Skip links

Building a B2B Content Strategy That Supports Every Stage of the Buyer Journey

Author: Bill Ross | Reading Time: 5 minutes | Published: February 17, 2026 | Updated: March 11, 2026

Emulent

Most B2B marketing teams have plenty of content—blogs, whitepapers, and sometimes case studies. But many lack a clear plan for connecting that content to how buyers make decisions. According to Gartner, B2B buyers do more than half their research before talking to sales. So, your content is already influencing buyers, even if you haven’t planned for it. This article will show you how to build a content strategy that supports buyers at every stage and helps you capture more opportunities.

Why Most B2B Content Strategies Leave Pipeline on the Table

Most B2B content investment focuses on the top of the funnel. Teams publish educational blogs and SEO guides, then hope buyers will take the next step on their own. Content for the middle and bottom of the funnel often gets overlooked.

This causes issues. When buyers compare vendors or build a business case, they often find only basic information on your site. They may turn to competitors who answer their specific questions.

“The brands that win in B2B are the ones that treat their content like a sales conversation at every stage. If a buyer is three weeks from a purchase decision and all you have is a beginner’s guide, you’ve already lost that deal to whoever published the comparison guide, the ROI calculator, or the implementation checklist.” — Emulent Marketing Strategy Team.

A strong B2B content strategy is more than just filling a publishing calendar. It should match how your ideal customers think, research, and make decisions. Every piece of content should help a specific type of buyer get closer to choosing your company.

Common reasons B2B content strategies stall:

  • No stage mapping: Content is created by topic, not by where the buyer is in their decision process, so pieces end up serving no stage particularly well.
  • Sales and marketing working separately: Marketing produces content without knowing the questions sales hears most at the deal stage, so decision-stage content almost never gets built.
  • Measuring traffic only: Page views feel like success, but they don’t tell you whether content is generating qualified leads or influencing closed deals.

Start With Your Ideal Customer Profile, Not Your Content Calendar

Before you plan any content, get clear on who you’re writing for. Your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) describes the type of company most likely to buy from you and benefit. The buyer persona goes further, outlining the specific person in that company who researches, supports, and approves the purchase.

This is important because the content that appeals to a VP of Marketing at the awareness stage is very different from what a CFO needs before approving a purchase. If you plan content without knowing who it’s for, you risk writing for an audience that isn’t real.

What a useful ICP and buyer persona includes:

  • Company profile: Industry, company size, revenue range, tech stack, and growth stage that match your best current customers.
  • Role and responsibilities: The job title, main goals, and daily priorities of both the person doing the research and the person approving the budget. In B2B, these are often different people.
  • Research behavior: Where they look for information, which publications they trust, and what search terms they use when they start a buying process.
  • Key concerns by stage: What they need to know at the awareness stage is very different from what they need confirmed right before a decision. Document both.

Once you know your ICP and buyer persona, plan content that meets their needs at every stage. The key is to target real people at the right time to get results. Now, let’s look at how to guide buyers through each content stage, starting with awareness.

Awareness-Stage Content: Get Found by the Right Buyers

At the awareness stage, buyers realize they have a problem, but may not know what the solution is or that your company exists. Your content should meet them where they search, teach them something helpful, and build enough trust to keep them interested.

SEO is important at this stage. Buyers search to understand their problem, learn new terms, or find better solutions. Your goal is to appear in these searches with truly helpful content, not just disguised ads.

“We tell clients that awareness-stage content is not about your company. It’s about the problem your buyer is trying to solve. If every paragraph circles back to your product, you’ve already lost the reader. Teach first. The brand recognition comes naturally from doing that well.” — Emulent Marketing Strategy Team.

Awareness-stage content types that work well in B2B:

  • Educational blog posts and guides: Long-form content that answers specific questions your buyers are actively searching for, built around the language they use, not industry jargon.
  • Explainer videos: Short, focused videos that break down a concept or process without pitching a solution yet.
  • Original research and industry data: Publishing data your audience cannot find elsewhere builds authority and earns backlinks, which strengthens your SEO over time.
  • LinkedIn thought pieces: Shorter-form content that builds familiarity and drives buyers back to your longer-form resources on your site.

Remember, buyers at the awareness stage aren’t ready to hear about your product yet. If you push for a demo or trial before they understand their problem, you’ll lose their interest. Focus on earning their attention first.

Consideration-Stage Content: Where Most B2B Brands Go Quiet

In the consideration stage, buyers compare options and figure out what solution they need. This stage often gets the least attention in B2B content, but it’s where strong content can set you apart from competitors.

At this stage, buyers move from understanding the problem to evaluating solutions and choosing whom to trust. They read comparisons, explore case studies, and seek peer recommendations. If your content isn’t part of this research, you’re missing a key opportunity.

