Your situation

The leads are there, the deals aren't closing

A long sales cycle is a messaging problem in disguise.

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Trusted by sales and marketing teams at leading companies

Meta Google Cloud Google Workspace Perk Usercentrics Imeld.ai DataGuard EY
Pipeline from nurture copy rebuilt around real buying drivers
4mo+
Average B2B sales cycle when messaging doesn't do enough of the work
81%
Of B2B buyers have a preferred vendor before they talk to sales

Long cycles are painful. They're expensive. They suck.

Every extra month in the pipeline is headcount, budget and board pressure you don't need. And the fix is usually clearer messaging at the right moment.

Leads that ghost you after the first conversation

The meeting went well. The follow-up landed. Then nothing. The prospect is still in there somewhere, they just need something that keeps them moving. The content you sent them isn't doing that job.

Multi-stakeholder deals with no shared narrative

The champion loves it but the CFO has questions. Legal wants a totally different angle. You're selling to five people with five different priorities and the content wasn't really built for any of them.

Case studies that don't match your buyer

You've got proof, it's just not the right proof. The outcomes aren't relevant, the industry doesn't match, and the story doesn't connect with the person reading it.

Nurture that nurtures nobody

Emails going out. Metrics look fine. Nothing's happening. The sequence was built around what you wanted to say, not what a buyer needs to hear.

Most long sales cycles are won or lost between conversations

By the time a buyer talks to sales, 81% already have a preferred vendor. The content they've seen before that conversation is doing the selling. And if it isn't working hard enough, the cycle gets longer.

How I fix it

Content that does the selling between conversations

Built for how complex B2B deals move. Which is rarely how the campaign calendar works.

i

Nurture that moves deals forward

Role-specific email sequences built around the questions buyers really ask at that stage. Designed to keep the right people warm and move the hesitant ones closer, one conversation at a time.

Rebuilt nurture programmes for enterprise tech teams that doubled pipeline by getting the message right for each stakeholder at each stage of the cycle.
ii

Case studies built for the conversation

Proof structured around the outcomes that matter to the next buyer. Specific enough to be credible. Flexible enough to work across industries and stakeholder types.

Developed for enterprise audiences where the buying committee is large and credibility is the deciding factor. Price and features come later.
iii

Multi-stakeholder collateral

Different people. Different priorities. One consistent story told in the right language for each. Pitch decks, one-pagers and executive summaries that speak to the CFO as clearly as they do to the champion.

Built for complex, multi-stakeholder buying processes across security, AI infrastructure and HR technology where the decision rarely sits with one person.

Applied in practice

If the pipeline's moving too slowly, here's where we usually start.

i

Nurture sequence rewrites

Role-specific, stage-aware email flows that keep the right people engaged between conversations.

ii

Case studies and proof content

Evidence structured around buying criteria. Built to travel inside a deal and hold up in front of a committee.

iii

Executive one-pagers

Short, sharp, stakeholder-specific. The CFO version. The IT version. The one that goes to legal.

iv

Pitch deck copy

Words that work without the presenter in the room. Because sometimes that's exactly what happens.

v

ICP and persona messaging

Getting clear on who's in the room and what each of them needs to hear before writing a word.

vi

Campaign-to-close content

A connected content system that carries a consistent story from first touch to signed contract.

Who does this

Hi. I'm Mike.

I've spent a decade writing for organisations where the buying process was long, the committee was large and the margin for vague messaging was zero. Meta. Google Cloud. Enterprise security, AI infrastructure, HR tech.

I know where deals stall. Usually somewhere between the champion saying yes and everyone else needing convincing. The right content at the right moment changes that.

More about me
Mike Sharkey, B2B Copywriter
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From the B2Blog

Make your content move deals forward.

If the pipeline's slow, the messaging is usually why. Let's find out.

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Frequently asked questions

On long sales cycles and messaging

Why is my B2B sales cycle so long?

Most long B2B sales cycles aren't a sales problem — they're a messaging problem. When content doesn't speak to each stakeholder's specific concerns, deals stall between conversations. The buying committee keeps growing while the content stays generic.

How does content affect sales cycle length?

81% of B2B buyers have a preferred vendor before they talk to sales. The content they've seen before that conversation does the selling. If it isn't specific enough, credible enough or relevant enough, the cycle gets longer every time.

Why isn't our nurture content moving deals forward?

Nurture content fails when it's built around what you want to say rather than what a buyer needs to hear at each stage. Role-specific sequences — built around the real questions a CFO, champion or legal team actually asks — move deals. Generic sequences don't.

Is the content review process slowing down our pipeline?

Often, yes. When content goes through multiple rounds of review before it reaches a buyer, it either arrives too late or gets watered down in the process. A senior editorial eye earlier in the process means fewer rewrites, faster sign-off and content that actually lands.

What B2B content moves deals fastest?

Case studies structured around buying criteria, not marketing milestones. Executive one-pagers tailored to each stakeholder's specific concerns. Nurture emails that answer the question the prospect is actually sitting with. Specific beats generic every time.

How do you write for a multi-stakeholder buying committee?

Start with one shared narrative — the core story that holds across the whole deal. Then adapt the language, emphasis and proof points for each role. The CFO needs to see risk and ROI. The champion needs to see capability. Legal needs to see process. One story, told in the right language for each room.