Wholesale B2B and outdoor industry news, tips, and tricks.

Four Reasons Why A Content Destination Is An Essential Piece of Your B2B Platform

Written by Jon Faber | 7/13/17 8:44 PM

How do you grow the relationship you have with your buyers and deliver a compelling experience that creates brand loyalty, especially in light of the drastic shifts caused by a pandemic? A content destination inside your wholesale B2B e-commerce platform.

A content destination let’s you connect with buyers when your reps aren’t able to be in the store. It informs your retailers, keeps them up to date on your latest products, engages them in your key stories, and helps you support the season. As a result, you build greater brand loyalty and grow your wholesale channels.

Given the recent changes forced upon our industry by Covid-19, it’s imperative that brands get on a B2B e-commerce platform that utilizes a content destination model. By establishing a destination in your B2B that houses all your key stories and materials, you can reap the benefit of a loyal, well-informed customer base and grow your wholesale channels as a result.

What is a "content destination"?

Think for a minute about the rich digital experience that B2C companies such as Amazon offer their customers. Shoppers can easily and quickly research products, get detailed delivery information, and read reviews from other customers.

What if your buyers’ B2B experience were as rich?

Treating content as a destination means creating a centralized repository for all of your company’s product materials. Product specs, lookbooks, and video testimonials are all in one spot - easily accessible and shoppable.

But a content destination isn’t just about beautiful images or video with great production value. It’s about enhancing the functional experience for your buyers.

Segmentation rules allow you to deliver meaningful content to individual buyers. This strengthens the buyer/brand relationship and creates long-term bonds of loyalty.

In fact, according to research by KPMG, 88% of CEOs are concerned about customer loyalty. It only makes sense to provide your buyers with a customer experience that reinforces or even augments brand loyalty.

Buyers understand that when a brand makes the effort to consistently keep them educated that the brand is investing in their success. The buyer builds a strong base of product knowledge and brand loyalty, and the result is an increase in wholesale sales.

Here are four key reasons to make sure your B2B has a destination for all your content.

1. A destination creates regular interaction with your content

Posting files into a shared drive or FTP isn’t good enough anymore. Your B2B needs a destination where you can craft a narrative and create meaningful engagements with your buyers.

A content destination is an opportunity to introduce new buyers to your brand. It’s the place to tell your story, track what they are engaging with, and convert that into sales. And for existing buyers a destination enables you to segment your buyers for a tailored experience.

Until recently, there’s been a lag between the time that a product becomes available for buyers and the time that the buyers are aware of that product’s existence.

But in a content destination approach, you can make your buyers aware of an item before it even leaves the production facility. This ability to feature items available for a futures order greatly reduces the time lag inherent in production cycles involving print catalogs.

2. A familiar, direct-to-consumer experience

Many of your buyers are likely used to shopping online. The engagement cycle is easy—look up a product, learn about it, and then buy it—and allows the user to make informed, confident purchases.

There’s no reason that your buyers shouldn’t enjoy the same access to product images, specs, and promotions that retail customers do. A content destination within your B2B empowers your buyers by giving them that familiar, direct-to-consumer experience.

Think of it as a B2C experience on a B2B platform—convenient, informative, and appealing. An immersive and positive digital experience is one that a buyer can comfortably engage in. It leads to informed, confident purchases on the part of your buyer.

3. Increase your buyers’ product knowledge

Your buyers will need to log in regularly to replenish stock or place futures orders. This is the perfect time to re-engage them in the conversation about your products.

A content destination in your B2B allows you to effectively tell key stories, highlight promotions, and ensure that buyers stay informed all season long, not just when you release new product.

Let’s say that you've contracted with a professional surfer to endorse your gear. Your marketing team produces a series of videos featuring the surfer wearing and talking about the product.

That's a more compelling story than a small, flat picture with product specs—and one that you can feature prominently when a buyer logs in. In other words, you can shape the experience that your buyers have before they place their orders.

This approach lets you tell your buyers a story, and who doesn’t like a good story?

In addition to narrative possibilities, there’s the practical matter of getting your content seen. After all, if you rely solely on email blasts, your buyers may not even see a promotion. So forget about emails that are text-heavy and frequently ignored. You’ll see greater traction with powerful visuals, living side by side with all your commerce tools.

A centralized content destination lets you put your promotions front and center so that your buyers won't miss an opportunity. You can better inform your buyers in less time, and highlight what’s important to them so they stay knowledgeable and engaged with your brand.

And this increase in knowledge and engagement creates a knock-on effect. Buyers can pass on the knowledge that they’ve gained to their customers, which facilitates the in-store sales process.

Imagine that: buyers helping you to move more product off the shelves because they can talk with even greater expertise about features and materials.

4. The right message to the right people

Big box, specialty, and online retailers all have different needs, and they serve the market in different ways. As such, a one-size-fits-all approach to delivering useful content for your buyers is going to miss the mark.

A content destination gives you the ability to segment your buyers by role, company size, or geography, just to name a few. Content is targeted to the specific needs of your individual buyers. As a result, they receive the most important and effective information they need to support their customers. 

Here's what this might look like in practice: a big box store that sells motorcycle apparel as one of its product lines and a specialty shop selling only motorcycle apparel can both use the same platform.

The difference is that when a buyer from the big box store logs in, the platform can display pricing options for large orders. When the owner of the specialty shop uses the platform, he sees limited-edition items that are available only in small product runs.

Each user sees products, pricing, and delivery options that are specific to that user's role in the market. This segmentation saves buyers time.

The future of B2B commerce

The benefits of a content destination for your buyers are clear. Product knowledge and system usability increase, go-to-market times get faster, and content customization becomes possible.

Your company will benefit too. A content destination allows you to continue to connect with your retailers, outside of the rep experience, delivering that human touch that has become so important in recent times. Buyers are more likely to become brand advocates when they’re informed, when they can engage with products, and when it’s clear that your brand has a genuine interest in supporting the success of their store.

And brand advocates help you grow sales.