TBV Insights

B2B video marketing: consistent messaging or repetitive?

video marketing: consistent messaging or repetitive
Video interwoven with your other content marketing initiatives makes the whole fabric much stronger. (Chart adapted from MarketingProfs. On the original, the height of the video bar is 70%.)

You’ve probably seen the original of the chart at the right (adapted from a Marketing Profs survey), or one like it, rank ordering content marketers’ reliance on various “tactics.” As a tactic, video seems to be essential. But, companies often fail to think about integrating video with other tactics. They just order up “a video about X,” as if the video, by itself, were the solution.

Sure, video is great. And there is plenty of evidence that “video” is good for content marketing. If, for example, you Google “video increases website SEO”, you can get more than 58,000,000 results. I’m sure almost all support the proposition.

What’s more, the same video can be used in numerous channels.

But that doesn’t mean your videos should repeat the same message people are seeing in your other marketing channels.

The problem with “repetitiveness” 

Yes, you want  “consistent messaging” across all channels. But, you don’t want to keep repeating the same message. That won’t help you lead prospects down the sales funnel — it may even annoy them.

What will lead them down the sales funnel is to to coordinate tactics so each message in each medium strengthens the whole.

For example, suppose you produce a video designed to connect key decision makers to a challenge they are facing. Your video can do a great job of depicting how your solution meets the challenge — but it’s not likely to have the heft to convince anyone. These are complex technologies with long sales cycles we’re dealing with here, not social apps of stunningly obvious coolness.

Promoting a webinar

So, wouldn’t it make sense to use the video to promote a webinar that explains your new process or strategy in detail? Along with a case study? Now you can follow up the  webinar with a 2-Minute Explainer video that connects the dots and summarizes how your technology supports the process that you described in the webinar. From there, you help prospects you can help prospects understand more about how your software or technology works with additional case studies and white papers. I’ll go into more detail on how to use videos with webinars next week.

More to come

See how the different channels be interlaced to form a holistic strategy that bring in more leads and clients? In the coming weeks, I’ll share some content marketing tactics using vsideo in support of product launches, webinars, and other sales and marketing initiatives — and how to weave content marketing tactics into content marketing strategies that get results.

 

Video for Buying Team Laggards

Laggard is a nice old-fashioned word that hardly anyone uses. It was surprising to learn that “laggard” is not infrequently used in discussions of technology adoption, and also how relevant

The case for use-case video

Use case videos for product demonstrations and tutorials  Tech tips and how-to’s. Case studies. These categories — let’s call them “use cases” — invariably show up near the top in

Videos to support your high-value offer

The High-Value Offer is a customer interaction with so much business value that the buyer feels compelled to engage. It’s an account-based marketing concept recommended by Gartner for customer acquisition,