Contents
- 1 Marketing Challenges in the Crowded Tech Landscape
- 2 B2C vs. B2B Marketing in the Tech Industry
- 3 Marketing Principles in the Tech Industry in 2025
- 4 Identifying Your Unique Value Proposition (UVP) and Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) in Tech
- 5 Content Marketing Strategies for Tech Companies
- 6 Marketing Strategies to Stand Out for Tech Companies
- 7 Metrics and Analytics for Tech Marketing Success
- 8 Case Study – Enterprise Backup Software Company Becomes Thought Leader
- 9 Conclusion
Key Takeaways
- Sophisticated marketing strategies allow tech brands to stand out from the crowd.
- It starts from defining ICP and target audience, but proper channel mix is crucial, too.
- Continue reading to learn how to build a multichannel marketing strategy for a high tech brand that will foster growth.
Nowadays, tech companies, especially high tech startups, face an unprecedented challenge: standing out in increasingly saturated markets, where inbound marketing strategies play a crucial role. As an example niche, with over 14000 martech solutions available as of 2024 and new SaaS companies launching daily, the tech sector is noisier than ever. For many technology companies, the question is not just how to succeed, but how to simply be noticed.
Marketing Challenges in the Crowded Tech Landscape
The rapid proliferation of tech solutions across various industries, fueled by the rise of tech startups, has led to a paradox of choice for individual consumers and businesses alike. While innovation drives the high-tech industry forward, it also creates a congested marketplace where differentiation becomes increasingly difficult. I see a lot of tech companies investing in their marketing strategies without having a clear differentiation, messaging and distribution strategies and this only benefits the advertising platforms and marketing technologies they use.
Over-Reliance on Industry Jargon
In most cases, marketers have several seconds to capture the attention of a prospect on their website. The primary goal in such situations is to transfer information about the product value and relevance to the potential customer and the usage of jargon-filled phrases completely contradicts the entire effort, introducing more challenges to the communication process. Have you ever seen anything from the below list of fluffy buzzwords?
- Cutting-edge
- Next-gen
- Seamless
- State-of-the-art
- Cloud-powered
- All-in-one
- End-to-end
- Resilient
- Future-proof
- Bulletproof
- Zero-downtime
- Always-on
- High-availability
- Self-healing
- Hyper-secure
It is up to the marketer to find the best approach to the prospect’s viewpoint, not the other way around. Messaging is more important than anything in the post-GPT era, considering how much information a marketer has to convey to the potential customer before the latter is ready to proceed with the action.
Overwhelmingly Pushy Marketing Approach
Not only sales teams in technology companies give prospects a “hard sell overload” with unsolicited emails, frequent phone calls, complicated proof-of-concept terms and so on. The same happens with marketing departments as well. Excessive lead nurturing emails, uncapped remarketing and video ads frequency, persistent call-to-action blocks on websites (at least 5 per single-screen webpage), annoying popup windows, relentless urgency in messaging – these are just a handful of examples that demonstrate the lack of sensitivity to the prospect’s needs.
The non-intrusive and respectful marketing approach to the audience promotes creating compelling and helpful content, distributing it gently and respecting the prospect’s decision-making process. The truly consulting-based approach to marketing that does not revolve solely around the purchasing decision is a great method of closing deals. The opposite may bring in more short-term sales but can damage trust in communications and harm renewals and upsells.
The Lack of Communication in Technology
A lot of tech brands try to market their products to the same tech audience instead of the full buying center (incl. decision-makers), thinking that digging deeper into the technology aspects behind the offer would make it more enticing. However, in most cases, this kind of attitude does not translate directly into better sales, which is why marketing to decision-makers in the buying center would always be a better idea in hindsight. Certainly, the buying center may include tech professionals, but often the product is also sold to C-level executives, finance and procurement managers, operations division and more.
Picture a cybersecurity company that sells its software by pointing to technical specs such as “quantum-proof encryption algorithms,” which is only interesting to IT experts. But what they fail to do is address ROI, cost-effectiveness and strategic benefits that are important to C-level executives and procurement managers in the buying center.
The primary marketing goal here is to establish a real and undeniable value for your product through communication with all buying center members, especially speaking their language and connecting it to their KPIs and goals. Smart marketers need to demonstrate the value that decision-makers of all departments can understand and agree with. Even though the technology itself is very important for products to sell, marketing is still much more about the use case for the business rather than technology for the sake of technology.
The Assumption that Customers Know Everything Beforehand
It is surprisingly common for tech marketers to try to speak to their consumers as if they are already aware of every single term and process in the industry. The lack of respect for the customer’s time and the absence of digestible information is a significant disadvantage to any marketing effort.
SaaS platforms tend to list features with phrases like “microservices architecture” or “API-first design” all too often without consideration of how those solve the user experiences their customers face on a day-to-day basis.
Fintech services are known to implement word-salad-speak like “blockchain-enabled lingering” or “zero-knowledge proofs,” apparently sidestepping to detail the actual benefits to a user, e.g. more security or transparency.
AI and machine learning software pitches bombard potential buyers with terms like “deep learning neural networks” or “reinforcement algorithms,” and they increasingly miss the opportunity to explain how the AI will change the business results or solve their problems.
Even the most complex products or services should serve the benefit of a business, which also means explaining it in a way that would make it easy for the end user to understand how it can benefit their processes and workflows.
Incorrect Assumptions About the Buyer’s Journey
In a nutshell, marketing is more of a continuous process and less of a solution for a one-time issue – high tech is not an exception, too. It should guide prospects and customers through a number of stages in their buyer’s journey, including the purchasing decision.
How many times have I seen how a new, freshly-funded SaaS company runs a flash marketing campaign that offers steep discounts for immediate sign-ups, but ignores the importance of nurturing leads through educational content and onboarding assistance? As a consequence, prospects avoid sales teams or customers quickly churn, because they have not entirely grasped the value of the product.
The lack of a defined buyer’s journey in the company can make or break a marketing strategy with ease, which is why trying to understand your target audience and the steps they go through to commit to a purchase is always going to be the better tactic in this context.
Outrageous Technical and Business Claims
Exaggeration and the lack of proof for outrageous claims are both an easy way to completely lose all credibility in a short time frame and that’s extremely common in high tech. Even if the product is incredibly valuable and useful, exaggerating its technical capabilities or business benefits is an easy way to reduce its total value in the eyes of potential customers. Here are the examples of such unverified claims:
- A tech startup touts its AI-powered platform when it claims “it can double any company’s revenue in 30 days” without producing a single successful case study or hard data to back the statement.
- A software company announces its cloud storage solution as having “unlimited capacity and zero latency,” without any context as to bandwidth limitations, pricing tiers or latency differences depending on location.
By the time the users face performance degradation or increased cost, the trust is already broken, although it is a powerful solution for most use cases. Whenever speaking of the product’s value or utility, marketing materials ought to use compelling data and logical justification.
Ignorance of Real Customer Needs
Most of the challenges above can also be summarized as the lack of understanding of what customers want from your product. The negligence in catering to customer’s needs greatly heightens the chances that the go-to-market strategy is going to be ineffective.
For example, a cloud computing company launched an expensive multi-channel company that promoted its infrastructure as more complex. When I was invited to determine why the campaign had failed, I realized that it had not paid attention to common customer problems: small businesses with easy setup, clear pricing for the future, and decent customer service. Naturally, the campaign could not have succeeded. And the agency conducted it professionally, and the product could solve just these problems.
Investing in a proper understanding of the end user in a technological market is the only way to resolve this issue. A company should have a clear understanding of what kind of issues their offering can solve for both an individual employee and the entire business. Once that is established, marketers can also start asking more specific questions, such as how your technology can impact the customer’s business, how you can establish your credibility in the eyes of the customer and so on.
B2C vs. B2B Marketing in the Tech Industry
The technological landscape is vast and varied, with multiple market categories having their own unique challenges and specialties. Here are a few examples of what tech companies might specialize in:
- Enterprise IT
- FinTech
- HealthTech
- Blockchain
- Cybersecurity
- EduTech
- Managed IT services
- AI
- Big Data
- SaaS
The marketing of these specialties varies greatly between B2C (Business-to-Consumer) and B2B (Business-to-Business) strategies. Each demands different strategies, messaging and objectives directed toward their respective audiences.
B2C Tech Marketing
In tech, B2C marketing tends to highlight personal benefits, user experience and emotional appeal. Ideal customers are individuals and consumers who desire convenience, entertainment or a solution to everyday problems for their targeted solution. For example:
- HealthTech applications such as fitness trackers, telemedicine, etc., tend to stress seamless operation, affordability and lifestyle improvement.
- FinTech products including budgeting applications or personal finance tools focus on providing simplicity, security and financial empowerment.
- AI-enabled device solutions for the home, including intelligent speakers, are marketed as intuitive to use, fun and must-have gadgets for modern living.
B2C campaigns utilize channels such as social media, influencer marketing and visual content to generate interest, with a strong focus on storytelling and customer testimonials. In this context, speed, simplicity and immediate value are critical.
