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Buying decisions for SaaS products are driven by the same mix of rational and emotional factors as consumer goods. To succeed, marketers must focus on the human needs, hopes, and dreams of their audience, not just product features.
The person scrolling social media at work is the same human they are at home. Effective marketing creates an emotional connection by focusing on the person ("P2P"), not just their professional role ("B2B"), leading to stronger, longer-lasting brand affinity.
The need for emotional connection isn't limited to consumer products. All software is used by humans whose expectations are set by the best B2C experiences. Even enterprise products must honor user emotions to succeed, a concept termed 'Business to Human'.
The ultimate PLG companies are consumer brands like shampoo, which sell on brand affinity, not commoditized features. As software becomes more commoditized, B2B companies must similarly build a strong brand theme that inspires users to associate with them, creating a more durable moat than features alone.
Enterprise buying isn't purely rational. Marketers should open with emotion, inspiration, and vision to capture attention and build aspiration. Only after earning that attention should they follow up with the logic, security, and assurance needed to de-risk the decision for IT and procurement.
B2B marketing often assumes a sterile, professional-only mindset. This is flawed. The same person scrolling LinkedIn during the day also binges consumer entertainment at night. B2B content should embrace humor and personality, recognizing that you're always marketing to the same multifaceted human being.
FloQast's CMO credits his early career in B2C e-commerce for his success in B2B SaaS. The skills learned in driving direct conversions and understanding self-serve motions became a key differentiator as B2B marketing has increasingly adopted more consumer-centric tactics to engage human buyers.
Reframe your market from B2B or B2C to B2H (Business to Human). This change in perspective emphasizes that whether in consumer or enterprise settings, the end-user is a person with emotional needs. This mindset makes "product delight" relevant and essential for all products, not just consumer apps.
While metrics are important, great marketing is built on genuine human insight. The most resonant campaigns connect with deep human traits. This is why many top CEOs have backgrounds in the humanities, not just STEM; they excel at understanding people, not just algorithms.
Data suggests 80% of B2B ads are ineffective because they are just product marketing in disguise, listing features and data. Truly effective B2B creative must first appeal to the human heart and mind, even for complex, million-dollar purchases.
Instead of leading with features, effective tech marketing starts with deep empathy for the user's specific problem, like a clerk asking if a customer needs to hang a picture on drywall or brick. The story then positions the product as the tailored solution to that unique challenge.