Big ValleyBig ValleyBig ValleyBig Valley
  • ABOUT
  • SERVICES
    • Brand Strategy
    • Marketing Strategy
    • Content Marketing
    • Corporate Communications
    • Digital and Social Marketing
    • Market Intelligence
  • CASE STUDIES
  • CULTURE
  • RESOURCES
    • Big Valley Marketing Blog
    • Pressing Matters Podcasts
    • Top Conversations in Tech
    • AI Research
  • CONTACT

Crafting a Thought Leadership Strategy

    Home Content Marketing Crafting a Thought Leadership Strategy
    NextPrevious

    Crafting a Thought Leadership Strategy

    By Charlie Cooper | Content Marketing, Story + Content, Strategy + Positioning | Comments are Closed | 25 July, 2022 | 0

    I detest the term “thought leadership.”

    It’s a pet peeve, but thought leadership isn’t something that you somehow “do.” Tim Marklein nails it when he makes the case that this is something that has to be earned. It’s not to be – or shouldn’t be – lumped into the same sentence with demand generation.

    Splitting hairs?

    I don’t think so. Marketers should understand the difference between strong thought leadership and gussied up demand-gen. All too often, though, the two concepts get lumped together as if thought leadership were solely an appendage of the overall sales and marketing strategy. That’s a mistake.

    My background isn’t in content marketing. For most of my career, I worked as a business and technology reporter and editor where at one point, I was involved in editing the op-ed submissions page. So, whenever I see companies trying to use thought leadership vehicles – whether in the form of opinion pieces or in conference presentations, etc. –to promote their products or technologies, my immediate instinct is to paint my face like Mel Gibson in “Braveheart,” grab a bullhorn and scream “No!”

    If you’re trying to drum up prospects for your new widget, that’s the purview of demand-gen tools and techniques. It’s fine to go about building a “message house” where companies align product messaging with core business objectives, competitive dynamics and the larger company vision. eBooks, webinars, email marketing and product-focused blogs can – and should – be part of a strategy to guide prospects through the conversion funnel.

    But if you intend to establish your executives as industry thought leaders, they need to speak to industry issues well beyond your product features and benefits. There’s a world of difference between building and serving an audience, versus selling to your marketing database. Robert Rose has a good piece explaining this in detail. Suffice it to say that we’re talking apples and oranges. When it comes to thought leadership, you should aspire to building an audience that is bigger and broader than your prospect list. An audience trusts you to share honest, frank advice and opinions about issues du jour that matter to them. Instead, you’re hitting them with a self-serving sales or marketing message? That’s going to undercut your creditability.

    During my time as an op-ed editor, it was easy to separate incisive essays from ham-handed product pitches. Your audience will spot the difference as well. They’ll see through your “pitch” and stop reading (or leave the keynote, or stop showing up when you invite them). If this is how you approach thought leadership, then you’re focused too much on yourselves and not enough about what your audience wants and needs.

    Put the Thought Back into Thought Leadership

    Readers are always going to be interested in commentators who have their fingers on the pulse of the market – particularly when it comes to the technology business where change is a constant theme. Customers want insights that help them better understand their markets.

    The formula for success is straightforward: build audience by sharing valuable insights and expertise (via interviews, articles, speeches, etc.) about issues of import. Look within your ranks to find experts with something to say. Entrust your executives to weigh in with intelligent and frank commentary about important topics of the day – which will pay off in the coin of greater audience relevance and brand recognition, and perhaps even media interest from reporters whose attention you’ve piqued.

    Consider the results in this 2020 LinkedIn/Edelman study of decision makers which, among other things, found:

    • 48% spent at least an hour each engaging with thought leadership content
    • 89% described thought leadership as responsible for enhancing their perceptions of an organization
    • 49% said thought leadership influenced their buying decisions

    So, when the exercise goes wrong, I must assume that someone in authority issued an edict that all content needs to be “on message” (sell, sell, sell) rather than doing right by the audience (inform, engage, inspire). Exactly the wrong move. Readers aren’t stupid and they know when someone’s trying to sell to them. You’re not just going to waste a lot of time and effort; you will lose the attention and trust of your audience.

     

    b2b tech, communications, content, content marketing, demand gen, demand generation, Positioning, POV, Technology Marketing, thought leadership

    Charlie Cooper

    More posts by Charlie Cooper

    Related Post

    • Top Conversations in Tech Jan’24: AI Continues to Dominate, Get Ready for the Misinformation

      By Inga Starrett | Comments are Closed

      Welcome to the January 2024 edition of Top Conversations in Technology, where we break down which topics are leading, rising and falling each month. Our monthly analysis is designed to help technology marketers maximize theirRead more

    • Top Conversations in Tech Dec’23: May old acquaintances be part of AI learning

      By Inga Starrett | Comments are Closed

      Welcome to the December 2023 edition of Top Conversations in Technology, where we break down which topics are leading, rising and falling each month. Our monthly analysis is designed to help technology marketers maximize theirRead more

    • Top Conversations in Tech Nov’23: WWKD (#whatwouldkeanudo)

      By Inga Starrett | Comments are Closed

      Welcome to the November 2023 edition of Top Conversations in Technology, where we break down which topics are leading, rising and falling each month. Our monthly analysis is designed to help technology marketers maximize theirRead more

    • Top Conversations in Tech Oct’23: And now for something really frightening…

      By Inga Starrett | Comments are Closed

      Welcome to the October 2023 edition of Top Conversations in Technology, where we break down which topics are leading, rising and falling each month. Our monthly analysis is designed to help technology marketers maximize theirRead more

    • September 2023 Technology Trends Overview

      By Inga Starrett | Comments are Closed

      Welcome to the September 2023 edition of Top Conversations in Technology, where we break down which topics are leading, rising and falling each month. Our monthly analysis is designed to help technology marketers maximize their relevance and adaptRead more

    NextPrevious

    Helping technology companies for ten years
    to grow, win, and lead through effective,
    expert-driven marketing and communications.

    Connect

    I want to hire Big Valley
    hireus@bigvalley.co

    I want to work for Big Valley
    workwithus@bigvalley.co

    Follow us
    • LinkedIn

    Recent Posts

    • Marketing Leaders: You’re Not Failing. You’re Leading in a Lonely System.

      Why even the best marketing leaders feel stuck—and how to break through.

      12 May, 2025
    • Reconsidering Pillar B2B Social Media Platforms

      By Arianna Crawford The B2B marketing and communications industry is in the

      6 May, 2025
    • Top Conversations in Tech: March 2025 Trends

      Step Aside GenAI, AI Agents are Here! Welcome to Top Conversations in

      29 April, 2025
    Copyright 2024 Big Valley Marketing | All Rights Reserved
    • ABOUT
    • SERVICES
      • Brand Strategy
      • Marketing Strategy
      • Content Marketing
      • Corporate Communications
      • Digital and Social Marketing
      • Market Intelligence
    • CASE STUDIES
    • CULTURE
    • RESOURCES
      • Big Valley Marketing Blog
      • Pressing Matters Podcasts
      • Top Conversations in Tech
      • AI Research
    • CONTACT
    Big Valley