MarketingProfs produced B2C Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends (North America) in partnership with the Content Marketing Institute. Our goal was to give you a clear view of the State of B2C Content Marketing. Among the questions this report answers: What's really happening? What are your biggest content marketing challenges? What slice of the budget will be dedicated to content next year, and what social channels are most relevant?
2. Overview: The State of B2C Content Marketing IN NORTH AMERICA
Hello Consumer Marketers!
Welcome to B2C Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends—North America.
For three years we’ve looked at B2B content marketing trends, and this year, we are excited to bring you these compelling B2C findings.
Here are some of the key research results:
86% of B2C marketers use content marketing, employing 12 individual tactics on average.
B2B marketers use social media more often than their B2C counterparts; however, B2C marketers consider it more effective
(57% of B2C marketers think social media is effective vs. 49% of B2B marketers). On average, B2C marketers use four social media
platforms, compared with the five used by B2B marketers.
On average, 28% of B2C marketing budgets are allocated to content marketing, and 55% of consumer marketers plan to increase
their content marketing spend.
According to our research, both B2B and B2C marketers are still struggling with the effectiveness of their content marketing. So while we
are happy that more marketers are engaging in content marketing to attract and retain customers, we also realize we have a ways to go.
On with the content marketing revolution...
Joe Pulizzi Ann Handley
Founder & Executive Director Chief Content Officer
Content Marketing Institute MarketingProfs
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3. 86% of B2C marketers use content marketing.
Percentage of B2C Respondents
Using Content Marketing
14% do not
use content
marketing
86%
use content
marketing
2013 B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks–North America: Content Marketing Institute/MarketingProfs
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4. B2C marketers use an average of
12 content marketing tactics.
Number of Tactics B2C Marketers Use
20+ Tactics 11% In general, the larger the B2C
company, the more tactics used.
16-19 Tactics 12%
Companies with 10,000 or more
13-15 Tactics 15%
employees use an average of
10-12 Tactics 15%
16 tactics, whereas the smallest
5-9 Tactics 36%
companies use an average of 10.
1-4 Tactics 8% Average: 12
0 10 20 30 40
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5. 100 B2C Content Marketing Usage
(by Tactic)
84% 84%
Compared with their B2B counterparts,
80 78% B2C marketers use more mobile content,
70% 69% mobile apps, print magazines, and print
newsletters.
63% 61%
60
Compared with their B2B counterparts,
B2C marketers use far fewer case studies,
white papers, webinars/webcasts, and
43% 42% 42% 41%
40
40% % research reports.
38 37%
33% 33% 33% 32% 32%
29% 28% 28% 28%
Social Media–Other than Blogs
Licensed/Syndicated Content
26%
Articles on Other Websites
21% 17%
Articles on Your Website
Branded Content Tools
20
Games/Gamification
Webinars/Webcasts
Virtual Conferences
Research Reports
Digital Magazines
Print Newsletters
In-person Events
Print Magazines
Annual Reports
Mobile Content
White Papers
eNewsletters
Case Studies
Infographics
Mobile Apps
Microsites
Podcasts
eBooks
Videos
Books
Blogs
0
2013 B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks–North America: Content Marketing Institute/MarketingProfs
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6. CONTENT MARKETING TACTIC EFFECTIVENESS
Confidence Gap
Effectiveness Ratings of Tactics Among B2C Users
Believe It’s Effective Believe It’s Less Effective
62% In-person Events 38% More B2C marketers rank social media as
62% eNewsletters 38% “effective” or “very effective” than B2B
marketers (57% of B2C marketers vs.
61% Videos 39% 49% of B2B marketers).
57% Blogs 43%
57% Social Media–Other than Blogs 43% More B2C marketers rank print materials
(both magazines and newsletters) as
56% Webinars/Webcasts 44%
“effective” or “very effective” than B2B
55% Branded Content Tools 45% marketers (51% of B2C marketers vs.
54% eBooks 46% 34% of B2B marketers for print magazines,
and 42% of B2C marketers vs. 28% of
53% Articles on Your Website 47%
B2B marketers for print newsletters).
52% Virtual Conferences 48%
51% Print Magazines 49%
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
2013 B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks–North America: Content Marketing Institute/MarketingProfs
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7. B2C
Facebook 90%
Twitter 69%
YouTube 65%
LinkedIn 51% B2C marketers use an average of four
Google+ 41%
social media sites to distribute content,
whereas B2B marketers use an average
Pinterest 35% of five.
14% Flickr
B2C marketers most often use Facebook,
14% Foursquare whereas B2B marketers most often use
12% Vimeo LinkedIn.
12% Instagram
9% StumbleUpon
7% SlideShare
7% Tumblr
3% Quora
0 20 40 60 80 100
2013 B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks–North America: Content Marketing Institute/MarketingProfs
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8. B2C marketers cite customer retention/loyalty
as their top content marketing goal.
