Tuesday, January 4, 2022

2022 Local SEO Success: The Year of Everywhere

“Everywhere!” is going to be the ebullient byword for approaching a brand new year of local search marketing with gusto. In 2022, the opportunity is there for local businesses to be everywhere customers are looking at a time when they are particularly open to change, whether that’s exploring new companies, testing new brands, or trying new modes of communication.

Public health, and its direct impacts on local businesses, will remain unpredictable. However, what’s as sure a bet as you’ll find anywhere these days is that if the companies you market can be found and liked by customers, you can significantly expand the number of neighbors you get to serve with care, compassion, and a commitment to making this a very good year for brick-and-mortar shops and SABs.

Let’s set you up for success with seven local SEO precepts for the year ahead, some expert commentary, and many signs of good things to come!

1. Converse with customers everywhere, with extra kindness

“What the world needs now, is love, sweet love.”

At that next meeting in which you are training staff who directly interact with your customers and clients, spend a minute listening to Ms. Warwick’s classic to get rooted in your deepest humanity and make a pact to bring these powerful feelings into every communication you have with the people you serve. We’re all going through so much these days, and even a few extra words of kindness can make the friendliest impression on a customer who could be sorely in need of being treated with respect and consideration.

The great news is that 2022 will offer the local brands you market a feast of options to make meaningful connections. To set the table, you should consider establishing all of the following mediums that make sense for the business and its customers:

  • In-person

  • Curbside messaging

  • Home delivery messaging

  • Text messaging

  • Direct Messaging, including Google Messaging

  • Live Chat

  • Email

  • Review responses

  • Review requests

  • Phone

  • On-hold phone messaging

  • Telemeetings

  • Website forms

  • Surveys

  • Social media exchanges

  • Post-transactional landing page messaging

  • Call-to-action text

All of these can be managed with honoring language that conveys your appreciation of your customers.

Don’t forget that the plain-old copy on websites is meant to be the start of a conversation, too. One of the best local search marketing agency tips I heard in 2021 came from Near Media co-founder Mike Blumenthal who suggests checking out Riverside.fm because it solves the age-old dilemma of having clients who are great at talking about their industry expertise, but have difficulties writing about it. With this remarkable video recording service, you can efficiently record this type of client and then use the results to create both video and text content. Brilliant!

I’ll paraphrase Leadferno CEO Aaron Weiche in saying, “If you want to sell everywhere, you must converse everywhere,” and I can’t think of a better way to sum up how important it will be to talk well with your local community in 2022.

2. Look everywhere for supply chain gaps

I was heartened when 2021 began with half a million new businesses starting up, but I also felt an uneasiness about the system undergirding retail: the global and consolidated national supply chain.

Did it happen to you that when you couldn’t get name brand hand sanitizer in 2020, your need was fulfilled by a local distillery? Did it happen to you that you found a regional flour mill to put bread on your table, or someone on Etsy to sew you a cloth mask?

The pandemic exposes the results of the race-to-the-bottom economics which began around the time I was born; large US companies decided to outsource manufacture to whatever region offered the cheapest labor. Now, after watching even Amazon flounder to deliver goods to shoppers due to global supply chain chaos, some American economists are calling on the nation to reshore manufacturing.

There has never been another moment in my own lifetime so filled with opportunity for any entrepreneur who can step up locally, regionally, or nationally to fill supply chain gaps and provide reliable production of essential goods. That local Etsy sewist can make t-shirts that don’t rip apart after a year of wear, in keeping the emerging philosophy of buy less/use longer. That potter downtown can replace your imported dishes when they break. That olive oil, pasta, masa harina, peanut butter, and soy milk can be grown and produced from start to finish in the US, too, rather than imported at a carbon cost that’s become too high.

Pre-pandemic business models that may have passed their shelf life can be retooled by entrepreneurs who know how to produce essential goods or organize others with these skills, and your marketing savvy may be best employed in building yourself a niche in the local supply chain right now, when it is so clearly needed.

3. Build back green everywhere you can

Much as I support the concept of reshoring, I feel serious qualms about it, too, because it triggers in my brain the spectre of rising smokestacks, just when we are in critical need of new, sustainable production methodologies.

If 2021 was the year that you, your staff and your customers found life, business and norms completely disrupted by heatwaves, wildfires and floods, you know in your bones that we’ve reached the end of the fossil fuel road. It’s simply not sustainable to create a new national or local supply chain with the old energy sources that brought us Climate Change, nor can we, in good conscience, continue the practice of using poorer nations or the poorest parts of our own nations as the toxic dumping grounds of industry.

I often encounter the attitude that individuals can’t do anything to make a difference on climate and I’ve personally experienced this melancholy, but local businesses can collectively meet the 71% increase in searches for sustainable goods with a nearby supply chain which significantly reduces the 1 billion+ tons of carbon emitted by long-distance shipping. The closer to home we grow, make and sell goods, the better. Meanwhile, there are a range of other green practices available to nearly all local businesses and no shortage of ideas for greener startups.

Make 2022 the year your local business drafts a climate action-based policy and publicizes it on your website, your Google Business Profile via posts and description, your social feeds, your video media, and via local news. 92% of customers say they feel more trust in businesses that are environmentally and socially conscious; it’s a win for everyone to make your company that kind of business.

4. Make your website key to customers shopping everywhere

Google wants to be the “transaction layer of the Internet” and, right now, it’s free for the local businesses you market to facilitate virtual window shopping by adding products to your Google Business Profile and, in the US, to get your products featured in Google Shopping via the Merchant Center.

The trouble with Google, though, is that everything they offer you for free is something they can put a price tag on at any time, and renting your customers back from Google for any purchase is never going to be as strong a position for a company as owning those sales outright.

With the pandemic’s acceleration of e-commerce (a 39% increase happened this time last year) and local delivery (here to stay), it’s now a basic business investment to build shopping carts into local business websites. If you can, choose a strong product like Shopify that will distribute your inventory feeds to multiple channels for customers who are now shopping everywhere, including social sites like Instagram and Meta/Facebook.

However, while you are greeting customers with multi-platform shopping options, my advice is to make your website the central hub of all this activity, as much as you possibly can, most particularly for repeat transactions. Don’t let any third party offer an easier shopping experience, better support, or more information than your own website does. Make the user experience so good that one-off customers who found you elsewhere come directly to your site for their second purchase.

5. Look for good organic SEO teachers everywhere to strengthen your website

With links and on-page SEO consistently making up about one-third of the perceived factors that drive local pack rankings, 2022 is the year in which local business owners and their marketers should prioritize the acquisition of organic SEO education. Chances are, you already have your local SEO education well in hand, but to provide the kind of discoverable, usable experience that will bring people to your site and keep them coming back, organic SEO has become a must-have. It supports your local rankings and multiple stages of your customers’ journeys.

As with our own local SEO industry, the organic SEO industry is polluted with information that isn’t actually accurate or helpful. You need resources that act as good teachers. Here is my list of five free organic SEO learning assets here at Moz that are respected for their usefulness, simplicity and depth:

Everyone learns best in their own way; socially follow generous organic SEO practitioners whose communications make the most sense to you and whose tips you find yield results. Two of my own favorite SEO teachers here at Moz are Dr. Peter J. Meyers and Tom Capper, and I tugged at their elbows to give me their predictions of the year ahead in organic SEO.