B2B Tech Marketing
B2B tech marketing, however, emphasizes proving ROI, long-term value and addressing business-specific pain points. The target audience is those making decisions such as CIOs, CTOs, CMOs, COOs and other managers. For example:
- Enterprise IT solutions emphasize scalability, security and integration with current environments.
- Big Data platforms aim their pitch to analytics teams claiming the technology “breaks down silos” and delivers insights to drive growth.
- Cybersecurity tools focus their value proposition on risk management (compliance, resilience, cost avoidance from breaches, etc.).
In B2B campaigns, thought leadership, technical documentation and case studies are prioritized. Channels including LinkedIn, paid search organic search and targeted email campaigns work better, because multiple people within an organization are usually involved in the purchasing journey and they have longer decision cycles.
Key Differences in Messaging
B2C messaging zeroes in on individual gratification now, like convenience, fun and self-betterment. In contrast, B2B messaging is inherently oriented to the company’s objectives: efficiency, cost-saving, innovation, etc. These differences are essential for any tech company to understand if it wants to successfully distinguish itself in a market and tailor its messaging to the audience’s specific priorities and challenges.
What’s Missing in Your Tech Marketing Strategy?
Marketing Principles in the Tech Industry in 2025
With the rise of privacy concerns, ongoing enforcement of new regulations in the technology industry and the lack of buyer’s attention span, future strategies of marketing technology products are going to change significantly from traditional models of the past.
One of the trends, which is especially true in the B2B tech marketing sphere, is the willingness of prospects to research products on their own terms, not through sales managers or official, often biased marketing materials and do it anonymously for as much time as possible (without contacting sales). Prospects are deciding themselves when they want to actually become leads and be nurtured to a sales opportunity. Before this, they often have already searched for the product in Google and chatGPT, checked the online reviews, discussed with colleagues and in “dark social” channels and tried competitor trials or watched demos.
The abundance of anonymous buyers and their willingness to discover products without any “gated assets” implies that marketing efforts should adapt accordingly. Instead of traditional lead generation targeted at decision-makers in the buying center, tech marketing strategies should focus on demand generation that attracts anonymous buyers through demonstrating open expertise, building genuine trust and engaging only when the buyer is ready for it.
Despite this trend, there are still a few ways to turn anonymous buyers and their caution towards sharing personal information into valuable leads, helping them purchase the product they want to receive on their own terms. Below, you’ll find five substantial principles that thrive in the age of an anonymous buyer.
Prioritize Demand Generation over Lead Generation
In my opinion, the previously popular tactic of prioritizing MQLs (Marketing Qualified Leads) is becoming less and less effective. As discussed above, prospects in 2025 are often not comfortable sharing information with an unfamiliar technology vendor or startup. Therefore, if all your assets and product experiences are gated, such prospects will never fall into your pipeline. As such, delivering value from the very first interaction with such prospects should be a priority, treating anonymous buyers as customers with complete right to anonymity and building a relationship that would allow for them to open up more in the future instead of trying to force it right away.
This approach is representative of a shift away from the early tactics of gating every piece of content or demanding any personal information right up front in favor of establishing trust through value-first engagement. By providing authoritative, ungated content, whether it be in-depth product tutorials, whitepapers or interactive demos, companies can demonstrate expertise (and earn credibility) without pressuring a potential lead.
Building user communities around free or freemium product versions, for example, drives peer-to-peer support, improving that experience and enabling you to draw them deeper and deeper into your engagement. Webinars and live Q&A sessions give prospects the chance to field any questions they might have and discover why the product is beneficial, all without committing to anything. By offering fast online support, even to those who are using the free version of their product, you show that you truly want to see your customers succeed, which can go a long way in creating goodwill and trust that leads to future conversions.
Reshape your MQL Targets
For anonymous tech buyers, being considered a lead is the end of the journey instead of its beginning. Of course, this kind of approach dramatically changes many of the existing marketing preconceptions, so the adjacent processes, like recalibrating MQL targets, should also be handled with care by both marketing and sales teams.
Lead generation should be more focused on lead quality and alignment with revenue goals than maximizing lead volume. Instead of giving all prospects the same treatment and generic marketing or outreach, marketers should seek out those who have evidence of clear intent through their behaviors, such as depth of engagement with ungated content, interactions with community resources or attendance at educational events. These actions give a better propitious measure of preparedness and revenue potential so that sales will only provide actionable leads.
In this frame, marketing and sales collaboration becomes increasingly crucial. Marketing needs to focus on finding the engagement behaviors that mean you have leads of high quality, while sales teams and closers need to be trained to help these leads further through the funnel with a consultative approach. Combined, they will create a pipeline that prioritizes conversion potential over volume, leading to improved revenue outcomes.
Consideration Phase Should Cover “the 3 R’s”
A number of research studies in the field of anonymous buyers have shown that detailed pricing and product specification lists are not as important as the “three Rs” – Reputation, Review and Recognition. It is a very difficult advantage to achieve in the short term, but it can be influenced by delivering value to prospects and investing in thought leadership content to earn a better category-wide reputation. Here are examples of how tech companies can address three Rs:
Reputation
A cybersecurity company publishes long thought-leadership articles on upcoming threats and best practices in online tech publications. They develop trust and positioning as they prepare security solutions for enterprise-grade security by projecting expertise.
Review
For a SaaS vendor, display 3rd party customer testimonials and case studies on the website with measurable results like “improved team productivity by 30%” or “lowered downtime by 50%”. These different use cases allow prospects to see the product in action through the eyes of others.
Recognition
An AI startup that enters and sits at a lot of industry award ceremonies and functions and wins awards for Best Innovation in AI or Top 10 Most Promising Startups. By prominently displaying these recognitions on their website or marketing materials, they assure prospects of their credibility and standing in the field.
Covering these three bases helps to make sure potential buyers will not just know about the product, but also trust the company enough to bring them one step closer to making a buying decision.
Introduce Sales into the Buyer’s Journey in a Meaningful Manner
Anonymous buyers are much more likely to talk with advisors, consultants or experts who can provide the information they need or help them evaluate the product through trials or hands-on demonstrations. This behavior represents a fundamental shift in how brands need to approach the traditional marketing-to-sales handoff.
Instead of assuming that sales should come into play early in the buyer’s journey, companies need to reframe the role of sales teams to complement and enhance the buyer’s exploration process. This means positioning sales not as the first point of contact but as a resource that provides strategic guidance when the prospect is ready for a deeper conversation. For instance, sales can step in to offer personalized consultations, help tailor product recommendations to the buyer’s specific use case or outline a clear path to achieving their goals with your solution. This approach requires sales teams to act more as collaborators and problem-solvers rather than solely as deal-closers.
This paradigm shift also impacts the traditional marketing funnel, which assumes a linear path from awareness to consideration to decision. Anonymous buyers often chart their own journey, exploring your brand, reviewing ungated content, engaging with peer communities and testing trial versions with fake emails — all before revealing themselves. The role of both marketing and sales in this scenario is to create opportunities for engagements that feel organic, valuable and aligned with where the buyer is in their process.
For this strategy to succeed, marketing and sales teams must work together to integrate sales expertise into the broader buyer journey in a seamless way. This could involve creating resources like on-demand webinars featuring product experts, offering interactive demos led by pre-sales or support specialists or even embedding support resources into user communities or trial programs. The key is to ensure that when sales do engage – it’s meaningful, consultative and seen as a value-add rather than a disruption.
Balance Between Share of Voice and Share of Market
The Share of Voice rule is a well-known formula in marketing that offers a rule of equation of sorts between the Share of Voice (SOV) and the Share of Market (SOM) for each company. If the SOV of the company is higher than its SOM, then this company’s market share is expected to grow until the two are roughly on the same level. Alternatively, if the SOM of a company is lower than its SOV, then the former is supposed to shrink until the two are equal, as well.
This kind of rule is applicable to both B2C and B2B markets. Companies could target campaigns to specific customer segments while leaving room for brand-building campaigns that reach a larger audience. A good practice is aligning Share of Voice with Share of Market: For example, when combining performance marketing tactics (personalized ads, ABM) with initiatives (thought leadership content, sponsorships, industry events) This synergistic approach not only enables businesses to retain their competitive edge but also creates sustainable brand equity.
Identifying Your Unique Value Proposition (UVP) and Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) in Tech
The foundation of standing out in a crowded market, particularly for tech startups, is a clear, compelling, unique value proposition (UVP). Your UVP is the cornerstone of your differentiation strategy — it’s what sets you apart from competitors and gives customers a reason to choose you over others. In my career, I have seen dozens of tech startups and sometimes even established high-tech companies that do not have or can not agree on their clear UVP.
What Makes a Strong UVP?
A powerful UVP should:
- Clearly articulate the unique benefit you provide
- Explain why you’re uniquely positioned to deliver this benefit
- Be relevant and valuable to your target audience
- Be simple and easy to communicate
- Be authentic and deliverable
Steps to Identify Your UVP
- Analyze your origin story
- Why was your company founded?
- What problem were you initially trying to solve?
- How has your mission evolved?
- Survey your customers
- Why did they choose you over competitors?
- What do they value most about your solution?
- What problems does your product or service solve for them?
- Conduct a competitive analysis
- Who are your main competitors?
- What are their UVPs?
- How can you differentiate yourself from them?
