For years, B2B brands invested more in sales and product than in brand marketing. The conventional wisdom was that superior specs and personal relationships would win the day.
Today, however, it's clear that strong branding is crucial in B2B, where it enhances the effectiveness of demand-generation activities, lowers the cost of sales, and commands a price premium.
Some of B2B branding's salience stems from evergreen truths: Emotion has always been a large driver in B2B purchases—more so than some people imagine. A business buyer, after all, is still a human buyer, and there are detrimental career implications for selecting the wrong supplier for a critical business process.
What's more, savvy B2B brands recognize that potential buyers can be classified into two groups: in-market and out-of-market.
Only a fraction of buyers are in-market: i.e., actively seeking your product or service and thus likely to respond to rational product features and benefits marketing. Your goal in relation to the out-of-market majority, on the other hand, is to be memorable enough that when those buyers do have a need, they seek out your brand. Emotional messages are more likely to create such memorable bonds.
The power of emotion aside, we're also experiencing major market shifts, both technical and societal, that are intensifying the importance of smart branding for B2B—specifically branding that demonstrates how purpose, values, and user experience shape a brand's messages and behaviors.
1. Digital Transformation
Today, almost every company is a digital company, particularly in B2B, where many legacy providers of technology and professional services incorporate software offerings, often with subscription plans.
It's a new business model, and it has upended the B2B sales cycle. To renew and grow subscriptions, companies must keep customers engaged and satisfied throughout their experience journey (conversion to sale is just the beginning). In short, marketers must think about customers as users rather than as buyers.
Bearing that in mind, great B2B companies become true resources committed to their clients' success.
Consider HubSpot, the pioneer of digital inbound marketing. Its brand voice—empowering yet simple—is channeled through every touchpoint, including its AI chatbots. What's more, it's come to serve as a hub for professionalization resources, offering freemium content for marketers at every step of customer relationship management (CRM) implementation.
By being approachable—easy to "talk" to—and an abundant source of marketing thought leadership, HubSpot offers a brand experience that lives up to its promise to help clients Grow better.
2. Increased Competition
Digital transformation creates competitive proliferation as traditional barriers to entry come tumbling down thanks to scalable technology platforms, remote work, and copious VC funding. It is challenging for any B2B company to maintain differentiation at the product or feature level.
That's where B2B branding comes in. Brands must show that though their heritage gives them scale and resources, they also possess the ability to flex to meet modern demands and opportunities.
American Express had long found differentiation in its exclusivity: Paying with a Gold (or Platinum or Black) AmEx card was a sign of prestige. Furthermore, by providing shoppers financial incentives for buying local on Small Business Saturdays, American Express became the credit card provider of American small businesses.
The program proved enormously successful, driving revenue to small businesses and also evolving American Express's brand positioning as highly purpose-driven and differentiated.
3. Sustainability as Business Imperative
Every year it gets clearer that environmental sustainability is not a "nice to have" but an imperative for continued business success. B2B companies have some of the largest changes to make to lower their carbon footprints: Industrial and utility firms create about half of the nation's greenhouse gases.