Creating content for unknown visitors and prospects
There are many different ways to slice and dice the stages of the buyer’s journey, but we’ve condensed it down to three typical primary stages:
1. Awareness
In this stage, a prospect becomes familiar with your firm and/or realizes that they have a need for your services. They’re trying to figure out what options exist and become familiar with the landscape. Blogging is the primary type of content to use at the awareness stage. It will help you appear in search results and help position you as a subject matter expert once they arrive at your website. Other content to consider would be infographics, articles, videos and online news releases. Social media is useful to promote your content and to start building awareness and rapport with prospects.
2. Interest/Consideration
At this stage, a prospect has identified a need and begins to conduct research for potential solutions or partners. They have interest in your firm to some degree, but are not ready to sign on the dotted line just yet. This is the stage where lead generation happens. Once you’ve attracted a prospect to your website through blogging or social media, you need content to convert the unknown visitor into an identified lead. They’re looking for information that will later help them make the decision of selecting a partner, so premium offers such as eBooks, whitepapers, reports, research studies and webinars are critical types of content in this stage.
3. Evaluation/Selection
Once a prospect has considered their options, they begin to narrow down the choices and ultimately determine who to select. This is where more traditional content plays a role. Prospects are looking for detailed firm information, data sheets and project profiles. They’re interested in reading case studies and testimonials, and are much more interested in sitting through a presentation. Last but not least, even a proposal should be viewed as content. It’s your last chance to add value, make a case for your firm and ultimately get on the shortlist, so look for unique ways to add more to the proposal than simply a scope and fee estimate.