- Identify underserved niches
- Are there pain points in your market that aren’t being adequately addressed?
- Can you specialize in serving a specific subset of customers better than anyone else?
- Evaluate your strengths
- What does your company do better than anyone else?
- What unique expertise or resources do you have?
- What positive feedback do you consistently receive from customers?
Once you’ve gathered this information, create your UVP by following these steps:
- List key differentiators by writing down all the things that make your offering unique.
- Prioritize based on customer value and rank differentiators based on how much your target customers care about them.
- For each top differentiator, clearly state how it benefits the customer.
- Distill your UVP into a clear, concise statement that you can communicate in 30 seconds.
I personally prefer using this simple formula from one of my former colleagues:
We, Company X, help customers of type Y in situation Z solve problem P using technologies S and gain value V.
This formula is a powerful tool for articulating a company’s value proposition.
Company X: Your organization
Customers of type Y: Your target audience
Situation Z: The context or circumstances in which your customers find themselves
Problem P: The specific challenge or difficulty your customers face
Technologies S: Your solution or approach to solving the problem
Value V: The specific benefits your customers receive
Here are some of the most frequent mistakes that I’ve seen tech startups make during my career:
- Too broad definitions, for instance, “we offer high-quality software solutions” – this is too vague to be effective.
- Focusing on features, not customer benefits.
- False uniqueness claims.
- Overcomplicating in a way that if you can’t explain your UVP simply, it needs refinement.
Being different from the rest is not the only important factor for a strong UVP – since being different in a way that is relevant to your target audience is way more important. Your value proposition should be clear in highlighting what kind of value your business can offer and why you have to be chosen over all of your competition.
How Can You Identify Your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)?
Identifying the ICP of a company in a B2B tech environment necessitates a strategic approach that uses a lot more than just basic demographic information. The first step here would be to start analyzing your most successful customer examples (strong engagement, low churn rates, high lifetime value, etc.). There are a few common patterns that can be discerned in the identification process:
- Company characteristics. Criterias such as employee count, annual revenue, industry, account location, business model, digital maturity level, technologies used in the account contribute to finding out the “sweet spot” for your product. I
- Behavioral indicators. The way successful customers interact with your product should also be analyzed for ICP knowledge. This includes features usage, onboarding metrics, decision-making processes, common pain points and so on.
- Financial patterns. Analyzing economics on who you want to serve gives you more ICP clarity. This includes revenue expansion potential, customer profitability and lifetime value from certain types of customers. Understanding financial trends aids in identifying sectors offering maximum sustainable growth.
- Sales patterns. Understanding details in sales patterns, such as average deal size, the length of the sales cycle or whether the decision-making process is complex or simple ties directly to the process of aligning the sales strategy with the customer profile to maximize revenue efficiency. One type of priority may be accounts that generate a highly lucrative deal size and a shorter sales cycle.
Once all this information is gathered, it should be possible to look for clusters of characteristics that have the highest chances of success. A proper ICP should be as specific as possible so that it can be used as a guide for targeted marketing efforts while also supporting sustainable growth. For instance, a cloud backup software company might have an ICP focusing on ideal customers that are mid-sized, say 500–1,500 employees, between $50M and $500M in annual revenues, located in North America (NA) and Western Europe (the EU) and with a business model that relies heavily on digital services and is very tech-forward (uses virtualization platforms and hybrid cloud). These customers are often enterprise level organizations, whose IT teams are often actively searching for scalable backup solutions that meet strict compliance requirements, such as GDPR or SOC 2; those that show high engagement with onboarding tools, with a deal size averaging between $100K–$250K and sales cycle of 3–6 months, with significant expansion opportunities.
Why Is ICP Segmentation Critical for Tech Marketing?
A universal approach to marketing that covers all target ICPs at once is no longer effective in a modern environment. Effective ICP segmentation offers extensive precision for your marketing efforts, resulting in substantial advantages.
Personalized value proposition. Proper segmentation makes it significantly easier to create messaging that resonates with the pain points of specific audiences while highlighting the benefits of the product that are the most relevant to this audience. Adjusting pricing and packaging to a specific segment’s requirements and developing case studies also fall under the topic of personalization. As an example, an enterprise backup software vendor would emphasize on the recovery times of its solution and cost predictability for fintech corporations, whilst articulating scalability and advanced data redundancy for HPC data centers.
Resource optimization. Smart segmentation can also improve marketing efficiency in terms of resource assignment. The ability to focus budgets, select marketing channels, create content and optimize ad spend for every specific ICP segment dramatically improves the overall resource allocation, reducing wasted budgets and improving marketing metrics like cost-per-trial, cost-per-demo and cost-per-client in general. As an example, running PPC campaigns on Google Ads to target MSPs versus thought leadership posts on LinkedIn for enterprise data centers allows resources to be effectively utilized in places where they can have the greatest impact.
Partner differentiation. Segmentation also provides a better understanding of customer needs, making it possible to build segment-specific partnerships and develop targeted feature sets for those partners. That way, the business can position itself in a unique manner compared with the competitors for channel partners in the niche. For example, if you were to create an API integrations with a tier-1 virtualization provider, it may be of high interest to HPC Data centers, whereas creating a low-frills white-label solution that MSPs can repackage and resell is of higher demand.
Enhanced customer experience. Better customer experiences are facilitated by customized product development roadmaps, targeted onboarding processes and segment-specific support programs. As other examples, for fintech companies, there may be high demand for compliance-focused support for the regulatory landscape, while enterprise data centers could require hands-on onboarding with technical specialists to facilitate ease of deployment in large and complex environments.
Content Marketing Strategies for Tech Companies
What Types of Content Resonate with Tech Audiences?
In the tech industry, where products and services can be complex, inbound content marketing is a powerful tool for demonstrating expertise, providing value and standing out from the competition. Here are some strategies to leverage content marketing for effective differentiation:
- Thought Leadership Content
Having an opinion leader is one of the ways to stand out. That means creating thought leadership content and sharing unique insights. Could be a research, an industry report, a trends analysis etc. You could publish in your company blog, or sell it to a 3rd-party website (industry media or blogs), or you can even make a whitepaper out of it and sell it as a gated asset. And one of the important things about this type of content is consistency; you need to keep a regular publishing schedule so that you can deliver your message and have an impact.
- Educational Content
In the complex industry, nothing is valued more than turning complicated things into straightforward ones. Is your software addressing a certain pain point? Then, create a comprehensive guide on how to approach this strategically and a tutorial on how to use your software for it. Transform this written content into a webinar and you will be able to distribute it in several formats. Produce short explainer videos and conquer YouTube Shorts. Mix written and visual content to reach audiences with their preferred type of communication.
While content such as blog posts or glossary articles might not be big on driving any visitor toward a purchasing decision, it is still invaluable when it comes to building your reputation and spreading brand awareness by answering typical questions in specific areas. The ability to rank higher in search engine results also contributes to the total volume of visitors attracted to your website, leading to a potentially higher number of total purchases.
- Interactive Content
This type of content presents a significant opportunity to differentiate, as it really engages the audience more than just reading a blog post. Online demos of the product, interactive product tours, ROI / TCO calculators, assessments – this list can be a long one and you can make a positive impression through these tools. Track engagement metrics of this type of content using GA4 events and refine it when you see that certain elements are blocking users from exploring till the end.
Quick Tips to Scale Content
It is a big challenge for small teams with limited resources to produce the content on scale and create a persistent content engine, which is a differentiator by itself. I think that there are two things that could help in this case.
- Repurpose your content, transform successful content into different formats from the original one;
- Collaborate and partner with industry influencers or complementary brands to source them for content creation on partner terms.
The goal is not just to create content, but to provide genuine value that positions your company as a trusted authority and go-to resource in your niche.
How Often Should You Publish Content for Maximum Impact?
Similar to most other venues, tech marketing necessitates a balance between quality and consistency in its content publishing frequency. However, rigid scheduling is also a detriment to most marketing efforts, so the best option would be to try and create a sustainable frequency that does not sacrifice quality standards from one content piece to another.
Quality should also be a priority over quantity, especially when it comes to highly accurate and thorough B2B content. You would have to consider audience consumption patterns in this case, since most enterprise tech buyers rarely spend more than a few hours per week consuming thought leadership content. In this context, one or two high-quality marketing elements provided on a weekly basis would be more than enough.
Resource availability for high-quality content is another noteworthy concern since the content in question has to be technically accurate and well-researched, which can be time-consuming. Additionally, the necessity to review technical content by several technical and marketing stakeholders can create its own bottlenecks that would have to be planned around.
The variation in content types would also make its own corrections to the overall marketing schedule. Most content types have their own preferred frequency, with case studies being the most efficient on a monthly basis, blog posts being provided once or twice a week in most situations, according to my personal experience.
These suggested timeframes will vary based on how long it typically takes to develop the content and its usual impact. Case studies — they need you for intermittent data collection, client approval, detailed storytelling etc, but they do pack an impact and are resource intensive — make them publishable only once a month. Blog posts, on the other hand, are much quicker to create and help maintain constant engagement with the audience, which matches the quicker consumption cycles of online readers, a suitable cadence for once per week or bi-weekly.
