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Great B2B content balances substance and style. It should be 'nutrient-dense' (valuable, logical information) like an almond, but also 'tasty' (entertaining and desirable) like a chocolate coating. This makes complex topics engaging and memorable.

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To create compelling educational email content, use this heuristic: is it interesting enough that a reader could bring it up at the dinner table and sound smart? This 'dinner table test' ensures your content provides genuine value, building brand affinity beyond just pushing promotions.

Marketers mistakenly assume B2B industries like finance are dull. In reality, these sectors are filled with compelling human stories about hopes, dreams, and innovation. The perceived lack of creativity is a massive competitive advantage for marketers willing to find and elevate these narratives.

Effective B2B content marketing involves giving away valuable secrets, not just pitching services. Instead of saying "hire me," create content that teaches potential clients how to fix common problems themselves. This demonstrates true expertise, builds trust, and makes them more likely to hire you for complex issues.

Stop worrying that producing both high-level 'sizzle' content and deep, technical content will make you seem inconsistent. Your audience is not a monolith. This 'and' approach appeals to different segments and creates more connection points, rather than alienating anyone.

To stand out in a crowded feed like LinkedIn, frame business insights through a personal hobby. A post about 'What Fly Fishing Taught Me About Business' acts as a pattern interrupt, creating a human connection that is more likely to be read than another generic business article.

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.

While writing for a B2B marketing audience, Dave Gerhardt discovered that his highest-performing content wasn't about marketing tactics, but about personal productivity—how people work, manage their time, and structure their days. This human-centric content resonates deeply with a professional audience.

Truly creative and effective B2B entertainment doesn't come from open-ended brainstorming. Instead, it thrives within the constraints of a well-defined strategic narrative or product message. This 'box' provides the necessary guardrails to ensure the content is both entertaining and strategically relevant.

Effective communication requires a careful balance. A clear structure makes your message easy to process and prevents cognitive overload, which listeners find aversive. At the same time, novelty and surprise are necessary to maintain interest and prevent boredom. One without the other fails.

Instead of using AI for mass content creation, which leads to overload, leverage it to adapt a core value proposition into highly relevant messaging for each persona within a buying group (CEO, CTO, CFO), addressing their specific pain points.