Win minds before
buyers raise hands
The big shift is this: TOFU is no longer mainly about "awareness." It is about shaping buyer preference before a buyer is ready to talk to sales. The teams that win in 2026/2027 will look less like blog factories and more like a hybrid of newsroom, studio, and measurement lab.
"The most important content moment is not when a buyer reaches out. It is the six months before they do."
CMI's top performers attribute their success to a clear set of factors. Here's how they rank:
The five strategic rules
Create recall, trust, and internal advocacy among buyers who are not ready to convert yet.
Long-form creates conviction. Short-form creates discovery. Written assets create retrieval.
The most valuable clip is often the one pasted into Slack, WhatsApp, or a buying-committee deck - not the one with the most likes.
In 2026/2027, the host is the trust interface between brand and buyer - not just talent.
Perfect attribution is fantasy. Decision-grade attribution is enough. Build for probabilistic measurement from the start.
Video is no longer
a supporting asset
HubSpot's 2026 data is unambiguous: the three highest-ROI content formats are all video-based. YouTube now reports over 700 million hours of podcast content watched on living-room devices in October 2025. The flagship content asset for 2026/2027 should be a video podcast or episodic show.
The four-layer content system
One flagship episode should systematically generate content across all four layers. This is not a content calendar - it is a production system.
The anchor asset - full depth, full conviction, full story
Conversion & nurture layer - 5-30 min videos average a 10% conversion rate (Wistia)
Discovery & dark-social forwarding - Under-1-min videos average 50% engagement (Wistia)
Search, AI retrieval & internal shareability
Design for parasocial
connection deliberately
Parasocial trust is not fluff. It is a demand-creation mechanism. Spotify's data makes the case plainly:
| Principle | What it means in practice | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Recurring hosts | One or two consistent hosts, not a parade of interchangeable spokespeople | Trust compounds with familiarity |
| Host has a real job | Translate complexity, frame stakes, ask the question the buyer is already asking | Competence + relatability = credibility |
| Human texture | Let the host show working, uncertainty, judgment, lived experience | Over-scripted brand content kills trust |
| Recognisable rituals | Recurring segments, repeated opening questions, "what's everyone getting wrong" | Repetition makes the show easy to remember and forward |
| Protect the relationship | No forced sponsor logic, no bait-and-switch hooks, no synthetic "thought leadership voice" | Parasocial trust compounds slowly - and collapses quickly |
Top-of-funnel that
actually moves revenue
High-performing TOFU is not generic educational content. It is content that helps the buyer group see the problem, explain the stakes internally, and justify a direction.
What hidden buyers care about at final vendor selection
The TOFU format portfolio
Content that explains why the old mental model is broken. This is how you create "why change."
Episodes and articles that explain what finance, security, ops, or procurement will care about. Arms champions for internal conversations.
Break down why launches fail, why attribution breaks, why implementations stall. Diagnose before you prescribe.
Original data gives buyers language, numbers, and charts they can reuse in internal decks. Earns search ranking as a bonus.
Two smart people disagree respectfully. Content that generates saves, forwards, and internal discussion.
"How leaders should evaluate X in 2026." Feels like TOFU, secretly a sales acceleration asset. Write it for internal forwarding.
If the content doesn't give the buyer something they can reuse internally, it's probably not revenue-grade TOFU yet.
What dark social is
and why it matters
Dark social is what happens when your content moves through private or referrer-obscured spaces: WhatsApp, Slack, Teams, DMs, text messages, forwarded emails, copied links, and internal docs.
Six ways to make dark social measurable
| Tactic | Implementation | What it tells you |
|---|---|---|
| UTM taxonomy | Episode-, guest-, and host-specific URLs with pre-tagged share buttons | Where private shares originate |
| Deep landing pages | Link to specific episode pages, not homepage. Long slugs make "direct" traffic diagnostic | Spikes in direct = dark-social movement |
| Self-reported attribution | "Where did you first hear about us?" - include podcast, colleague, forwarded link options | What your analytics can't see |
| Sales involvement | "How did this account hear about us?" as a required CRM field | Content touches invisible to marketing |
| Dark-social proxies | Branded search lift after episode drops, copy-link click volume, clip-to-site visit rate | Directional signal of private sharing |
| Cohort & lift analysis | Exposed vs. unexposed accounts: compare meeting rate, win rate, cycle length, ACV | TOFU's financial legibility |
Deterministic where possible. Probabilistic where necessary. Commercial at the end.