What Role Does SEO Play in Tech Content Marketing?
SEO in marketing tech content has a challenging fate due to the necessity to balance technical credibility and search visibility. Though brands might want to just focus on their product, SEO effectiveness often comes from creating content that mirrors what audiences are searching for: in-depth product comparison articles or general education content. So, for example, instead of just covering the unique aspects of your own backup software, you may need to write a full comparison of several backup solutions, including competitor ones, in order to rank for high-intent keywords such as “best enterprise backup solutions”. This method allows you to promote at the same time without spending on ads and subtly position your product among the best, even if it means exploring a few competitors’ products in the process.
The below checklist for technical SEO includes the most important on-page optimization factors that you should optimize:
- Ensure proper website hierarchy with logical categorization
- Optimize navigation for intuitive user experience and include breadcrumbs
- Create a valid robots.txt file and XML sitemap for Google Search Console
- Use clean, readable URLs (avoid excessive parameters)
- Maintain consistent use of trailing slashes
- Replace underscores with hyphens in URLs
- Fix broken 301 redirects
- Avoid redirect chains and loops
- Redirect HTTP traffic to HTTPS
- Ensure consistent www or non-www usage
- Implement custom 404 error pages with helpful navigation
- Validate correct canonical tags on pages
- Manage GET parameters effectively
- Fix mixed HTTP and HTTPS resource loading
- Update internal and external links to HTTPS
- Identify duplicate content issues caused by mirror sites
- Optimize Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) for faster loading
- Improve First Input Delay (FID) for better interactivity
- Stabilize visual content to reduce Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS)
- Minimize JavaScript and CSS files
- Enable browser caching
- Compress images and use modern formats like WebP
- Ensure responsive design across devices
- Verify that JavaScript-rendered content is crawlable
- Use server-side rendering (SSR) or dynamic rendering for key content
- Test JavaScript-based links and navigation
- Ensure SSL certificate validity
- Implement schema.org types (e.g., articles, reviews, events) where applicable
- Identify and resolve duplicated or missing title and meta descriptions
- Optimize meta tags for target keywords and CTR
- Maintain a clear H1 structure across pages
- Avoid duplicate or missing H1 tags
- Properly structure H2, H3 and other headings for content hierarchy
- Compress images for faster load times
- Ensure all images have descriptive, keyword-rich alt tags
- Use modern image formats like WebP
- Identify and fix duplicate content issues
- Review & rewrite AI-generated content for compliance with Google’s helpful content guidelines
- Audit internal link structure for orphaned pages
- Use keyword-rich anchor text without over-optimization for internal linking
The same kind of list for off-page SEO below should also be applied:
- Backlink profile growth from high-authority domains
- Regular press-releases with unlinked brand mentions
- Thorough research & guidance of Google’s content quality guidelines and other recommendations, including E-E-A-T
- Social media promotion of the content, as well as the usage of third-party websites such as Wikipedia to build credibility and reputation
A great keyword strategy is one of the keys to SEO success, particularly in the tech industry, where search behavior is highly specialized and most of the keywords have enormous difficulty (KD). Here are some (not all) types of keywords and when to use them, to help get you the most bang for your SEO buck:
- Industry-Specific Terminology: Consider specific words that indicate the technology, tools or solutions that your target audience is looking for (e.g. “cloud-native architecture” or “AI-powered analytics”)
- Branded and Competitor Terms: Keywords that mention your brands and products or comparison with competitors (for example, “Azure vs. AWS” or “Salesforce alternatives”)
- Long-Tail Technical Queries: Focus on detailed, low competition niche queries with a high purchase intent, such as “best GPU for AI training” or “how to optimize Kubernetes clusters”
- Question-Based Queries: Tailor content toward commonly searched problem-solving or how-to questions, such as “how does blockchain work” or “what is zero trust security”
- Emerging Tech Buzzwords: Use keywords associated with emerging technology or innovation (e.g., “quantum computing applications” or “generative AI tools”)
- Integration and Solution Queries: Use feature keywords that highlight product link and integration, the ability of a third-party vendor, for example “crm integration with slack” or “IoT device management solution”
- Location-Specific Keywords: For those with local targets, incorporate keywords relevant to specific locations (e.g., “AI consulting services europe” or “cybersecurity in singapore”)
Catering to multiple buckets in your keyword strategy allows you to reach a wider audience, increase relevance of content and address multiple angles of search intent, whilst remaining in keeping with the technical nous of your target sector. My advice is to start with keywords with low KD, ensure high rankings for such keywords first, and then gradually proceed to keywords with higher KD and competition. For instance, in my case, instead of going for:
Target on this one:
Generative Engine Optimization in Tech Content Marketing
As AI tools such as ChatGPT and other large language models (LLM) become increasingly pervasive, generative engine optimization (GEO) has emerged as an essential element of tech content marketing. It brings us to a concept some are calling GEO — which is creating content that is optimized in search engines like Google but also optimized for queries that users can make in generative AI models. With these models now being the default source of information for technical decision-makers and researchers, aligning content with their data processing style has become critical.
This typology ensures that tech companies have to excel in GEO, ensuring that tech companies’ content can be concise, clear and coherent throughout the information. Unlike traditional SEO where metadata and backlinks matter, generative AI models are more about relevance (that I think has a mathematical analogy of vectorizing the text). If, for example, a company provides enterprise backup solutions, its articles should have clearly structured paragraphs that directly target common questions such as “What are the necessary features of enterprise-grade backup solutions?” It helps AI models extract and present the right information that is relevant to the user.
This will also expose them to authoritative and well-cited content, making it more credible for generative models, which mainly rely on information from trusted and verifiable platforms. Finally, reinforcing your content with metrics, real-world case studies and quotes from field experts also boosts the topicality of your content. For example, a blog that compares backup solutions, bringing statistics, use cases and customer reviews, is much more likely to be cited by an AI model answering related questions.
Generative engine optimization also incentivizes the move towards evergreen content. AI tools for the most part rely on rich, time-neutral and well-structured resources that age well, including comprehensive guides, product walkthroughs and in-depth comparisons. Tech companies can therefore ensure their content remains discoverable and influential in this evolving digital landscape by aligning their content strategies with the principles of GEO.
Measuring the Impact of Content on Marketing Efforts
Some of the most valuable content marketing metrics to keep track of in the tech industry specifically are:
- Engagement Metrics
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- Download rates for technical whitepapers.
- Community engagements/technical discussions.
- Return visits to resource centers.
- Time spent on technical documentation.
- Code sample usage/implementation.
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- Lead Generation Metrics
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- Content attribution in winning deals.
- The ratio of technical content downloads to demo requests.
- Technical content’s influence on deal size.
- Time from first content interactions to the end of the sales process.
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- Business Impact Metrics
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- Customer acquisition costs for content-driven leads.
- Share of voice in technical discussions.
- Sales cycle length for content-engaged prospects.
- The influence of technical content on customer retention.
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- Attribution and Analysis Metrics
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- Content performance monitoring across different segments and personas.
- Technical content’s impact on sales enablement.
- Content reuse measurement during technical discussions.
- Multi-touch attribution as the means of tracking content influence on the buyer’s journey.
Regular reporting cycles for analysis purposes should be created in order to draw actionable recommendations from. Adjusting your content strategy as time goes on makes it possible to identify which content types work the most, offering better navigation of prospects through the sales funnel.
Marketing Strategies to Stand Out for Tech Companies
Account-Based Marketing: From Lead Quantity to Quality
While ABM is not actually something innovative as a method, I still see a lot of tech companies that do not leverage it in their overall marketing strategies (which are, in most cases, focused on lead quantity instead of quality). Therefore, I consider this method to be innovative for certain companies. ABM is a strategic approach that concentrates sales and marketing resources on a specific set of target accounts within a market, often integrating inbound tactics to attract and engage high-value prospects.
- Instead of broad-reaching campaigns, ABM personalizes marketing efforts to specific high-value accounts.
- Benefits it brings include a higher conversion rate from leads to opportunities, a higher close rate, improved customer relationships and better alignment between sales and marketing.
- Implementation:
- Identify target accounts based on ideal customer profiles
- Research each account thoroughly
- Create personalized content and campaigns for each account
- Engage across multiple channels
- Measure and optimize based on account-specific metrics
While it may be challenging when you need to completely re-imagine your marketing strategy focused on quantity to quality, if your sales are struggling, changes to ABM and focusing on quality may benefit your results in the long run. Here you can find a detailed article on ABM with best practices and examples from my career.
What’s Missing in Your Tech Marketing Strategy?
Building a Distinctive Brand Identity & Awareness in Tech Space
The importance of a strong branding position in marketing is very difficult to overestimate. A clear and concise brand identity would be able to serve as a clear distinction from the rest of the market. Color schemes and logos are just a part of the brand – since the term itself covers the entire “experience” that customers receive when working with your company. First of all, let’s discuss what is included in brand identity.