Pete says:

"Google is signaling their intent louder and louder these days, and that leaves us with a pretty boring answer about the future: "Expect more of the same." Google will continue to push the limits of what "organic" means and experiment aggressively with changes to keep ad dollars flowing. Passage indexing caused a lot of confusion in 2021, but I believe it's part of a broader push to repurpose content on the web. Combine that push with advances in NLP and the recent increase in title rewrites and the bottom line is that we will have less control of what appears in SERPs in 2022. This is going to require increasing awareness of how these changes impact CTR and search engagement and a renewed focus on controlling what we're able to control (and measuring the rest).

Pay close attention to core updates if post-pandemic consumer behavior shifts — including a return to brick-and-mortar commerce — as these may require manual intervention by Google in ML systems. If 2020-2021 taught us anything, it's that the world still drives Google more than Google drives the world."

Tom says:

"Title rewrites, continuous scroll, indented results... the back half of 2021 has shown that Google does not consider the SERP to be at all sacred. There's a willingness to change and experiment, even when (as with the title rewrites) the changes feel half-baked or amateurish. We should be ready for more of the same in 2022, especially with Google's talk of its MUM technology powering new and more complex result types. SEOs need to be open-minded and adaptable - sure, complain that these results are harder to measure and target than what went before, but make sure you're trying to win at the new game while you reminisce about the old one. At the same time, we should expect to see an increased harshness of Page Experience as a ranking factor, with Google quietly ramping up from the extremely conservative, slightly botched launch."

It’s a lot to absorb, but you can do it with good study habits over the next twelve months, and the comforting thought that even the best organic SEOs are continually learning.

6. Look at reviews everywhere for business intelligence more than rankings

For as long as online local business reviews have existed, the majority of industry discussion has been about how the ratings, number and text of reviews may impact local search engine rankings. It’s an important topic, but preoccupation with it can:

  • Overlook that reviews are a primary vehicle for responsive customer service, just like SMS or email

  • Contribute to business owners being the primary drivers of review fraud, buying fake positive reviews for their own brands and creating the reality in which nearly 11% of Google’s review base is fake, according to a landmark 2021 report by Greg Sterling.

  • Obscure that reviews are a free ongoing source of direct consumer feedback which depicts the health of a local business and its major quality control issues, as in this important Near Media/GatherUp study demonstrating how inventory issues at Walmart correlated with a rise in consumer complaints being published as online reviews.

Make 2022 the year your reputation and reviews strategy focuses less on sheer numbers or ratings of reviews, and more on auditing and analyzing the sentiment within the overall review corpus. Moz Local customers will have the advantage of their dashboard pulling in reviews from multiple sources for basic sentiment analysis, highlighting trends in what customers are praising or blaming as the new year moves forward. Repeat mentions of topics like employee rudeness, long wait times, disappointment in products, incorrect citation information, communications barriers, or accessibility issues signal the need for structural fixes that could directly impact profitability, with all the mystery taken out of the matter by consumer candor.

Needless to say, 2022 should also be the year that any serious company bans the purchase of fraudulent reviews. A business will learn nothing useful about its performance from singing its own praises.

7. Look for silver linings everywhere and share them with your community

It can be a valiant act to fully face difficulties while choosing hope in hard times. If you make this choice in 2022, your honest yet optimistic communications can be of real service to your community. Here are three silver linings that could be coming our way in the year ahead:

New treatments for COVID-19 could come to the local rescue

While the pandemic didn’t alter the behavior of some groups, and other groups have been experimenting with their comfort zones in returning to activities outside the home, McKinsey has done a good job tracking the continued caution being exercised by about half of Americans. If 2022 realizes the rumored promise of a medication like Monulpiravir or Paxlovid, it will be the single most impactful difference between the new year and the last two. At the start of the pandemic, Kaiser estimated that about ⅓ of US adults risked serious outcomes if infected, due to their age and medical conditions. I can’t think of a more hopeful image than vaccinations and new COVID-19 treatments potentially enabling 90 million people to greet the world again in greater security.

Monopoly losses could be local business gains

Have you noticed that antitrust has become daily news and that even a short list of some of the recent investigations concerning monopoly is indicative of a shift in regulatory activity? There are two sources of potential good in this for small businesses. One, if governing bodies are willing to directly take on monopolies like Amazon and Walmart, it could directly create a fairer marketplace for local businesses. Two, and this is the aspect that interests me most, local businesses have the opportunity to ride the customer wave of anti-bigness that appears to be gathering momentum.

In this changing environment, being proud of being small can be speak to the aspirations of shoppers whom surveys indicate would be more committed to shopping locally as a result of the pandemic once it eases (82%), do so because they want to keep their money in the community (57%), and choose to shop nearby because of the unique product selection (61%). This will not be an easy road, particularly in the US, but I see hope in a shopping public that wants small-batch over mass-produced, is becoming educated about the detriment of monopoly on local economies, and that has a built-in feeling of loyalty to small businesses.

Regulated tech can support small businesses instead of undermining them

Check out Squarespace’s “everything to sell anything” suite and sign up to attend a virtual event hosted by the American Independent Business Alliance this year. Then take a moment to appreciate the wonder of just how simple it is becoming for any entrepreneur with a great local business idea to market their offering with immense sophistication while finding nearby support in a Buy Local association.

It’s never been easier to build a good, optimized website, shoot amazing photos and videos, get a shopping cart as facile as the big brands have, huddle with business peers for solidarity, and take all the other marketing steps that lead up to finally getting to talk 1:1 with a customer. That’s the point I hope we never lose sight of in local search marketing : everything we do is meant to connect people and increase the quality of life in local communities. If governments will do their job to protect economic and human diversity, we can do ours of making our towns and cities really fine places to live with accessible goods and services for everybody.

That’s the hope I’ll be taking into 2022, everywhere I go in the industry, and it’s an optimism I hope you feel and can share with all your clients and customers in the new year ahead!

Image credits: Ianqui Doodle, Detroit Derek Photography, KJBax, and Celeste Lindell.

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Hit Me With Your Best Blogs: The Top 25 Moz Blogs of 2021

2021 was a big year for Moz: we joined the Ziff Davis family, held our second all-virtual MozCon, added a technical SEO certification to Moz Academy, released new and improved guides for topics like local SEO, link building, and Google Analytics, and launched exciting betas for Moz Pro — Performance Metrics and True Competitor

We also published 186 posts on the Moz Blog this year, and as is tradition, it's time to look back at the most popular ones! You’ll find Whiteboard Friday episodes, technical SEO insights, search engine updates, and tips for analytics, among several other topics. 

Enjoy this look-back, and have a safe and happy new year, Moz friends! See you in 2022. 

*The top 25 Moz Blog posts published between January 1 - December 28, 2021, in order by pageviews generated during that timeframe.


1. 21 Smart Google SEO Tips

Author: Cyrus Shepard | Published: January 8, 2021

Moz SEO expert Cyrus Shepard shares his top 21 tips for successful Google SEO, including what to prioritize and what to look out for in the year(s) ahead. He's also included a bunch of helpful resources for your reference in the transcription!

2. The Definitive Guide to JavaScript SEO (2021 Edition)

Author: Pierce Brelinsky | Published: February 9, 2021

The web is in a golden age of front-end development. JavaScript and technical search engine optimization are experiencing a renaissance. In this article, Pierce Brelinsky of Go Fish Digital shows you how to optimize your JS-powered website for search in 2021 and beyond.

