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14 touchpoints from one white paper

Quick tip: 14 touchpoints from one white paper [guest tip from Zachary Hyde]

Does your company think doing a white paper means dressing up a sales pitch with a pretty design and throwing it on your website?

You’ll never generate any acceptable ROI that way.

And you’ll be tempted to say, “We tried white papers, but they don’t work for us.”

The problem is, you’re doing it wrong.

The key is to use one piece of content to generate more touchpoints with the same prospects. Without being a pushy, pandering idiot.

 


Quick refresher: What are touchpoints?

impressions and touchpoints required to generate B2B leads HockeyStack

                 Source: HockeyStack

A touchpoint is any interaction between a prospect and a company, its employees, its products or services.

Touchpoints include visiting a website, clicking an ad, or opening an email.

Martech firm HockeyStack analyzed 1.5 million customer journeys and found that it takes an average of 54 touchpoints to generate a marketing-qualified lead (MQL).

And the bigger the deal size, the more touchpoints you need to bring it home.
—Gordon

 


So here’s how to make those 14 touchpoints

1. Create a white paper devoid of any product mention except for “About the Company” section and the call-to-action at the very end. (1 touchpoint)

2. Generate 3 blog posts from your white paper. (3 touchpoints)

Here’s how, depending on the flavour…


scoop of chocolate ice cream

For a problem/solution white paper, do one blog on the problem, another on why traditional solutions don’t work, and a third to introduce the generic category that solves the problem with no downsides or unintended consequences.


scoop of strawberry ice cream
For a numbered list, pick the three most intriguing points from the list to run as posts. Or run the whole list bald with no details, then pick two points for the other two blogs.


no vanilla ice cream allowed


Don’t even think of doing a product backgrounder
.
You’re trying to generate leads at the top of the funnel, remember? It’s too early to start blabbing about your product.


 

3. At the end of each blog, point to the landing page for your white paper.

Remember your prospect has an unachieved outcome, an unfulfilled promise, a need. The landing page can give your prospects a chance to face those.

But that page has to compete with thousands of other free documents. Your copy on that page has to show your prospect how they will benefit from your content; by saving time, by gaining hard-to-find research, or by solving their problem.

Remember to shorten your opt-in form and just ask for their name, work email, and zipcode. (1 touchpoint)

add value with your landing page and motivate prospects with your thank you page

4. After a prospect downloads your white paper, show them a thank you pagewhere you don’t waste the real estate.

B2B buyers are often looking for human interaction—but not with a sales team.

So use a color photo of the CEO or founder here to give a personal intro and motivate prospects to continue. (1 touchpoint)

Image of hands sending emails from keyboard

5. Send a series of five emails over the next five business days to nurture that  prospect. Always wait 24 hours to send the first one.

Don’t overload them with further resources; let them focus on the one they downloaded and point out its value around the same pain points.

And resist the temptation to offer a call or a demo. It’s still too early.

At most, prime the prospect to move further with a newsletter or another sequence that doesn’t include talking to your sales people. (5 touchpoints)

LinkedIn logo

6. Set up 3 promoted LinkedIn posts that direct your audience to the blogs you wrote earlier. Use a visual in each post. (3 touchpoints)

That’s 14 touchpoints from a single white paper

You just provided a minimal viable funnel that did everything right:

  • Your content helps prospects understand an issue or solve a problem.
  • You are being persistent but respecting your prospects’ time.
  • You aren’t demanding that they listen to any sales pitch.

Don’t worry.

If a prospect is a good fit for your company, they will remember you even before you follow up with more helpful emails that point to useful—not obnoxious— content.

 


Note: This article is based on an email sent by Zachary, which I liked so much I asked him to expand it for this website. —Gordon


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About Gordon Graham

Worked on 328 white papers for clients from Silicon Valley to Switzerland, on everything from choosing enterprise software to designing virtual worlds for kids, for clients from tiny startups to 3M, Google, and Verizon. Wrote White Papers for Dummies which earned 60+ 5-star ratings on Amazon. Won 16 awards from the Society for Technical Communication. Named AWAI 2019 Copywriter of the Year.

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