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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
White Papers Most Important to Technology Buyers
by Jack Loechner, Thursday, April 5, 2007, 8:45 AM

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White Papers Most Important to Technology Buyers

According to a study in February, 2007 by KnowledgeStorm and MarketingSherpa to examine how content development, formatting and targeting affect technology buyers' perceptions of value, 71% of technology buyers say that white papers are the most frequently read form of content, and 57% say they are passed along more than half the time. 75% of marketers include them in their marketing mix.

Other key findings show that:

  • 85% of technology buyers say they need to see at least three pieces of content about a new technology before they acquire significant knowledge of it. Of the marketers surveyed, 43% had between 5 and 20 pieces of content in their marketing library.
  • Technology buyers conduct nearly 75% of their research and information gathering online. Marketers split their online and offline marketing efforts up disproportionately (60% and 40% respectively).
  • 60% percent of technology buyers look for different types of content depending on where they are in the buying cycle. 38% of marketers currently customize their content to meet the needs of prospects at different points in the buying cycle, but another 27% plan to do so in the future.

Nearly 78% of marketer respondents "oversee" or have "significant involvement" in content marketing programs. 41% of the respondents hold the titles Director of Marketing, CMO or VP, and 32% are Marketing or Product Managers.

53% of the technology buyers in the study are business professionals, 47% are IT professionals, 46% are involved at a strategic level, and 32% authorize, or have a major influence on, IT purchases.

Key findings in the report include information such as:

  • 92% of technology buyers say they are either "somewhat satisfied" or "very satisfied" with the quality of content available to them.
  • The Web is the preferred delivery channel as nearly three-fourths of all technology information searches are made online.
  • 79% percent of technology buyers stated that they received 25% or more of their information from vendor-sponsored content, including white papers, case studies, corporate Websites and technology solution information.
  • 49% percent of respondents considered the information they found online to be of greater value to the content they received through other means such as events, mailings and publications. However, marketers still put 40% of their efforts into offline campaigns.
  • 61% of technology buyers want content that directly addresses the issues they face at each point in the decision process.
  • Only 38% of marketers surveyed currently create content that meets the needs of potential buyers from research to purchase., but 27% have recognized the need to develop content that supports customers throughout the buying cycle.
  • Technology buyers conduct nearly three-quarters of their technology research and information gathering online, while marketers conduct a disproportionate percentage of their content marketing offline (40%).
  • Though respondents value well-written, high quality content, even more valued was the educational quality of the material, which 85% of technology buyers rated as "very" or "extremely" important to them.
  • Less than one-third of technology buyers claimed to access Webcasts "most frequently." Conversely, almost two-thirds of marketers sponsor or use Webcasts in their marketing programs.

The report concludes that "developing a balanced content program requires that marketers abandon the tendency to focus internally on their products, features, corporate structures and strategies and instead look at the need for content more from the technology buyer's perspective..."

For more information, and access to the report and podcast, please visit KnowledgeStorm here.

2 comments on "White Papers Most Important to Technology Buyers"

  1. Ira Dember from Dember & Associates
    commented on: April 05, 2007 at 12:53 PM
    Today's research brief notes that: "79% percent of technology buyers stated that they received 25% or more of their information from vendor-sponsored content, including white papers, case studies, corporate Websites and technology solution information." These percentages may be substantially understated. It depends on whether articles published in industry and technical magazines were considered as part of "vendor-sponsored content". Articles published in many such magazines carry bylines of authors who work for vendors. Editorial guidelines differ from magazine to magazine, but such articles must promote a point of view crafted by a company's marketing department. This isn't hypothetical. I spent decades ghostwriting articles that were commissioned by marketing departments of various technology companies. The magazine doesn't have to pay for such "contributed articles," a boon to time- and cash-strapped editorial staffs. However, these are indeed articles and not paid advertisements, so the vendor doesn't have a free hand. Editors retain control over the material, and in my experience they exercise that control. In most cases I worked directly with a publication's editor to ensure that the content met his/her editorial requirements as well as my client's marketing objectives. I believe the widespread existence of vendor-contributed articles in magazines should to be taken into account when conducting and analyzing a survey such as the one being reported here. Such articles, like whitepapers, are widely read and passed along. By the way: I believe that as long as vendor-contributed articles are properly attributed -- as they almost always are, because they boost the vendor's presige -- then presenting them as editorial content is not necessarily a bad thing. Readers can judge a vendor-contributed article's slant by noting its attributed source. Contributed content would be pernicious only if it were not attributed to the vendor.

  2. Paul Beatty from BTC Inc
    commented on: April 05, 2007 at 9:52 AM
    Major mistakes. The major mistakes magazine web publishers make are: [] not asking the readers what they want and need. [] not measuring the content being used .

    The print to web connection is very powerful and needs the research of what the reader and the advertiser wants and needs. Not what the web master thinks they need. Paul Beatty pbbeatty@optonline.net

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