3. SEO Forecasting in Google Sheets

Author: Tom Capper | Published: February 1, 2021

After the success of a 2015 article in which he shared a free forecasting tool, Tom has created a new, free spreadsheet template to forecast how your SEO efforts will affect your site traffic. In this post, he shows you how it works and how to use it, and then how to build your own (better?) version.

4. UTM Tagging for Google My Business

Author: Claire Carlile | Published: August 6, 2021

Guest host and small business SEO expert Claire Carlile walks you through the what, why, where, which, and who of UTM tagging for your GMB profiles.

5. 3 Vital Click-Based Signals for SEO: First, Long, & Last

Author: Cyrus Shepard | Published: April 7, 2021

This post shows you how to optimize for click signals to improve your SEO, regardless of how Google might use them as a ranking signal.

6. When & How to Disavow Backlinks in 2021

Author: Tom Capper | Published: April 28, 2021

It’s been nearly nine years since Google rolled out its Disavow Tool. This guide covers how and when to use it, and the potential risks and benefits.

7. Beginner's Guide to Google My Business: What It Is, How To Use It, and Why

Author: Miriam Ellis | Published: March 15, 2021

Reference this simple, comprehensive guide to get off on the right foot with one of Google’s most important digital assets for local businesses.

8. 7 Emerging Technologies in SEO and Their Applications

Author: AbdulGaniy Shehu | Published: February 22, 2021

As an SEO professional, you need to know the latest industry trends to keep up with its ever-changing demands. In this post, you’ll find seven emerging technologies in the SEO industry, and how they impact your work as an SEO expert.

9. How to Calculate Your SEO ROI Using Google Analytics

Author: Adriana Stein | Published: September 6, 2021 

Measuring ROI for your SEO efforts involves two factors: KPIs and the cost of your current SEO campaigns. With GA, you can pinpoint where your audience is coming from, set goals to stay on track, and incorporate the most attractive keywords to rank better in search engines.

10. How to Write an SEO-Focused Content Brief Your Writers Will Love

Author: Kameron Jenkins | Published: February 10, 2021

The right content brief can help you maximize organic search traffic. Learn what to include in your content briefs, what to avoid, and tips for getting your writers bought in.

11. How to Explain Domain Authority to a Non-SEO

Author: Andy Crestodina | Published: February 19, 2021

Do you ever have to explain the importance of Domain Authority to clients or co-workers who have little or no SEO experience? If so, Andy Crestodina walks through how to get your message across successfully.

12. How to Measure the Quality of Your SEO Traffic Using Google Analytics

Author: Adriana Stein | Published: November 23, 2021

To get a better understanding of what’s considered “quality traffic”, we’ll look into various Google Analytics metrics that will help you create a rock solid SEO strategy.

13. 100% Free Technical SEO Site Audit Checklist (& Beyond)

Author: Cyrus Shepard | Published: June 7, 2021

Learn the tools and tactics you'll need to pinpoint technical issues on your site and turn them into wins for your users and your rankings with this free technical SEO checklist from Moz.

14. 7 Actually Smart Tips to Reduce Bounce Rate

Author: Cyrus Shepard | Published: March 26, 2021

Is a high bounce rate bad? The answer is: it depends, but yes, sometimes it can be. Is a high bounce rate bad for SEO? That’s where it gets a little more complicated. In this week’s episode of Whiteboard Friday, Cyrus gives you seven easy SEO tips to address your bounce rate, and increase engagement and satisfaction to make your users happier.

15. 9.5 Ways Google Rewrites Your Title Tags

Author: Dr. Pete Meyers | Published: August 31, 2021

In August, Google released a title rewrite update that may have left you feeling confused and more than a little frustrated. But why is Google rewriting titles, and what can we learn from it? Dr. Pete explored over 50,000 <title> tags to find out.

16. Featured Snippets Drop to Historic Lows

Author: Dr. Pete Meyers | Published: March 1, 2021

On February 19, MozCast measured a dramatic drop (40% day-over-day) in SERPs with Featured Snippets. This is the lowest prevalence rate of Featured Snippets in our data set since summer of 2015. What's driving the losses, and who is most affected?

Also be sure to read the follow-up piece from March 22: Featured Snippets: Not Gone, Just on Holiday (Apparently)

17. According to the Experts: 5 Technical SEO Trends to Watch in 2021

Author: Morgan McMurray | Published: March 9, 2021

To find out more about the current state of technical SEO we asked seven industry experts for their thoughts and advice. Here's what they had to say. 

18. Long Tail SEO in 2021: How You Can Have It All or Die Trying

Author: Dr. Pete Meyers | Published: April 21, 2021

Due to Google’s advancements in Natural Language Processing, the long tail of search has exploded. However, I will argue that NLP has also imploded the long tail, and understanding how and why may save our collective sanity.

19. 8 Unconventional Ways to Generate Qualified B2B Sales Leads

Author: Nadya Khoja | Published: January 18, 2021

It’s time to take an unconventional approach to lead generation, especially for B2B companies, because B2B is a different ballgame than B2C — and your strategies need to reflect your audience.

20. 6 Steps to Executing an Efficient SEO Clean-Up Strategy

Author: John Allen | Published: April 27, 2021

In this article, learn how to successfully execute an SEO clean-up strategy to ensure your site aligns with your business goals, keeps you in Google’s good books, and yields an excellent user experience for visitors and customers.

21. The Three Bosses of SEO

Author: Ola King | Published: September 10, 2021

In SEO, there are three main “bosses” with different needs: your business, your searchers, and your search engines. How do you answer to all of them?

22. The ROI of SEO

Author: Kavi Kardos | Published: October 15, 2021

Search marketers can't get our important work implemented if we can't prove that it's worth the investment to our higher-ups. With that in mind, Kavi Kardos gives you the numbers and the talking points you need to justify the return on investment of your SEO work.

23. How We Increased Our Client’s Leads by 751% on Less Than £1K Per Month [Case Study]

Author: Lydia German | Published: January 27, 2021

The team at Tao Digital Marketing breaks down how they were able to go above and beyond for their client, Fleetcover, using four strategies that increased leads by 751%, keywords by 259%, and impressions by 535% — all with a small SEO budget.

24. Technical SEO Implementations to Increase the Impact of Your Link Building Campaigns

Author: Crystal Carter | Published: April 26, 2021

In this blog, examine some of the technical SEO strategies you can use for your site before, during, and after your link building campaigns in order to optimize the performance and long-term impact of each campaign.

25. Announcing the New Technical SEO Certification Series: What It Is & How to Get Certified

Author: Kavi Kardos | Published: February 2, 2021

The Moz Learning Team has put in many, many hours of work to develop a technically focused, in-depth training series that hones in on the nuts and bolts of technical SEO. We’re thrilled to announce the launch of the Technical SEO Certification Series through Moz Academy.

Monday, December 27, 2021

Local SEO Statistics that Tell Our Industry’s Story

What a gift it is that local SEOs put hours of research into facets of our industry and then freely share their findings! Today, I’m going to bundle the most important recent local search marketing statistics and survey takeaways into a single gift basket, which you can draw from when you need to create a compelling narrative which clients can quickly understand, demonstrate the value of a particular campaign to bosses and co-workers in order to get buy-in on an initiative, or even just explain to mystified friends and family what you do for a living. 

With sincere thanks to all the people cited in this column for your brilliant and useful work, here are my top local SEO stat picks that tell the story of our local SEO present and future.

Local search and localism are going strong! 

