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The B2B Content Marketing Report

The B2B Content Marketing Report
Brian Dean

Written by Brian Dean

We analyzed 502 B2B companies to better understand how they approach content marketing. And to help identify content marketing approaches that work best in the B2B space.

Specifically, we looked at:

  • How many B2B companies have a blog
  • The types of content are they publishing
  • How much organic traffic B2B blogs receive each month
  • The characteristics of top performing B2B content
  • And more

Now it’s time to share what we discovered.

Our summary findings are as follows:

1. 72% of B2B companies have a blog. Put another way, 28% of B2B companies don’t have a blog.

2. Only 8% of B2B companies solely use their blogs for sharing company-focused, PR-style content.

3. B2B blogs that create education content receive 52% more organic traffic than those that mainly publish content about their company.

4. Only 29% of B2B companies allow comments on their blog posts.

5. 65% of B2B companies use stock images in their blog posts.

6. The most popular call-to-action in B2B content is to highlight “related posts” or “related content”.

7. 35% of companies used “subscribe to our newsletter” as a prominent call-to-action on their blogs.

8. Only 24% of companies use pop-ups on their blogs.

9. On average, B2B blogs receive 282 visits from organic search each month.

10. Top-performing B2B blog posts receive an average of 99 shares on social media and 49 visits per month from organic search.

72% of B2B Companies Have a Blog

Our research found that nearly 3 out of 4 B2B companies have a blog.

72 Percent Of B2B Companies Have A Blog

Or put another way, 142 of our 502 (28.3%) of B2B companies don’t have a blog.

For most companies, their blog is the main hub of their content marketing efforts. And a key source of organic traffic.

Without a blog, it strongly suggests that 28% of B2B companies are making little investment in their content marketing.

According to FocusVision, B2B decision makers typically consume 13 pieces of content during the buying cycle. Interestingly, the majority of that content is read directly from the vendor’s website.

Which is probably why 46% of B2B marketers plan on investing more in content marketing in the future.

According to our research, the majority of B2B businesses are invested in content marketing and SEO.

However, a fair number of B2B companies are either not using content as part of their marketing approach. Or their content marketing is happening off-site (for example, on social media networks like LinkedIn).

The rest of this report mainly focuses on the majority of B2B companies that do use blogging as part of their content marketing strategy.

Key Takeaway: 28% of B2B companies don’t use blogging as part of their content marketing strategy.

61% of B2B Companies Use WordPress as Their CMS

Across the 360 SaaS companies with existing blogs, we identified 25 different content management systems in use. The most popular choice was WordPress, used by 220 (61%) companies.

61 Percent Of B2B Companies Use Wordpress As Their CMS

Note: We weren’t able to discover the CMS used by 53 of the companies on our list (10.5%). These may have been custom-built solutions or CMSs that are not commonly used.

According to BuiltWith, WordPress is the world’s most popular CMS.

So the fact that WordPress came out on top shouldn’t come as a surprise.

However, powering 61% of all B2B blogs, it’s interesting just how dominant WordPress is in the B2B world. To put this figure into perspective, the second most-popular CMS was HubSpot. Which was used by just 9% (34) of the companies we looked at.

Key takeaway: WordPress is the most popular choice of content management system for B2B companies – by far. HubSpot was the second most popular CMS among the B2B blogs that we analyzed.

38% of B2B Company Blogs Publish Content to Educate Their Audience

Across the companies we looked at, there were four distinct use cases for company blogs:

  1. Company news: these blogs only focus on the company and its products.
  2. Educational content: these blogs share helpful content that is designed to solve problems and provide value to the reader.
  3. Mixed: the company shares its press and educational content in one place.
  4. Industry news: Blogs that focused on sharing news relating to the industry they’re in.
Most B2B Blogs Are Mixed

The “mixed” approach was most popular, used by 51% of companies. This all-in-one strategy is likely popular because it has the best of both worlds.

Most content is focused on providing valuable content that educates an audience on a problem they’re looking to solve. The blog is also where a company publishes company-focused content that position’s their company as an industry leader.