Organizational Goals for
B2C Content Marketing
Customer Retention/Loyalty 77% Though customer retention/loyalty is the
top organizational goal for B2C marketers,
Customer Acquisition 75%
B2B marketers rank it fourth.
Brand Awareness 74%
Engagement 66% Customer acquisition and brand awareness
Website Traffic 61% are top goals both for B2C and B2B marketers.
Lead Generation 52%
More B2C marketers site sales as a goal
Sales 50% than do B2B marketers; however, more
Thought Leadership 32% B2B marketers cite lead generation,
Lead Management/Nurturing 25% lead management/nurturing, and thought
leadership as priorities.
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9. B2C marketers most often use web traffic to measure
content marketing success.
Measurement Criteria for
B2C Content Marketing Success
Web Traffic 62%
Direct Sales 55%
Social Media Sharing 52% Both B2C and B2B marketers rank web traffic
Time Spent on Website 43% the most important measurement criterion.
Qualitative Feedback from Customers 42%
SEO Ranking 42% B2C marketers place more emphasis on direct
Increased Customer Loyalty 37% sales, whereas B2B marketers place more
Sales Lead Quality32% emphasis on the quality and quantity of
Sales Lead Quantity 30% sales leads.
Inbound Links 25%
Benchmark Lift of Company Awareness 25%
Benchmark Lift of Product/Service Awareness 22%
Cross-selling 16%
Cost Savings 10%
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10. More than half of B2C marketers plan to increase their
content marketing budget over the next 12 months.
B2C Content Marketing Spending
(Over Next 12 Months)
Significantly
Decrease
Unsure
1% 11%
Decrease 55% of B2C marketers say they will
2% increase their content marketing spend.
Increase
Remain the 45% Overall, B2C marketers are planning to
Same increase content marketing spend at a
31% rate similar to B2B marketers.
Significantly
Increase
10%
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11. 28% of B2C marketing budgets are allocated
to content marketing.
Total Marketing Budget Spent
on B2C Content Marketing The average share of marketing budget
spent on B2C content marketing is 28%
Micro (Fewer than 10 Employees) 37% (on average, B2B marketers allocate a
bit more: 33%).
Small (10-99 Employees) 24%
Large B2C companies allocate a greater
Midsize (100-999 Employees) 14% share (27%) of their total marketing
Large (1000+ Employees) 27% budget to content marketing than large
B2B companies do (22%); however,
Overall 28% B2B companies of all other sizes allocate
slightly more budget than B2C companies.
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12. 53% of B2C marketers say they create content
only in-house.
Insourcing vs. Outsourcing
of B2C Content Creation B2C marketers create content in-house
and outsource it in proportions that are
In-House Only 53% nearly equal to those reported by B2B
marketers.
Outsourced Only 2%
It’s rare for either a B2C or a B2B
Both 44% company to completely outsource
content creation.
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13. On average, 46% of B2C companies outsource
content creation.
Percentage of B2C Companies that
Outsource Content Creation
Micro (Fewer than 10 Employees) 27%
The larger a B2C company is, the more
Small (10-99 Employees) 50% likely it is to outsource content creation.
Midsize (100-999 Employees) 50%
Large B2C companies outsource content
Large (1000+ Employees) 67% creation more frequently than large
B2B companies.
Average 46%
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14. Most B2C marketers tailor their content.
How B2C Organizations Tailor Content
Profile of Individual Decision Makers 45%
Stage in the Buying Cycle 41%
85% of B2C content marketers
Personalized Content Preferences 31% tailor their content in at least
one way, compared with 91%
Company Characteristics 23%
of B2B marketers.
None 13%
Other 8%
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15. Lack of budget is the top challenge faced by
B2C content marketers.
Challenges that
B2C Content Marketers Face
Lack of Budget 52%
Producing Enough Content 51%
Producing the Kind of Content that Engages 49%
52% of B2C content marketers
Producing a Variety of Content 42%
are challenged with lack of budget,
Inability to Measure Content Effectiveness41% compared with 39% of B2B content
Lack of Knowledge, Training, and Resources 35% marketers.
Lack of Integration Across Marketing 31%
Lack of Buy-in/Vision 21%
Finding Trained Content Marketing Professionals 13%
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2013 B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks–North America: Content Marketing Institute/MarketingProfs
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16. Biggest B2C
Content Marketing Challenge
Lack of Budget 23%
More B2C marketers than B2B marketers
Producing Enough Content 15% cite lack of budget as their biggest
challenge (23% B2C vs. 14% B2B).
Producing the Kind of Content that Engages 15%
More B2B marketers than B2C marketers
Lack of Knowledge, Training, and Resources 10%
cite producing enough content as their
Inability to Measure Content Effectiveness 8% biggest challenge (29% B2B vs. 15% B2C).
Lack of Buy-in/Vision 8% Nearly the same percentage of B2C and
B2B marketers cite producing the kind of
Lack of Integration Across Marketing 6%
content that engages as their biggest
Producing a Variety of Content 5% challenge (15% B2C vs. 18% B2B).
Finding Trained Content Marketing Professionals 2%
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17. Just 32% of B2C marketers believe they are effective
at content marketing.
How B2C Marketers Rate the
Effectiveness of Their Organization’s
Use of Content Marketing Slightly more B2B marketers (36%)
than B2C marketers (32%) believe
5 Very Effective 7% they are “effective” or “very effective”
4 25% at content marketing (defined as an
answer of 4 or 5 on a scale of 1 to 5).
3 45%
B2C companies with 1,000 employees
2 18% or more rate their organizations as
“effective” or “very effective” more
1 Not At All Effective 2% often than smaller B2C companies do.
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18. Profile of a best-in-class B2C content marketer.
Comparison of Most Effective B2C Content Marketers
with Least Effective B2C Content Marketers
Most Effective Overall/Average Least Effective
Share of marketing budget
allocated to content marketing 40% 28% 17%
Number of tactics used 14 12 8
Number of social platforms used 5 4 3
Plans to increase content marketing
spend next year 49% 55% 59%
Tailor content to profile of
decision maker 46% 45% 30%
Challenged with producing
engaging content 35% 49% 63%
Challenged with lack of buy-in/vision
from higher-ups 14% 21% 33%
2013 B2C Content Marketing Benchmarks–North America: Content Marketing Institute/MarketingProfs
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19. Profile of a best-in-class B2C content marketer.
The most effective B2C content marketers:
Spend a higher percentage of their marketing budget on content marketing
Use more tactics and distribute content on more social networks
Tailor content to specific profiles/personas more frequently
Are far less challenged in terms of producing engaging content
Are less challenged with lack of buy-in/vision from higher-ups
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20. B2C Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends–North America was produced
by Content Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs and sponsored by Pace. The survey was mailed
electronically to a sample of B2C marketers from among members and subscribers of MarketingProfs
and Content Marketing Institute. A total of 354 responded from North American companies in August
2012, representing a full range of industries, functional areas, and company sizes.
B2C Industry Classification Size of B2C Company B2C Job Title/Function
(by Employees) Sales
Administration/Support Website/Technology
Retail Sales/Business Management 2% Programmer
1%
Trade/Distribution Advertising/ Large 2%
10% Marketing (1000+ Employees) Consultant Other
8% Healthcare/Medical/ 22% 3% 6%
Other Pharmaceutical Midsize General
Management
8% (100-999 Micro
41% Employees) (Fewer than 5%
Marketing/Advertising/
19% 10 Employees) Marketing
Administration/Support Communications/PR
7% Travel/Tourism/
Hospitality
34% 9% 34%
Content Creation/
6% Small Management
(10-99 Employees) 10%
4% 6% Banking/Accounting/
Financial 24% Corporate
Management/Owner
5% 5%
Publishing/ 29%
Real Estate Media
Education Insurance
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21. About Content Marketing Institute:
Content Marketing Institute (CMI) is the leading global content marketing education and training organization.
CMI teaches enterprise brands how to attract and retain customers through compelling, multi-channel
storytelling. CMI’s Content Marketing World event is the largest content marketing-focused event. CMI
also produces the quarterly magazine Chief Content Officer, and provides strategic consulting and content
marketing research for some of the best-known brands in the world. Get more content marketing resources at
ContentMarketingInstitute.com. CMI is a division of Z Squared Media, a 2012 Inc. 500 company.
About MarketingProfs:
MarketingProfs is a professional development resource that offers actionable know-how designed to make
you a smarter marketer. More than 423,000 MarketingProfs subscribers rely on us to stay up-to-date on the
most important trends in marketing—from social media and content marketing to lead generation and email
marketing. MarketingProfs delivers enhanced professional development training via online seminars and
short webcasts, in-depth how-to reports, research, interactive planning tools, online courses, and in-person
events. Subscribe to our actionable daily newsletter at MarketingProfs.com.
About Pace:
Pace is a custom content marketing leader, producing multi-channel content that delivers results for a diverse
client base. Our staff of more than 300 professionals consistently produces award-winning work in a variety of
media, including digital, mobile content, social media, magazines, catalogs, books, videos, and e-commerce
solutions. Pace was founded and is owned by Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, the current chair of the American Red
Cross, and is based in Greensboro, NC. For more information, please visit paceco.com,
http://twitter.com/PaceComm, or http://www.linkedin.com/company/pace-communications.
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