Consideration-stage content types that convert well in B2B:

  • Comparison guides: Honest comparisons between approaches or solutions, including ones you don’t offer, build far more trust than content that only shows your solution in a favorable light.
  • Customer case studies: Share specific stories focused on results. Describe the buyer’s situation before working with you, what you did, and the measurable outcome.
  • Webinars and live Q&As: These give buyers a chance to interact with your team, ask real questions, and form a relationship before a formal sales conversation begins.
  • Detailed how-to content: Step-by-step guides that show how your approach works in real situations demonstrate expertise and help buyers decide if it fits their needs.

Decision-Stage Content: Help Buyers Make the Internal Case

By the decision stage, the buyer has narrowed their options and is close to committing. But in B2B, the person who did the research almost never makes the final call alone. They need to present a recommendation to leadership, finance, or a buying committee. Your content at this stage should help them do that job.

This is also where sales enablement content is valuable. Content made to support sales conversations, answer late-stage objections, or justify the investment to a CFO can make the difference between closing a deal and losing it.

“Decision-stage content is often the content no one thinks to build because it doesn’t drive traffic. But it closes deals. An ROI calculator, a detailed implementation guide, or a security and compliance FAQ can be exactly what a champion needs to get internal sign-off. We’ve seen that kind of content influence more revenue than a full year of blog publishing.” — Emulent Marketing Strategy Team.

Decision-stage content types that support B2B purchases:

  • ROI calculators and business case templates: Give buyers a tool to translate your solution’s value into numbers that matter to their leadership team.
  • Implementation guides and onboarding previews: Answering the question, “What happens after we sign?” helps remove a big source of hesitation late in the process.
  • Security, compliance, and technical documentation: For enterprise buyers, these documents are required before any purchase can proceed.
  • Testimonials and reference customer programs: At this stage, social proof should be specific. A named customer with a similar situation and clear results is much more convincing than a generic quote. Once you have decision-stage content, make sure buyers see it by planning your distribution and nurture efforts.

Connecting the Stages: Distribution and Lead Nurture

Creating content for each stage is just part of the job. Buyers rarely follow a straight path. They don’t always find your awareness content first and then move to consideration content later. You need a distribution plan that guides buyers through each stage.

Email nurture sequences are a reliable tool for this in B2B. When a buyer downloads an awareness-stage guide, that’s a signal. Sending an automated email series with consideration-stage content over the next few weeks keeps your brand top of mind as they continue their research.

Distribution tactics that connect content across stages:

  • Gated content with intent-based follow-up: When someone downloads a whitepaper or registers for a webinar, use that signal to route them into a nurture track built for their stage and topic interest.
  • LinkedIn retargeting: Serve consideration and decision-stage content to buyers who have already visited your awareness-stage pages or engaged with your profile.
  • Sales team content sharing: Give your sales team a short library of stage-appropriate content they can send during active conversations, so they don’t have to find it themselves.
  • Internal linking and content upgrades: Create clear pathways in your content so that when someone finishes an awareness-stage post, they are directed to a relevant consideration-stage resource instead of just a generic “contact us” page.

How to Measure Whether Your Content Is Moving Deals

Traffic shouldn’t be your main metric for B2B content. A blog post with ten thousand visits from the wrong audience doesn’t help your revenue. Instead, measure if your content attracts the right buyers and moves them closer to a purchase.

To do this, connect your content data to your CRM. When a lead converts, track which content they viewed before becoming qualified. When a deal closes, see which content the contact engaged with during the sales cycle. Most marketing automation platforms and CRMs can track this if set up right.

“The question we push every B2B client to answer is: which piece of content shows up most often in the journey of your closed-won deals? That single data point tells you more about where to invest your content budget than any traffic report. Most teams have never looked at it.” — Emulent Marketing Strategy Team.

Metrics that reflect real content performance in B2B:

  • Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL) rate by content piece: Which content is generating leads who actually match your ICP, not just visitors who bounce after one page?
  • Pipeline influence: How often does a specific content piece appear in the journey of deals that reached a certain pipeline stage or closed?
  • Content-assisted revenue: The total value of deals where at least one content piece was consumed during the sales cycle, tracked in your CRM.
  • Stage progression rate: Are buyers who consume your consideration-stage content more likely to request a demo or enter an active sales conversation? Tracking this shows whether your middle-funnel content is doing its job.

Building a B2B Content Strategy That Works for Your Business

If you need help building or reviewing your B2B content strategy, the Emulent Marketing Team can work with you to map content to the buyer journey, find where deals are dropping off, and create a plan that supports both marketing and sales. Contact the Emulent Team today to discuss your B2B marketing strategy.