An example of this “mixed” approach is from Segment. All their blog posts sit within one directory (segment.com/blog/). But each post is clearly separated into different categories depending on the subject matter or post type:

Segment Blog

As you can see in this screenshot, their blog posts are very clearly categorized into themes: company-related posts (such as the announcement of Segment’s acquisition by Twilio) in one category, and educational posts relating to growth and marketing in another category.

38% of the blogs that we analyzed publish 100% educational content on their blog.

Interestingly, only 8% of companies solely used their blogs for PR-style, company news-focused content.

This suggests that if a B2B company is investing in their blog, they understand they’re likely to see better results by providing useful content for their audience vs. company updates and news.

Key takeaway: 51% of B2B blogs use their blog as a home for all their content – both educational and company-focused.

Educational Blogs Receive 52% More Organic Traffic Than Company-Focused Blogs

We found that educational blogs receive 52% more organic traffic than those which focused on company news and PR-style content:

Educational Blogs Receive 52 Percent More Organic Traffic Than Company Focused Blogs

This finding isn’t entirely surprising: educational content is more likely to rank for a wider variety of keywords. On the other hand, a business that’s only publishing news is limited to ranking for their company name and a handful of other related terms.

Key takeaway: Blogs that focus on educating their audience (rather than promoting their own company) receive 52% more organic traffic than company-focused blogs.

Only 29% of B2B Blogs Allow Readers to Leave Comments

Are B2B brands publishing content to create a community with their audience? Or is it a one-way street?

Our research found that only 106 (29%) of the B2B blogs we looked at allow readers to leave comments.

29 Percent Of B2B Blogs Allow Readers To Leave Comments

Allowing comments isn’t necessarily a “best practice” for blogs anymore. There’s certainly a case to be made that comments can lead to more site engagement. However, the data is unclear on whether comments actually generate more traffic and links.

Comments also come at a cost: moderation and fighting spam. And according to our data, most B2B companies prefer to run their blogs without a commenting feature.

Key takeaway: 70% of B2B blogs don’t allow readers to leave comments on their posts.

65% of B2B Blogs Use Stock Images

65% of the blogs we looked at used stock images as their featured image. 14% used no images at all. And only 21% of blogs used custom images for their posts.

65 Percent Of B2B Blogs Use Stock Images

Using stock images is an easy way for busy content managers to bring visuals into their posts.

However, during this study, we saw the same stock images crop up multiple times on different blogs.

In 2019, Reboot conducted a long-term experiment to investigate whether stock images (which are often used across hundreds of other sites) are treated by search engines as duplicate content, and as a result cause a ranking issue. They concluded: “Using unique images on your website does have a positive impact on organic web rankings… compared with equivalent sites using duplicated images across the web.”

While it’s impossible to draw wide-sweeping guidelines based on a single SEO experiment, it’s fair to say that custom images can help your blog content stand out. Which may make creating unique images worth the investment regardless of any potential SEO benefit.

Key takeaway: Almost two-thirds of B2B blogs use stock images for their content’s featured image.

23% of B2B Blogs Don’t Have a Call-To-Action

Content can be an excellent source of traffic for B2B blogs. But with typical bounce rates hovering at around 50%, a clear call-to-action can help convert that traffic into a lead or trial.

We found eight different types of call-to-action used across the B2B blogs in our data set:

  • Subscribe to our blog/newsletter
  • Related/recommended articles
  • Download gated content
  • Book a demo
  • Start product trial
  • Sign up
  • Contact us
  • View pricing
23 Percent Of Blogs Dont Have A Call To Action

Note: several companies used more than one type of call-to-action on their blogs.

The most popular type of call-to-action was to show-case related articles, used by 39% of companies. The second most-popular call-to-action was to subscribe to their newsletter, used on 35% of blogs.

This data suggests that many B2B companies understand the importance of using their content to build ongoing relationships with their audience and to encourage multiple pageviews.

Interestingly, almost one-quarter of the blogs that we looked at didn’t use any type of call-to-action.