The stats

The story 

Small local business is huge, people want to support it (citing access to unique products and keeping money in their own communities as major motivators), and Google sees search through a local lens because they know the location of most searchers. It’s hard to overstate just how prominent the local-digital connection has become in people’s lives and it’s smart to define a narrative that aligns with local community goals, given stated mistrust of large corporations and preference for SMBs .

Data says these local search marketing tactics are winners

The stats

The story

Local SEO has become so diversified, but you can manage it with the right tools!  If a local business is approachable via many digital doors and delivers excellent customer service, it will show up in ratings and reviews, which then create a virtuous cycle of driving more visibility, clicks, and conversions. There is no smarter mindset for local search marketers and their clients than a customer-centric one.

Tales from the Local SEO workplace

The stats

  • 70% of us saw marketing budget cuts in 2020 as a result of COVID 19%. Nevertheless, multiple studies, like this one from Obility, showed that clients who were able to continue investing in SEO saw substantial growth. It has been one heck of a rollercoaster ride for our industry.

  • In 2020, half of our customers already knew they would be permanently keeping the new tech and strategies they scrambled to implement during the pandemic. I would expect this number to be higher as we bid 2021 goodbye. New developments are here to stay.

  • Our clients have invested seriously in implementing digital shopping on their local business websites, but we are in the dissatisfactory scenario of Google hiding website links in 59% of local packs. Nevertheless, keep advising clients to double down on their sites and to feed, fight and flip Google.

  • Google dominates our lives and the fates of our agency clients, but it’s estimated that Apple Maps may now have as many as a 100 million US users now, and many of us are keeping a close eye on its development.

  • Because Amazon has captured 50% of US online spending, local SEOs here are also closely watching  FTC antitrust developments which could positively impact our small local business clients who have been fighting such a hard battle against monopolies.

  • 60% of us are earning the same or more than the US median income,which is $57,456 for men and, scandalously, only $47,299 for women working full time. Only 19% of us are making over $100,000 a year. Depending on where you live, working in SEO could mean a month-to-month existence or a life relatively free of grinding financial worry.

  • Nearly 4.3 million American workers across all industries quit their jobs in August of 2021. Adam Audette offers some thoughtful commentary on the impact of this on SEO agencies, and my advice is to look for opportunity in this scenario to be bold in seeking meaningful work with a dignified wage. 

The story

There is no gainsaying that local SEO professionals have had a rough ride for the past two years. At the same time, our work has become utterly essential because so many of our clients ended up being integral to the emergent infrastructure which has kept communities resourced throughout the pandemic. It’s important to remember that though we may live and breathe local business listings, reviews, content, links, and optimization, the Internet remains a mysterious place to so many of our neighbors. COVID-19 is making it more important than ever before for us to share our knowledge to help connect the online and offline worlds for customers, businesses, and all folks in general. 

We do important work that merits decent pay, and my wish for you in 2022 is that you land in a good place, help tons of local clients, and experience a work/life balance that affords you peace, possibilities, and positive satisfaction! 

Image credits: Under The Sun, Lezumbalaberenjena, Jeremy Yoder, and Ken Lund

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

3 Effective Ways to Quickly Identify Your SaaS Brand’s Top SEO Competitors

There are over 22,600 software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies in the world right now, according to Crunchbase.

On Capterra, there are more than 800 software categories.

Research by Statista indicates that the market size of the SaaS industry has grown from $5.56 billion in 2008 to over $156 billion in 2020.

What do these figures show? It’s simple. The SaaS industry landscape is becoming more competitive by the day.

To stay on top of your game as a SaaS business, you must identify the companies you're competing with from an SEO standpoint. That way, you’ll know the content strategies to focus on, the keywords to target, and the type of backlinks to acquire. In this post, you’ll learn three effective ways to do this quickly.

Why care about your SEO competitors as a SaaS brand?

If you don’t know your SEO competitors, you’re leaving so much on the table, while they occupy the top spots on the SERPs.

1. You can identify the top keywords they’re targeting and how they’re acquiring backlinks to help your own strategies.

By identifying the companies competing against your SaaS brand, you’ll know the top keywords they’re targeting. That way, you can focus on those keywords that can generate qualified traffic and drive user signups for your SaaS. This streamlines your keyword research process.

Knowing your top SEO competitors is also a great way to perform a link gap analysis. That way, you can know the type of backlinks they’re acquiring and where they’re getting them from. This helps you to identify relevant websites that are more likely to link to you.

2. You can figure out the competitive edge you have over them

If you don’t know who your top competitors are, you won't be able to find the SEO opportunities to focus on to drive growth for your business.

Take, for instance, if they focus more on high-volume, top-of-the-funnel keywords. If you then go after middle- and bottom-funnel keywords, it could give you a competitive edge.

3. You can understand their biggest drivers of growth and conversion.

Most SaaS companies optimize their blog posts, landing pages, and product pages for conversions. This is because they measure growth by the number of signups and paying customers that they have.

By identifying your SEO competitors, you can know the kind of CTAs and buttons that work well in your niche. That way, you’ll have a better understanding of the conversion strategies that can drive growth for your SaaS business.

Three ways to identify the SEO competitors of your SaaS brand

Here are three tactics you can try today to identify your SaaS brand's top SEO competitors.

1. Use SEO tools

SEO tools have access to large amounts of data for different websites and niches — and they’ve analyzed and categorized this information for your own use.

For example, SEMrush has the Market Explorer tool, which helps you to find potential competitors for your business. Ahrefs also has a competing domains report in the Site Explorer tool. This helps you to identify the websites competing with your SaaS, based on the kind of keywords you’re ranking for.

You can also use the Moz Pro True Competitor tool to identify the top SEO competitors for your SaaS brand. Here’s how it works: Let’s say you want to identify the top SEO competitors of Moz. With this tool, you can find that information within a few seconds.

The first thing you need to do is enter the following details in the tool:

  • Preferred market: The specific location you’re targeting

  • Domain type: The type of domain

  • Domain name: Your website URL

Once you enter this information and hit the “Find Competitors” button, you’ll get a list of top 25 competitors:

As you can see, websites competing with Moz on the SERPs aren’t limited to software brands alone. They include others such as:

  • Google

  • Search Engine Journal

  • Hubspot

  • Search Engine Land

  • Wordstream

  • Backlinko.

This tool also has the Overlap and Rivalry metrics, to filter your top competitors.

The Overlap metric filters your top competitors based on the shared keywords you both rank for on the first page of Google. The Rivalry metric uses factors like CTR, DA score, the volume of shared keywords, etc. to identify the most relevant competitors for your SaaS.

After identifying your top SEO competitors, you can perform an in-depth analysis of at most 2 of them, to know the keywords they’re targeting.

2. Survey or interview your new and existing customers

If someone signs up for your SaaS product, chances are that they’ve demoed or tried out other options before deciding to go with yours. It's also possible that they've just churned from one of your competitors to become a customer.

This shows that they have an idea of who your direct and indirect competitors are. To get this information, all you need to do is reach out and interview them one after the other. This could be by talking to them via a quick call, sending a short survey for them to fill out, or asking them during the onboarding process.

Here are some questions you can ask customers to identify your top competitors:

  • What tools were you using to [solve X problem] before trying out our product?

  • If you’ve never used any tool before, how were you able to solve this problem before now?

  • What made you interested in trying out our product?

  • When did you realize that a tool​ like ours is what you need right now?

