The role of content in B2B is changing
The role of content in B2B has shifted significantly in recent years. Content is no longer merely a communication tool or supporting material for campaigns. At the same time, many companies face uncertainty at this exact point: the effort appears high, the impact difficult to measure, and the benefits often diffused across marketing, PR, sales, and digital channels.
Yet the market reality is clearly evolving. When personal contacts are no longer sufficient, markets become more fragmented, and decision-making processes begin earlier, content moves to the center. Not as an isolated measure, but as a connecting element — between topics and markets, between strategic PR work, digital channels, and the website, between visibility and demand.
In practice, content marketing rarely fails due to a lack of production. Content is created. What is often missing is a clear understanding of the role content should play within the overall system — and how it generates impact over time.
As a content marketing agency, we do not see content as a standalone discipline, but as a strategic lever within the interplay of PR, website, and digital visibility. Content is planned, prioritized, and editorially refined to provide orientation, build thematic authority, and support decision-making processes. To remain effective, it is consistently developed in alignment with website structure, SEO, and AI-driven search systems. Not for short-term effect — but for sustainable impact.
Clarifying the role of content
If you are considering what role content should play in your organization going forward — whether for relevance, thought leadership, or demand generation — an early alignment can be valuable.
Structured, non-binding, and tailored to your specific starting point.

Rafael Rahn
Between topics, markets, and decisions
The function of content in B2B
Building Relevance. Preparing Decisions
When content is meant to provide orientation
Thought leadership and issue management
Leading topics instead of delivering content
Language, style, and thematic depth
Editorial expertise in B2B content marketing
Platforms, channels, and formats
How content is deployed


From strategic framing to ongoing execution
How content is set up strategically
Typical Starting Points and Strategic Questions
When Content Marketing Is Meaningfully Applied
Positioning content strategically
If you are considering what role content should play in the future — for relevance, thought leadership, or demand generation — a structured exchange can be valuable.
Non-binding, tailored to your specific starting point, and without premature recommendations.

Rafael Rahn
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
About content marketing
We understand content marketing as the strategic use of content to build relevance and provide orientation in complex B2B environments. The focus is not on individual formats or channels, but on topics that are structured, contextualized, and developed over time. Content plays a central role within the interplay of communication, website strategy, and digital visibility.
Many content agencies operate primarily in a production-driven way. Our approach begins earlier. We first clarify the role content should play within the overall system of the company and then assume editorial responsibility for topics, structure, and quality. Content is not created in isolation, but as part of a strategic communication and impact framework.
Content marketing is especially valuable where markets are explanation-intensive, topics are evolving, or decision-making processes are complex. Typical examples include B2B companies with longer decision cycles, new technologies, regulatory frameworks, or the ambition to build thought leadership. It is less suitable for purely short-term activation objectives.
Thought leadership is not an end in itself, but the result of consistent editorial work. It emerges when companies identify relevant topics early, contextualize them, and accompany them over time. Content marketing provides the substantive foundation, while PR ensures context and reach. What matters is not volume, but substance and continuity.
Discoverability is a prerequisite for impact. Content must be visible where information and decision processes begin — through traditional search engines as well as AI-driven search systems. The key factors are not technical optimization alone, but clear content structure, thematic consistency, and editorial quality.
AI supports content work in meaningful ways, such as research, structuring, or generating variations. However, editorial responsibility remains with people. Especially for new, complex, or reputation-sensitive topics, linguistic expertise, stylistic precision, and market understanding are essential. High-quality foundational texts are still best developed by experienced editors.
Collaboration begins with a shared assessment: What role should content play, which topics are relevant, and what objectives are central? Based on this, we develop a thematic structure and assume editorial responsibility for implementation. Content is continuously developed and integrated with website strategy, PR, and digital visibility.
Content marketing is not a short-term instrument. Initial effects — such as clearer topic positioning or improved discoverability — often become visible relatively early. Sustainable impact, such as thematic authority, trust, or higher-quality demand, develops over time. The decisive factor is the willingness to build and evolve content consistently.
A conversation is worthwhile when content is expected to play a more significant role — for example in the context of new topics, strategic changes, or the desire for clearer positioning. The aim is not to provide a quick solution, but to assess realistically whether and how content marketing can be meaningfully applied in your specific situation.