Key takeaway: 39% of B2B companies use “related articles” as a call-to-action on their blog. This is an even more popular CTA than “subscribe to the newsletter”, which was only used by 35% of companies. 23% of B2B blogs don’t have any CTA at all.

24% of B2B Companies Use Pop Ups On Their Blogs

Our research found that only 24% of B2B companies were using pop-ups on their blogs.

24 Percent Of B2B Companies Use Pop Ups On Their Blogs

Note that we didn’t consider cookie notifications a popup. As that’s a legal requirement in certain instances.

Of the 88 companies that did use pop-ups, we saw nine different types:

  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • Promote specific content
  • Book product demo
  • Sign up to product
  • Allow browser notifications
  • Contact us
  • Complete a survey
  • Start free trial
  • Company announcement
Types Of Pop Ups Used On B2B Blogs

An example of this is from Grammarly. They use a pop-up on their blog to encourage visitors to sign-up for a free trial.

Grammarly Popup

Or this example from Pindrop, who use a pop-up to promote recommended content (in this case an upcoming webinar).

Pindrop Popup

The most popular types of pop-up asked visitors to subscribe to a newsletter (41%) and to promote specific content (28%). Again, this shows that the majority of B2B companies are focused on building a relationship with their audience vs pushing product demos or sign-ups right away.

Key takeaway: Only 24% of B2B companies are using pop-ups on their blogs. But those that do, the most popular type of pop-up is encouraging visitors to subscribe to their newsletter (accounting for 41% of the blogs with pop-ups).

Next, we decided to look at the SEO performance of the blogs in our dataset in terms of organic traffic and keyword rankings.

(Note that the data here is an analysis of the entire blog. Not individual blog posts)

We found that the average B2B blog receives 282 visits from organic traffic each month.

The Average B2B Blog Gets 282 Organic Visitors Per Month

However, this finding doesn’t show the full picture.

 
B2B websites Visits from organic traffic (median)
All websites in our analysis 280
Top 10% 22,000
Bottom 10% 0

As we can see in the table above, there’s a significant amount of variance in organic traffic levels among the sites in our dataset. While the top 10% of blogs receive a median of 22,000 visits from organic search each month, the bottom 10% get essentially zero.

In fact, 32 of the sites we looked at didn’t get any traffic from organic search – and 70 of them were getting less than 10 visitors from SEO per month.

We also looked at the number of keywords that a typical B2B blog ranks for in Google organic search.

We found that on average B2B blogs rank for 784 keywords. But as with organic traffic, there’s a huge variance across the sites we looked at:

 
B2B websites Number of organic keywords (median)
All websites in our analysis 784
Top 10% 34,550
Bottom 10% 2

On average the sites we looked at ranked for 784 organic keywords. But the top 10% ranked for 34,550 keywords. But the bottom 10%? Only 2.

Key Takeaway: The average B2B blog gets 280 visitors per month. However, this figure is slightly skewed by the significant number of B2B blogs that get little to no traffic from SEO. And the top 10% of B2B blogs that rank for thousands of popular keywords.

Backlinks and referring domains are an important factor in influencing search engine results. We found that, on average, B2B blogs receive 1,145 backlinks from 120 referring domains.

 
B2B websites Backlinks (median) Referring domains (median)
All websites in our analysis 1,145 120
Top 10% 147,000 2,560
Bottom 10% 4 2

We’ve previously outlined that we discovered huge levels of variance in terms of organic traffic and keyword rankings. And that pattern continues here.

In this case, the top 10% of B2B companies in our analysis have an average of 147,000 backlinks from 2,560 referring domains. However, the bottom 10% have only 4 backlinks from 2 referring domains.

Key Takeaway: The typical B2B business has links from 120 referring domains. We also found that top-performing B2B blogs received 2,560 referring domains on average.

Total Backlinks, Referring Domains and Keyword Rankings Correlate With Organic Traffic for B2B Blogs

Next, we looked at the relationship between backlinks, keyword rankings and organic traffic for blogs in the B2B space.

Our research found that there was a fairly weak correlation between both the number of backlinks and the number of visits from organic search.

Backlinks VS Organic Traffic

There was a stronger correlation between referring domains and organic search.

