#B2BMX Day 2: Keynote Speakers Reveal the New Keys to Content Marketing Greatness

Day 2 of B2BMX featured three keynote addresses, all jam-packed with invaluable insights and tactical takeaways to support B2B marketing and sales teams. Demand Gen Report pinpointed five breakout quotes from these sessions and explored their alignment to recurring themes and pain points.
“Millennials are the new decision-makers.”
– Neil Patel, NP Digital
During his keynote, Patel, who is Co-founder of NP Digital, detailed his blueprint for transforming B2B challenges into opportunities for growth.
Among key findings and takeaways, Patel emphasized that Millennials have a particular affinity for webinars as compared to Gen X and Z. In fact, webinars are among the top-converting content types, along with white papers and case studies. At a time when many marketers are pondering the future of the format, Patel reaffirmed that these virtual sessions are here to stay.
“The reason you’re not breaking through is because you’re trying to DO what [those companies] DO. When you should be THINKING how they THINK.”
– Lindsay Tjepkema, Casted
Lindsay Tjepkema, Founder of the podcasting platform Casted, shared her B.R.A.V.E framework with the audience during her keynote, “The Difference Is BRAVE: The Mindset Of Breaking Through.”
Tjepkema explained that brands such as Salesforce, Apple and HubSpot break barriers and build bridges — not by following others’ playbooks but by creating their own. And to reach their legendary status, teams need to make hundreds of tiny brave decisions over time.
“I know that you are here already hearing a lot about AI.”
– Phyllis Davidson, Forrester
Yes, it seemed like every session touched on what AI can do and what it is capable of doing. Speakers throughout Day 2 in particular explored how different teams and functions currently use AI, whether these applications meet expectations and how organizations can develop internal controls and processes to ensure success.
To that end, Forrester’s VP and Principal Analyst Phyllis Davidson stressed how to navigate the overlaps in technology categories and capabilities to build and support a sound content architecture, while Patel shared three keys to implementing AI successfully within a business:
- Make a strategic plan
- Focus on one or two applications where AI can really move the needle
- Pay attention to existing tools that may have recently added AI capabilities
“We’ve certainly made some good headway with AI in terms of applying AI across this lifecycle, but I would venture to say it’s relatively siloed.”
– Phyllis Davidson, Forrester
Davidson has seen the impact of AI firsthand, largely in marketers’ quest to amplify the value of content and enable personalization at scale. Many B2BMX sessions (including Davidson’s) pointed to AI as a vehicle to ramp up content creation without increasing budget or investing in more headcount.
Davidson encouraged attendees to take a hard look at the entire content lifecycle and identify ways to transform this engine using AI. She explained how AI can enable new workstreams and also facilitate certain stages of the content lifestyle, whether it be planning, ideation, creation or amplification. Essentially, the transformation of these workstreams serves as a foundation for a personalization roadmap that traverses the content lifecycle.
“Collaboration is crucial. Break down silos between IT, marketing and business units for unified goals.”
– Neil Patel, NP Digital
A common theme in all three presentations was that sales, marketing and other key departments need to work together to reach organizational goals.
“Without brand alignment, it might be spectacular, but it won’t translate to business,” explained Tjepkema. “It’s what happens to a lot of brand podcasts that are amazing, but no one knows the brand was behind it.”
To that end, Davidson talked about how AI agents are connecting these parts of the content lifecycle. “My hope is we’ll overcome the siloed approach we’re using today,” she said.
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