A Lack of Website Content May Kill Your B2B Company

Your technical website “content” is the difference between showing up in the search results or fading into obscurity.

The “content” on a website, simply put, is the textual and visual information that conveys a message to your customer.  At its most basic, it is a description of the product or service.  At its best, it educates or solves the reader’s problem, helping to convert them into a lifetime customer. Content is rapidly becoming critical to helping your potential customers find you through a search engine.  It is critical that you build useful content on your company’s website.

While companies that sell to the consumer market are very good at creating content for their websites, traditional industrial B2B companies are, for the most part, failing miserably. Content for such a business tends to be more technical in nature, requiring more than general marketing knowledge to create.  As a result, many industrial companies ignore it altogether.  The underlying reason for a lack of content creation seems to be this:

Your marketing professionals don’t fully understand your technology and your technical people are not well versed in marketing.

Is it hard for you to explain what your company does, to someone who is not in the business? That’s not unusual in the Industrial Business-to-Business world because these products often require specific technical knowledge to be understood.  As a result, many companies operate under the assumption that their business is too technical to take advantage of online marketing techniques. However, many businesses that formerly ranked at the top of the search results are now disappearing from the first page, due to a lack of CONTENT on their website.  Doing nothing is a path to obscurity, as younger generations rely almost entirely on search engines to discover new companies.

If you suspect your organization suffers from a lack of content, we can help.  Six Foot Lever LLC specializes in teaching your team to create beneficial Technical Content.  Our people have the technical experience and education to understand your technology, along with the marketing knowledge to get your message out.  However, there is a lot you can learn just by reading the rest of this article.  By the way, this article is essentially content marketing for our own company (whoa, meta!).

A more detailed explanation of what is meant by “content” is in order, along with why it’s important.  Have you ever read a “blog” or an online review?  When the author is genuine in their intent (not just trying to rank for keywords) they try to help the reader solve a problem or teach them something useful.  Search engines (especially Google) recognize this and try to take into account the “content” on a web page or site when displaying results.  This is why you often see consumer reviews, lists, or how-to articles in the results.  Someone has taken the time to write valuable (we hope) content for their reader and the search engine attempts to provide that information to their user.  At the same time, this content helps the search engine to figure out what your website is about.

For example, if you (as a Google user) search “how to apply sunscreen”, Google will attempt to find results that will be useful to YOU (try it!).  Those results appear right under any ads (hint, “how-to” searches tend to show fewer ads for some reason).  Because this is a consumer product that everyone uses, competition would be stiff to get your content on page one of the search results.  There will likely be a LOT of content out there for any consumer product searches as people try to lead you to their review or e-commerce website.

Now let’s search for a more technical subject, like “how to measure roundness” (roundness being one of the technical terms in metrology).  There are a LOT of companies out there that make metrology equipment to measure this feature.  But look at the results and how many metrology companies do you see?  On the day I did this (7/12/17), exactly one metrology company showed up on the first page, Taylor Hobson (link to article).  Every other result was a definition of roundness or a methodology.  This gives a sizable publicity edge to Taylor Hobson, as they were the only company SELLING A PRODUCT to show up in the results.  So how did Taylor Hobson do this?  By writing TECHNICAL CONTENT that was USEFUL TO THE READER. Whether it was a conscious effort or not, I do not know.  But, in their efforts to provide useful content on their website, they ranked for the search term “how to measure roundness”.  That may not be the exact term that YOU would use to find a roundness gage, but it can be assumed that many people looking for a way to measure roundness, may need a roundness gage.

All of this will come as no surprise to a content marketer, but many industrial companies are missing the boat because they aren’t even aware that content matters. Anyone familiar with SEO (search engine optimization) would also point out that context matters, but this subject falls outside the scope of this article.

Google, in particular, has become more content-driven over time. This means that Google is ranking sites based on how useful they are to their own users.  Prior to Google addressing this in their algorithm, search results might have shown the site with more backlinks or the website with the most relevant keywords.  Of course, no one outside of Google knows the WHOLE story of what they are ranking sites for.  The point here is that GOOD CONTENT, in context, improves your chances of being found by your potential customer.  So, if you sell a technical product or service and don’t have good technical content, you may not even show up in the results.  Worse, much of the effort your marketing team did in the past may now be irrelevant.