B2B Blogs With Lots Of Referring Domain Backlinks Get More Organic Traffic

This suggests that it may be better to generate links from a number of different sites, rather than focus on getting a large number of links from the same set of sites.

These findings are in-line with other search engine correlation studies, like this and this.

Not surprisingly, there was a specially strong correlation between the number of keywords a blog ranks for, and how much traffic it gets from organic search:

The Number Of Keywords A Site Ranks For Correlates Strongly With Organic Traffic Levels

Key Takeaway: Consistent with other correlational research, referring domains correlates with higher levels of the organic search traffic for B2B websites.

Top-Performing B2B Blog Posts Receive 49 Monthly Visits From Organic Search

So far we’ve focused on the analysis of B2B blogs as a whole. Now we’re going to switch gears and take a deep dive into the benchmarks that top-performing b2B blog posts tend to have.

Specifically, we identified each company’s best performing blog post, as measured by the organic search traffic it received each month.

Then, we analyzed each top performer in terms of organic traffic levels and keyword rankings.

 
Top performing B2B blog posts Visits from organic traffic (median) Ranking keywords (median)
All websites in our analysis 49 29
Top 10% 2,001 678
Bottom 10% 1 3

Our research found that the average best-in-class post ranked for 29 keywords and generated 49 visitors from organic search each month. 49 visitors may not sound like a lot of traffic. However, it’s important to keep in mind that B2B terms tend to be more commercially focused and have higher buyer intent when compared with B2C keywords. Also, organic traffic can often be reliable and consistent, especially when compared to traffic from the referral, direct traffic, social media or paid traffic.

As before, the top 10% of companies far out-perform the rest of the group. Their best posts rank for 678 keywords and generate 2,001 monthly visitors from organic search.

We also looked at the length of these top-performing posts. We cover that in more detail below.

Key Takeaway: Top-performing B2B blog posts tend to bring in 49 visitors from organic search per month.

Top-Performing B2B Blog Posts Generate 99 Social Media Shares

Social media is one of the most commonly-used channels for content promotion and distribution. But how successful is it?

We identified each company’s best-performing blog post, in terms of the number of social media shares it received:

 
Top performing B2B blog posts Social media shares (median)
All websites in our analysis 99
Top 10% 3,000
Bottom 10% 2

Our research found that the average best-in-class B2B blog post gets shared 99 times on social media.

Again, the top 10% of companies far out-perform the rest of the group, with their best posts shared 3,000 times. At the other end of the scale, the bottom 10% were only shared twice.

Key Takeaway: While social shares vary greatly between blog posts, top-performing posts have an average of 99 social media shares.

We identified each company’s best-performing blog post, in terms of the number of referring domains it received:

 
Top performing B2B blog posts Referring domains (median)
All websites in our analysis 12
Top 10% 245
Bottom 10% 1

Our research found that on average, the top B2B blog post generates backlinks from 12 referring domains. While the top 10% received backlinks from 245 referring domains.

A previous study we did using data from BuzzSumo found that 94% of all blog posts have zero external links.

So while a median of 12 referring backlinks doesn’t sound like a lot, it’s infinitely more than what the vast majority of blog posts receive.

Key Takeaway: Top-performing B2B blog posts have 12 referring domain backlinks.

Long Form Content Performs Best In The B2B Space

Do longer blog posts perform better in B2B?

We looked at the word count for the top-performing blog posts across four different categories:

  • Posts that generate the most organic traffic
  • Posts that receive the most shares on social media
  • Posts that generate the most dofollow backlinks
  • And posts that get backlinks from the most referring domains.

On average, the best-performing posts (in terms of organic traffic) was 855 words long, compared with 1454 words for the top 10%, and 509 words for the bottom 10%.

For the top 10% best-performing posts in terms of social media shares, the average length is 1,116 words. Compared to 679 words for the bottom 10%.

For posts that generate the most dofollow backlinks, the average post is 780 words. Compared to 495 words for the bottom 10%.

And for posts that get backlinks from the most referring domains, the top 10% of posts contained 1552 words. The bottom 10% were only 554 words in length.

