Content That Converts: 3 Proven Ways to Create It
Most B2B companies publish content regularly. Very few create content their audience actually reads — let alone acts on. Here's what separates content that converts from content that collects dust.
Why Most B2B Content Fails to Convert
Here's the uncomfortable truth: 60–70% of B2B content goes completely unused, according to SiriusDecisions research. Your team creates it. Nobody reads it. It generates zero leads.
The problem isn't volume. It's relevance. Most B2B content talks about what the company does rather than what the reader needs. That's the gap — and closing it is simpler than you think.
Content that converts — content that actually drives qualified traffic and leads — follows three principles. We've used them to help clients achieve results like a 300% increase in organic traffic within 12 months. Here's exactly how they work.
Tip 1: Start With Your Reader's Problem, Not Your Product
The single most effective change you can make to your content is this: open with the reader's frustration, not your credentials.
Your audience already knows they have a problem. They're searching for answers, not vendors. If the first thing they see is "We are a leading provider of…" they'll bounce within seconds.
Example: Instead of "Our platform offers advanced analytics capabilities," write "You're spending hours pulling reports, but your board still can't see which channels actually drive revenue." The second version acknowledges their pain. It earns the next scroll.
This approach also aligns with GEO — Generative Engine Optimisation — which focuses on structuring content so AI search engines like ChatGPT and Perplexity can cite it. AI tools favour content that answers specific questions directly. Start with the problem, deliver the answer, then expand.
Tip 2: Structure Content for Humans and AI Search Engines
Your content needs to work for two audiences simultaneously: the human reader scanning for value and the AI engine deciding whether to cite you.
For human readers, this means clear H2 headings, short paragraphs (two to four sentences maximum) and one idea per section. Research from the Nielsen Norman Group shows users read only 20–28% of text on a web page. Make every word earn its place.
For AI search engines, structure matters even more. Use semantic headings that answer specific questions. Place your most important insight at the top of each section — the "answer first" approach. This signals to both Google and AI-powered engines that your content deserves a prominent citation.
Example: A heading like "How to Create B2B Content That Converts" is far more useful than "Our Approach to Content." The first version matches what real people type into search bars. The second tells them nothing.
E-E-A-T — Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness and Trustworthiness — remains Google's quality framework. But it matters for AI search too. Content that demonstrates first-hand experience and backs claims with data earns more citations across both channels.
Tip 3: Back Every Claim With Specific Numbers
Vague claims kill credibility. "We deliver great results" means nothing. "We helped a B2B technology firm increase organic traffic by 300% and generate 400% more sales-qualified leads in 12 months" means everything.
Numbers work because they're concrete. They let your reader assess whether your results are relevant to their situation. And they give AI search engines something quotable — a data point worth citing.
According to recent content marketing research, B2B organisations that document their content strategy are 3x more likely to report success than those that don't. That's not a feel-good statistic. It's a strategic advantage.
Example: Compare these two sentences:
- "Content marketing delivers long-term value for your brand."
- "Content we created 18 months ago still generates 40% of this client's monthly qualified leads."
The second version is specific, credible and useful. It gives the reader a reason to keep reading — and a reason to get in touch.
What Content That Converts Actually Looks Like
Every piece of high-performing B2B content shares these characteristics:
- It solves a specific problem — not a vague category, but one frustration the reader faces this week.
- It's structured for scanning — clear headings, short paragraphs, bold key points. Nobody reads a wall of text.
- It proves its claims — with numbers, named outcomes or concrete examples. No hollow superlatives.
- It's built for longevity — content written today should still drive qualified traffic 18 months from now. That means writing for enduring questions, not trending news cycles.
If you're publishing regularly but not seeing results, the issue isn't effort. It's approach. The three techniques above — leading with the reader's problem, structuring for both humans and AI and backing every claim with evidence — are the foundation of content that actually converts.