- Visual Identity
- Simple, memorable and scalable logo
- Color palette that reflects your brand personality and stands out in your industry
- Typography that is readable and aligns with your brand character
- A consistent style for photos, illustrations and icons
- Brand Voice
- Decide if your brand voice is formal, casual, technical or approachable
- Develop a consistent technical vocabulary for your niche
- Brand Story
- Share why your company was founded
- Clearly state what you are trying to achieve
- Highlight what your company stands for
Here is my recipe; your brand should be authentic and reflect your company’s true values and culture. Look at competitors and ensure your brand stands out either through visual identity or through a unique voice (ideally, both). Apply your brand identity across all channels and touchpoints to be consistent. Remember, in tech, your brand identity should communicate not just what you do, but also why you do it and why it matters. A strong, consistent brand identity, supported by inbound marketing efforts, builds trust, recognition and loyalty in a crowded market. At the same time, a brand identity would be nothing without an equally powerful brand awareness.
In a way, brand awareness is another side of the same coin when it comes to its relation to brand identity. If the identity of a brand is all the content that the brand itself produces, then the awareness of that same brand is how the aforementioned content is perceived by the market (and if it is even remembered).
The power of a brand is very difficult to underestimate in a modern marketing landscape. There are multiple studies claiming that the positive reputation of a brand can influence at least 39% of total buying decisions in B2B markets. At the same time, brand and reputation are not something you can create overnight and generating lasting connections with the target audience is always a time-consuming process in itself.
Two of the most basic ways of creating brand awareness are to provide value-added content and develop a persona that the buyer can relate to your brand. This is a perfect example of building up brand awareness with compelling storytelling, but it is just one of a multitude of examples that could look very different from one target audience to the next. For example, a tech company focused on enterprises could share success stories in the form of case studies or thought leadership content, while one targeting startups could use relatable, aspirational stories in blog posts or short-form video.
While part of it is organic, advertising also drives brand awareness. Video ads, especially on platforms like YouTube and LinkedIn, deliver your brand’s narrative in a visually appealing manner that is often better retained than static media. Display remarketing campaigns further solidify this awareness by retargeting individuals who have engaged with your website or content, reminding them of your value proposition as they pursue alternative sites. For instance, various cybersecurity companies could deploy remarketing campaigns that show customer testimonials or simple visuals that explain its solutions, in a bid to remain top of mind as the prospect deliberates on a decision. This blend of organic and paid strategies enables brands to gain new followers while nurturing prior consumers’ familiarity.
Strategic Competitor Analysis for Tech Marketing Positioning
Competitor analysis in itself is an important element of any business attempting to enter a new market, no matter if the business itself has a pre-existing reputation or is merely a startup. Analyzing your potential competitors beforehand can bring up a lot of useful information for your business to capitalize upon, such as the knowledge of what channels your competitors are using to generate traffic and convert leads or what are the estimates for their marketing KPIs, such as the overall traffic volume organic and paid search traffic volumes, traffic from social media and email marketing. Some intelligence methods that I practice even allow marketers to estimate competitor conversion rates. Being able to learn what marketing channels with low conversion rates should be avoided, without actively trying them out yourself, can be a significant advantage for tech companies with limited resources and budgets.
Here are some examples of tools and tactics that are used to perform extensive competitor analysis:
- Competitor pages in social media, incl. types of published content, posting tone and frequency, hashtags and CTAs;
- Press releases and news sections of competitive websites;
- Mentions in tech analyst reports;
- News about participation in conferences or trade shows;
- SimilarWeb analysis for digital marketing channels distribution;
- SEO services, such as Semrush or Ahrefs, to analyze search rankings organic traffic and paid advertising performance;
- Thorough website analysis, incl. content types (text, image and video), messaging and lead-capturing methods (demos, webinars, free trials, whitepapers, case studies, etc.).
Competitor analysis is important for a proper understanding of what go-to-market strategies your tech competitors are using. It helps find hidden growth opportunities and therefore, helps stand out in crowded segments of technology markets.
Multichannel & Cross-Device Digital Marketing Strategy in Tech
For multichannel strategies, the tech market should have the least trouble understanding the relevance of digital marketing (and not losing sight of it). A McKinsey report states that 94% of B2B decision-makers prefer using a mix of online and offline channels throughout their buying journey; thus, omnichannel strategies have become the new norm to drive buyers through the funnel to close deals successfully. In fact research from Aberdeen Group shows that companies using a multichannel marketing strategy can expect to see up to a 300% increase in conversion rates compared to single-channel efforts
Google’s mobile searches have been responsible for over half of the total search queries in this search engine, highlighting the importance of developing a cross-device digital marketing strategy for your tech company.
The sheer number of digital marketing channels can be somewhat staggering, with examples such as:
- SEO
- Paid search
- Organic and paid social media
- Review platforms
- Local business catalogs
- Influencers
- Video & podcast hosting platforms
- Email marketing
- Programmatic and native advertising
By leveraging a variety of these channels in an integrated strategy, tech companies can maximize their reach and engagement while addressing diverse audience preferences.
Social Media Strategies for B2B Tech
An important B2B tech marketing channel is social media — a medium with powerful platforms to target decision-makers and establish authority. Social channels such as LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter) and YouTube offer unique opportunities to showcase expertise, engage prospects and drive results through both organic and paid strategies.
LinkedIn is one of the best B2B tech marketing platforms. You can target people by job titles, job functions, groups, skills, industries and company sizes, which is perfect for reaching buying center members in tech organizations. LinkedIn also caters to different content formats and stages of the customer journey — from thought leadership articles to in-depth case studies and webinars. X, with its fast-paced environment, is perfect for sharing real-time updates, participating in industry discussions and engaging with tech influencers. YouTube complements these platforms by offering space for long-form, in-depth content such as product demos, tutorials and customer success stories.
Paid formats are also an option, such as LinkedIn Message Ads and LinkedIn Lead Forms, both of which greatly enhance your lead generation efforts. These ads send tailored, straight-to-inbox messages to your ideal customers, giving them a feeling of exclusivity and urgency. Combining this with Sponsored Posts for your standard organic posts allows your brand to be seen in both the LinkedIn Inbox and Newsfeed of vital stakeholders. In my own campaigns, this blend has yielded a marked increase in high-quality leads, especially for gated assets like whitepapers. Read my LinkedIn B2B case studies in another blog post.
The dark social channels: Reddit, Slack groups and private messaging apps like WhatsApp, are playing an ever more powerful role in B2B tech marketing. Sharing bite-sized infographics, technical whitepapers or short videos that have a high value but are also easy to share, makes it possible to leverage this hidden network. Encouraging employees and partners to share content within their professional circles amplifies the reach and impact of your marketing efforts.
Leveraging Client Testimonials for Improving Technical Credibility
All of the recent developments in marketing technology notwithstanding, there is still nothing more powerful from a selling standpoint than the target buyer being convinced by other companies’ positive opinions on the topic of product they might be interested in.
Client testimonials is a reliable peer-to-peer endorsement strategy for your brand to appeal to prospects. Collecting testimonials is always recommended for practically any industry and if your product operates in multiple fields at once – try to gather customer opinions from each sector separately for a better effect, when possible. If your software is applicable to both healthcare and finance, highlight client testimonials from influential customers in both sectors to buoy credibility across buyer personas.
Testimonials are great, but also including reviews from trusted review sites adds to the credibility. Some of the top platforms that will work well for tech businesses include:
- G2: G2 is one of the top software review platforms, where users can rate tools on ease of use, features, ROI and more.
- Capterra: With great comparison capabilities, Capterra is a popular site for tech buyers looking to compare software. Having a strong presence here communicates reliability and value to prospects.
- TrustRadius: This site focuses on in-depth reviews and offers users the opportunity to provide extensive commentary. It’s especially powerful in the tech sector, where decision-makers are looking for nuance.
- Clutch.co: Clutch is a perfect fit for service businesses, such as development firms or digital agencies. It is based on verified reviews and case studies so it is a trusted source for B2B buyers.
- Gartner Peer Insights: An industry-specific resource for enterprise IT solutions and services, Gartner Peer Insights includes trusted, vetted reviews written exclusively by IT decision-makers. It also creates high-impact reports such as its “Voice of the Customer,” which summarizes customer perspectives and calls out leading vendors, lending your product fact and reach.
A proactive approach for collecting reviews is the best one — contacting clients at the right times, like post-support ticket resolution or after successfully completing projects.
For example, based on my experience, sending follow-up emails with customers immediately after resolving support tickets went amazingly well for collecting reviews. In an effort to scale this, we had implemented automation where, within 24 hours of a ticket being closed, a personalized email was sent to the client thanking them for their time and inviting them to share feedback on G2 or TrustRadius. Not only this approach leveraged off the customer’s recent positive interaction, it also enabled a seamless process for them. Over a 6-month period, this approach netted a 25% response rate, resulting in 50+ verified reviews which propelled our profile on the major review platforms.
Video Marketing Strategy for Tech Products
Video content has evolved into an integral part of B2B tech marketing, effectively providing a versatile means to connect with decision-makers at every phase of the customer journey. For tech-focused audiences, platforms such as LinkedIn and YouTube are beneficial for different reasons. LinkedIn is great for reaching professionals with short, professional videos, while YouTube offers room for detailed tutorials, demos and thought leadership that builds your authority over time.