For all the metrics we analyzed, the trend is the same: the top 10% of posts are significantly longer than average, and the bottom 10% are significantly shorter.

Long Form B2B Content Generate More Traffic Shares And Backlinks VS Short Form Content

Of course, a long post won’t automatically perform better just because it’s long. It needs to deliver value to earn those shares and links.

But our research does suggest that all things being equal, longer blog posts outperform shorter ones in the B2B space.

Key Takeaway: Long-form B2B content generates more social shares, backlinks, referring domains and organic traffic. For blog posts that rank well in organic search, the top 10% of posts are almost 3x the length of the bottom 10% of posts.

Conclusion

I hope you found this analysis of the B2B content marketing space interesting and useful.

I’d like to thank Emily Byford for helping me put this industry study together. For those that want to learn more about how we conducted this research, here’s a link to our methods and the raw data used for this analysis.

And now I’d like to hear from you:

What’s your #1 takeaway or lesson from this study? Or maybe you have a question.

Feel free to leave a comment below.

215 Comments

  1. As a B2B marketer, this is great info, thank you so much!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Andrew, no problem. As y’all know, I’m in B2B. And I wanted to specifically look at factors that played into the success (or failure) of B2B content.

      Which, as anyone in B2B knows, is SUPER different than B2C. BuzzSumo and I looked at B2B vs B2C content a little bit in this study. But I really wanted to drill down.

      1. Hi Brian,

        That link with the “api” subdomain isn’t working for me. I had to type it out myself to get to the correct page.

        1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

          My bad. I fixed the link.

  2. Hi Brian. Thanks for the post.

    72% of companies B2B have a blog but many of them have no clue how to write an interesting content that triggers visitors interaction.

    For me it looks like that many companies run a blog just for sake of it….

    Or just because everybody else does it without realizing its benefits for the business. 🙂

    Cheers

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Very true. Most B2B blogs are just kinda there. And our data shows that most B2B blogs don’t get much traffic. But still: you at least need to have a blog as a ticket to entry. Which is why we looked at that.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hey Davis, glad you enjoyed the report.

  3. Very helpful thank you. I’m just looking at updating our company site and the question about blog content was an important one being considered.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Dan. This report came at a good time then. Glad you found it useful.

  4. Amazing content, very clear, easy to read and helpful.

    Pleanse Brian, keep up the good work!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Isaac. I’ve definitely got some cool stuff in the works. Stay tuned.

  5. Brian an amazing study as always!
    You have been publishing a lot of data studies nowadays.
    This was a much shorter one compared to others.
    Great stuff just one issue, I was reading this post on mobile and the tables weren’t responsive.
    I couldn’t understand anything.
    Please look into this…
    Anyways, great stuff!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Naman. I’ll look into the table thing. They should be responsive.

  6. Hey Brian, Last year situation gave us one by one bouncer.

    Now this 2021 year I’m trying to give a bounce back by enlarging my content marketing with some extra-ordinary strategy like you have mentioned in this post.

    Thanks for sharing these reports specially for B2B. Much needed!!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      No worries, Subhash. Hope it helps you out.

  7. Do you think there is a correlation between greater organic traffic to the blog on a b2b site and improved rankings for the product/service pages?

    & what do you think are the best practices to ensure maximum impact from the b2b blogs to the service/product pages?

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hey Tom, there’s probably a correlation there. But it’s not a direct one (causation). What I mean is: sites that get a lot of organic traffic usually have lots of backlinks. Lots of backlinks help all of the pages on a site rank better (including product/service pages).

      To answer your other question, there’s a lot to that. But it basically comes down to strategic internal linking.

      1. Thank you for your response Brian, this was very helpful

  8. Dear Brian

    Your articles are always such a pleasure to read and full of value. I would love to know if you have any courses that will guide the aspiring blogger to a proper blogging success. there are so many important points , the do’s and dont’s more often than not, people miss. I am sure a lot of people will benefit

    This article is a veritable eye opener as far as the effectiveness of B2B fro companies go and a road map too. Very interesting informative and worth every word

    Regards
    Dinakar

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Dinakar. I recommend checking out my Grow Your Blog Fast course. It’s exactly what you outlined here. And has a lot of strategies specific to B2B.