The four-layer
measurement scorecard
Your scorecard should move from attention quality all the way to revenue impact. Never report impressions, views, and MQLs in a vacuum and call that content ROI.
- →Watch time & average % viewed
- →Consumption hours
- →Completion rate
- →Returning viewers
- →Live watch behaviour
- →Follower / subscriber growth
- →Repeat viewers
- →Newsletter opt-ins
- →Comments, saves, audience participation
- →Episode-to-episode retention
- →Direct deep-link ratio
- →Branded search lift
- →Self-reported mentions
- →Episode-assist rate in CRM
- →Copy-link click volume
- →Opportunity creation (influenced)
- →Exposed-account win rate lift
- →Sales-cycle compression
- →ACV delta: exposed vs. unexposed
- →Influenced pipeline per content pillar
Advanced KPI stack
| KPI | Scorecard Layer | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Return viewer rate | Attention + Relationship | Proxy for audience loyalty and future consumption |
| Follower / subscriber growth | Relationship | Spotify: followers consume 4× more episodes than non-followers |
| Direct deep-link ratio | Dark Funnel | Reveals private sharing behaviour that GA hides |
| Self-reported source % | Dark Funnel | Captures influence your attribution stack cannot see |
| Episode mention rate in CRM | Dark Funnel + Revenue | Links specific content to specific accounts |
| Exposed account meeting-rate lift | Revenue | Shows whether content improves sales access |
| Exposed account win-rate lift | Revenue | The most commercially credible TOFU metric |
| Influenced pipeline per pillar | Revenue | Informs content investment allocation |
The studio with
revenue ops attached
Wistia says over 40% of companies create at least one video per week, almost 60% are increasing video budgets, and 71% now handle video production in-house. CMI says 45% of B2B marketers still lack a scalable model for content creation. That gap is your opportunity.
Minimum viable team
| Role | Core responsibility | Key output |
|---|---|---|
| Editorial Lead / Showrunner | Owns the show thesis, editorial calendar, and guest selection | Narrative coherence, production rhythm |
| Host or Host Pair | Creates intimacy, credibility, and emotional recall | Trust interface with the audience |
| Producer-Editor | Records, edits, clips - runs the production system | Full episode + all derivative formats |
| Distribution Lead | Manages publication, scheduling, platform optimisation | Multi-platform reach and consistency |
| Designer / Motion | Thumbnails, captions, graphics, short-form visual identity | Scroll-stopping visual assets |
| Marketing Ops / Analytics | UTM architecture, attribution, scorecard, CRM integration | Dark-social visibility + pipeline reporting |
| Sales Liaison | Trains reps on clip usage, feeds back CRM mentions | Content reach into active sales conversations |
AI: right use cases vs. wrong use cases
- ✓ Transcript cleanup and chaptering
- ✓ Title and headline variants
- ✓ Clip selection suggestions
- ✓ Metadata, captions, translation
- ✓ Repurposing drafts from episode summaries
- ✓ Research clustering
- ✕ Outsourcing your point of view
- ✕ Manufacturing originality at scale
- ✕ Replacing host voice with synthetic tone
- ✕ Publishing unreviewed AI copy as thought leadership
The 90-day rollout
- Define ICP, buying jobs, hidden buyers, show thesis, host roles
- Build the measurement framework
- Lock UTM taxonomy and self-reported attribution questions before publishing anything
- Record four to six episodes before launch
- Build template systems: full episodes, segment cuts, shorts, articles, thumbnails, captions, sales one-pagers
- Train sales on how to use clips in outreach and follow-up
- Launch in batches, not as one-off hero content
- Watch for direct traffic to deep pages, branded search movement, self-reported mentions, repeat viewers
- Double down on themes that get forwarded privately - not just publicly applauded
Content that drives sales looks like trust media.
Strong point of view. Strong host. Strong long-form core. Aggressive short-form distribution. Low-friction private sharing. Measurement built for imperfect visibility. The teams that accept that reality earlier will beat the teams still trying to force every buying journey into last-click analytics.
Content Marketing Playbook 2026/2027 — Sources: Edelman, Gartner, HubSpot, CMI, Wistia, Spotify, YouTube, SparkToro, Edison Research, LinkedIn