AI Visibility: GEO, AEO, AI Search & SEO

What Makes B2B Content Marketing Work Today | RiseOpp

• RiseOpp • Season 2 • Episode 53

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0:00 | 4:39

Full Transcript: B2B Content Marketing: Everything You Need to Know

B2B content marketing is moving away from volume-based publishing toward strategy, buyer intent, and measurable business impact.

This episode breaks down how teams can use topic clusters, account-based marketing, AI-assisted workflows, sales enablement, short-form video, and first-party data to build stronger content systems.

Marketers, founders, SEO professionals, and growth leaders will learn how to create fewer, higher-impact assets that support trust, authority, and revenue growth.

👉 Read the full guide:

https://riseopp.com/blog/b2b-content-marketing-everything-you-need-to-know

SPEAKER_00

Welcome to this custom deep dive. You know, we are unpacking a comprehensive guide on modern B2B content marketing to discover how top teams are winning in 2026. Because um, for a long time, B2B marketing looked a lot like a guy standing on a crowded street corner with a megaphone.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, totally.

SPEAKER_00

Just like shouting out blog posts and email blasts, hoping someone anyone would stop and listen. But today that old volume and blast playbook is just dead. Content marketing is all about orchestrating measurable growth.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that guy is, well, he is completely out of a job now. I mean, marketing teams are under immense pressure from the CFO's office to actually prove ROI.

SPEAKER_00

Right, vanity metrics are out.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Stuff like page views or social shares, they are essentially worthless now if they don't show a tangible impact on the sales pipeline. Success is all about revenue.

SPEAKER_00

But you know, since that high volume content treadmill is broken, how are modern teams actually producing material? Because generative AI is everywhere, right?

SPEAKER_01

Oh yeah, everywhere.

SPEAKER_00

So isn't it tempting to just use AI as this cheap content factory? I kind of think of it, well, you should treat AI like a sous chef. You know, the sous chef does all the tedious chopping and prep work, but the human remains the head chef.

SPEAKER_01

That is actually a perfect analogy. And the source data validates that too. I mean, something like 89% of marketers are using generative AI, but the most successful teams don't use it to replace human authenticity.

SPEAKER_00

They use it to speed things up.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It is an accelerator for workflows, like um structuring outlines, summarizing transcripts, that sort of prep work. Because if you just churn out generic AI-written garbage to game search engines, you will fail.

SPEAKER_00

Because keyword stuffing is totally out, right?

SPEAKER_01

Completely ineffective. Google's algorithms prioritize context now. So winning actually requires what they call intent-driven topic clusters.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, intent-driven topic clusters, let's break that down.

SPEAKER_01

So instead of just writing a fluffy post to rank for the word software, you map highly specific topics to exact stages of the funnel. It guides the buyer logically based on their actual intent.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, that makes sense. So you create this highly intentional content, but um the digital landscape is noisier than ever. How do you get buyers to actually consume it?

SPEAKER_01

Well, that is the million-dollar question.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Because I saw something in the text that blew my mind. Teams are spending like 80% of their time distributing content and only 20% writing it. I would think the writing should take the bulk of the time if it has to be so strategic.

SPEAKER_01

You would think so, yeah. But distribution is where the actual strategy lives. A brilliant piece of content is totally useless if it just sits on a dead landing page. So teams rely heavily on account-based marketing or ABM and micro audiences.

SPEAKER_00

So you aren't broadcasting to the whole street corner.

SPEAKER_01

You are knocking on specific doors.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The generic content gets ignored, so you have to micropersonalize for specific roles. Like a CFO needs a totally different message than, say, a DevOps lead.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, that brings up the Dell case study from the sources, their IT squad campaign. They wanted to reach IT professionals who, you know, notoriously hate corporate marketing.

SPEAKER_00

They have a massive filter for corporate speak. Right. So instead of forcing them onto a corporate landing page, Dell met them right on Reddit. They used native, humorous, animated characters.

SPEAKER_01

And it resulted in a 200x boost in brand credibility.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Which is wild because they didn't disrupt the buyers, they just mirrored the community's natural language and bypassed that filter entirely.

SPEAKER_00

It seems like meeting buyers where they are means radically rethinking the format, too, not just the platform. Like, why are we still using standard PDF white papers?

SPEAKER_01

We really shouldn't be. Just look at the Spotify Spread Beats campaign.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow. Yes. I loved this part.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Spotify wanted to reach media planners to show off their video ads. And media planners live inside spreadsheets all day long.

SPEAKER_00

So they put a music video inside a spreadsheet.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. They embedded a fully playable music video right inside an Excel spreadsheet. They proved that true differentiation means breaking the format completely to reach buyers in their natural habitat.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, zooming out here. B2B content is clearly this layered multi-channel discipline now. It is all built on personalization and revenue generation.

SPEAKER_01

Definitely. And as third-party cookies fade away, well, that first party data is going to be your most valuable asset.

SPEAKER_00

Which leaves us with a final thought for you to chi one. Since cookies are disappearing, content has to do so much more than just capture attention.

SPEAKER_01

It really does.

SPEAKER_00

Ask yourself is the content you are creating right now simply a passive lead generator, or is it actively designed as an intent engine to track meaningful behavioral data?