How to implement successful B2B Content Marketing - and an interview with Augie Kennady of ShipMonk

In B2B marketing - content is king - an interview with Augustin Kennady of ShipMonk by Richard Lucas

This article ends with "how to" and "what to do" for those who are already sold on the idea. If you want to listen to top professionals Sonal Chokshi from a16z and Camille Ricketts is the Head of Content and Marketing at First Round Capital here not everyone will have the budgets to operate at their level, but the thought they put into their Content strategy and the resources and effort they deploy show how seriously they take it.

 

A few weeks ago I heard Andrew Warner interviewing The founder of ShipMonk Jan Bednar here in the Mixergy podcast.

 

If you want to know more about ShipMonk the company, listen to this podcast. The many other entrepreneur interviews on Mixergy are an inspiration for this podcast. Andrew asks his interviewees straight forward business questions about how they started, what problems the product solves, how they got started,, how much money they are making, how they find customers and sell, and gets enough detail to be really useful.


His questions (and Jan’s answers) about how ShipMonk did sales and marketing caused me to prick up my ears. He went down both the traditional and online marketing path. When his business was just getting started he went to business speakers events and handed out thumb drives can be preloaded with your corporate documents so people knew what his business was offering. Once he was more estabilished he look to marketing online and taking advantage of online marketing methods to grow his business. Jan the founder - started talking about SEO (search engine optimization), describing how important content marketing was for his niche B2B business. He said most of it was done by someone in house called Augie. whose job, amongst other things, was to get content about ShipMonk into relevant places on the internet.

I’ve long felt by gut feel and instant that for highly specialised services this must be a good strategy. Here was a successful startup following exactly the strategy I felt should work well. Jan went on to describe what might be called “long tail SEO” where the goal is to make sure that when a target client is searching for detailed information about a problem related to the industry the vendor is in, they will find content from the vendor that will build both awareness of, and confidence in, that vendor, possibly with a link back to the the vendor’s web page.

I thought to myself , if I can get to this guy Augie - I can find out if I am right, and share that with my podcast listeners.

I noted his name, (made easy by Mixergy as they have a transcript of their interviews on the website) and googled it, together with the name of the company and Twitter, Linkedin. Within a few seconds I had attempted to connect to Augie by Linkedin and Twitter. (In my experience I can usually reach about half the people I want to get to this way). I don’t expect success ever time - but it is quite easy most of the time.

Augie was happy to given an interview so I set it up - another note to readers - once you have a working podcast/blog with traffic (more than 28000 people have listened to Project Kazimierz podcasts, it gives you a excuse to approach people doing something you find interesting and discuss talking to them). You can hear the whole Project Kazimierz interview here

There were three reasons why I wanted to talk to him.

1 As I wrote above he was doing what I think that many companies with a well defined product should do, following the Gary Vaynerchuk model of being helpful, providing Value first and only later potentially asking for something in return.

  1. I wanted details., I want to find what exactly he did, how how much time he spend doing it and what the impact was. Cost benefit analysis, to verify if my gut feel was supported by the facts

  2. I like wanted to find out and share and tricks of tips in how to do it.

I wasn’t expecting was how open, intelligent and good humoured Augie was going to be . The brand of a company is very much reflected by the type of people it attracts and retains. ShipMonk is doing a good job.

So what does actually Augie do to boost B2B specialist sales lead generation and marketing?

Augie does a number of things that are common sense and good practice in for business. He hangs out on line whether the customers are and is helpful and friendly. ShipMonk offers 3rd Party logistics and order fulfilment for on line shops, andsuccessful Crowdfunding campaigns where there is a logistic task - sending out products to all those who supported the project once they are produced.

He spends a lot of time on Quora, a global English language "Question and Answer” Portal. Quora - allows users to add their credentials, a link back to your company and job position, but he doesn’t end his posts with "use ShipMonk services”. He posts intelligent thoughtful answers and is a top “Quora” answerer, which means that when people posting questions to do with e-fulfilment on Quora his name pops up as a person they can request an answer from, positioning him and ShipMonk as experts and helpful people.

This isn’t the only place however, there are popular software services for on line shops like Shopify and others, and he is active in their forums as well. so he spends time in Shopify, Magent0, Woocommerce (a Wordpress plugin focussing on e-commerce), and Reddit. If your curious - is Shopify good? Then do some research and you might find it's the platform for you. If you're looking to unlock the potential of your Magento powered site, including the implementation of commercially viable keywords and optimized product pages, magento seo services are definitely worth consideration if you're ready to bring big revenue to your ecommerce operation.

At the front of his mind is the need to focus on being helpful to prospective clients, believing that "being helpful" rather than "self promotion" is much more effective in encouraging people to check out what they do.

When he does post a link he adds a UTM Code Generator in the link which means that he knows which traffic comes from where.

When I asked about Linkedin and Facebook groups - he commented that, although these platforms are huge and shouldn’t be ignored, they are so dominated by users promoting their services that this commercial marketing sales-y noise drowns out the more positive impression that exists in on line communities that run for the benefits of their users rather than sales people.

Guest posts

The second thing his does is guest posts on blogs that are possibly or of interest to his potential clients. The content of the blog posts are to position Augie and ShipMonk as experts and professionals rather than just be self promotion.