  • How much research did you do to decide on our product? What are some other, similar tools you discovered during the research process?

3. Perform a Google search targeting your SaaS use cases and features

Performing a Google search for the use cases, features, and problems your software solves is a great way to identify your top SEO competitors. This is effective because most companies ranking high on Google are investing in SEO.

Use the “related:website” advanced search feature

This search operator shows you other websites related to the one you search for on Google.

Let’s say you want to find websites like salesforce.com. You can search for “related:salesforce.com” on Google. The results on page one are some of SalesForce’s top SERP competitors:

Search for the use cases of your software

If your software helps SaaS companies onboard and activate new users, one of your core use cases is “user onboarding”.

If you search “user onboarding software” on Google, you’ll unlock competitors who are either bidding for or ranking organically for the keyword.

Some of the websites targeting this use case on Google include:

  • Appcues

  • Userpilot

  • Apty

  • Userflow

Aside from that, there are SaaS brands paying to rank on the first page of Google for this keyword.

Search for your SaaS features

One of the core features of the Moz tool is the “rank tracking” feature. To identify the websites that have a similar feature, you can input that keyword on the Google search bar.

Here’s the result it returns:

As you can see, aside from Moz, other competing websites for this feature include:

  • Link-Assistant

  • Ahrefs

  • Rank Tracker

  • Spyfu

  • SEMrush

Search for your SaaS jobs-to-be-done (JTBD)

Let's say you run an online video editing software, one of the problems that your audience most likely have is “how to add an image to video”.

By performing a Google search for this query, you’ll see a result that looks like this:

This shows that some of the top SEO competitors in the online video editing space include:

  • Kapwing

  • Veed

  • Online Video Cutter

  • Flixier

  • Movavi

Conclusion

If you don’t know the SaaS companies you’re competing with, they'll leave you behind and dominate your niche.

In this post, you’ve learned three effective ways to identify your top SEO competitors as a SaaS brand:

  1. You can use an SEO software such as the Moz True Competitor tool to find your competitors and know the keywords they’re targeting.

  2. You can reach out to new and existing customers, to find out the solutions they’re comparing you with.

  3. You can search Google for your SaaS product’s features and use cases. This shows you the companies likely competing with your brand on the SERPs.

Ever tried any of these tactics before? Kindly share which of them worked really well for your SaaS brand in the Q&A.

Friday, December 17, 2021

Best of Whiteboard Friday 2021: 21 Smart Google SEO Tips

Our top Whiteboard Friday episode of the year was originally published all the way back at the beginning of January! So much has happened in the marketing industry since then, but Cyrus’s 21 SEO tips for the year are still definitely smart, and these go way beyond the SEO basics. He's also included a bunch of helpful resources for your reference in the transcription below!

How many of these were you able to implement throughout the past 12 months? Let us know on Twitter @Moz, and we’ll see you in 2022 with brand new episodes!

21 Smart Google SEO Tips for 2021 Whiteboard

Click on the whiteboard image above to open a high resolution version in a new tab!


Video Transcription

Howdy, Moz fans. Welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. I'm Cyrus Shepard. Today, so glad that you can join us. We are talking about 21 smart Google SEO tips for 2021. We're getting ready for a new year, a new year of SEO strategies. These are 21 practical tips that you can implement that should, hopefully, move the needle on your organic traffic. 

These are some of the best tips that I've collected over the past year. Many of them that I'm going to use myself in my own SEO strategies. 

Now we have four categories: increasing clicks, content/on-page SEO tips, technical SEO, and a little bit of link building. There are 21 of these. These are going to go fast. We're trying to do 10 to 12 minutes, so we don't get to spend a lot of time on each one. But don't fret. We're going to link to appropriate resources in the transcript below so that we can keep along and explore a little bit more. All right. Ready to dive in? 

Increasing clicks

Let's start with clicks, specifically earning more clicks from Google without actually ranking higher, because that's one of the great things about SEO. You don't actually have to rank higher to get more traffic if you can get more clicks from the rankings that you already have. So let's talk about some specific strategies for getting more clicks without increasing rankings. 

1. Favicon optimization

First, favicon optimization.

Now I'm surprised more people haven't talked about this in 2020. Google displays favicons in mobile search results, and they can influence your click-through rate if they're high contrast, if they're visible or not visible. Having a good favicon can make a few percentage points difference, very minor, but it does make a difference if you can get it right. Aaron Wall, SEO Book, wrote one of the very few posts about that

2. Breadcrumb optimization

While we're optimizing our favicons, let's take a look at breadcrumb optimization. Google displays breadcrumbs in both desktop and mobile search results. They can be keyword-rich breadcrumbs, which can influence your click-through rate. Now Google gets their breadcrumbs from a lot of places. That can be your URL, your schema markup, your actual breadcrumbs on the page.

What you want to do is make sure Google is displaying the breadcrumbs that you want them to display, using those keywords that you choose. The best way to do that, make sure that you have breadcrumbs actually on your page with links, that you're using schema markup. Ideally, it would match your URL structure, but that isn't always necessary. So a great breadcrumb optimization audit. 

3. Meta descriptions

Let's optimize those meta descriptions. This is so old-school SEO. But a recent study shows that 30% of websites don't even use meta descriptions. Now that's understandable because another study shows that 70% of the time, Google will rewrite the meta description, usually because it's not using the keywords that the user is searching for. But if we write a well-crafted meta description, it can compel users to click, and that means using keyword-rich descriptions that people are actually searching for, so when Google does use your meta description, it's encouraging those clicks and acting as marketing copy for your website.

4. Numbers in titles

Along with meta descriptions, titles. Just shared a study recently showing that dates added to titles increased rankings for a particular brand. Numbers are generally one thing that I always test in title tags that usually produce pretty consistent results. Specifically, dates in title tags are often a winner, January 2021.

Don't be spammy about it. Don't include it if it doesn't make sense and don't fake it. But if you can include a number, it will often increase your click-through rate for any given query. 

5. <Title> boilerplate

How about doing a boilerplate audit for your title tag? Tip number five. What's boilerplate? Boilerplate are the parts of your title tag that repeat every single time.

For example, here at Moz, we put "Moz," our brand name at the end of every title tag. We used to put "Whiteboard Friday" at the end of every Whiteboard Friday until we tested it and found out that we actually got more clicks and higher rankings when we removed it. So boilerplate, you want your titles to be unique, provide unique value. So I would encourage you to experiment with your boilerplate and see if removing it actually increases your rankings.

Sometimes it's not going to. Sometimes you need that boilerplate. But do the test to find out. 

6. FAQ and how-to schema

Tip number six: schema, specifically FAQ and how-to schema. Google gave us a huge gift when they introduced these in search results. FAQ schema gives you a lot of SERP real estate. You can't always win it, and you can't always win the how-to schema, but when you do, that can definitely increase or influence people to click on your result, expand those FAQ schemas out.

It's not appropriate for every page. You want to make sure that you actually have those FAQs on your pages. But it is one way, in appropriate situations, that you can increase clicks without increasing your actual Google ranking. All right. 

Content/on-page SEO

Let's move on to some content and on-page tips. 

7. Relaunch top content

All right, number seven. This is the year I want you to look into relaunching your top content.

Content can go stale after a few years. So we launch content. You have a blog, you launch it, and you share it on social media. Most people forget about it after that. So go back, look at your top content over the last two to five years or even 10 years, if you want to go back that far, and see what you can relaunch by updating it, keeping it on the same URL. In some cases, you can see gains of 500% to 1,000% just by relaunching some of your old content with some updates.