You can hire marketing people or contractors, but unless they have the capability to understand your field, the best they can do is run ads based on keywords that you provided.  It is wise to supplement this by creating USEFUL content around the same keywords.  Unfortunately, your marketing people may not be able to create this content on their own.  Having your engineer create content can also present a problem as they may fail at capturing the reader’s interest, or at conveying the marketing message.

The Six Foot Lever team can assess your current capabilities and can usually train the people you already have to become more effective.  For smaller companies that do not have a dedicated marketing team, we can handle all of your content creation needs, for a very reasonable cost.  Sometimes a single presentation to key people is all that is needed to kick off your content creation efforts.  Email us to learn more, or use the contact form below: info@sixfootlever.com

[forminator_form id=”315″]

Note: This article is meant as an introduction for business owners who may not be aware of the importance of content creation.  It is not intended to be a definitive guide to content writing.  Many details were left out in the interest of brevity.

 

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

Learn about the Threat from Leveraged Technology

Leveraged Technology refers to the digital tools that are available to every business, regardless of size.  These tools can be used to displace much larger companies or to reinforce your own company’s position in the marketplace.

 

This article is meant to be an introduction to the concept of Leveraged Technolgy*

 

The Existential Threat to Your Business, from Leveraged Technology and the Solo Entrepreneur

We are entering an economic shift where the solo entrepreneur or micro business will be able to compete with mid to large-sized organizations, by using a combination of outsourcing and digital technology tools.

A new generation is busily learning these tools, which will turn their tiny new businesses into an asymmetric threat in your market niche. Mastery of these tools will make it impossible for you to compete with them in the future unless you take steps to prepare your organization. Disruption is the operative word and tactic of the upcoming entrepreneur and while disrupting an existing business model can be great news for the consumer, it presents a serious threat to those whose livelihood is being disrupted.

Your new competitors will need only to understand your market niche to assemble the virtual team needed to compete with your established business. As newer generations learn how to exploit these tools, EVERY established business is at risk. It is simply a matter of time before someone from this generation decides that your niche is worth pursuing.

If you’ve been paying attention to Small Business for the last ten years, you are no doubt aware of what solo entrepreneurs and start-ups with minimal funding have been able to achieve. Although their core product or service holds some interest to us, it is not what is threatening your business.

Instead, consider the capabilities they exhibit outside their core product. They are somehow able to design, build, and market a product, then manage their finances with a small team or even a single person. They have seemingly mastered the support tasks that every business must contend with, without employing (sometimes literally) a support team.

Now, ponder for a moment that their methods of conducting business grew not out of design and intent, but rather from necessity. With a shortage of both personnel and funding, they leveraged outsourcing and technology tools to perform classic business functions at little to no cost. In some cases, they even developed the technologies that were necessary to fill these roles. By attaining efficiencies that were inconceivable ten years ago, they have been able to compete with established businesses. Quite possibly, they could not have existed in the first place if not for these tools. Today’s solo entrepreneur has many online and outsourced tools available that would have required teams of people to emulate, as little as ten years ago. For the first time ever, it is now possible for a single person to access outsourcing and technology tools to:

  • Design a Product
  • Keep the Books
  • Find an Overseas Manufacturer
  • Ship to a Fulfillment Center
  • Market to Their Customer

The new solo entrepreneur (or solopreneur) is able to accomplish all of these tasks and more through the use of a number of online resources. They are also able to create recurring revenue streams around an existing product without a single person to support it after the initial launch. Some of these online resources are:

……and the list goes on and on. When we add 3D scanning and printing, along with an easily accessible manufacturing base in China, the force-multiplying effects are stunning. All of this can be done from a single computer, without a warehouse or building full of highly paid overhead (a.k.a. employees), or even an office. It’s not difficult (but there is a learning curve), nor is it expensive. But running an online business is also not the subject of this article.

All these new techniques and services are used to support the solo entrepreneur’s core product, which more often than not, is something that did not previously exist in the marketplace. This presents a limited threat to existing businesses. But consider what would happen if the same techniques were used against your established business.

Imagine if one of these young geniuses of the tech industry were to use these techniques and target YOUR established business. Whether you sell a product or a service, would you know how to compete with the solo entrepreneur or small group who could match or surpass your existing resources?