  9. Very interesting as always Brian. Great work by you and your team.

    Cheers

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Lee.

  10. Bhushan Patel Avatar Bhushan Patelsays:

    Great one Brian. Have you also analyzed how many leads on average B2B companies receive against blogs?

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks. We actually didn’t look at that. For this study we used publicly-available data (or data that could be scraped). So we weren’t able to look at leads.

  11. It would be good to study only B2B service companies – Every B2B study I’ve ever found has always been Ecom/SASS/Single Solution and next to none of B2B services like Commercial Coffee Machines, Printers, Stationary, Fit out companies, Plant suppliers etc

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Yeah that would be interesting. For this study we didn’t just look at SaaS and ecom. But I see what you mean.

  12. Thanks for the post Brian. Looks like a ton of information that will take me some time to digest, but I will be gladly reading it & enjoying it. Once again, thanks for all your efforts & hard-work!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Darshan. I think you’ll enjoy this one.

  13. Amazing information Brian although a whole load to digest so might have to read it again. As a B2B this is an extremely useful post. Thanks Brian for the great post once again!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Paul, you’re welcome. Glad you got so much value out of this report.

  14. Ali Abbas Avatar Ali Abbassays:

    Great work, Brian! Scanned through it, looks very interesting.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Ali.

  15. Interesting find about using stock images. Thanks Brian!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Walid. That finding stuck out to me too.

  16. Thanks for an informative article. Have just created a blog on my company webpage. When I created it, it was still not clear what kind of content I was going to have on it. Learning that 51% of B2B blogs are both educational and contain company information was great to hear.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Yvette, no problem. For sure: there’s nothing wrong with publishing company info. But as this analysis found, it’s important to focus more on educational content. I’m glad to hear that you found the report useful.

  17. Awesome post Brian! Thank you and your team for this research. Interesting points about post length, CTAs and stock photos! Cheers!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Eduardo 👍👍👍

  18. Very useful content Brian, especially for those who are interested in starting a startup.

    The #1 key takeaway for me by looking at the detailed study is -B2B companies should hire at least one professional SEO expert for their blog 🙂

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      HA! That’s definitely true, Rajan.

  19. Great information Brian ( also big thanks to Emily and rest of your team)
    It will help us again a lot on our marketing strategy and to provide a better customer service.

    I became already a big fan of your posts and Backlinko.

    Great job!

    Olesya

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Olesya. For sure: Emily did a great job with the data collection and analysis for this report.

  20. What a timing, I am just looking to improve my clients blog and boom here is my favorite person to help me out.

    And the things I will improve will be pop-up and educational post.

    Thanks Brian

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      👍👍👍

  21. I am always learning something new from your articles because it’s very clean and easy to understand.
    You & your team are really working hard to give us valuable information like this.
    Thank you so much for this kind of info.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Sonu.

  22. Hi Brian, You just solved my confusion (though I was almost sure) of using WordPress as CMS for my upcoming B2B product/service website. Now when 61% use WP, why shouldn’t I?

    Though it was a short article as per your standards, it was entertaining and insightful nevertheless.

    Thanks for sharing.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Naina. I actually use WordPress myself). So if we analyzed Backlinko, I’d be part of that 61%. Either way, I think that WP is the best choice for most blogs.

  23. Happy new year Brian and well done to yourself and Emily for a great study.

    An interesting point you concluded “The average B2B blog gets 280 visitors per month. However, this figure is slightly skewed by the significant number of B2B blogs that get little to no traffic from SEO. ”

    This is very timely as it is something I’ve been giving a lot of thought to recently and that is the difference between keyword driven B2B blogs, perhaps split by some being validated by search volume, and those validated by social media signals and referring domains.

    What I mean is some businesses don’t allow social media in the workplace. A lot of professionals also have a go-to guide such as a technical catalogue and so, depending upon the industry, don’t usually expect to see a blog appear when using Google to find their answer.

    For example, a company that manufacturers electrical motors.

