Tweak Your Biz » Marketing » B2B Online Marketing And Networking: 3 Activities That Get You Clients

B2B Online Marketing And Networking: 3 Activities That Get You Clients



B2B online marketing and networking is a different animal from B2C. It requires a subtler set of strategies and often a more creative approach. In this post, I will give you examples of  activities I have used to get to results and new clients.

I should warn that being authentic is important here. For these approaches to work, you have to want to build relationships. If you are only carrying out these tactics to generate customers – business people will see through you!

B2B Online Marketing And Networking

# B2B online marketing activity 1: master LinkedIn

Linkedin is one of the most valuable tools available to the B2B business professional. Why?

  • It’s where other business people in their millions hang out.
  • It allows you to build relationships with virtually every company of note on the planet.

Any B2B professional who ignores LinkedIn doesn’t deserve to be called a professional, in my opinion! Also, if I’m honest, my experience of how the average business person uses Linkedin wouldn’t inspire me.

Make a LinkedIn time investment

  • It’s clear that many users haven’t invested the time to properly understand this B2B social platform.
  • There is no good reason why should be the case. There is a huge amount of (free) information and support available to anyone who is prepared to go and find out.

Learning to become a proficient, efficient and smart LinkedIn user is no longer about choice, it’s a must!

Become a Linkedin superstar like Frank Hannigan

The following interview is a stunning example of how smart business people can leverage Linkedin.

Frank Hannigan (one of the best users of Linkedin I know!) describes how he used the platform to raise over 200 thousand dollars in less than 2 weeks.

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# B2B online marketing activity 2: content marketing

“Content marketing is an umbrella term encompassing all marketing formats that involve the creation and sharing of content in order to attract, acquire and engage clearly defined and understood current and potential consumer bases with the objective of driving profitable customer action.” wikipedia.org

Plan to create REALLY great content

Creating content that your customers want is proven to be one of the very best ways to engage with new clients but only after you plan:

  • What information your clients will really find useful
  • And how you’re going to get your content to “go there”

The content marketing “chicken and egg” problem.

The online content game is a very competitive environment and many B2B content creators struggle to make their content work for them.

This happens primarily because of a kind of chicken and egg content marketing problem:

  1. Most B2B businesses have never really experienced the value that B2B content can bring them
  2. As a result, they’ve never end up investing the time and resource to do it properly. Hence, the vast majority of B2B content ends up being average at best.
  3. Where as, the B2B content opportunity was really, in producing higher quality and more focused content from the very start.

The Ahain Group uses reports to talk with new customers

The Ahain group are an independent, ideas-led social business consultancy and start up business, where I am a founder.

We needed to develop a business and content strategy that would position us within the marketplace and open client doors. So we started to produce high value content aimed at the sectors where opportunities exist for us.

So far, the Ahain group has produced two separate social business reports  and the response has proven that this strategy is working for us.

  • Each report takes approximately 10 days to complete
  • Researching and creating each report gives us huge insight into that sector
  • The people and companies we want to talk to are interested in reading these reports
  • And then some are interested in becoming our customers

# B2B online marketing activity 3: use business interviews

Interviews are a super way to build business relationships.

When you interview another business person, you can find out about:

  • What makes them tick
  • What’s great about their business
  • Their business philosophy and values

Promoting interviews builds value into your business relationships

Proactively promote and share their story with your network, which will result in them receiving:

  • More kudus
  • More exposure
  • New customers

Tell me of a better way to find out about someone and their business, offer them value and position yourself as a good guy or girl?

Sian Phillips and Nellie R. Akalp

Our new TweakYourBiz Editor, Sian Phillips has used interviews effectively to develop new relationships and grow her businesses. For example: 

Summary:

There are many other B2B online marketing and networking opportunities out there and I would invite you to add your suggestions in the comments below.  

I suppose my overall point would be, that unless you are prepared to invest the time to learn the skills required, the results will always remain limited. Online is a competitive and often unforgiving place for a mediocre B2B strategy, so your goal should be to be the very best that you can be.  