Video can be used by tech companies to explain complex concepts, showcase how products work and establish credibility through customer success stories. For instance, a SaaS company may develop a sequence of explainer videos showcasing how its platform makes operations more efficient or saves enterprise clients money. Couple these with testimonials from customers who highlight the measurable outcomes they experienced and you have a recipe for credibility that resonates with prospects.
Both paid and organic strategies are key to video marketing for tech products. Paid campaigns, like YouTube pre-rolls or LinkedIn Sponsored Content, can be laser-focused and scalable. For example, a retargeting campaign could present testimonials or feature flashlights to users who have previously visited a product page making them nearer to converting. In contrast, organic efforts, such as posting thought leadership videos on LinkedIn or running an educational YouTube channel — create long-term engagement and trust with an audience.
For instance, for an enterprise backup software company I worked with, an end-to-end approach included a webinar with a title “Ensuring Data Resiliency in Virtual Environments”, covering the software’s ability to back up all major hypervisors — along with a customer success story. We advertised the webinar on LinkedIn to IT leaders and reposted important clips as organic content on LinkedIn and Twitter to maximize reach. After the webinar session, we shared the recorded session with our email newsletter and hosted YouTube to engage with the audience broader. This recorded session can be hosted on the company website in a gated section where it can be gated with a virtualization backup whitepaper for continued lead generation. This maximizes the reach of a single video across channels and stages of the buyer’s journey.
Optimizing Tech Company Websites with Strategic Sections
For tech companies, a company’s website is frequently the first interaction with potential customers and therefore needs to be both a functional resource, as well as a marketing tool. Properly structured and designed websites according to the audience increase leads, customer engagement and conversion rates. To do this, tech companies must focus on certain, specifically tailored areas that serve their target audience’s desires and needs.
For example, a product page is an opportunity to showcase details of your offerings. Cloud services providers, for example, might add feature breakdowns, technical specifications, use cases and even interactive elements such as cost calculators to help prospective buyers assess solutions quickly and efficiently.
Solutions sections can connect product capabilities to customer pain points. It should be subdivided by industry or product application. A cybersecurity company, for instance, could showcase their healthcare compliance or financial services targeted solutions with specific examples of how their tools mitigate industry-specific challenges.
Use Customer Stories and Case Studies for social proof and credibility. Detailed reports of how businesses have successfully integrated your technology allow prospects to imagine similar outcomes. For example, a SaaS provider could show testimonials in combination with metrics: “40% less downtime” to show value. This includes whitepapers, webinars and other content the company can use to become a leader in the industry via Resource Hubs. For a data analytics firm, downloadable guides, “how-to” videos and research reports are resources that educate their visitors and nurture them down the sales funnel.
Sections like Support and FAQ simplify interaction with customers by resolving issues or answering questions they may have. Rather than static FAQs, tech companies could include dynamic search bars or chatbots. A software company, for instance, can help users find solutions to setup problems or tech glitches in seconds, resulting in higher satisfaction levels and less support burden.
Marketing Automation & Lead Nurturing Platforms for Tech
In the world of tech, marketing automation (or lead nurturing, as I call them) platforms are vital to help users personalize their customer journeys and turn them into opportunities. These platforms can also help B2B tech companies with long sales cycles and highly informed buyers create contextualized messaging and deliver ads across multiple touchpoints.
Tech corporations reap benefits from platforms that permit dynamic segmentation, multi-channel marketing campaign execution and actionable analytics. Enterprise solutions such as Marketo Engage, Pardot (Salesforce Marketing Cloud) and HubSpot work fine for large organizations, whereas for startups and SMBs, some lighter tools like Mailchimp, ActiveCampaign and Sendinblue do the job. As an example, one of SaaS might use Mailchimp to create email sequences to trial users by sending onboarding tutorials and reminders to convert them into customers. ActiveCampaign’s advanced automation capabilities might track how users behave on a website or app, automatically sending targeted messages like recommendations for products or highlights of features.
Integration with CRMs, analytics tools and other software ecosystems is crucial. Compatible with Salesforce, HubSpot CRM, Google Analytics and the like, tools like Mailchimp and ActiveCampaign integrate with any sales and marketing platform. A cybersecurity vendor, for example, can integrate Mailchimp with HubSpot CRM for a seamless synchronization that brings together marketing and sales efforts, allowing both teams to see the same view of customer activity.
Smaller tools do offer multi-channel lead nurturing as well. Sendinblue is all-in-one email marketing and SMS campaigns, enabling tech companies to deploy SMS campaigns to reach their users on their favorite communication channels. For example, a backup software provider might use Sendinblue to send out post-webinar follow-ups over email while reminding attendees of a demo session via SMS.
Remarketing Strategies for Tech Product Growth
In order to stay relevant during the entire customer journey with potential leads and existing clients, tech companies should use remarketing. Remarketing campaigns can increase conversions, bring more upsell opportunities and improve customer retention by reaching audiences that are already engaged with your brand. A multichannel approach can also support these efforts by expanding user touch points at the platforms where they are most active.
When applied for leadgen, remarketing is all about supporting the interest to convert. For instance, you can show ads to a prospective buyer who visited a pricing page or downloaded a whitepaper, later on via LinkedIn Message Ads, Google Display Network or YouTube. During this multi-touch approach, companies often emphasize success stories to overcome common objections that prevent prospects from taking the next step, like booking a demo or signing up for a trial.
For your existing clients, remarketing has different aims, like upselling, cross-selling or brand loyalty. For example, a SaaS company might conduct an email campaign to remind clients about the features they have not used or to introduce higher level plans. Since tech companies can reach prospects on multiple platforms, remarketing is by nature multichannel. Popular channels include:
- Google Ads: Display marketing through Google Display Network or Demand Gen Campaign to re-engage visitors visually, either through banners or dynamic ads enabled based on their browsing behavior.
- LinkedIn: Reach professionals via Sponsored Content or InMail based on their history of engagement with you that may include previous attendance at webinars or gated content.
- Social Media Platforms: These visually appealing, larger ads can be used on sites like Reddit and Twitter to help renew leads and current customers.
- Email Remarketing: Personalized follow-ups, product updates and renewal reminders for users who haven’t converted or are nearing the end of their subscription.
Interactive Product Demos vs. Proof of Concepts
Interactive demos allow potential customers to experience your product without a full implementation. This is very effective for companies that sell enterprise-grade software products. Such products require long deployment cycles tailored to the client’s IT environment and therefore, the demonstration of product benefits during the evaluation stage can be very challenging. Trials also rarely help, as they are time-limited and do not provide the ability to test the product in real-life situations. As a general rule, tech companies leverage proof-of-concepts to tackle such situations, but they rarely quickly convert into sales as well. Interactive demos can dramatically shorten sales cycles in such situations.
- Create a simplified, guided version of your product that users can interact with online.
- Use container technologies to create custom environments for every visitor and allow them to reload from scratch in case the user makes a mistake.
- Use such problematic moments to engage your pre-sales team in a guided demo, when they can demonstrate not only the product but also your support quality.
- Allow users to perform typical scenarios of using your software and accompany this with onboarding help.
- Implement analytics to track user behavior during these demos and make informed decisions on adapting these experiences to showcase key features and design user-friendly interfaces.
- Integrate with lead capture and nurturing systems for follow-ups.
Chatbots vs. Human-Based Conversational Marketing
Intelligent AI-powered chatbots can engage with prospects 24/7, qualifying leads and answering basic questions. However, there are a few reasons why AI chatbots can sometimes underperform humans, especially in technical roles.
Chatbots may struggle to fully grasp the nuances and context of complex technical issues, leading to misunderstandings or irrelevant responses. That is why I regularly see visitors checking if they are talking to a human before starting a chat. Bots have some difficulty with novel or edge cases. They are trained on existing data and may struggle with new, unique or rare problems that fall outside their training dataset. Lastly, humans can often come up with innovative solutions or workarounds, while AI tends to be more constrained to predefined responses. The worst cases that I have seen were when AI was unable to escalate appropriately and did not recognize when a problem was beyond its capabilities and needed human intervention.
I advocate for a balanced, hybrid approach, which allows your company to stand out because too many tech organizations are routing to fully AI-based conversations. A balanced strategy combining AI-based chatbots and humans can maximize efficiency while ensuring high-quality service during the first impression.
- For the initial contact:
- AI chatbot handles initial inquiries 24/7 for both support and sales
- AI categorizes queries as support or sales-related
- AI assesses the complexity and urgency of each inquiry
- Tiered response example:
- Tier 1: AI handles product information but redirects pricing queries to humans
- Tier 2: AI qualifies leads based on specific questions but then schedules a call with human sales reps
- Tier 3: AI is immediately routing to senior sales staff in case high-value opportunity rules were met
- Time-based resource allocation
- During peak hours there is a blend of AI and human agents
- Off-peak is primarily human-driven with minimal AI oversight
- After hours AI handles most queries; human interactions for top engagements
- Global coverage
- AI provides 24/7 global coverage for initial interactions
- Human teams strategically located across time zones in preferred regions
- Follow-the-sun model for continuous human availability
- Proactive engagement
- AI identifies upsell/cross-sell opportunities in support interactions
- AI initiates proactive chat popups based on usage browsing patterns
- Human sales team follows up on AI-identified opportunities
To make this hybrid model work, ensure seamless transitions and smooth handoffs between AI and humans. What is very important is to preserve the context of the discussion during all transitions and allow users to choose between AI or human interaction. Here you can find a detailed article about marketing strategies with live chats.
