Only 5% of your audience is ready to buy. For the other 95%, the goal is to build "mindshare"—a runway of awareness and trust through valuable content. This ensures that when they eventually enter a buying cycle, your brand is already a known and respected entity.
Most content fails because its intention is selfish: to convert a user. A successful strategy treats the content itself as the final product, designed solely to provide value and build a relationship. This consumer-centric approach, which avoids treating content as a top-of-funnel tactic, is what builds long-term trust and a loyal audience.
For technical B2B products, the influencer's role is not to be a salesperson or demo the product. Their value lies in building credibility and top-of-funnel interest with their trusted audience. The company is then responsible for nurturing those leads with product-specific details.
Don't wait until a campaign to focus on audience growth. Proactively schedule dedicated list-building activities (like a new quiz or free workshop) on your calendar during your 'off-seasons.' This builds a warm audience and strong relationships before you need to make an ask, leading to more successful launches.
To stay top-of-mind with prospects who aren't ready to buy, map out the critical decisions they'll face around a compelling event. By providing resources that help them navigate these inherent challenges (e.g., compliance, tax), you become a trusted advisor, not just another vendor waiting for an opportunity.
Stop viewing brand as a top-of-funnel activity. For elite companies, brand isn't a precursor to selling; it is the selling. It creates inbound demand that bypasses traditional conversion tactics like search ads or affiliate marketing, making it the most powerful and sustainable growth engine.
Think of consistent brand building—through thought leadership and storytelling—as preparing the soil. It lays a foundation of trust and recognition. When a targeted ABX campaign is launched, it lands with a warmer, more receptive audience, rather than feeling like a cold, disjointed outreach.
A common content marketing mistake is giving away tactical "how-to" steps, leaving nothing to sell. Instead, educate your audience on the conceptual "what" and "why" (declarative knowledge). This builds trust and demonstrates expertise, creating demand for the step-by-step implementation (procedural knowledge), which is your paid product.
Overtly plugging your product triggers defensiveness. Instead, create high-value "edu-sales" content that subtly mentions your tool as one part of a solution, or even has no call-to-action at all. This builds trust and makes people actively seek out what you're selling.
In today's market, founders cannot afford to build a product and then seek an audience. The only durable competitive advantage is building a content engine first to capture free impressions and organic reach, then monetizing that pre-existing audience with a product or service.