According to Forrester, 74% of B2B buyers research online before speaking with a supplier. This shift has reshaped demand generation. If you are not in buyers’ minds, and in search results, you do not exist. In manufacturing, this means publishing deep, technical, high-quality content in multiple formats: downloadable spec sheets, tutorial videos, interactive calculators, product comparisons, industry-specific white papers, all backed by solid technical SEO.
Industrial marketers do not just deal with long sales cycles. They must also sync multiple product data sources (ERP, spreadsheets, suppliers), ensure cross-channel consistency, manage regional and local variations, and support decision-making for both technical and non-technical buyers.
Most manufacturers still use spreadsheets as the primary system for managing product information. That makes scaling the business far more difficult. Tools like a PIM for manufacturers centralize all data, enrich content, and distribute it easily to the website, ecommerce, distributors, and marketplaces.
If you still manage product information in Excel, start by identifying fields that are repetitive, error-prone, or incomplete, and estimate how many hours are lost on weekly maintenance. That number will help you build a case for investing in systems like a PIM.
Now let’s dive into how to strengthen your company’s digital marketing. Use this complete guide to apply it to your context, see what is working, and spot areas to improve.
Let’s start with SEO, a term you have heard many times. Marketers should work with engineering or technical support to gather specific terminology, industrial synonyms, and the queries customers actually use. The most powerful approach is to create evergreen content based on technical specifications, industry standards, and real use cases.
Our suggestion: create “by industry application” pages or “solutions by need” that group products contextually, not just by category. Example: “Automation systems for bottling lines” instead of just “industrial PLCs.” Another way to improve SEO is to group products on landing pages by customer type: “Solutions for agricultural OEMs” or “Components for industrial maintenance in chemical plants.” These groupings improve SEO and personalize the user experience.
Recommended tool: use Ahrefs or Semrush to identify relevant keywords for your sector. Make sure your product pages target those keywords.
The biggest mistake in industrial PPC is using generic keywords with broad context, such as “valves” or “hydraulic filters”, that lack clear intent. Instead, focus on hyper-specific long-tail terms like “ISO 15552 stainless steel pneumatic valve” or “Bosch Rexroth replacement hydraulic filter.”
We suggest: run branded-search campaigns to protect your brand from distributors bidding on your name. Also run campaigns only for your most profitable SKUs or flagship products that wedge into the market and attract prospects who can then discover the rest of your portfolio.
Recommended tool: use Google Ads Keyword Planner plus advanced conversion filters to identify products that generate not just clicks but contact requests or technical downloads.
Many potential customers check LinkedIn weekly and consume technical content on YouTube. You do not need memes or virality. You need authority. Build authority by publishing micro-case series, behind-the-product content (how X is made), and interviews with your R&D team. It may be costly, but it is worth it to stay top of mind in your sector.
We recommend: turn internal technical presentations into educational LinkedIn carousels. Share quick phone-shot videos showing how your products work and upload them to YouTube to boost your Google presence. Always include calls to action such as “Request the full spec sheet” or “Request a product demo”. This lets you repurpose existing work into digital content.
Recommended reading: Social Media Marketing for Manufacturing Companies
In manufacturing, email marketing should be hyper-segmented by industry, application, geography, and buyer type (technical versus purchasing). Why? Because the same product can interest a maintenance engineer in Germany and a logistics buyer in Mexico, yet their needs, language, and timing are completely different. By tailoring emails to these nuances, you raise open rates, click-throughs, and, most importantly, conversions, which is the ultimate goal.
Recommended tools: ActiveCampaign or HubSpot can help with this segmentation and save you many hours. You can also use PDF trackers like DocSend to see engagement with spec sheets or catalogs.
One of the most common pitfalls in industrial B2B marketing is setting vague goals such as “We want more website traffic” or “We need greater visibility.” These goals are subjective and hard to measure when assessing whether a strategy worked in a given time period. Instead, goals should be very specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-bound, for example a quarter or a year. This way, once that period ends, it is much easier to assess results and decide whether to adjust the strategy going forward.
Here are a few specific examples to make this concrete:
Defining specific goals not only guides the strategy, it also helps evaluate which tactics work and justify future investments to leadership or sales.
In industrial markets, a single product can have up to five buyer personas: engineering, procurement, maintenance, quality, and management. Each needs different arguments.
We recommend: build a content map by buying stage and role. Use tables in tools like Figma to plot it visually and detect content gaps.
Technical content does not have to be boring. You can use:
Recommended reading: Unlocking B2B Conversions with Content Your Buyers Actually Need
We recommend: create “distributor content templates” so partners can replicate your campaigns locally with editable copy, images, and videos.
Do not rely only on Google Analytics. Use tools that reveal what happens to your target users when they visit your site. For example:
All the work above will not help if your website does not function properly or is not optimized. Your site is like the trusted neighborhood store. It should work as a sales tool and a technical self-service. That means enabling filtering by specifications, not just categories, search that recognizes product codes, and bulk downloads such as ZIPs of images or PDF spec sheets.
Also remember your website must fit complex industrial contexts. Users are not impulse buyers, they are technicians, engineers, or professional buyers who need fast access to specifications, documents, and features that ease decision-making with the most user-friendly interface possible in a world full of technical specs.
So where should you start?
Ask yourself these five questions to check if your site serves industrial buyers well:
If your site checks these five boxes, you have a solid start to scale the business in the right direction.
To get there more easily, we recommend these tools:
In short, in an ideal setup, your website should be:
Many technicians search on mobile while on the shop floor or during customer visits. Make sure your spec sheets can be read, downloaded, and shared easily from any device.
No analizar comportamiento por SKU es desperdiciar información clave. Cruza datos de buscador interno + páginas visitadas + clics en PDF para entender qué información falta o está mal estructurada.
Technical branding is not just a logo. It is the format of your spec sheets, the tone of your emails, and the visual style of your catalogs and templates. It may seem minor, but a coherent, attractive brand environment can tip the balance in your favor. Consistency signals professionalism and reduces friction in decision-making.
With everything above, it is time to put it into practice. Here is a quick checklist to get started now.
This approach can unlock real growth in your digital channels, improve internal efficiency, and above all help you sell more with less friction.