3 Must-Haves for Effective B2B Thought Leadership Articles
How to Distinguish Thought Leadership from Other Forms of B2B Writing
Force #1. A changing energy economy
Force #2. Increasing complexity and inconsistency
Force #3. Proliferation of data
Force #4. The drive to improve operational efficiency.
Occasionally, I will expand on one of the points. Here’s an example using force #2.
Energy execs are signaling that complexity in the industry today and where it is headed by mid-century cannot be managed with status quo thinking or a patchwork of manual and digital processes. If one of the following characteristics is present, your organization is most likely being held back by complexity.
The previous sentence has obligated me to identify the characteristics of complexity, which I do in short, successive paragraphs of about 50 words each.
Energy companies in North America are looking for something more than operational productivity. They are seeking operational flexibility. The ability to rapidly scale to accommodate growth and leverage demand, plus the ability to protect margins with digital efficiencies in an over-supplied market. Senior management is turning to the CFO for leadership of digital initiatives.
Ask a hundred writers, and you’ll get a hundred different ways to write a B2B thought leadership article. This is my approach. I hope you find it usefu
Memo to the CFO: McKinsey & Company, July 2018