So do a relaunch audit in 2021. 

8. Increase internal linking

Number eight: increasing internal linking. Now a lot of top SEO agencies, when they need to quickly increase rankings for clients, there are generally two things that they know are the easiest levers to pull. First, title tags and meta descriptions, what's getting more clicks, but second is increasing the internal linking.

You know that you can increase internal links on your site, and there are probably some opportunities there that you just haven't explored. So let's talk about a couple easy ways to do that without having too much work. 

9. Update old content with new links

Number nine is updating your old content with new links. This is a step that we see people skip time and time again. When you publish a new blog post, publish a new piece of content, make sure you're going back and updating your old content with those new links.

So you're looking at the top keyword that you want to rank for, and going in Google Search Console or checking tools like Keyword Explorer to see what other pages on your site rank for that keyword, and then adding links to the new content to those pages. I find when I do this, time and time again, it lowers the bounce rate. So you're not only updating your old page with fresh content and fresh links and adding relevance. You're adding links to your new content. So make sure, when you publish new content, you're updating your old content with those new links. 

10. Remove unnecessary links

Number 10, remove unnecessary links from your content. Now this is a form of PageRank sculpting. PageRank sculpting is a dirty word in SEO, but actually it works to a certain extent. It's not nofollow link page sculpting.

It is removing unnecessary links. Do you really need a link to your team page on every page of your website? Do you need a link to your contact form on every page of your website? In many cases, you don't. Sometimes you do. But if you remove the unnecessary links, you can pass more link equity through the links that actually count, and those links are a major Google ranking signal.

11. Mobile link parity audit

Number 11, need you to do a mobile link parity audit. What is that? What is a mobile link parity audit? That is ensuring that the links on your mobile site are the same as the links on your desktop site. Why is that important? Well, the last couple of years Google has moved to a mobile first index, meaning what they see on your mobile site, that's your website.

That's what counts. So a lot of sites, they have a desktop site, and then they reduce it to their mobile site and they're missing links. They get rid of header navigation, footer links, and things like that. A recent study showed that the average desktop page has 61 links and the average mobile page has 54 links. That means on the web as a whole there are seven fewer links on mobile pages than desktop pages, meaning a lot of link equity is being lost.

Mobile Link Parity Audit

So do a study on your own website. Make sure you have mobile link parity between your desktop and your mobile site so you're not losing that equity. 

12. Invest in long-form content

Number 12: need you to invest in long-form content. Now I am not saying that content length is a ranking factor. It is not. Short-form content can rank perfectly well. The reason I want you to invest in long-form content is because consistently, time and time again, when we study this, long-form content earns more links and shares.

It also generally tends to rank higher in Google search results. Nothing against short-form content. Love short-form content. But long-form content generally gives you more bang for your buck in terms of SEO ranking potential. 

13. Use more headers

When you're doing that long-form content, make sure you do number 13: use more headers. I'm talking about H2 and H3 tags.

Break up your content with good, keyword-rich header tags. Why? Well, we have research from A.J. Ghergich that shows that the more header tags you have, generally you rank for more featured snippets. Sites with 12-13, which seems like a lot of header tags, rank for the most featured snippets of anything that they looked at in their most recent study.

So make sure you're breaking up your content with header tags. It adds a little contextual relevance. It's a great way to add some ranking potential to your content. 

14. Leverage topic clusters

Number 14, leverage topic clusters. Don't just launch one piece of content. Make sure you write about multiple pieces of content around the same subject and link those together. When you do that and you link them intelligently, you can increase engagement because people are reading the different articles.

You can add the right contextual inner links. I have a great case study that I want to show you in the transcript below, where someone did this and produced amazing results. So look into topic clusters for 2021. 

15. Bring content out of tabs

Finally, bring your content out of tabs. If you have content that is in accordions or drop-downs or you have to click to reveal the content, study after study after study shows that content that's brought out of tabs and brought into the main body, so people don't have to click to see, generally performs better than content that's hidden in tabs.

Now to be clear, I don't believe that Google discriminates content in tabs. They seem to be able to index and rank it just fine. But I think people generally engage with content when it's out of tabs, and maybe some of those signals help those pages to rank a little better. 

Technical SEO

All right. Just a very few technical SEO tips. We're going fast.

16. Core Web Vitals

Number 16: this is the year to invest in Core Web Vitals. These are some of the page experience signals that Google is bringing to the forefront in 2021. It's going to be an actual ranking factor very soon. We're talking about cumulative shift layout, hard word to say. Generally, we're talking about site speed and delivering great page experience. Now some of these things are very technical, and Google has some tools, like Lighthouse, to try to help you to figure them out.

One tip I like to share, if you are on WordPress, I highly recommend using Cloudflare, in particular their APO for WordPress. It's a great way to speed up your WordPress website and help you score better for some of these Core Web Vitals. It's very low cost, it's easy to implement, and it's a great way to speed up your WordPress website.

17. Limit sitemaps to 10,000

Number 17: sitemaps. Sitemaps, you're allowed to have 50,000 URLs per sitemap. This is always a question in every SEO quiz. How many URLs per sitemap are you allowed? Instead, if you have a large site and you have indexing issues, tip number 17, limit your sitemaps to 10,000 URLs. You don't have to use all 50,000.

We have some evidence that using smaller sitemaps, compressing those into a limited URL set can actually improve your crawlability of those. It's kind of like Google might prioritize those in some way. The data seems to support it. You also get a little bit better data out of Google Search Console. You can see what's being indexed and what's not.

18. Leverage dynamic sitemaps

Also, leverage dynamic sitemaps. Our friend Oliver Mason shows — that I'll link to in the transcript below — that a dynamic sitemap is a sitemap that changes based upon what you want Google to crawl. So if you have a large corpus of URLs that you want Google to crawl, put the high priority ones in their own special sitemap.

Maybe you limit it to one thousand URLs. As Google crawls and discovers those, remove them and put in additional high priority URLs that you want Google to discover. Keep the sitemap small and tight, and let Google know that those are the ones that you want them to pay attention to. 

Link building

Let's quickly talk about link building tips for 2021, because everybody loves link building.

No, kidding. Everybody hates link building. Link building is so hard. There are some professionals and there are some great people in the industry who do love it, who are great at it. Personally, I'm not that great at link building, but I still am able to build a lot of links. 

19. Passive link acquisition

One way that I'm able to do that is number 19: passive link acquisition. What passive link acquisition means is creating content that passively earns links as people discover it in the SERPs.

It means I don't have to outreach to people. It means that when they find it, when journalists find it, when bloggers find it, they naturally want to link to it. You do that by creating the types of content that journalists and bloggers and web creators are looking for. These are generally data, guides, definitions, how to, such as this video. When you create that kind of content, it generally earns a lot of links as people find it. Passive link building is one of the most sustainable ways to earn links over time. 

20. Page-level link intersect

Number 20, page-level link intersect. When you do have to do outreach, you want to do outreach to the pages most likely to link to you. Now we've known for a long time one of the top SEO tips for link building is find websites that link to your competitors but not to you.

I like to make that a little more specific and find web pages that link to at least two of my competitors but not to me. That means that they are generally a resource page, if they're linking to multiple competitors but not to me, and more likely to link to me if I ask them. We have a great tool here at Moz, Link Explorer, that does page-level link intersect. I think it's the best tool for this specific task in the SEO industry, not because I'm biased, because I actually use it.