There is already a trend of solopreneurs who provide marketing services, turning on their previous clients and manufacturing the very items they were helping to market. The last case I heard was of an Internet marketer that decided to offer his own line of lotions and scrubs because he figured that if the client had enough margin to hire him, it was a good business. Without having to pay someone to market his own products, the margins were even bigger. The design and manufacture of the product were the easy parts!

Online tools are becoming increasingly sophisticated, yet easier to learn every day. Not every solopreneur will create the next Twitter. Most are going to start their business in existing industries and aim to disrupt them with agility, service, and creativity. These people may not have the imagination to create an original business, but they will understand the tools needed to crush yours. Imagine someone selling your core product or service, but without the expenses of payroll, marketing, or fulfillment. Imagine a single person managing multiple teams of designers, all working to create a product designed to beat you at your own game. These thoughts should keep the small business owner awake, but instead, most are still sleeping. Every established business, unless its core products are protected by a heavy patent portfolio, faces this threat. It is only a matter of time before these technology “guns” are trained on YOUR product or service. It may be hard to imagine that some group of young entrepreneurs would want to enter your business, let alone compete in it. However, you probably already have some competitors in your industry. What if THEY decide to adopt these leveraging technologies before you do……They only need to “get it” to start down the road of using these force multipliers to compete. As they scale up to crush you, you are now in the unenviable position of playing catch-up.

The story of the start-up is often written around the product or the mission that directs them. Instead, maybe we should be asking these start-ups, what “tools” they used to gain the efficiencies that make them successful. Tim Ferriss talked about employing some of these tools in his landmark book, The Four Hour Workweek. In it, he proposes how one person can set up an income stream and then travel the world on the automated income. Great, but I think a lot of people miss one of the major conclusions that can be drawn from his work.

The Four Hour Workweek is, at its core, a book about leveraging technology to gain efficiency. Sure, the lone entrepreneur can use these technology tools to start an automated business and travel the world, but I almost wish he had left the secondary title off of the cover. The tools that Tim talks about can be used by any size company, to improve efficiency and become more competitive. Putting “Escape 9–5, live anywhere, and join the new rich” on the cover, makes it harder to get a CEO to read it. Maybe Tim will repackage it someday as “How to Leverage Technology and Employ Pareto’s Rule, to Quadruple your Competitive Advantage.” That would make it easier to sell the idea to upper management!

You might be thinking, “Why can’t we do this right now and make our company unassailable in our niche? Why can’t we teach some of our own employees, to use the solo entrepreneur’s tools as force multipliers? Why can’t we harden our organization to the threat, before it materializes”?

The first step in preparation might be to allocate the responsibilities of or create the position of (in the case of a larger organization), a Chief Technology Officer. To use recognized corporate titles, the CTO is responsible for the dissemination of technology through the corporation and products. It is their responsibility to stay current on the leveraging technologies, but more importantly, to train employees in their uses. Ideally, this would be someone that you already have, who understands the technologies and how they can be used in your business, to improve employee and corporate effectiveness. This person could even be the hobby-entrepreneur that is already lurking in your organization. This “intrapreneur” can be used to excite the other employees to adopt and learn new tools. In lieu of an actual CTO, there are also companies like SixFootLever.com, which specialize in training your existing workforce to respond to asymmetric threats from these technologies.

Is it possible to change the culture of an established organization, so that they can compete with the modern startup and their technological tools? Certainly, it is possible, but the older the company is, the more set they tend to be in their ways. A lot depends on how effective this intrapreneur/CTO is in “selling” the rest of the company on the idea that the threat is real and imminent.

They must also be able to explain the technologies and provide a frame of reference, to those who may not have a technical background. Then, they must be able to persuade management and employees to act, in order to save their company and their jobs.

*This article is a general overview of WHY you need to train your employees to adapt to Leveraged Technology, regardless of the type of business you run.  It is a brief intro to some of the tools and methods and is written for a traditional brick and mortar business, that may have limited capabilities.  It is NOT written for the experienced Digital marketer, so there is no need to tell me all the things I “missed” 😉

This article was originally posted by Darren Dawes, on Medium.com  It is part one in a series that continues on LinkedIn

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather