August 8th, 2008

Global B2B Manufacturer "Frees" Content — Sees Web Traffic Soar

Should business-to-business (B2B) companies offer content for “free”? By “free,” I mean offering things such as e-books, white papers, and reports without requiring people (aka “buyers”) to register for the content?

This has been a hot topic under discussion at Bob Bly’s blog. In a July 22, 2008 post, Bly states,

I advise my readers to require the user to submit his e-mail address . . . and opt into my e-list . . . in exchange for getting my free viral e-books like my latest on selling to the “GOM” market — men age 50 and older.

In this post, Bly is refuting David Meerman Scott’s advice to “make content totally free with no registration requirement at all so that people are more likely to download it and share with colleagues.”

In the B2B world, very little content is “free.” If you want a white paper or a special report, you have to hand over your contact info — and often the info requested is way more than is justified for a white paper or report.

Asking for this information suppresses response — or if people do fill in the registration form, they’ll use bogus information such as “Donald Duck,” or “Mickey Mouse.”

(I know this because I once put a “free” report behind a registration page. The results were less than stellar.)

One of my clients, a global manufacturing company, recently benefited from opening up their online content.

Previous to 2007, customers who wanted to download an MSDS (material safety data sheet) had to register for the corporate site. The registration process included filling out a long form.

According to the e-business manager, people complained about this — but it was corporate policy.

The policy was changed early last year — allowing anyone to download an MSDS without first registering.

The result? Web traffic SOARED — from 40,000 visits to 80,000 in just a few months, with over 61,000 downloads of the hot, hot, hot MSDS documents.

The e-business team expects the number of downloads to double for 2008.

Removing the registration barrier had an unexpected side benefit — it cut down on customer support emails to the business unit. Said one manager, “We went from 5 – 6 emails a day for these things to none.”

Apparently, keeping information “protected” behind registration barriers is common in my client’s industry.

It was pointed out that my client’s competitors lock up product literature — including brochures and data sheets — as well.

Imagine — keeping brochures, datasheets and the like from buyers interested in your products. I can only shake my head.

What do you think? Should B2B companies keep content behind barriers? Should they offer content for free? Or do a little a both?

Filed under B2B Marketing, B2B SEO, B2B Web Content | 7 Comments »
Posted by Dianna Huff

Feedback on “Global B2B Manufacturer "Frees" Content — Sees Web Traffic Soar”

  1. David Meerman Scott Says:

    Hi Dianna, You already know what I think. Make it free. Glad to see you jumping on this bandwagon and thanks for the additional proof points. Cheers, David

  2. Ed Gandia Says:

    There should be a little of both. Some careful thought should be put behind the decision, though. You can’t just blindly require registration for everything and expect good results (registration for MSDS sheets seems a bit silly). Yet for a B2B marketer trying to generate leads, doing away with registrations altogether is probably a mistake.

    I say choose carefully and keep you registration super, super short. I’m talking name, company, email, phone. And if it’s part of a direct mail or email effort to your house list, you can sometimes get away with less info (you already have it in your system!).

  3. Jeff Gwynne Says:

    Dianna-

    I agree that awareness and thought leadership pieces such as white papers and brochures should be free of registration. But collateral that are sensitive from a competitive point-of-view should be hidden. This includes data a spec sheets. I always like to put the latter on the customer service page where people are registered by definition.

    Jeff

  4. Dianna Huff Says:

    Ed — I agree with you. And Jeff, I can see spec sheets, but brochures? Isn’t the point of a brochure to help sell a product? Why would a company want to lock up that kind of content?

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  6. F.C. Boyd Says:

    I agree with Dianna. That is exactly the point of the brochure! Free is necessary, as is balancing what is given.

  7. Dianna Huff Says:

    @F.C. — Exactly!

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