Are you publishing content regularly but finding it rarely leads to sales conversations? Is your content team active, but your pipeline unconvinced?
This article is for founders, marketing leads, and sales teams at B2B businesses who want content that actively participates in buying decisions, not content that merely keeps the blog updated.
We'll cover what buyer-intent content is, the Big 5 framework that powers it, and a six-step process you can start this week.
Content that influences buying decisions is educational material, including articles, videos, comparison guides, and pricing pages, published to answer the questions buyers are already asking before they contact your business.
This concept sits within what Google calls the Zero Moment of Truth (ZMOT): the online research phase buyers go through before committing to a purchase. On average, 80% of a purchasing decision is made online before a prospect picks up the phone, a figure backed by Google's own research.
Your content either participates in that decision-making process, or it leaves a gap for a competitor to fill. Content that influences decisions does one specific thing: it reduces the uncertainty buyers feel before they commit.
NOTE: Costs and frameworks in this article apply to founder-led B2B businesses, typically £1m–£20m ($1.25m–$25m) revenue. USD equivalents are rounded throughout. Allow 12–24 months for content ROI to compound meaningfully.
Most business content fails to influence buyers because it is created without a map, produced for volume, brand presence, or internal approval rather than to answer what a buyer needs to know at a specific stage in their journey.
Build a Trusted Brand identifies three recurring content traps:
Any one of these is enough to make a well-written piece invisible to the buyers who matter.
The fix is not more content. It is better-mapped content, built around what buyers are genuinely searching for before they reach your sales team.
The cost of creating buyer-intent content ranges from near-zero for a business with an in-house content manager, to over £180,000 ($225,000) across three years for a managed agency programme.
Agency content retainers typically cost £3,000–£15,000 ($3,750–$18,750) per month, as cited in Build a Trusted Brand. An in-house content manager in the UK typically costs £28,000–£45,000 ($35,000–$56,250) per year (estimated from typical UK market salary benchmarks, 2025).
| Approach | Monthly Cost (GBP) | USD Equivalent | Long-term ownership |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-house team | £2,000–£4,000 ($2,500–$5,000) | $2,500–$5,000 | Full |
| Freelancer | £500–£2,000 ($625–$2,500) | $625–$2,500 | Partial |
| Agency retainer | £3,000–£15,000 ($3,750–$18,750) | $3,750–$18,750 | Low |
A simple ROI check: If your average deal value is £10,000 ($12,500) and buyer-intent content helps close one additional deal per quarter, a £2,000 ($2,500)/month content investment pays for itself in that single quarter. Businesses aligning content to the buyer's journey see 73% higher conversion rates than those that don't.
The Big 5 is a buyer-intent content framework, originating from Marcus Sheridan's Endless Customers System™ and explored in depth in Build a Trusted Brand, that covers the five topics buyers search for most obsessively before making a purchase.
Businesses willing to publish transparent content across all five consistently outrank, outsell, and out-trust their competitors. When Marcus Sheridan published an honest comparison of fiberglass versus concrete pools, admitting his product was not right for everyone, River Pools ranked first in search results for over a dozen comparison phrases and built the trust that would eventually reshape the business entirely.
Additional reading: The Big 5 Questions Every Buyer Wants Answered Before They Buy
Buyer-intent content and brand-awareness content serve different purposes: brand awareness builds recognition at the top of the funnel, while buyer-intent content participates in the decision-making process where purchases are actually made.
| Buyer-intent content | Brand-awareness content | |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Reduce purchase uncertainty | Build recognition |
| Funnel stage | Middle and bottom | Top of funnel |
| Typical format | Cost guides, comparisons, FAQs | Social posts, thought leadership |
| Conversion impact | High | Low |
Most businesses dramatically over-invest in brand awareness and under-invest in the comparison and problem-focused content buyers search for right before they reach out. Both types have a role. The ratio matters.
The content formats most effective at influencing buying decisions are those that directly answer a buyer's active research question, reducing uncertainty before any sales conversation begins.
In order of conversion influence:
River Pools and Spas grew from 20,000 to over 600,000 monthly website visitors by publishing honest content across all five Big 5 categories. Their sales efficiency improved substantially: they needed only 120 appointments to sell 95 pools, compared to 250 appointments to sell 75 pools previously, because buyers arrived already educated and already trusting. This data comes from the River Pools case study as documented in Build a Trusted Brand, drawing on Marcus Sheridan's first-hand account of the business's growth.
Creating content that influences buying decisions requires six steps: audit what you have, identify Big 5 gaps, map content to funnel stages, produce in order of conversion impact, integrate with sales, and measure.
The most overlooked step is step five. Assignment Selling is what turns buyer-intent content from a marketing asset into an active sales tool, and it's the single biggest lever for compressing the time between first contact and closed deal.
Additional reading: Why Every Sales Conversation Should Start With a Blog Post (Assignment Selling Explained)
Early impact is possible within 90 days if content is integrated into the sales process immediately. Organic search and inbound results typically take 12–24 months to compound. Research cited in Build a Trusted Brand suggests becoming a recognised authority in your space often takes around 30 months of consistent, structured publishing.
Publishing for brand presence rather than buyer questions. The content that converts is the content that directly answers what a buyer is searching for today, not the content that reflects well on your brand internally.
Track which pages are viewed by contacts before they convert to a deal. If your pricing page and comparison articles are being read by leads who go on to close, they are doing exactly what buyer-intent content should do. HubSpot's contact activity timeline makes this easy to measure.
You came here because your content isn't converting, because you're publishing regularly and still not seeing it move the pipeline.
You now have a clearer picture of why that happens, and what to do about it.
The buyers you want are already researching. 80% of their decision is formed before they speak to you, and the Big 5 framework, combined with a content map and Assignment Selling, gives you a system to be part of that decision rather than absent from it.
What remains is the decision to publish honestly, on cost, problems, and comparisons, where most of your competitors still will not.
If you want help building this system into your sales process, book a scoping call to talk through where your content gaps sit.
The Big 5 Questions Every Buyer Wants Answered Before They Buy
Why Every Sales Conversation Should Start With a Blog Post (Assignment Selling Explained)
Mapping Content to Buyer Intent: A Playbook for Modern Marketers
Tom Wardman is a fractional marketing consultant, author of Build a Trusted Brand, and one of the UK's first five certified coaches in the Endless Customers methodology, trained directly under Marcus Sheridan. Tom works with founder-led B2B businesses to replace agency dependency with self-sufficient growth systems built around content that earns buyer trust before the first sales conversation.
Pricing disclaimer: All GBP–USD price conversions are rounded estimates and correct at the time of publishing. Exchange rates fluctuate and figures should be treated as indicative only.