    The tradespeople who buy these usually want specific technical information and for this reason, writing posts with SEO keywords in mind such as “build an electric motorcycle on a budget” may not be targeting the same audience the website wants to attract and yet as an SEO consultant I have to convince them that this will attract backlinks to the post which will then pass link equity to the less “sexy” service pages etc.

    Could it be that B2B is the king of “boring niches”?

    As an SEO working with multiple clients, whenever I get a new enquiry from a B2B website and I’m looking how I can attract backlinks or drive new traffic with content, its something that I guess most people struggle with and resort to building the links themselves direct to the money pages.

    Have you any advice on this front? I.e a company pushes back on posts that will attract social attention and backlinks because it doesn’t fit in with their brand compliance.

    Cheers,
    Graham

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hey Graham, good point there. As someone that used to run an agency, I 100% know what you mean.

      I think the key is to not even worry about social media focused content. In fact, one of the most interesting findings from this study was that content that gets lots of social shares and content that gets lots of backlinks are usually very different (I recommend reading the study to learn more). But overall, I think it’s important for B2B companies to focus on content that’s going to bring in backlinks. And that’s usually not anything super interesting that’s going to get a lot of play on social media.

      1. I’ll check it out, thanks Brian.

  24. Fascinating insights as usual Brian, having just had a client ask me to ‘remove’ the News link from some concept artwork I’d put together… I’m going to cite this article for them. Thanks again!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi David, nice! Good timing then.

  25. Are podcasts and videos classified as something other than content marketing or just not surveyed here?

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      They’re definitely considered content marketing. We just didn’t look at them here.

      1. Dave Avatar Davesays:

        Thanks Brian. Again very useful info. I would be very interested in adding to your analysis the effect of videos on B2B blog posts (overall, top 10%, bottom 10%, etc.). My guess is that if done well, videos are even more effective in a blog post than the text version.

  26. Dave Simon Avatar Dave Simonsays:

    Did the sample of B2B companies include internet business like your own? They publish expertise about the medium within the medium and therefore have an unnatural advantage – eg identifying loads of keywords – because of that expertise.
    What are the takeaways for non-internet businesses?

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hey Dave, we included a mix of online and brick and mortar type B2B brands. We have a full methods at the bottom of the report if you want to learn more about how we conducted the research.

  27. Richard Flynn Avatar Richard Flynnsays:

    Compelling. exhaustive. knowledgable. must read.

    Thanks Brian!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Richard, you’re welcome. Glad you found it so useful.

  28. Hi Brian,
    many thanks for posting about B2B – we are starved of good help. Your findings reiterated that digital marketing best practices is very difficult in the B2B space e.g. restrictions of Blog length on most platforms, really knowing where your customers hang out, what the customer is really interested in etc.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Mertin. There’s definitely some overlap with B2B and B2C. But you’re 100% right: there are a lot of differences too.

  29. Thanks for the info Brian. What would be really helpful is your list of recommendations at the end after studying these factors.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Tashi.

  30. Really interesting to see that the HubSpot CMS is so popular. Now second to WordPress as the CMS for choice amongst B2B companies. That’s amazing growth since HubSpot have only recently launched their formal Website product relatively recently. Will be interesting to see how this changes over time.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Clwyd, for sure. HubSpot’s growth is super impressive. But it also makes sense here because they really target B2B companies with their marketing.

  31. I’m a “less is more” person and tend to write blogs that are short and to the point. Apparently, not a good strategy for SEO. At least my blogs are educational!

    Great research!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks John. There’s a place for short and sweet content for sure. But yeah, longer content does tend to do better in Google (all things being equal).

  32. Spot on!

    I am managing a B2B blog and every detail in this article fits perfectly the B2B content marketing cycle.
    Keep up the good work.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      👍👍👍

  33. An impressive share! I have just forwarded this to a co-worker who
    was doing a little research on this. Thanks Brian

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Xolani. And thanks for spreading the word.

  34. This is super cool, Brian! Love aggregated data like this.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Jeff, thank you! Glad you enjoyed the report. I love doing these aggregated data projects. There are always interesting nuggets to uncover.