To find the right blogs, he uses clever Google searches like this "ecommerce fulfillment" inurl:"write-for-us”

"ecommerce fulfillment" inurl:”guest-post” might also work well

 
 

To decide which blogs are worth writing for Augie checks, how active they are. If the last post was in 2016 or earlier, the chances are it is dead. Also he spends some time reviewing the blog checking that it is 'real’ and of reasonable quality content. A blog full of get rich quick schemes, dietary supplement ads, celebrity scandals and so on, is not worth developing a relationship with. As in Peter Theil’s Palantir , a smart human together with high quality tools, works better than people or techhnology alone.

He finds that most bloggers are glad to take his posts, as it enhances the quality of their blog. Aas he can prove his a reputation as an authority, they usually take his guest posts for free. We speculated about whether the presence of Amazon with their “Fulfilled by Amazon” (FBA) has the impact of deterring many companies from entering the market If there is “silly money” IE generously funded startups that don’t know what they are doing in the market this can push up the price of accessing influencers

Gary Vaynerchuk of Vayner Media and the “Ask Gary Vee” show often advises entrepreneurs to check out both popular Pinterest and Instagram influencers in their locality. While really big names charge a lot, he thinks that the local “star” with a few hundred or thousands of followers may be very glad to talk about local businesses that have the right chemistry for them.

A third way that Augie works on to get the word out about ShipMonk is through co-operation with third party sites that provide experts to journalists. The one he talked about was “Help a reporter Out” https://www.helpareporter.com the idea here is that rather than send press releases to journalists who are usually not interested in the content, he commits ShipMonk to being available when journalists are looking for someone to comment on a news story. This approach works very well. It’s important to note that from time to time journalists prefer to access to the CEO or Founders rather than him, so top management have to be on board and supportive.

ShipMonk also runs paid Facebook and Linkedin adverts, but this is not Augie’s responsibility. What they find is that more than half, possibly 2/3 of leads that convert into sales come from his activities.

A key question is to compare the cost of acquisition from this “useful content for our target market "approach to traditional on line advertising and also look at the life time value and unit economics.

It’s important to note that Shipmonk expect to make significant profit per customer, so it’s well worth investing time to generate such leads and clients. This isn't always the case with lower value added sales.

There is possibly an upper limit to how much can be done, both in terms of content created, and finding places to put them. We reviewed in the podcast However, the numbers that Augie gives suggests that especially for a start up with limited funds this is a better way to go than throwing money into Adwords. It may be hard to scale up, even if the cost per lead is less.

We discussed using external writers to create content. In his experience this sometimes worked but the challenge is exactly the same as I have had with my businesses in Poland. that finding people who can write well and are able to sound authoritative out the sectors we are active in is not easy. A good professional writers in the US typically charges between $120-200 for a 600-800 so in the range 2-4 cents a word.

In terms of future developments, Augie is convinced that ShipMonk should start putting out content on Youtube. “How to” videos are extremely popular and that his boss Jan will be listening to the podcast..… so watch this space. I suggested they consider webinars and using webinar content for videos as well, and I'd love to know if this works as well.

Augie's view was that, overall, this type of marketing is is a long game. It doesn't lead to over night success but certainly is more cost effective in sales generation that Facebook and Google Adwords alone.

Main recommendations and action items

If you read this article and are thinking “yes - I agree- I want my company/organisation to do this. Where to recap "this" means populating relevant parts of the internet, where clients and potential clients hang out to look for information and advice, with relevant helpful content from people who are visibly representatives of your company, You believe that this will both help position your positive helpful brand like ShipMonk, and to build positive brand awareness and generate leads through

long tail relevant content creation. You recognise that this may not scale in the sense that you cannot market in this way alone, but you are sure that this if done well, can do a lot for your business.

Do the following

1. Make sure you should know the sort of problems that your business solves for potential and existing clients.

2. Make a long list of places where your potential clients will end up checking when they go hunting for solutions to the problems you can solve. This list should include off line as well as on line sources of information and advice. Most "off line" events like conferences and consulting companies have a lot of on line promotion too.

3. If there are consultants, training companies, trade associations and events where executives go to ask questions, find answers and new ideas, note them too.

4. Put all of them in order work out which ones are the highest quality. Linkedin and Facebook Groups, Reddit and Quora Groups, blogs, vertical portal forum, vendor forums, magazine fora, On-line video channels, - whatever you can find using intelligent Google searches. Review them before you start posting, Get a sense of the culture of each place - *Don't* start on Reddit with an advert to give an obvious example. Use the tracking tools referred to in the above blog posts like UTM codes
Start answering questions on Quora, Build up some credibility on Quora.

Use the Searches recommended above to find blogs that could carry guest posts.

Ask your clients/existing community what sort of topics y0u should create content about

Write your own blog posts, and consider other forms of content.

Consider Webinars about the problems your products solves.

Put webinars and presentations onto Youtube and Slideshare.

Experiment with platforms like Pinterest, Tumblr, Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat, even if you think that Linkedin and Facebook is where all the action is.

Track what works and what doesn't.

Develop marketing automation programmes so that you don't let the people who you attract into your sales funnel die away, instead develop "lead nuturing" techniques to keep them warm.

Let me know how it goes