21. Be the last click

Tip number 21 for 2021, be the last click. What do I mean by that? I mean satisfy your users. Once you earn the first click, you want to get that first click that people click, but you also want to be the last click. That means they found what they are looking for. User satisfaction is ranking signal number one. Your goal with all of this is to satisfy the user, to give them what they search for.

That's the magic of SEO. They're searching for something, and you're delivering it to them at the exact moment they search for it. When you can be the last click, you're almost guaranteed to rise in rankings and get the traffic that you deserve. 

All right, those are 21 tips. That's your roadmap for 2021. Hope you enjoyed it. Please share this video and share your tips for 2021 in the comments below.

Thanks, everybody.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

The Core Elements of Storytelling that B2B Can Learn from B2C

Meet the One Rand Man, an average 30-something-year-old living in Cape Town, South Africa. As an architect, he’s living his best life, eating out at swanky restaurants, buying rounds of tequila shots for the whole table, and splurging on clothing of the highest quality. He rarely tracks his finances.

But one day, he wakes up and realizes the more he makes, the more he spends on his extravagant lifestyle. He gets curious, so he orders his entire monthly salary to be paid in one rand coins. Yes, you heard that right. The One Rand Man is now on a quest to understand just how much he’s spending in hopes that he’ll spend less by using coins to purchase everything.

Sanlam Life Insurance took on his social experiment as a marketing tactic to teach people how to better manage their money and make smarter financial decisions. And this story blew up — we’re talking thousands of hits on Youtube and plenty of positive publicity. This B2C business used the One Rand Man’s story to educate consumers on the power of making educated financial decisions. And where do you think those consumers turned to when they needed financial assistance? Of course, Sanlam.

What about B2B businesses, though? Does the same concept still apply? The truth is that many of you might believe incorporating this marketing tactic is time consuming or irrelevant to your business audience, but the truth is it works — with flying colors.

For those in the B2B world, you’ve probably heard of B2B referred to as “Boring 2 Boring.” Well, it’s time to end that and spice things up a bit. So, let’s explore marketing storytelling techniques you can use to take your B2B marketing strategy to the next level.

Why is storytelling important in B2B marketing?

You’ve probably turned to the usual suspects in your marketing efforts — urgency, fear, and shock. By doing so, you’ve hit your ideal customers' pain points with discounts and shiny offers, however, the power of a story can take those one-time customers and make them brand evangelists.

Why does this matter? The most powerful form of marketing is word-of-mouth referrals.

Story-based marketing pulls at heartstrings and cultivates trust. Instead of thinking about your customer as a sale, and them thinking about you as just a product or service, you’re creating long-lasting relationships that break through the barriers of consumerism.

This is especially helpful for B2B businesses, where products and services can often be challenging for consumers to understand. Storytelling humanizes your brand and simplifies complex B2B topics by offering an alternative perspective.

Seven benefits of storytelling you should know

There are numerous benefits to utilizing storytelling as a marketing tactic, in particular, decreased customer acquisition costs and shorter sales cycles. When done right, story-infused messaging elevates and scales your business quicker than you believed possible.

1. Humanizes the brand and conveys personality

Dove portrays a sincere and authentic personality that’s inclusive for all no matter their skin tone, body shape, or complexion type. In a world where fashion brands and cosmetic powerhouses tell women how they should look, their story-infused messaging is a refreshing narrative changer.

How to bring this into B2B

Humans relate to other humans. So, think about how you can highlight the stories behind your team to create a connection with your target audience. As a B2B SaaS business, Dubsado does a really dashing job of highlighting their team’s backstory with super spunky copy. By simply incorporating the story behind your employees, you’re standing out from the sea of other businesses in your industry.

2. Creates emotional connections with the audience

To mention another example from Dove, this campaign showcases a little girl’s future being heavily influenced by all the beauty ads, and urges parents to start a conversation with their children about the industry before the ads do.

By explaining how these ads potentially influence the minds of young girls, Dove creates an emotional connection with parents. They don’t just buy Dove for the product benefits, they purchase from a brand that stands for an inclusive and positive message.

How to bring this into B2B

Let’s look at a video created by Zendesk called, “Sh*t Support Agents Say”. Zendesk is a B2B SaaS company that makes businesses better by appealing to both their teams and customers. In this video, they pull on the relatable emotions of a specific group of people within a business: customer support agents.

Think about a specific group of people within a business industry you’re targeting. How can you create a story-driven video that pulls on an emotion? How could you craft content around current events or values that matter to you and your target audience? By taking a stance, and weaving it into your brand messaging, you’ll create lasting impact and urge your audience to truly care.

3. Motivates customers

The image below is a snippet from the Dollar Shave Club website. This brand is well known for making it easy and fun for new customers to engage with their products and services.

Website visitors can quickly identify the right products and understand how they can become a member through the “Easiest Quiz Ever”, about their daily grooming routine and product needs.

This way, customers feel motivated as well as excited to see how Dollar Shave Club’s products could elevate their daily routine.

How to bring this into B2B

Let’s put this idea of motivating people to work for your B2B business. Motivating others doesn’t mean you need to stop what you’re doing and create a new quiz. Look at Zeb Evans, CEO and founder of ClickUp (a project management software). Each week he posts videos on Linkedin that motivate his target audience to join in on the conversation pertaining to work culture, localization, and even some of his biggest lessons scaling his team.

You can simply motivate your target audience to first engage with your brand by sharing behind the scenes moments and lessons you’re learning along the way. This inspires others and makes you more approachable, too.

4. Works as a basis for customer retention

Canva does an excellent job of creating content their B2B and B2C audiences love. They understand that in order to retain their customers, their offering should not be just about design principles and templates. Their carefully curated blog touches upon various topics, such as case studies (how a redesign boosted a non-profit organization’s impact), efficient organization skills (teaching school teachers how to organize their digital notes), and how-to design guides.

Canva is not just a leading brand for amateur designers, but is also a go-to destination for its users to learn more about several aspects of their daily life at work.

How to bring this into B2B

Map out the types of people that work at the businesses you’re targeting. You have graphic designers, content marketers, business founders, and various other titles. Think about them and create blog content to appeal to their specific areas.

Maybe you do a series geared towards how content marketers could create more productivity in their daily lives by using your product or service. When you pose a solution to their individual stresses, they’ll be more likely to stick around if they feel seen and heard.

5. Also a great way to get new customers

To piggyback off the last point, because Canva’s blogs are super helpful, they’ll very likely get shared and act as free promotion on various channels.

Let’s take a peek at how Eddie Shleyner, the founder of Very Good Copy, incorporates this into his business. Each week he provides fresh micro articles with story-infused, quick writing tips. At the end he encourages — and makes it easy for — his audience to share with others.

How to bring this into B2B

Creating rich, educational, and snappy content for specific individuals within your target audience, and then making it easy for them to share with a friend, is a sure fire way to get lots of referrals.

6. Makes your content unique and exciting

Most of us would gladly binge watch Netflix given a day off and some freshly popped popcorn. We crave stories, and are ready to invest our time in those ones that pique our curiosity and help us relate.

One great example of this is the B2B software company in the UK called Advanced. In their “right the first time” campaign to increase brand awareness, they literally wove in fairytale elements from stories like “Jack and the Beanstalk”.

This helped their complex industry become more digestible. In fact, the CEO of ILTA mentioned he wanted his software to be “like the Goldilocks story: not too hot, not too cold, but just right”.