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The Author:

Niall Devitt is a doer, not a talker when it comes to social media. Niall advises organisations how to plan, design and implement social media strategies that generate real business returns.  Niall is Chief Digital Strategist & Founder at the Ahain Group, an independent, ideas-led social business consultancy with experience of working with all types of clients and sectors– from large blue-chip multinationals to the 1 SMEs. Download our industry specific and researched social business reports. In 2009, Niall co-founded TweakYourBiz.com (formally Bloggertone.com) an international, business community and online publication. http://www.ahaingroup.com/

Add Your Comment

  • John Twohig

    Great post Niall, you are becoming quite prolific:)

  • http://www.bloggertone.com Niall Devitt

    Thanks John, Now that Sian is Editor, I can get back to producing more content!

  • http://twitter.com/#!/antonmccarthy Anton McCarthy

    Great post Niall. Content marketing is probably one of the most cost-effective ways for you to get your message out there and attract new business, simple as that. The biggest cost is your time – but investing in those terms will repay you many times over. Recognising the value of this is key, and probably something that many struggle with or find hard to comprehend – with the result that they miss the opportunity. So there are some clear gains to be made in being the one who is prepared to invest the time required!

  • http://www.bloggertone.com Niall Devitt

    Thanks Anton, for me, the opportunity is in not just doing content but doing it really well. Quality matters but so does quantity in my opinion. That’s why it usually a great idea to include your network, your customers, your heroes etc.

  • http://twitter.com/davedungan Dave Dungan

    Hi Niall, nice article and great point about the ‘chicken and egg’ problem. It can be difficult to sell it to businesses as they don’t see the value. Often people would see writing an article as a 15 minute job, but to get the value they should be spending more like 3 hours!

  • http://twitter.com/xcelbusiness Helen Cousins

    Hi Niall
    One of the things about writing B2B content that I find challenging is the balance between providing valuable content and the need to present that in the context of what you do. I have delivered several seminars/written content for accountants, about using content and social media for practice development. I’ve always been asked to do this rather than pro-actively sought it as a main income stream. The requests have come from either an accountancy body, or from accountants directly. However, I merely practice what I preach, “preaching” or coaching is not my main thing. This week I met an accountant who has been to a few of my “gigs” / read my stuff and thought I was a marketeer for the accounting profession. He had no idea that I was an accountant – one who just happens to be up front about the tactics that I use, and who shares it with my colleagues. So, it’s a case of the shoemaker’s shoes for me – and while B2B marketing is not hard sell, I need to make sure that I am seen in the right context when I do that type of “by-product” work.
    On the other hand, there is nothing worse than reading a post that has been written solely for the purpose of being self promotional, and contains no real value for the reader. As you rightly point out in the beginning of your post – it’s all about being authentic!

    Great post Niall, good tips there, thank you,
    ~ Helen

  • http://www.bloggertone.com Niall Devitt

    Hi Helen, I know you pretty well so I obviously have some insight here. Let me ask you a question. When you write a piece of content – do you first identify which customer type you are targeting? There is a difference between writing content and writing content to get customers.

  • http://www.bloggertone.com Niall Devitt

    Anyone who is prepared to publish an article that they only spent 15 mins on, really shouldn’t do content marketing. In fact, they properly shouldn’t market full stop because they’re just going to do more damage than good.

  • http://meetingking.com/ Avi Kaye

    I’m just constantly amazed at the number of companies (B2B AND B2C) that don’t understand what an awesome opportunity LinkedIn presents, and JUST as amazed at the number of social media marketers who don’t understand the medium, or how to use it.

    By the way, it’s not just ‘writing an article’ that people think take 15 minutes. It’s also ‘spending time playing on the internet’. I’ve encountered enough people who think that spending 10 minutes a day on Facebook, LinkedIn or whatever, is enough to really make a difference. Haven’t always managed to convince them otherwise :)

  • http://twitter.com/xcelbusiness Helen Cousins

    Yes Niall, you know me well :) I am not customer driven when writing, but I do think of who I am writing for.
    On one hand, I would never reverse engineer a post, ie. think what I want to sell and then write a thinly disguised advertorial post for example.
    On the other hand, I should keep a narrow focus, so that I don’t send out a confusing message about what I do.

  • http://www.bloggertone.com Niall Devitt

    Ok then! :) what type of customer I am targeting here and what I am trying to communicate to them?

  • http://www.bloggertone.com Niall Devitt

    Thanks Avi, great points! and yes, you can’t convince everyone.