Lâarticolo del 22 Giugno â22su MarketingWeek, scritto da Charlotte Rogers, sintetizza i punti salienti dellâultima ricerca di Ehrenberg-Bass e The B2B Institute di LinkedIn, i piĂč bravi oggi a dare un connotato e un metodo scientifico alla materia del marketing: âCollegare i messaggi dei Brand alle situazioni di acquisto Ăš il modo per conquistare "la mente e il mercato". Sulla base del presupposto che "i ricordi generano vendite", la ricerca esorta i player B2B a investire su campagne capaci di costurire ricordi del Brand legati ai momenti di considerazione dellâacquisto.
Linking brand messages to key buying situations can increase customer acquisition and retention, proving the âaccountabilityâ of B2B brand marketing, according to new research from the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
Collaborating with LinkedInâs B2B Institute, the research suggests brand messaging can become fully customer-centric by focusing on category entry points, the cues customers use to access memories when faced with a buying situation. These cues are both internal, such as motives and emotions, and external, including location and time of day.
âCategory entry points are not about the brand, theyâre about the buyer,â the reportâs author Professor Jenni Romaniuk, associate director (international) at the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, tells Marketing Week.
âThatâs what makes them important to understand separately from your brand. You canât look at your brand and see category entry points, you have to go outside of it.â
The research urges marketers to identify and prioritise the category entry points that matter in their sector, and which their product can serve, linking their brand to category entry points through clear messaging.
âWe are aiming for wider, fresher networks and I canât say that enough. It is contrary to how weâre brought up to believe branding works. Itâs contrary to this idea of positioning, finding that one thing you can own to be different from everybody,â Romaniuk explains.
âItâs about saying: âThereâs lots of different ways people come into a category, we want to be behind as many of those doors as possible.â Thatâs the probability game that comes in with this thatâs different from everything.â
Whatâs really important in marketing is not bottom of funnel, lead generation clicks. Itâs top of funnel, brand building memory.Jon Lombardo, LinkedIn B2B Institute
The research reveals the pay-off for B2B marketers adopting this approach could be considerable. Analysis of the US insurance sector found the fewer category entry points a customer links to a brand or company, the greater their likelihood of switching to another brand.
Regression modelling across 17 products suggests, for this sector, each additional category entry point a customer links to a brand in their memory lowers the probability of defection by 5%.
âThat single number alone is worth billions of dollars in marketing value,â says Jon Lombardo, global head of research at LinkedInâs B2B Institute.
The research ties messaging and memory to money, he states, which is âcompletely differentâ to the current obsession with clicks. Lombardo suggests Google gets all the credit for a purchase within the industry, with marketers forgetting the âmost important search engineâ is your brain.
âItâs your memory that got you to Google in the first place and your memory is going to pull strong brands. Strong brands are not built on clicks, but on memories. The other thing thatâs very interesting is even when people go to Google and click for something, buyers show a bias for the brands they already know,â he notes.
âThis is in some sense the double benefit of brand. Itâs more likely to come to mind and even if you do click, youâre still going to click on the strongest brand. It explains whatâs really important in marketing is not bottom of funnel, lead generation clicks. Itâs top of funnel, brand building memory. Thatâs the fundamental idea.â

An analysis of CEPs in the US insurance sector. Source: Ehrenberg-Bass Institute/LinkedIn B2B Institute
However, Lombardo admits the practice of building memory structures via a thorough understanding of category entry points is far from widespread among B2B marketers.
âOne of the primary things people misunderstand is how advertising works. People think they just put an ad in front of you and you immediately buy. Thatâs not how it works. Generally, you donât generate any sale from an ad, what you do is generate a memory and then at some point later they consult their memory,â he adds.
âMemories generate sales, clicks donât generate sales is the very simple way you might put it.â
Head of development at the B2B Institute, Peter Weinberg, suggests the way B2B marketers think about their brand today is either to focus on raising awareness of a specific product solution or link it to âfluffy perceptual attributesâ like innovation or friendliness. He describes this new research as offering a âdifferent paradigmâ.
âItâs about linking brand to a customer need in a buying situation. I donât think B2B marketers are really setting those kind of objectives today. Itâs either very product oriented, or itâs very perception oriented. Itâs not oriented around a buying situation,â Weinberg argues.