  35. Some great insight in this post, Brian. I find it interesting that 23% of B2B blogs don’t have a CTA. I would have thought that a CTA would be standard on any B2B marketing. Thanks for sharing.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Hazel, thanks. Same here. I thought that number would be at least double that.

  36. Hi Brian, I thought the stats would show more traffic than that per month. Did you analyze these on a specific niche or did I miss that something?
    Very interesting insights, thank you for sharing with us!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Lisa, yeah the traffic numbers were on the low side for sure. We actually looked at a wide range of industries within B2B. Also, the traffic averages were skewed a little because a few sites in our data set got close to zero visitors per month.

  37. I’m continually amazed at how few companies encourage comments. Unfortunately, far fewer get any kind of follow up. What a lost opportunity in B2B.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hey Michael, I 1000% agree. I never understood the point of having comments if the company is going to ignore every comment that comes in. I don’t think you need to reply to every single comment. But at least some.

  38. Elsie Avatar Elsiesays:

    Hi Brian,
    Perfect timing! I’m just about to begin a new blog for a client. Just wondering, can I have WP CMS on the site (built on shopify) or will I need a new domain?

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Elsie, thank you. I definitely recommend keeping the blog on the same domain. That way, the domain authority the site builds up from the blog can help boost the site’s product and services pages.

  39. Fabulous content as usual – amazing how quickly you put these together at an ever-increasing rate Brian.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Craig. I appreciate that.

  40. One HECK of a killer report, Brian & team! 🤘

    Is there anything you feel in B2B that’s being overused? Anything you noticed that could make be better? 🤔

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Darren. I appreciate that. To answer your question, I’d say that B2B companies tend to focus too much on beginners with their content (because those terms tend to get the most search volume). Instead, B2B brands that crush aren’t afraid to go after keywords that potential buyers further along tend to search for (like “X vs Y” keywords).

      1. Lol, yeah I think you nailed it. “B2B brands that crush” – most of them don’t. Insightful! Thanks, Brian!

  41. Hey Brian

    As always you impress! Great read, I learn a lot.
    Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      You’re welcome, Dennis. Glad you learned something new from this report.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Giovanni, you’re welcome.

  42. As a B2B marketing consultant for tech and IT businesses, I must say that most of the businesses use weak call-to-actions. It’s better to convert into a “message to a team” rather than “related articles”.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      100% agreed. There’s a place for boosting pageviews. But the main CTA for most B2B sites should be to ask readers to become a lead.

  43. Hi – curious if there was any data/correlation/thoughts you may have on how long the site had been active? We are a new brand (1.5yrs) and have found that backlinks in particular seem to be a function time the site is up and running ~ there is some natural amount that happens from normal business activity, etc.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hey Simon, good question there. We actually didn’t look into that. But you raise a really valid point: sites (and pages) that are older tend to have more links, get more traffic etc. So an older blog would have a huge inherent edge over a new one for that reason alone. Great point.

  44. Hi Brian,

    As an SEO copywriter, this research really validates that people search for information before purchasing.

    Great blog post!

    Melissa

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Melissa. Absolutely: content marketing is super underrated in B2B.

  45. Zain Malik Avatar Zain Maliksays:

    Amazing as always, Brian!

    It’s shocking to learn that 142 of these 502 B2B companies don’t even have a blog.

    Seems like some companies still think it’s 2005.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Yeah that surprised me too. I knew that it wouldn’t be 100%. And that most of the blogs wouldn’t be that great. But I was still expecting a higher proportion of B2B sites to at least have a blog.

  46. Stephen Avatar Stephensays:

    Helpful and insightful, as always! Thanks for the data and the supporting information.

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Hi Stephen, you’re welcome.

  47. Kristin Avatar Kristinsays:

    THOUGHT it said B2C and closed it, then said no… wait… B2B! Thank you so much for this!

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      HA! Nice.

  48. Great, this data is very useful in a variety of ways especially in quoting stats in the B2b space

    1. Brian Dean Avatar Brian Deansays:

      Thanks Wade.

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