What do you think of when you hear the words B2B marketing? Pushy sales emails, jargon-filled SEO blogs, unsolicited phone calls, leaflets at exhibitions? We’ve come a long way since the 90s and B2B is quickly becoming one of the most exciting and innovative areas for marketing professionals to explore. Trust us, we do it every day.
With so much ingenuity in the space, and B2B SMEs popping up to offer solutions you never knew you needed, we felt it was time to dig a little deeper into B2B campaigns created by, and for, SMEs. But before we do, let’s take a look at the current state-of-play for SMEs:
It looks like the new year presents huge opportunities for SMEs looking to grow. Whether you’re focused on bringing in new leads and growing your revenue, or integrating new tools that will make your workforce more productive, it’s an exciting time to be a B2B brand.
This month, we want to inspire you to get imaginative in your upcoming B2B campaigns. Whether you’re planning to create a Christmas campaign like no other or you want to bring a spark of creativity to your 2024 planning, we’ve identified four imaginative B2B campaigns going to, and from, SMEs.
For this sector spotlight, we wanted to spend some time understanding the effectiveness of B2B marketing and what the potential is for the market. But of course, SMEs exist across all kinds of industries, from technology to healthcare and hospitality. So how do you build a typical SME audience?
We decided to focus on brands marketing to SMEs primarily in the technology and finance sector, analysing followers of companies such as QuickBooks, MailChimp, Slack, Asana, Upwork and Oracle. This helped us build an affinity report, which shows us common interests, media channels, and other useful insights that can inform a B2B marketing campaign. You can review the full report here.
Looking at the audience as a whole, we can see that this audience skews more toward men, who make up 70% of the total audience. They’re likely to be English speakers, though we also see Spanish, Arabic, Portuguese and French appearing among the spoken languages. This range of language is reflected in the locations of the audience, with only 30% of this audience being based in the US. We see India, the UK, Canada, Australia and Brazil all ranking high in audience locations, suggesting a truly global audience.
This particular SME audience tends to skew quite young, with 18- to 34-year-olds making up 60% of the total audience. They all share a common interest in entrepreneurs and tech, with brands and notable people such as Google, Bill Gates, Elon Musk, and TechCrunch all appearing in their most followed tabs. Sports, finance and travel all appear in shared interests, and words such as marketing, business, digital and designer all appear prominently in the bios of their social media channels.
While we can make general assumptions about what a B2B audience may look like, it’s always important to remember that your audience is not a monolith. We can evaluate a snapshot of the total audience, but we need to identify and analyze segments to truly understand the opportunities available. Our report generated six possible segments to explore, today we’re going to focus on the three largest segments:
Now that we’ve got a flavor of the types of people that are interested in, working for, and running SMEs, let’s turn our attention to some imaginative B2B campaigns from Slack, Upwork, Shopify, and MailChimp.
Have you ever been forced to watch a customer case study video for a product, and found yourself bored to tears? Most case study videos feature the same old jargon and a general air of mystery that is usually designed to force you to book a demo to actually learn something.
Not at Slack. As a SaaS product focused on streamlining communication and making work easier, it makes sense that they wanted to find the fastest, and most amusing, way to communicate what they can actually do for you.
They took aim at SMEs who are skeptical and stuck in their ways with a customer mockumentary called ‘So Yeah, We Tried Slack…’. In this two-minute video, we meet Sandwich Video, a reluctant Slack customer who found integrating the product completely changed the way they approached productivity and communication.
In an advert that feels a little like an episode of The Office, we see interviews with different members of the team, who all have different ways of talking to each other. Emails, iMessage, Gchat, Dropbox, WhatsApp, IRL meetings in a utility cupboard. TLDR; total chaos. Then we learn how Slack has made things so much easier and helped the Sandwich Video team get more done.
A customer testimonial delivered in a genuinely entertaining way clearly words. The main campaign video has had over 1.3 million views, over 4,000 likes, and tons of comments from people who genuinely enjoyed watching the video and sharing their own use cases. Best news? Sandwich Video is a genuine customer.
Amongst all the changes the world has experienced over the last few years, remote and flexible working has become increasingly important for many SMEs. But pre-pandemic, freelance platform Upwork was already making waves for SMEs by promoting the many uses of freelancers.
In 2018 they launched a B2B campaign called ‘Hey World’, which involved a series of video ads that specifically called out major entrepreneurs and public figures, encouraging them to ‘Get it done with a freelancer. Examples included Elon Musk and freelance PAs, Amazon and customer support reps, and people who use Comics Sans in need of a graphic designer to get their marketing out of the 90s.
A bold campaign delivered in a playful manner, this campaign cleverly tapped into the rapidly growing gig economy, as well as the 73.3 million freelancers currently working in the US alone. The messaging also perfectly tapped into pop culture, offering freelance help to time-strapped or resource-strapped pop culture figures, business icons, institutions and political leaders – among them Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, author George R.R. Martin, Equifax and NASA.
They blended video content with out-of-home activity as well, with animations in digital spots at Fulton Center in Lower Manhattan and San Francisco’s Montgomery Street station. According to the Upwork marketing team, this B2B campaign resulted in a 10% increase in usage of their platform from Fortune 500 companies. Mission accomplished.
What if your B2B campaign could inspire thousands of B2Bs to follow their dreams? We love Shopify’s first ever brand campaign, entitled ‘Let’s Make You A Business’. Drawing on their experience of working with thousands of independent business owners every single day, they set out to drive the next wave of independent business owners with a campaign that highlighted how working with Shopify can make your dreams come true.
Developed in tandem with agency partner R/GA, Shopify used TV advertising, paid and organic social, radio ads and even out-of-home that included taking over vacant storefronts with creative vinyl wraparounds encouraging people to imagine themselves launching that idea they had. A clever way of going beyond traditional marketing methods to reach people in all walks of live, whether they’re walking the dog or browsing YouTube.
“Starting and running a business unlocks incredible freedom for entrepreneurs, but it can also be a daunting process,” said Jeff Weiser, CMO at Shopify. “Shopify exists to help merchants every step of the way, and our new campaign is meant to inspire future entrepreneurs to start their own journey.”
It doesn’t matter how strong your branding is or how much of the market you’ve captured, even the best brands fall victim to typos. In the case of marketing-automation platform MailChimp, this led to a creative spark that fuelled a major B2B marketing campaign. Working with agency Droga, they launched ‘Did you mean MailChimp?’.
Inspired by a mispronunciation of the brand in the credits of the hit podcast Serial, they created nine different projects that rhymed with MailChimp such as FailChips, WhaleSynth, KaleLimp, MailShrimp, JailBlimp and more. Then, they created three short films to advertise these mysterious products, then used people searching for these strange brands to direct them with a simple search engine message, ‘Did you mean MailChimp?’.
This ridiculous and truly imaginative campaign was then able to introduce people to MailChimp. It was also able to build a musical instrument using whale sounds, launch a trend, and create a chart-topping song. Not bad for a B2B marketing campaign.
"We used mispronunciation as a creative device to inspire all kinds of different executions, knowing that people would be curious about what they were seeing and search for more information," said Mark DiCristina, senior director of brand marketing at MailChimp. “We have a history of not taking ourselves too seriously and having fun with our name, and this felt like a perfect way to introduce ourselves to potential new customers in a big and creative way.”
So, what have we learned from this imaginative approach to SME marketing campaigns?
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