How to bring this into B2B

When applying this to your own B2B business, think about stories you read as a child and weave that into a “story-telling” animated video (or blog) series, but instead of the original characters, use your company characters (you being the trusty friend, your customer being the hero).

Using storytelling gives a unique and exciting edge to your brand messaging, as it helps people relate and engage with your content. So consider how you can use everyday stories we tell our kids in a new product or service you’re launching.

7. Shows a less “salesy” side of your business

Instead shoving “buy now!” or “purchase here!” CTAs down your customers’ throats, focus on copy that makes them laugh, piques their curiosity, and makes them feel in control. Take Barkbox, for instance: they do a really great job of using humor. In this tweet, you can see how their CTA totally makes their audience feel in control.

How to bring this into B2B

How can you be a bit more witty in your B2B copy? Look into what’s trending on social media, so that you can play into the bigger story of what’s happening in people’s daily lives and be more relatable. For example, Dave Harland is a well-known B2B copywriter in the UK and is popular for his witty and sarcastic LinkedIn posts that reflect his copywriting style and skills.

Core marketing storytelling techniques B2B can learn from B2C

As I mentioned earlier, it can often be challenging for B2B businesses to incorporate storytelling into their messaging because they’re not always talking to the decision maker, unlike B2C consumers. However, it is possible, and I’m going to show you exactly how you can break it down to build it back up— with a story.

1. Build up a brand with personality

Just like you have a playful, serious, humorous, or charismatic personality, your brand has one, too. Think of it as a living, breathing being. To truly humanize your brand, it's important to give it a personality. Here are some common brand personalities that might resonate with your brand:

  • Educational: like the Moz Blog you’re reading from right now. Does your brand consistently create content to inform others about a different perspective, how your products work, or how-to do something?

  • Entertaining: like Netflix. Is your brand meant to distract others from the chaos of the world, and for a moment just forget their worries?

  • Disruptive/Rebellious: like Harley Davidson. A wild-at-heart kind of brand that’s not afraid to take risks.

  • Sensual and Luxurious: like Red Saint Botanical, a true spirit-based beverage brewed from rare teas. Does your brand ooze sophistication and scream refreshing?

  • Efficient and Motivational: like Nike. Maybe your brand’s heart beats like a champion and is eager to motivate others.

  • Happy: like Coca-Cola. If your brand’s sole mission is to cultivate joy, laughter, and radiance then happiness is its identity.

Even with B2B, your brand personality doesn’t have to fit in one of these boxes, as they’re simply suggestions. Play around with identities and characteristics that feel right to you by diving deeper into your brand values.

2. Create an authentic and original narrative

Every piece of content that you publish should tell a story. Whether it's an email, newsletter, Instagram post, or blog article, the messaging should be universal, memorable, consistent, and organized. Focusing on these elements will strengthen your content strategy and make it more powerful, and therefore unique. Let’s now take a look at content authenticity in action.

Since 1973, Patagonia has always put out authentic content, constantly showcasing its brand values, company culture, and ethics. It's evident through stories like trail runner Felipe Cancino’s of running through the Maipo River Valley, showcasing how Alto Maipo hydropower is greatly affecting the ecosystem, that Patagonia cares about our environment.

In another story, Daniel taps into the mind of a beginner by teaching his daughter to surf. It's clear that Patagonia not only cares for the environment, but also about how bonding over an outdoor activity cultivates healthy relationships.

As you can see, consistently pushing out content that aligns with your values and brand personality builds a strong bond between your business and customers that can’t be broken.

How to bring this into B2B

Microsoft is both a B2B and B2C brand that offers a wide range of products. In an effort to share business-related stories about how their products are used, they developed Microsoft Story Labs. This was a true win-win, because Microsoft now has user-generated content to share across other channels, and users become more connected to the brand by sharing their stories.

3. Wholeheartedly embrace emotion

Displaying strong emotions helps consumers understand they’re not alone and that they can help a cause greater than themselves, especially when they have a brand by their side.

Toms is a great example of this. On their impact page, they outline their aim to use the profits from their business to contribute to the issues of food scarcity and lack of resources in minority communities.

Overall, consumers are keen to see a strong emotional connection to greater issues that matter, and they’ll be more likely to support a brand that displays this.

How to bring this into B2B

Your audience is made up of individuals, so the emotional element (which is often overlooked in B2B) needs to be a large component to drive the message home. In the same way that B2C does, write out their fears, joys, and anxieties and tie that into how your business could elevate or diminish those feelings.

4. Get to know your audience

Freaker USA, a brand that created a funky universal jacket, wrote this on their about page: “Your little one’s sippy cup can be just as freaked as your 40oz Colt.”

This copy shows how well they know their audience. They understand sometimes parents need a one-size-fits-all product that will keep a child's milk warm (and stylish) and something for their own adult beverage.

How to bring this into B2B

Simply ask your current clients through interviews, or conduct market research on look alike audiences to get to know them better. Get to know their quirks and nuances by asking them open-ended questions so that you can get first-hand insight that you may not have gotten otherwise.

A business that has managed to understand even the tiniest details about its customers can really nail their paint points. Knowing their basic age, ethnicity, or location isn’t enough — get to know what they like at Starbucks, how they celebrate their birthday, or what Netflix shows they watch. When you understand these specific details, you can surprise them and communicate in their language to stay top of mind.

The bottom line? The better you know your audience, the deeper your relationship with them can be.

5. Make it personal

Snapchat’s Bitmoji app launched in 2016, allowing users to create their own emoji (bitmoji) based on their appearance. Snapchat managed to bring out customers’ inner child through the creation of cartoon-like figures, which they can exchange amongst their contact list.

How to bring this into B2B

People want to feel unique, and they’re drawn to messages that appeal to their personality and way of thinking. The more ways you personalize your content, user experience, or messaging to showcase this, the more they’ll be tempted to try your brand.

Plus, using personalization on your website is a surefire way to grab your audience’s attention. For example, you could offer a targeted lead magnet like a marketing template for those in that sector, or you could integrate a chatbot with pre-set answers so they’ll be directed exactly where they want to go.

6. Hone in on data

As the years go on and we become more integrated with technology, data will continue to play a huge role in how we personalize experiences for consumers.

For instance, Refinery29 used data to showcase how plus-sized women are not adequately represented within images online. They incorporated this data in their brand strategy, and started shooting images and redesigning illustrations to accurately reflect real women in the US.

How to bring this into B2B

By using data and tying it to topics your B2B brand cares about, you can quickly form new and interesting stories, which in turn create an emotional connection with your audience. Collect data on your own marketing campaigns — social media in particular — to find stories that are already working for your brand, and scale accordingly.

Start implementing storytelling into your B2B marketing strategy

Storytelling not only solves some of your biggest B2B business issues (you’re familiar with dreadfully long sales cycles or unengaged prospects), but it can also nourish life-long relationships with customers to create a bigger impact. At the end of the day… isn’t that what we as marketers want?

The marketing storytelling techniques that B2C businesses use are very similar for B2B businesses, too:

  • Brand personality

  • Emotions

  • Narrative

  • Knowing Your Audience

  • Personalization

  • Use of Data

You’ll come to find that the benefits always outweigh the effort a B2B business spends on this process.

By studying B2C brand storytelling (like the One Ran Man story from earlier), you can apply that same mentality and strategy into your B2B business to reap the same benefits.