CRM. Page views and social shares are vanity metrics that don’t correlate with pipeline generation.
We build content strategies that map to buying committee roles, funnel stages, and revenue outcomes. Not content for content’s sake.