Reddit Marketing for Tech Growth
Reddit, after its deal with Google and significant growth in traffic, is a crucial platform for tech marketing that offers a selection of unique marketing possibilities. A lot of technical decision-makers use Reddit for product research and peer recommendations on a regular basis, and there are plenty of subreddits providing specific technical information in a concentrated manner. Examples include:
- r/sysadmin (960k members): Discussions about IT infrastructure, server management and troubleshooting for system administrators.
- r/dataengineering (237k members): Focused on data engineering topics like ETL processes, database design and big data tools.
- r/cybersecurity (1Mn members): Dedicated to cybersecurity trends, tools and best practices, attracting security professionals and enthusiasts.
- r/devops (362k members): Covers DevOps methodologies, automation tools, CI/CD pipelines and infrastructure-as-code practices.
- r/linuxadmin (216k members): For Linux administrators, discussing command-line tools, server configurations and open-source solutions.
- r/cloudcomputing (30k members): Focused on cloud technologies, platforms like AWS, Azure and Google Cloud and discussions about scalability and architecture.
- r/networking (360k members): A hub for network engineers and professionals discussing routing, switching, network design and troubleshooting.
- r/msp (193k members): Tailored to managed service providers, featuring insights on client management, tools and service delivery models.
The platform itself rewards authentic expertise over any form of promotional content and its discussions are often considered highly influential when it comes to purchase decisions. Tech marketers can use it to establish thought leadership via active participation and relevant subreddits can be monitored for feature requests or customer pain points.
Detailed case studies and other technical information can be shared there when relevant, building relationships with the community on a more personal level. Being able to engage in transparent technical discussion about your product, including its limitations and capabilities, is an invaluable experience in a modern marketing environment, as well.
With that being said, Reddit also has many pitfalls that a lot of business representatives fail to avoid. Overly promotional content on the platform is instantly rejected in most cases and it is extremely easy to damage your credibility by providing responses that lack technical depth. Both the violation of subreddit-specific rules and the insufficient engagement with community feedback can also damage the overall brand value in the eyes of more technical users.
Influencer Marketing in Tech
Collaborating with industry thought leaders can extend your reach and credibility. I have worked with backup and recovery, IT security, building information modeling, SharePoint tools, SalesForce tools, ecommerce platforms and other tech niches and I was always able to find influencers that were a great fit. In the tech space, influencer marketing takes on a different form compared to B2C. Instead of celebrities or social media personalities, tech influencers are typically industry experts, thought leaders and respected professionals who have significant sway over business decision-makers.
Now, you might ask why it works. First of all, it builds credibility. Endorsements from respected figures lend authority to your brand. Secondly, such partnerships expand your reach and you can access new audiences through the influencer’s network that you can not target with direct advertising tools. Another big advantage for the tech industry is that influencers can help explain complex software solutions in relatable terms.
Here are the types of tech influencers that I look for:
- Industry analysts from Gartner, Forrester or other outlets
- Tech journalists from platforms like TechCrunch or Wired
- Academic experts or researchers in relevant fields
- Technical thought leaders, e.g., well-known developers or engineers
- Authors of widely-read tech blogs or podcasts
The next question is, what do I actually propose to an influencer? Here are some general ideas which you may customize for your specific niche:
- Co-created content distribution:
- Whitepapers, webinars, podcasts, joint research, etc.
- Have influencers share your content with their networks
- Contribute guest posts to the influencer’s blog or publication
- Speaking engagements:
- Invite influencers to speak at your events
- Sponsor influencers to speak at major industry conferences
- Product feedback and development:
- Involve influencers in beta testing
- Create an influencer advisory board
- Exclusive Events:
- Host roundtable discussions with influencers and key clients
- LinkedIn Live sessions with influencers and key clients
The tech influencer market is filled with unusual challenges, but clever marketers would be able to transform them into lucrative opportunities for success. If the overall pool of relevant influencers in your areas of interest is limited, you can try to expand it by contacting emerging experts in narrow use cases or expanding your very definition of influence.
Authenticity is one of the most valuable factors here and encouraging honest and balanced opinions from influencers is significantly better than expecting blind devotion with no criticism. If the ROI measurement seems problematic at first, setting up clear and defined goals should lessen the burden, along with the usage of unique tracking methods.
My personal way of maximizing success and overcoming these kinds of challenges is to prioritize long-term relationships in most cases to facilitate mutually beneficial connections between influencers and my customers. In this case, quality is far more important than quantity – a large number of non-relevant leads is not nearly as valuable as a small group of an audience with a high engagement rates.
Freemium Models and Free Products: A Strategy for Tech Companies to Stand Out
Freemium models offer a part of a product or service for free while charging for advanced features, functionality or usage. This approach can be a powerful differentiator and a lead generation tool for tech companies in crowded markets.
You provide a basic version of your product or service at no cost, just like open source software. Simultaneously, you offer premium features, increased usage limits or enhanced support for a fee. As a result, users can experience the core value proposition before committing financially.
What are the benefits?
- Allows potential customers to try your product without financial commitment
- Free users can become brand advocates, driving organic growth
- You gather usage data to inform product development and marketing
- You rapidly increase user base and market penetration
- You stand out from competitors who don’t offer free options
The next step after this idea is approved is implementation strategies. Identify core features to offer for free vs. premium and then select one of the following approaches:
- Set usage limits and implement thresholds that encourage upgrading (e.g., storage limits, user numbers)
- Provide basic features for free, advanced ones for pay
- Offer basic support for free, premium support for paying customers
- Make individual use free and team features paid
The key challenge is in balancing between free and paid features. Ensure the free version provides genuine utility; otherwise, the whole idea will not work. You will have to continuously analyze user behavior and adjust your offering based on the outcomes. Continuously assess what should be free vs. paid as the market situation changes. The second problem that you will run into is converting free users to a paid solution, which can be tackled with clear value communication. Make benefits of paid tiers obvious and compelling. In the model # 3 above, supporting a large free user base can be resource-consuming. In response, develop efficient self-service support options like community forums or mailing lists. During my career, I continuously heard that freemium cannibalizes paid offerings, but again, there has to be a clear differentiation and value proposition for premium tiers. Another typical complaint was about dealing with “freeloaders”. I usually recommend viewing free users as potential advocates and focusing on their long-term value instead of looking at them as a cost. Use insights from the free tier to improve the product.
Measuring your freemium model will require you, as a marketer, to track user acquisition rate (growth rate of your free user base), conversion rate from free to paid users, customer acquisition cost and its comparison for freemium vs. traditional models, customer lifetime value, feature usage and churn rate between free and paid users.
By implementing a well-designed freemium model, tech companies can significantly increase their visibility, user base and, ultimately, their market share.
Leveraging AI & LLMs for Tech Marketing
With significant progress in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Large Language Models (LLMs), tech companies are leveraging these capabilities to hyper-personalize content, generate creative copy, analyze predictions and streamline workflows. Generative AI tools allow tech firms to sift through vast pools of data and deliver business intelligence. For instance, predictive analytics tools can determine which of your leads have the highest conversion probability, enabling marketing teams to work on the most relevant leads. Using these tools, businesses can also forecast customer behavior, including churn risks, enabling companies to take proactive measures to retain customers.
LLMs such as the OpenAI’s GPT models or models that you customize and fine-tune have become essential for content generation and personalization. With these models one can generate marketing copy, blog posts, social media updates etc. within minutes, even scripts for marketing videos. For example, a SaaS company can leverage an LLM to personalize email marketing processes for various segments, from trial users to paying customers, as well as enterprise leads. LLMs are capable of generating content at scale, leading to lower manual effort per tasks without compromising on quality.
This is also a significant part of customer engagement where LLM based chatbots on the enterprise stack also assist in understanding the user behavior and patterns. These bots give real-time conversational responses to customer queries, be it addressing technical questions or helping a user fill out a product demo request. For tech companies, not only does this better serve customers, but this also serves to gather data on user needs and pain points.
Sustainability Marketing in Tech
In a world where sustainability is a top priority, implementing eco-friendly practices in tech marketing can give businesses a competitive edge. Today’s buyers — particularly enterprise clients — increasingly consider environmental impact in their purchasing decisions. Energy-efficient tech products and carbon-neutral operations of IT companies, for example, can be presented as a major differentiator for tech organisations in terms of sustainability.
Sustainability messaging must be authentic and data-driven in order to strike the right chord with audiences. An example of a tech company that puts sustainability at the forefront could be an enterprise software vendor. The company’s remote work policy reduces carbon footprint due to commuter-time pollution and helps local economies by hiring excellent talent without the need to relocate employees. Their primary offering is designed for energy efficiency, utilizing programming languages like C and C++ to optimize performance and reduce resource consumption. Some advanced features significantly decrease clients’ storage needs and network load, leading to lower energy usage in data centers. By doing so, this vendor minimizes its environmental footprint and helps its customers reach their sustainability targets.
