How to Steal Your Competitors' Demand

A Data-Driven Approach to Conversion Rate Optimization

Steal this strategy…

Buy licenses for all your competitors’ – this works well for B2B SaaS products.

Create long-form video reviews for all of them, and then post each one on YouTube.

You will show all the limitations of their product, and in that same video, highlight why your product is better.

You can post those videos under a different account than your company account to disguise your bias.

Two added benefits:

👉 You may learn some things about their product that can inspire you to improve your product

👉 You can use this intel to create battlecards for your sales team

Anyone curious about your competitor (who may not have even heard about your brand) may search for video reviews (this could be thousands of interested buyers).

They will not only become aware of your brand (if that weren’t already), but you could potentially nudge them closer to buying your product.

Strategies for Improving Your Content Marketing

Too often B2B companies create content and just post it on their company page. But it hardly ever reaches their audience organically.

To overcome this, I would suggest:

Social media – have staff, especially the CEO, post on their social pages, and also post in groups where your audience hangs out. 

I posted something about SEO once on my LinkedIn page and it got 200 impressions and 1 like. That’s because my LinkedIn connections don’t care about SEO as much as I do. I posted that same post in a marketing group and it got 10,000+ impressions, hundreds of comments and likes, new connection requests… 

Also, just because you post it once, it doesn’t mean you can post it again. You can reschedule it, change the title, change the feature graphic, etc.

I called this the three Rs of Content – Reuse, Remix, and Repurpose.

Paid promotion – put a little ad spend behind it and target it to your audience. It doesn’t have to be much, $20 – $100 per post can often be enough to guarantee it’ll be put in front of the right people. Again, going back to what I first said – is it something the audience would care about? Does it have an engaging title? Does the cover art looking interesting and appealing? Lots to consider here.

Too often when companies hit publish, they move onto the next one, and hope and pray that their post will organically take on a life of its own and go off into the world and do what it needs to do.

Sadly, this is rarely the case.

Once you hit publish, that content should go in a spreadsheet and you should set some time aside every month to monitor what each post did in terms of impressions, engagement, and so on. There are many other things you need to do as well such as uploading it to Google Search Console, SEO optimization, rescheduling, A/B testing, and planning what happens next.

Repurposing content is huge – can we turn this thing into something else (or better yet, 10 other things)? Could it be a video, or a podcast topic, or a webinar, or an infographic, or can we post it on Medium or LinkedIn Pulse, or create social posts from it…? Essentially you want to tailor your content for each platform, considering the format and style.

Partnerships and Collaborations can be a great way to amplify content – they can post it on their channels and you could do the same for theirs. Partners are those who share a common audience but are not competitors.

Newsletters can be a great way to distribute content, but too often companies neglect the most important part – collecting emails. There is a whole strategic initiative in and of itself with this, which I won’t go into.

In terms of long form video content, that needs to be chopped up into smaller clips for Reels, YouTube Shorts, and TikTok videos. There is a whole methodology here.

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