Event and Conference Marketing for Tech Companies
Public relations helps tech companies build relationships and showcase their expertise through events and conferences. Engaging attendees has three parts: before the event (pre-event promotion), at the event (on-site engagement) and after the event (post-event follow-up). These events offer tech companies a chance to show thought leadership, generate quality leads and discover new partnerships.
In-person, companies can garner interest through targeted digital campaigns and exclusive invitations to VIP attendees. In-person events may also include interactive AR/VR demonstrations, gamified booths, etc. For example, GRAX at Dreamforce 2024 demonstrated successful event marketing, where they lined up a series of strategic engagement opportunities to display their knowledge of how to manage Salesforce data. They even get creative with the tactics like hosting closed doors events like the “GRAX Happy Hour” — to create an informal atmosphere for some networking and relationship-building. GRAX also hosted “Lunch & Learn” and “Dinner & Discover” programs, unique educational experiences that shared important data management strategies over complimentary meals and creating stronger connections with participants. The organisation of these highly targeted events in combination with live demonstrations and personalized meetings made GRAX uniquely engage new prospects and partners, further establishing their presence and impact at the conference.
Partnership Marketing and Channel Ecosystem Development
Focus on partnership marketing and developing a channel ecosystem in tech companies is crucial for growth, especially in enterprise software with complex and long sales cycles. There are two types of partnerships: technical and channel. Such partnerships allow companies to improve their value accreditations, broaden their market outreach and encourage innovation.
A technical partnership is about integrations, compatibility and co-development of complementary technologies. The main goal is to enhance innovations and increase customer satisfaction by providing a seamless experience. As an example, an enterprise backup provider would work with VMware to better backup and restore virtual machines, thus creating a better and more user-friendly solution for companies working in virtualized environments.
Channel partnerships focus on increasing the number of reselling partners to tap into wider markets. Such partnerships help tech companies to penetrate unknown markets more effectively, leveraging the expertise and customer relationships of partners. For example, a cybersecurity company could partner with MSPs to sell its solutions as a service, allowing small and medium-sized businesses to access security capabilities. Through value-added resellers VARs, a vendor can also regionalize the solution to that area and better align local laws and procurement practices and even language.
What’s Missing in Your Tech Marketing Strategy?
Metrics and Analytics for Tech Marketing Success
The key to knowing the success of tech marketing strategies is tracking the right metrics. KPIs will vary according to your specific industry, ICP and goals, which may be to increase lead volume, shorten sales cycles, improve retention rates, etc. Here are some examples of dashboards with metrics to evaluate the performance of a specific tech marketing strategy.
B2B SaaS KPI Dashboard
B2B SaaS companies track metrics such as customer acquisition, product engagement and subscription lifecycle on their KPI dashboard. Key components might include:
- Customer Acquisition Metrics
- Cost Per Acquisition (CPA): Monitors the expense involved in obtaining new customers through marketing and sales activities.
- Lead Conversion Rate: Tracks the proportion of marketing-qualified leads (MQLs) that turn into actual paying customers.
- Channel ROI: Where you look at performance between acquisition channels, things like paid search organic traffic and email campaigns
- Product Engagement Metrics
- Monthly Active Users (MAU): Measures the active use of the software over time.
- Feature Adoption Rate: Tells you how many of your users have adopted specific features in your product, so you can understand usability and customer requirements.
- Time to Value (TTV): A metric that measures how long it takes for new users to reach their first relevant success with the product.
- Metrics for the Subscription Lifecycle
- Customer Retention Rate: Measures the number of customers who renew their subscriptions over a set time period.
- Net Promoter Score (NPS): It gauges how satisfied customers are and how likely they are to recommend the software.
- Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR): Tracks recurring revenue and growth trends.
Enterprise Software Key Performance Indicators Dashboard
This KPI dashboard for an enterprise software company shows metrics such as large-scale deals, implementation success and customer relationships. Key elements might include:
- Sales and Pipeline Metrics:
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- Average Deal Size: Monitor the average size of enterprise contracts to identify growth opportunities.
- Sales Cycle Length: This metric helps you understand the time required to close deals and indicates the efficiency of your process.
- Pipeline Velocity: Measuring the volume, size and speed of deals through your pipeline, to estimate future revenue.
- Metrics for Adoption and Implementation:
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- Time on Deployment: Measures the duration it takes to deploy the software across customer environments.
- Customer Satisfaction Post-Deployment: At this stage, client feedback is collected to evaluate onboarding, usability, etc.
- User Adoption Rate: Indicates how quickly and effectively end-users start using the software in their workflows.
- Customer Success and Retention Metrics:
- Renewal Rate: Measures what percentage of contracts are renewed, is a strong indicator of satisfaction with the product.
- Auxiliary Revenue: Tracks revenue from the sale of extra products or services to existing customers.
- Customer Lifetime Value (CLV): Evaluates the total potential revenue from a single customer throughout their lifetime.
The dashboard covers long-term relationships and high-value contracts and that enterprise customers stay satisfied and engaged with the product.
Case Study – Enterprise Backup Software Company Becomes Thought Leader
This company provided enterprise backup software and had to compete against other established industry giants, including companies with hundreds of times the revenue and customer base and marketing budget. Besides improving its market visibility, the company wished to drive high-quality leads into its sales pipeline. To overcome these challenges, the company implemented a full-funnel, multi-channel strategy focused on establishing itself as a thought leader while delivering quantifiable growth.
In lieu of credibility, the company used white papers, detailed accounts of their knowledge of the enterprise backup technologies landscape and how their software was uniquely qualified to back up a class of system. Not only did these resources provide insights but they also emphasized the technical strengths of the product, catching the attention of potential buyers. They also created a blog that ran issues that pertain to enterprise backup technologies, providing regular high-value content to use as web branding hooks to draw in their markets.
The company was determined to help the market know about what it was doing so to support the efforts of awareness and more engagement specific to the HPC niche, it put itself to serve in front of the biggest HPC conferences in the industry and pushed for speaking opportunities to showcase its expertise and solutions to its specific audience. But their overall marketing played well outside this niche to all enterprise backup technologies.
They used a multi-channel marketing strategy to drive lead generation. They ran PPC campaigns around keywords with high intent for enterprise backup and recovery, leading to conversions through targeted landing pages. SEO assisted with organic visibility by means of well-written blog posts/white papers/etc. The company relied heavily on social media channels such as LinkedIn and Twitter to target decision-makers and technical professionals with organic engagement and paid promotions. Reddit and its tech-savvy community were key for the brand because it opened up a new opportunity to engage directly in comment threads in conversations about backup and recovery solutions, allowing for technical depth and credibility building with posts in response. In the case of email marketing, it catered to the leads through personalized content, like product news and webinar invites, in an effort to drive more exploration of the company’s offerings.
In an effort to improve the screening experience for potential customers, the company developed an interactive demo to eliminate a previously cumbersome exercise of trials. This web-hosted demo enabled people to experience the product’s functionality with little work, ensuring a higher rate of conversion for leads. Also, the company was able to create credibility and a community of users who often upgraded to paid solutions as they grew, by using its open-source version of the software.
The results were significant. With the combination of SEO, paid advertising and content-driven strategies organic search traffic and lead generation increased from 100 to 1,000 leads per month. The company transitioned past being a tool vendor and evolved into being a trusted advisor in the enterprise backup segment. This transition resulted in heightened media coverage, analyst recognition and an honorable mention in their niche of Gartner’s Magic Quadrant.
Through the data-driven, multi-channel execution with customer alignment, the company was able to break through and drive a strong sales pipeline and establish itself as a thought leader around enterprise backup.
For more information, please visit here: https://iunisov.com/portfolio/backup-systems/.
Conclusion
Building a successful marketing strategy in tech, a cutthroat environment, takes much more than just a well-worded message or a few well-placed ads. Determining it requires a holistic, multi-channel strategy that speaks to your unique value proposition, customer needs and market trends. Each component, from establishing yourself as an expert in the field, leveraging partnerships, optimizing your presence on the internet, carrying the right tools like even AI, to creating trust to generate leads, needs to be a part of a whole to achieve sustainable growth.
A crucial part of this process is establishing a feedback loop. Regular feedback loops through customer insights, sales teams and campaign performance metrics are key to ensuring your strategy is grounded in real-world needs and expectations. This allows you to optimize messaging, enhance targeting and pivot with changing market dynamics. For instance, an analysis of responses to a content campaign may shed light on gaps in messaging that can be filled in future efforts or customer feedback may highlight new pain points that help with product development.
For nascent companies, the first steps should clearly articulate their unique value proposition (UVP) and ideal customer profile (ICP). These will guide everything from content creation to determining which channels you will use for marketing and beyond. Once these are set, prioritize high-impact activities — SEO, pay-per-click and thought-leadership campaigns — to build visibility and credibility, fast.
At the end of the day, your marketing strategy should portray your tech company as a tool provider but as much more than that: it should form the image of your brand as a competent advisor, an innovator, a thought leader and a partner in your customer’s success. You will not only rise to the top amidst congested industries, but also build strong ties with customers, partners and stakeholders by providing consistent value at every engagement, along with a strong feedback loop for continuous transformation. It is this long-term focus that fuels the sustainable success in the fast-changing tech sector.